CHAPTER III
No MATTER!
WITHIN ANOTHER YEAR ANTHONY and Gloria had become
like players who had lost their costumes, lacking the pride to
continue on the note of tragedy—so that when Mrs. and Miss Hulme of
Kansas City cut them dead in the Plaza one evening, it was only
that Mrs. and Miss Hulme, like most people, abominated mirrors of
their atavistic selves.
Their new apartment, for which they paid
eighty-five dollars a month, was situated on Claremont
Avenue,1 which is
two blocks from the Hudson in the dim hundreds. They had lived
there a month when Muriel Kane came to see them late one
afternoon.
It was a reproachless twilight on the summer side
of spring. Anthony lay upon the lounge looking up One Hundred and
Twenty-seventh Street toward the river, near which he could just
see a single patch of vivid green trees that guaranteed the
brummagem umbrageousness of Riverside Drive. Across the water were
the Palisades, crowned by the ugly framework of the amusement
park—yet soon it would be dusk and those same iron cobwebs would be
a glory against the heavens, an enchanted palace set over the
smooth radiance of a tropical canal.
The streets near the apartment, Anthony had found,
were streets where children played—streets a little nicer than
those he had been used to pass on his way to Marietta, but of the
same general sort, with an occasional hand-organ or hurdy-gurdy,
and in the cool of the evening many pairs of young girls walking
down to the corner drug-store for ice-cream soda and dreaming
unlimited dreams under the low heavens.
Dusk in the streets now, and children playing,
shouting up incoherent ecstatic words that faded out close to the
open window—and Muriel, who had come to find Gloria, chattering to
him from an opaque gloom over across the room.
“Light the lamp, why don’t we?” she suggested.
“It’s getting gbostly in here.”
With a tired movement he arose and obeyed; the gray
window-panes vanished. He stretched himself. He was heavier now,
his stomach was a limp weight against his belt; his flesh had
softened and expanded. He was thirty-two and his mind was a bleak
and disordered wreck.
“Have a little drink, Muriel?”
“Not me, thanks. I don’t use it any more. What’re
you doing these days, Anthony?” she asked curiously.
“Well, I’ve been pretty busy with this lawsuit,” he
answered indifferently. “It’s gone to the Court of Appeals—ought to
be settled up one way or another by autumn. There’s been some
objection as to whether the Court of Appeals has jurisdiction over
the matter.”
Muriel made a clicking sound with her tongue and
cocked her head on one side.
“Well, you tell ’em! I never heard of anything
taking so long.”
“Oh, they all do,” he replied listlessly; “all will
cases. They say it’s exceptional to have one settled under four or
five years.”
“Oh ...” Muriel daringly changed her tack, “why
don’t you go to work, you la-azy!”
“At what?” he demanded abruptly.
“Why, at anything, I suppose. You’re still a young
man.”
“If that’s encouragement, I’m much obliged,” he
answered dryly—and then with sudden weariness: “Does it bother you
particularly that I don’t want to work?”
“It doesn’t bother me—but, it does bother a lot of
people who claim—”
“Oh, God!” he said brokenly, “it seems to me that
for three years I’ve heard nothing about myself but wild stories
and virtuous admonitions. I’m tired of it. If you don’t want to see
us, let us alone. I don’t bother my former ‘friends.’ But I need no
charity calls, and no criticism disguised as good advice—” Then he
added apologetically: “I’m sorry—but really, Muriel, you mustn’t
talk like a lady slum-worker even if you are visiting the lower
middle classes.” He turned his blood-shot eyes on her
reproachfully—eyes that had once been a deep, clear blue, that were
weak now, strained, and half-ruined from reading when he was
drunk.
“Why do you say such awful things?” she protested.
“You talk as if you and Gloria were in the middle classes.”
“Why pretend we’re not? I hate people who claim to
be great aristocrats when they can’t even keep up the appearances
of it.”
“Do you think a person has to have money to be
aristocratic?”
Muriel... the horrified democrat... !
