I
Law, order, and restraint had carved Frederick Travers' face. It
was the strong, firm face of one used to power and who had used
power with wisdom and discretion. Clean living had made the healthy
skin, and the lines graved in it were honest lines. Hard and
devoted work had left its wholesome handiwork, that was all. Every
feature of the man told the same story, from the clear blue of the
eyes to the full head of hair, light brown, touched with grey, and
smoothly parted and drawn straight across above the strong-domed
forehead. He was a seriously groomed man, and the light summer
business suit no more than befitted his alert years, while it did
not shout aloud that its possessor was likewise the possessor of
numerous millions of dollars and property.
For Frederick Travers hated ostentation. The machine that waited
outside for him under the porte-cochere was sober black. It was the
most expensive machine in the county, yet he did not care to flaunt
its price or horse-power in a red flare across the landscape, which
also was mostly his, from the sand dunes and the everlasting beat
of the Pacific breakers, across the fat bottomlands and upland
pastures, to the far summits clad with redwood forest and wreathed
in fog and cloud.
A rustle of skirts caused him to look over his shoulder. Just
the faintest hint of irritation showed in his manner. Not that his
daughter was the object, however. Whatever it was, it seemed to lie
on the desk before him.
"What is that outlandish name again?" she asked. "I know I shall
never remember it. See, I've brought a pad to write it down."
Her voice was low and cool, and she was a tall, well-formed,
clear-skinned young woman. In her voice and complacence she, too,
showed the drill-marks of order and restraint.
Frederick Travers scanned the signature of one of two letters on
the desk. "Bronislawa Plaskoweitzkaia Travers," he read; then
spelled the difficult first portion, letter by letter, while his
daughter wrote it down.
"Now, Mary," he added, "remember Tom was always harum scarum,
and you must make allowances for this daughter of his. Her very
name is--ah--disconcerting. I haven't seen him for years, and as
for her...." A shrug epitomised his apprehension. He smiled with an
effort at wit. "Just the same, they're as much your family as mine.
If he
is my brother, he is your uncle. And if she's my niece,
you're both cousins."
Mary nodded. "Don't worry, father. I'll be nice to her, poor
thing. What nationality was her mother?--to get such an awful
name."
"I don't know. Russian, or Polish, or Spanish, or something. It
was just like Tom. She was an actress or singer--I don't remember.
They met in Buenos Ayres. It was an elopement. Her husband--"
"Then she was already married!"
Mary's dismay was unfeigned and spontaneous, and her father's
irritation grew more pronounced. He had not meant that. It had
slipped out.
"There was a divorce afterward, of course. I never knew the
details. Her mother died out in China--no; in Tasmania. It was in
China that Tom--" His lips shut with almost a snap. He was not
going to make any more slips. Mary waited, then turned to the door,
where she paused.
"I've given her the rooms over the rose court," she said. "And
I'm going now to take a last look."
Frederick Travers turned back to the desk, as if to put the
letters away, changed his mind, and slowly and ponderingly reread
them.
"Dear Fred:
"It's been a long time since I was so near to the old home,
and I'd like to take a run up. Unfortunately, I played ducks
and drakes with my Yucatan project--I think I wrote about
it--and I'm broke as usual. Could you advance me funds for
the run? I'd like to arrive first class. Polly is with me,
you know. I wonder how you two will get along.
"Tom.
"P.S. If it doesn't bother you too much, send it along
next mail."
"Dear Uncle Fred":
the other letter ran, in what seemed to him a strange,
foreign-taught, yet distinctly feminine hand.
"Dad doesn't know I am writing this. He told me what he said
to you. It is not true. He is coming home to die. He doesn't
know it, but I've talked with the doctors. And he'll have to
come home, for we have no money. We're in a stuffy little
boarding house, and it is not the place for Dad. He's helped
other persons all his life, and now is the time to help him.