“Why, of course. Aristocracy’s only an admission
that certain traits which we call fine—courage and honor and beauty
and all that sort of thing—can best be developed in a favorable
environment, where you don’t have the warpings of ignorance and
necessity.”
Muriel bit her lower lip and waved her head from
side to side.
“Well, all I say is that if a person comes
from a good family they’re always nice people. That’s the trouble
with you and Gloria. You think that just because things aren’t
going your way right now all your old friends are trying to avoid
you. You’re too sensitive—”
“As a matter of fact,” said Anthony, “you know
nothing at all about it. With me it’s simply a matter of pride, and
for once Gloria’s reasonable enough to agree that we oughtn’t go
where we’re not wanted. And people don’t want us. We’re too much
the ideal bad examples.”
“Nonsense! You can’t park your pessimism in my
little sun-parlor. I think you ought to forget all those morbid
speculations and go to work.”
“Here I am, thirty-two. Suppose I did start in at
some idiotic business. Perhaps in two years I might rise to fifty
dollars a week—with luck. That’s if I could get a job at
all; there’s an awful lot of unemployment. Well, suppose I made
fifty a week. Do you think I’d be any happier? Do you think that if
I don’t get this money of my grandfather’s life will be
endurable?”
Muriel smiled complacently.
“Well” she said, “that may be clever but it isn’t
common sense.”
A few minutes later Gloria came in seeming to bring
with her into the room some dark color, indeterminate and rare. In
a taciturn way she was happy to see Muriel. She greeted Anthony
with a casual “Hi!”
“I’ve been talking philosophy with your husband,”
cried the irrepressible Miss Kane.
“We took up some fundamental concepts,” said
Anthony, a faint smile disturbing his pale cheeks, paler still
under two days’ growth of beard.
Oblivious to his irony Muriel rehashed her
contention. When she had done, Gloria said quietly:
“Anthony’s right. It’s no fun to go around when you
have the sense that people are looking at you in a certain
way.”
He broke in plaintively:
“Don’t you think that when even Maury Noble, who
was my best friend, won’t come to see us it’s high time to stop
calling people up?” Tears were standing in his eyes.
“That was your fault about Maury Noble,” said
Gloria coolly.
“It wasn’t.”
“It most certainly was.”
Muriel intervened quickly:
“I met a girl who knew Maury, the other day, and
she says he doesn’t drink any more. He’s getting pretty
cagey.”
“Doesn’t?”
“Practically not at all. He’s making piles of
money. He’s sort of changed since the war. He’s going to marry a
girl in Philadelphia who has millions, Ceci Larrabee—anyhow, that’s
what Town Tattle said.”
“He’s thirty-three,” said Anthony, thinking aloud.
“But it’s odd to imagine his getting married. I used to think he
was so brilliant.”
“He was,” murmured Gloria, “in a way.”
“But brilliant people don’t settle down in
business—or do they? Or what do they do? Or what becomes of
everybody you used to know and have so much in common with?”
“You drift apart,” suggested Muriel with the
appropriate dreamy look.
“They change,” said Gloria. “All the qualities that
they don’t use in their daily lives get cobwebbed up.”
“The last thing he said to me,” recollected
Anthony, “was that he was going to work so as to forget that there
was nothing worth working for.”
Muriel caught at this quickly.
“That’s what you ought to do,” she exclaimed
triumphantly. “Of course I shouldn’t think anybody would want to
work for nothing. But it’d give you something to do. What do you do
with yourselves, anyway? Nobody ever sees you at Montmartre or—or
anywhere. Are you economizing?”
Gloria laughed scornfully, glancing at Anthony from
the corners of her eyes.
“Well,” he demanded, “what are you laughing
at?”
“You know what I’m laughing at,” she answered
coldly.
“At that case of whiskey?”
“Yes”—she turned to Muriel—“he paid seventy-five
dollars for a case of whiskey yesterday.”
“What if I did? It’s cheaper that way than if you
get it by the bottle. You needn’t pretend that you won’t drink any
of it.”
“At least I don’t drink in the daytime.”
“That’s a fine distinction!” he cried, springing to
his feet in a weak rage. “What’s more, I’ll be damned if you can
hurl that at me every few minutes!”
“It’s true.”
“It is not! And I’m getting sick of this
eternal business of criticising me before visitors!” He had worked
himself up to such a state that his arms and shoulders were visibly
trembling. “You’d think everything was my fault. You’d think you
hadn’t encouraged me to spend money—and spent a lot more on
yourself than I ever did by a long shot.”
Now Gloria rose to her feet.
“I won’t let you talk to me that way!”
“All right, then; by Heaven, you don’t have
to!”
In a sort of rush he left the room. The two women
heard his steps in the hall and then the front door banged. Gloria
sank back into her chair. Her face was lovely in the lamplight,
composed, inscrutable.
“Oh—!” cried Muriel in distress. “Oh, what is the
matter?”
“Nothing particularly. He’s just drunk.”
“Drunk? Why, he’s perfectly sober. He
talked—”
Gloria shook her head.
“Oh, no, he doesn’t show it any more unless he can
hardly stand up, and he talks all right until he gets excited. He
talks much better than he does when he’s sober. But he’s been
sitting here all day drinking—except for the time it took him to
walk to the corner for a newspaper.”
“Oh, how terrible!” Muriel was sincerely moved. Her
eyes filled with tears. “Has this happened much?”
“Drinking, you mean?”
“No, this—leaving you?”
“Oh, yes. Frequently. He’ll come in about
midnight—and weep and ask me to forgive him.”
“And do you?”
“I don’t know. We just go on.”
The two women sat there in the lamplight and looked
at each other, each in a different way helpless before this thing.
Gloria was still pretty, as pretty as she would ever be again—her
cheeks were flushed and she was wearing a new dress that she had
bought—imprudently—for fifty dollars. She had hoped she could
persuade Anthony to take her out to-night, to a restaurant or even
to one of the great, gorgeous moving-picture palaces where there
would be a few people to look at her, at whom she could bear to
look in turn. She wanted this because she knew her cheeks were
flushed and because her dress was new and becomingly fragile. Only
very occasionally, now, did they receive any invitations. But she
did not tell these things to Muriel.
“Gloria, dear, I wish we could have dinner
together, but I promised a man—and it’s seven-thirty already. I’ve
got to tear.”
“Oh, I couldn’t, anyway. In the first place I’ve
been ill all day. I couldn’t eat a thing.”
After she had walked with Muriel to the door,
Gloria came back into the room, turned out the lamp, and leaning
her elbows on the window-sill looked out at Palisades Park, where
the brilliant revolving circle of the Ferris wheel was like a
trembling mirror catching the yellow reflection of the moon. The
street was quiet now; the children had gone in—over the way she
could see a family at dinner. Pointlessly, ridiculously, they rose
and walked about the table; seen thus, all that they did appeared
incongruous—it was as though they were being jiggled carelessly and
to no purpose by invisible overhead wires.
She looked at her watch—it was eight o’clock. She
had been pleased for a part of the day—the early afternoon—in
walking along that Broadway of Harlem, One Hundred and Twenty-fifth
Street, with her nostrils alert to many odors, and her mind excited
by the extraordinary beauty of some Italian children. It affected
her curiously—as Fifth Avenue had affected her once, in the days
when, with the placid confidence of beauty, she had known that it
was all hers, every shop and all it held, every adult toy
glittering in a window, all hers for the asking. Here on One
Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street there were Salvation Army bands and
spectrum-shawled old ladies on door-steps and sugary, sticky candy
in the grimy hands of shiny-haired children—and the late sun
striking down on the sides of the tall tenements. All very rich and
racy and savory, like a dish by a provident French chef that one
could not help enjoying, even though one knew that the ingredients
were probably left-overs....
Gloria shuddered suddenly as a river siren came
moaning over the dusky roofs, and leaning back in till the ghostly
curtains fell from her shoulder, she turned on the electric lamp.
It was growing late. She knew there was some change in her purse,
and she considered whether she would go down and have some coffee
and rolls where the liberated subway made a roaring cave of
Manhattan Street or eat the devilled ham and bread in the kitchen.