He didn't play ducks and drakes in Yucatan. I was with him,
and I know. He dropped all he had there, and he was robbed.
He can't play the business game against New Yorkers. That
explains it all, and I am proud he can't.
"He always laughs and says I'll never be able to get along
with you. But I don't agree with him. Besides, I've never
seen
a really, truly blood relative in my life, and there's your
daughter. Think of it!--a real live cousin!
"In anticipation,
"Your niece,
"BRONISLAWA PLASKOWEITZKAIA TRAVERS.
"P.S. You'd better telegraph the money, or you won't see Dad
at all. He doesn't know how sick he is, and if he meets any
of his old friends he'll be off and away on some wild goose
chase. He's beginning to talk Alaska. Says it will get the
fever out of his bones. Please know that we must pay the
boarding house, or else we'll arrive without luggage.
"B.P.T."
Frederick Travers opened the door of a large, built-in safe
and methodically put the letters away in a compartment labelled
"Thomas Travers."
"Poor Tom! Poor Tom!" he sighed aloud.
II
The big motor car waited at the station, and Frederick Travers
thrilled as he always thrilled to the distant locomotive whistle of
the train plunging down the valley of Isaac Travers River. First of
all westering white-men, had Isaac Travers gazed on that splendid
valley, its salmon-laden waters, its rich bottoms, and its virgin
forest slopes. Having seen, he had grasped and never let go.
"Land-poor," they had called him in the mid-settler period. But
that had been in the days when the placers petered out, when there
were no wagon roads nor tugs to draw in sailing vessels across the
perilous bar, and when his lonely grist mill had been run under
armed guards to keep the marauding Klamaths off while wheat was
ground. Like father, like son, and what Isaac Travers had grasped,
Frederick Travers had held. It had been the same tenacity of hold.
Both had been far-visioned. Both had foreseen the transformation of
the utter West, the coming of the railroad, and the building of the
new empire on the Pacific shore.
Frederick Travers thrilled, too, at the locomotive whistle,
because, more than any man's, it was his railroad. His father had
died still striving to bring the railroad in across the mountains
that averaged a hundred thousand dollars to the mile. He,
Frederick, had brought it in. He had sat up nights over that
railroad; bought newspapers, entered politics, and subsidised party
machines; and he had made pilgrimages, more than once, at his own
expense, to the railroad chiefs of the East. While all the county
knew how many miles of his land were crossed by the right of way,
none of the county guessed nor dreamed the number of his dollars
which had gone into guaranties and railroad bonds. He had done much
for his county, and the railroad was his last and greatest
achievement, the capstone of the Travers' effort, the momentous and
marvellous thing that had been brought about just yesterday. It had
been running two years, and, highest proof of all of his judgment,
dividends were in sight. And farther reaching reward was in sight.
It was written in the books that the next Governor of California
was to be spelled, Frederick A. Travers.
Twenty years had passed since he had seen his elder brother, and
then it had been after a gap of ten years. He remembered that night
well. Tom was the only man who dared run the bar in the dark, and
that last time, between nightfall and the dawn, with a southeaster
breezing up, he had sailed his schooner in and out again. There had
been no warning of his coming--a clatter of hoofs at midnight, a
lathered horse in the stable, and Tom had appeared, the salt of the
sea on his face as his mother attested. An hour only he remained,
and on a fresh horse was gone, while rain squalls rattled upon the
windows and the rising wind moaned through the redwoods, the memory
of his visit a whiff, sharp and strong, from the wild outer world.
A week later, sea-hammered and bar-bound for that time, had arrived
the revenue cutter
Bear, and there had been a column of conjecture in the
local paper, hints of a heavy landing of opium and of a vain quest
for the mysterious schooner
Halcyon. Only Fred and his mother, and the several house
Indians, knew of the stiffened horse in the barn and of the devious
way it was afterward smuggled back to the fishing village on the
beach.
Despite those twenty years, it was the same old Tom Travers that
alighted from the Pullman. To his brother's eyes, he did not look
sick. Older he was of course. The Panama hat did not hide the grey
hair, and though indefinably hinting of shrunkenness, the broad
shoulders were still broad and erect. As for the young woman with
him, Frederick Travers experienced an immediate shock of distaste.
He felt it vitally, yet vaguely. It was a challenge and a mock, yet
he could not name nor place the source of it. It might have been
the dress, of tailored linen and foreign cut, the shirtwaist, with
its daring stripe, the black wilfulness of the hair, or the flaunt
of poppies on the large straw hat or it might have been the flash
and colour of her--the black eyes and brows, the flame of rose in
the cheeks, the white of the even teeth that showed too readily. "A
spoiled child," was his thought, but he had no time to analyse, for
his brother's hand was in his and he was making his niece's
acquaintance.
There it was again. She flashed and talked like her colour, and
she talked with her hands as well. He could not avoid noting the
smallness of them. They were absurdly small, and his eyes went to
her feet to make the same discovery. Quite oblivious of the curious
crowd on the station platform, she had intercepted his attempt to
lead to the motor car and had ranged the brothers side by side. Tom
had been laughingly acquiescent, but his younger brother was ill at
ease, too conscious of the many eyes of his townspeople. He knew
only the old Puritan way. Family displays were for the privacy of
the family, not for the public. He was glad she had not attempted
to kiss him. It was remarkable she had not. Already he apprehended
anything of her.
She embraced them and penetrated them with sun-warm eyes that
seemed to see through them, and over them, and all about them.
"You're really brothers," she cried, her hands flashing with her
eyes. "Anybody can see it. And yet there is a difference--I don't
know. I can't explain."
In truth, with a tact that exceeded Frederick Travers' farthest
disciplined forbearance, she did not dare explain. Her wide
artist-eyes had seen and sensed the whole trenchant and essential
difference. Alike they looked, of the unmistakable same stock,
their features reminiscent of a common origin; and there
resemblance ceased. Tom was three inches taller, and well-greyed
was the long, Viking moustache. His was the same eagle-like nose as
his brother's, save that it was more eagle-like, while the blue
eyes were pronouncedly so. The lines of the face were deeper, the
cheek-bones higher, the hollows larger, the weather-beat darker. It
was a volcanic face. There had been fire there, and the fire still
lingered. Around the corners of the eyes were more
laughter-wrinkles and in the eyes themselves a promise of deadlier
seriousness than the younger brother possessed. Frederick was
bourgeois in his carriage, but in Tom's was a certain careless ease
and distinction. It was the same pioneer blood of Isaac Travers in
both men, but it had been retorted in widely different crucibles.
Frederick represented the straight and expected line of descent.
His brother expressed a vast and intangible something that was
unknown in the Travers stock. And it was all this that the
black-eyed girl saw and knew on the instant. All that had been
inexplicable in the two men and their relationship cleared up in
the moment she saw them side by side.
"Wake me up," Tom was saying. "I can't believe I arrived on a
train. And the population? There were only four thousand thirty
years ago."
"Sixty thousand now," was the other's answer. "And increasing by
leaps and bounds. Want to spin around for a look at the city?
There's plenty of time."
As they sped along the broad, well-paved streets, Tom persisted
in his Rip Van Winkle pose. The waterfront perplexed him. Where he
had once anchored his sloop in a dozen feet of water, he found
solid land and railroad yards, with wharves and shipping still
farther out.
"Hold on! Stop!" he cried, a few blocks on, looking up at a
solid business block. "Where is this, Fred?"
"Fourth and Travers--don't you remember?"
Tom stood up and gazed around, trying to discern the anciently
familiar configuration of the land under its clutter of
buildings.
"I ... I think...." he began hesitantly. "No; by George, I'm
sure of it. We used to hunt cottontails over that ground, and shoot
blackbirds in the brush. And there, where the bank building is, was
a pond." He turned to Polly. "I built my first raft there, and got
my first taste of the sea."
"Heaven knows how many gallons of it," Frederick laughed,
nodding to the chauffeur. "They rolled you on a barrel, I
remember."
"Oh! More!" Polly cried, clapping her hands.
"There's the park," Frederick pointed out a little later,
indicating a mass of virgin redwoods on the first dip of the bigger
hills.
"Father shot three grizzlies there one afternoon," was Tom's
remark.
"I presented forty acres of it to the city," Frederick went on.
"Father bought the quarter section for a dollar an acre from
Leroy."
Tom nodded, and the sparkle and flash in his eyes, like that of
his daughter, were unlike anything that ever appeared in his
brother's eyes.
"Yes," he affirmed, "Leroy, the negro squawman. I remember the
time he carried you and me on his back to Alliance, the night the
Indians burned the ranch. Father stayed behind and fought."
"But he couldn't save the grist mill. It was a serious setback
to him."
"Just the same he nailed four Indians."
In Polly's eyes now appeared the flash and sparkle.
"An Indian-fighter!" she cried. "Tell me about him."
"Tell her about Travers Ferry," Tom said.
"That's a ferry on the Klamath River on the way to Orleans Bar
and Siskiyou. There was great packing into the diggings in those
days, and, among other things, father had made a location there.
There was rich bench farming land, too. He built a suspension
bridge--wove the cables on the spot with sailors and materials
freighted in from the coast. It cost him twenty thousand dollars.
The first day it was open, eight hundred mules crossed at a dollar
a head, to say nothing of the toll for foot and horse. That night
the river rose. The bridge was one hundred and forty feet above low
water mark. Yet the freshet rose higher than that, and swept the
bridge away. He'd have made a fortune there otherwise."
"That wasn't it at all," Tom blurted out impatiently. "It was at
Travers Ferry that father and old Jacob Vance were caught by a war
party of Mad River Indians. Old Jacob was killed right outside the
door of the log cabin. Father dragged the body inside and stood the
Indians off for a week. Father was some shot. He buried Jacob under
the cabin floor."
"I still run the ferry," Frederick went on, "though there isn't
so much travel as in the old days. I freight by wagon-road to the
Reservation, and then mule-back on up the Klamath and clear in to
the forks of Little Salmon. I have twelve stores on that chain now,
a stage-line to the Reservation, and a hotel there. Quite a tourist
trade is beginning to pick up."
And the girl, with curious brooding eyes, looked from brother to
brother as they so differently voiced themselves and life.
"Ay, he was some man, father was," Tom murmured.
There was a drowsy note in his speech that drew a quick glance
of anxiety from her. The machine had turned into the cemetery, and
now halted before a substantial vault on the crest of the hill.
"I thought you'd like to see it," Frederick was saying. "I built
that mausoleum myself, most of it with my own hands. Mother wanted
it. The estate was dreadfully encumbered. The best bid I could get
out of the contractors was eleven thousand. I did it myself for a
little over eight."
"Must have worked nights," Tom murmured admiringly and more
sleepily than before.
"I did, Tom, I did. Many a night by lantern-light. I was so
busy. I was reconstructing the water works then--the artesian wells
had failed--and mother's eyes were troubling her. You
remember--cataract--I wrote you. She was too weak to travel, and I
brought the specialists up from San Francisco. Oh, my hands were
full. I was just winding up the disastrous affairs of the steamer
line father had established to San Francisco, and I was keeping up
the interest on mortgages to the tune of one hundred and eighty
thousand dollars."
A soft stertorous breathing interrupted him. Tom, chin on chest,
was asleep. Polly, with a significant look, caught her uncle's eye.
Then her father, after an uneasy restless movement, lifted drowsy
lids.
"Deuced warm day," he said with a bright apologetic laugh. "I've
been actually asleep. Aren't we near home?"
Frederick nodded to the chauffeur, and the car rolled on.
III
The house that Frederick Travers had built when his prosperity
came, was large and costly, sober and comfortable, and with no more
pretence than was naturally attendant on the finest country home in
the county. Its atmosphere was just the sort that he and his
daughter would create. But in the days that followed his brother's
home-coming, all this was changed. Gone was the subdued and ordered
repose. Frederick was neither comfortable nor happy. There was an
unwonted flurry of life and violation of sanctions and traditions.
Meals were irregular and protracted, and there were midnight
chafing-dish suppers and bursts of laughter at the most
inappropriate hours.
Frederick was abstemious. A glass of wine at dinner was his
wildest excess. Three cigars a day he permitted himself, and these
he smoked either on the broad veranda or in the smoking room. What
else was a smoking room for? Cigarettes he detested. Yet his
brother was ever rolling thin, brown-paper cigarettes and smoking
them wherever he might happen to be. A litter of tobacco crumbs was
always to be found in the big easy chair he frequented and among
the cushions of the window-seats. Then there were the cocktails.
Brought up under the stern tutelage of Isaac and Eliza Travers,
Frederick looked upon liquor in the house as an abomination.
Ancient cities had been smitten by God's wrath for just such
practices. Before lunch and dinner, Tom, aided and abetted by
Polly, mixed an endless variety of drinks, she being particularly
adept with strange swivel-stick concoctions learned at the ends of
the earth. To Frederick, at such times, it seemed that his butler's
pantry and dining room had been turned into bar-rooms. When he
suggested this, under a facetious show, Tom proclaimed that when he
made his pile he would build a liquor cabinet in every living room
of his house.
And there were more young men at the house than formerly, and
they helped in disposing of the cocktails. Frederick would have
liked to account in that manner for their presence, but he knew
better. His brother and his brother's daughter did what he and Mary
had failed to do. They were the magnets. Youth and joy and laughter
drew to them. The house was lively with young life. Ever, day and
night, the motor cars honked up and down the gravelled drives.
There were picnics and expeditions in the summer weather, moonlight
sails on the bay, starts before dawn or home-comings at midnight,
and often, of nights, the many bedrooms were filled as they had
never been before. Tom must cover all his boyhood ramblings, catch
trout again on Bull Creek, shoot quail over Walcott's Prairie, get
a deer on Round Mountain. That deer was a cause of pain and shame
to Frederick. What if it was closed season? Tom had triumphantly
brought home the buck and gleefully called it sidehill-salmon when
it was served and eaten at Frederick's own table.
They had clambakes at the head of the bay and musselbakes down
by the roaring surf; and Tom told shamelessly of the
Halcyon, and of the run of contraband, and asked Frederick
before them all how he had managed to smuggle the horse back to the
fishermen without discovery. All the young men were in the
conspiracy with Polly to pamper Tom to his heart's desire. And
Frederick heard the true inwardness of the killing of the deer; of
its purchase from the overstocked Golden Gate Park; of its crated
carriage by train, horse-team and mule-back to the fastnesses of
Round Mountain; of Tom falling asleep beside the deer-run the first
time it was driven by; of the pursuit by the young men, the jaded
saddle horses, the scrambles and the falls, and the roping of it at
Burnt Ranch Clearing; and, finally, of the triumphant culmination,
when it was driven past a second time and Tom had dropped it at
fifty yards. To Frederick there was a vague hurt in it all. When
had such consideration been shown him?
There were days when Tom could not go out, postponements of
outdoor frolics, when, still the centre, he sat and drowsed in the
big chair, waking, at times, in that unexpected queer, bright way
of his, to roll a cigarette and call for his
ukulele--a sort of miniature guitar of Portuguese
invention. Then, with strumming and tumtuming, the live cigarette
laid aside to the imminent peril of polished wood, his full
baritone would roll out in South Sea
hulas and sprightly French and Spanish songs.
One, in particular, had pleased Frederick at first. The
favourite song of a Tahitian king, Tom explained--the last of the
Pomares, who had himself composed it and was wont to lie on his
mats by the hour singing it. It consisted of the repetition of a
few syllables. "
E meu ru ru a vau," it ran, and that was all of it, sung
in a stately, endless, ever-varying chant, accompanied by solemn
chords from the
ukelele. Polly took great joy in teaching it to her uncle,
but when, himself questing for some of this genial flood of life
that bathed about his brother, Frederick essayed the song, he noted
suppressed glee on the part of his listeners, which increased,
through giggles and snickers, to a great outburst of laughter. To
his disgust and dismay, he learned that the simple phrase he had
repeated and repeated was nothing else than "I am so drunk." He had
been made a fool of. Over and over, solemnly and gloriously, he,
Frederick Travers, had announced how drunk he was. After that, he
slipped quietly out of the room whenever it was sung. Nor could
Polly's later explanation that the last word was "happy," and not
"drunk," reconcile him; for she had been compelled to admit that
the old king was a toper, and that he was always in his cups when
he struck up the chant.
Frederick was constantly oppressed by the feeling of being out
of it all. He was a social being, and he liked fun, even if it were
of a more wholesome and dignified brand than that to which his
brother was addicted. He could not understand why in the past the
young people had voted his house a bore and come no more, save on
state and formal occasions, until now, when they flocked to it and
to his brother, but not to him. Nor could he like the way the young
women petted his brother, and called him Tom, while it was
intolerable to see them twist and pull his buccaneer moustache in
mock punishment when his sometimes too-jolly banter sank home to
them.
Such conduct was a profanation to the memory of Isaac and Eliza
Travers. There was too much an air of revelry in the house. The
long table was never shortened, while there was extra help in the
kitchen. Breakfast extended from four until eleven, and the
midnight suppers, entailing raids on the pantry and complaints from
the servants, were a vexation to Frederick. The house had become a
restaurant, a hotel, he sneered bitterly to himself; and there were
times when he was sorely tempted to put his foot down and reassert
the old ways. But somehow the ancient sorcery of his masterful
brother was too strong upon him; and at times he gazed upon him
with a sense almost of awe, groping to fathom the alchemy of charm,
baffled by the strange lights and fires in his brother's eyes, and
by the wisdom of far places and of wild nights and days written in
his face. What was it? What lordly vision had the other
glimpsed?--he, the irresponsible and careless one? Frederick
remembered a line of an old song--"Along the shining ways he came."
Why did his brother remind him of that line? Had he, who in boyhood
had known no law, who in manhood had exalted himself above law, in
truth found the shining ways?
There was an unfairness about it that perplexed Frederick, until
he found solace in dwelling upon the failure Tom had made of life.
Then it was, in quiet intervals, that he got some comfort and
stiffened his own pride by showing Tom over the estate.
"You have done well, Fred," Tom would say. "You have done very
well."
He said it often, and often he drowsed in the big smooth-running
machine.
"Everything orderly and sanitary and spick and span--not a blade
of grass out of place," was Polly's comment. "How do you ever
manage it? I should not like to be a blade of grass on your land,"
she concluded, with a little shivery shudder.
"You have worked hard," Tom said.
"Yes, I have worked hard," Frederick affirmed. "It was worth
it."
He was going to say more, but the strange flash in the girl's
eyes brought him to an uncomfortable pause. He felt that she
measured him, challenged him. For the first time his honourable
career of building a county commonwealth had been questioned--and
by a chit of a girl, the daughter of a wastrel, herself but a
flighty, fly-away, foreign creature.
Conflict between them was inevitable. He had disliked her from
the first moment of meeting. She did not have to speak. Her mere
presence made him uncomfortable. He felt her unspoken disapproval,
though there were times when she did not stop at that. Nor did she
mince language. She spoke forthright, like a man, and as no man had
ever dared to speak to him.
"I wonder if you ever miss what you've missed," she told him.
"Did you ever, once in your life, turn yourself loose and rip
things up by the roots? Did you ever once get drunk? Or smoke
yourself black in the face? Or dance a hoe-down on the ten
commandments? Or stand up on your hind legs and wink like a good
fellow at God?"
"Isn't she a rare one!" Tom gurgled. "Her mother over
again."
Outwardly smiling and calm, there was a chill of horror at
Frederick's heart. It was incredible.
"I think it is the English," she continued, "who have a saying
that a man has not lived until he has kissed his woman and struck
his man. I wonder--confess up, now--if you ever struck a man."
"Have you?" he countered.
She nodded, an angry reminiscent flash in her eyes, and
waited.
"No, I have never had that pleasure," he answered slowly. "I
early learned control."
Later, irritated by his self-satisfied complacence and after
listening to a recital of how he had cornered the Klamath
salmon-packing, planted the first oysters on the bay and
established that lucrative monopoly, and of how, after exhausting
litigation and a campaign of years he had captured the water front
of Williamsport and thereby won to control of the Lumber Combine,
she returned to the charge.
"You seem to value life in terms of profit and loss," she said.
"I wonder if you have ever known love."
The shaft went home. He had not kissed his woman. His marriage
had been one of policy. It had saved the estate in the days when he
had been almost beaten in the struggle to disencumber the vast
holdings Isaac Travers' wide hands had grasped. The girl was a
witch. She had probed an old wound and made it hurt again. He had
never had time to love. He had worked hard. He had been president
of the chamber of commerce, mayor of the city, state senator, but
he had missed love. At chance moments he had come upon Polly,
openly and shamelessly in her father's arms, and he had noted the
warmth and tenderness in their eyes. Again he knew that he had
missed love. Wanton as was the display, not even in private did he
and Mary so behave. Normal, formal, and colourless, she was what
was to be expected of a loveless marriage. He even puzzled to
decide whether the feeling he felt for her was love. Was he himself
loveless as well?
In the moment following Polly's remark, he was aware of a great
emptiness. It seemed that his hands had grasped ashes, until,
glancing into the other room, he saw Tom asleep in the big chair,
very grey and aged and tired. He remembered all that he had done,
all that he possessed. Well, what did Tom possess? What had Tom
done?--save play ducks and drakes with life and wear it out until
all that remained was that dimly flickering spark in a dying
body.
What bothered Frederick in Polly was that she attracted him as
well as repelled him. His own daughter had never interested him in
that way. Mary moved along frictionless grooves, and to forecast
her actions was so effortless that it was automatic. But Polly!
many-hued, protean-natured, he never knew what she was going to do
next.
"Keeps you guessing, eh?" Tom chuckled.
She was irresistible. She had her way with Frederick in ways
that in Mary would have been impossible. She took liberties with
him, cosened him or hurt him, and compelled always in him a sharp
awareness of her existence.
Once, after one of their clashes, she devilled him at the piano,
playing a mad damned thing that stirred and irritated him and set
his pulse pounding wild and undisciplined fancies in the ordered
chamber of his brain. The worst of it was she saw and knew just
what she was doing. She was aware before he was, and she made him
aware, her face turned to look at him, on her lips a mocking,
contemplative smile that was almost a superior sneer. It was this
that shocked him into consciousness of the orgy his imagination had
been playing him. From the wall above her, the stiff portraits of
Isaac and Eliza Travers looked down like reproachful spectres.
Infuriated, he left the room. He had never dreamed such potencies
resided in music. And then, and he remembered it with shame, he had
stolen back outside to listen, and she had known, and once more she
had devilled him.
When Mary asked him what he thought of Polly's playing, an
unbidden contrast leaped to his mind. Mary's music reminded him of
church. It was cold and bare as a Methodist meeting house. But
Polly's was like the mad and lawless ceremonial of some heathen
temple where incense arose and nautch girls writhed.
"She plays like a foreigner," he answered, pleased with the
success and oppositeness of his evasion.
"She is an artist," Mary affirmed solemnly. "She is a genius.
When does she ever practise? When did she ever practise? You know
how I have. My best is like a five-finger exercise compared with
the foolishest thing she ripples off. Her music tells me
things--oh, things wonderful and unutterable. Mine tells me,
'one-two-three, one-two-three.' Oh, it is maddening! I work and
work and get nowhere. It is unfair. Why should she be born that
way, and not I?"
"Love," was Frederick's immediate and secret thought; but before
he could dwell upon the conclusion, the unprecedented had happened
and Mary was sobbing in a break-down of tears. He would have liked
to take her in his arms, after Tom's fashion, but he did not know
how. He tried, and found Mary as unschooled as himself. It resulted
only in an embarrassed awkwardness for both of them.
The contrasting of the two girls was inevitable. Like father
like daughter. Mary was no more than a pale camp-follower of a
gorgeous, conquering general. Frederick's thrift had been sorely
educated in the matter of clothes. He knew just how expensive
Mary's clothes were, yet he could not blind himself to the fact
that Polly's vagabond makeshifts, cheap and apparently haphazard,
were always all right and far more successful. Her taste was
unerring. Her ways with a shawl were inimitable. With a scarf she
performed miracles.
"She just throws things together," Mary complained. "She doesn't
even try. She can dress in fifteen minutes, and when she goes
swimming she beats the boys out of the dressing rooms." Mary was
honest and incredulous in her admiration. "I can't see how she does
it. No one could dare those colours, but they look just right on
her."
"She's always threatened that when I became finally flat broke
she'd set up dressmaking and take care of both of us," Tom
contributed.
Frederick, looking over the top of a newspaper, was witness to
an illuminating scene; Mary, to his certain knowledge, had been
primping for an hour ere she appeared.
"Oh! How lovely!" was Polly's ready appreciation. Her eyes and
face glowed with honest pleasure, and her hands wove their delight
in the air. "But why not wear that bow so and thus?"
Her hands flashed to the task, and in a moment the miracle of
taste and difference achieved by her touch was apparent even to
Frederick.
Polly was like her father, generous to the point of absurdity
with her meagre possessions. Mary admired a Spanish fan--a Mexican
treasure that had come down from one of the grand ladies of the
Court of the Emperor Maximilian. Polly's delight flamed like
wild-fire. Mary found herself the immediate owner of the fan,
almost labouring under the fictitious impression that she had
conferred an obligation by accepting it. Only a foreign woman could
do such things, and Polly was guilty of similar gifts to all the
young women. It was her way. It might be a lace handkerchief, a
pink Paumotan pearl, or a comb of hawksbill turtle. It was all the
same. Whatever their eyes rested on in joy was theirs. To women, as
to men, she was irresistible.
"I don't dare admire anything any more," was Mary's plaint. "If
I do she always gives it to me."
Frederick had never dreamed such a creature could exist. The
women of his own race and place had never adumbrated such a
possibility. He knew that whatever she did--her quick generosities,
her hot enthusiasms or angers, her birdlike caressing ways--was
unbelievably sincere. Her extravagant moods at the same time
shocked and fascinated him. Her voice was as mercurial as her
feelings. There were no even tones, and she talked with her hands.
Yet, in her mouth, English was a new and beautiful language, softly
limpid, with an audacity of phrase and tellingness of expression
that conveyed subtleties and nuances as unambiguous and direct as
they were unexpected from one of such childlikeness and simplicity.
He woke up of nights and on his darkened eyelids saw bright
memory-pictures of the backward turn of her vivid, laughing
face.
THE REST OF THE TEXT IS AVAILABLE IN FULL VERSION.