Her purse decided for her. It contained a nickel and two
pennies.
After an hour the silence of the room had grown
unbearable, and she found that her eyes were wandering from her
magazine to the ceiling, toward which she stared without thought.
Suddenly she stood up, hesitated for a moment, biting at her
finger—then she went to the pantry, took down a bottle of whiskey
from the shelf and poured herself a drink. She filled up the glass
with ginger ale, and returning to her chair finished an article in
the magazine. It concerned the last revolutionary widow, who, when
a young girl, had married an ancient veteran of the Continental
Army and who had died in 1906. It seemed strange and oddly romantic
to Gloria that she and this woman had been contemporaries.
She turned a page and learned that a candidate for
Congress was being accused of atheism by an opponent. Gloria’s
surprise vanished when she found that the charges were false. The
candidate had merely denied the miracle of the loaves and fishes.
He admitted, under pressure, that he gave full credence to the
stroll upon the water.
Finishing her first drink, Gloria got herself a
second. After slipping on a negligee and making herself comfortable
on the lounge, she became conscious that she was miserable and that
the tears were rolling down her cheeks. She wondered if they were
tears of self-pity, and tried resolutely not to cry, but this
existence without hope, without happiness, oppressed her, and she
kept shaking her head from side to side, her mouth drawn down
tremulously in the corners, as though she were denying an assertion
made by some one, somewhere. She did not know that this gesture of
hers was years older than history, that, for a hundred generations
of men, intolerable and persistent grief has offered that gesture,
of denial, of protest, of bewilderment, to something more profound,
more powerful than the God made in the image of man, and before
which that God, did he exist, would be equally impotent. It is a
truth set at the heart of tragedy that this force never explains,
never answers—this force intangible as air, more definite than
death.
Richard Caramel
Early in the summer Anthony resigned from his last
club, the Amsterdam. He had come to visit it hardly twice a year,
and the dues were a recurrent burden. He had joined it on his
return from Italy because it had been his grandfather’s club and
his father’s, and because it was a club that, given the
opportunity, one indisputably joined—but as a matter of fact he had
preferred the Harvard Club, largely because of Dick and
Maury.2 However,
with the decline of his fortunes, it had seemed an increasingly
desirable bauble to cling to.... It was relinquished at the last,
with some regret....
His companions numbered now a curious dozen.
Several of them he had met in a place called “Sammy’s,” on
Forty-third Street, where, if one knocked on the door and were
favorably passed on from behind a grating, one could sit around a
great round table drinking fairly good whiskey. It was here that he
encountered a man named Parker Allison, who had been exactly the
wrong sort of rounder at Harvard, and who was running through a
large “yeast” fortune as rapidly as possible. Parker Allison’s
notion of distinction consisted in driving a noisy red-and-yellow
racing-car up Broadway with two glittering, hard-eyed girls beside
him. He was the sort who dined with two girls rather than with
one—his imagination was almost incapable of sustaining a
dialogue.
Besides Allison there was Pete Lytell, who wore a
gray derby on the side of his head. He always had money and he was
customarily cheerful, so Anthony held aimless, long-winded
conversation with him through many afternoons of the summer and
fall. Lytell, he found, not only talked but reasoned in phrases.
His philosophy was a series of them, assimilated here and there
through an active, thoughtless life. He had phrases about
Socialism—the immemorial ones; he had phrases pertaining to the
existence of a personal deity—something about one time when he had
been in a railroad accident; and he had phrases about the Irish
problem, the sort of woman he respected, and the futility of
prohibition. The only time his conversation ever rose superior to
these muddled clauses, with which he interpreted the most rococo
happenings in a life that had been more than usually eventful, was
when he got down to the detailed discussion of his most animal
existence: he knew, to a subtlety, the foods, the liquor, and the
women that he preferred.
He was at once the commonest and the most
remarkable product of civilization. He was nine out of ten people
that one passes on a city street—and he was a hairless ape with two
dozen tricks. He was the hero of a thousand romances of life and
art—and he was a virtual moron, performing staidly yet absurdly a
series of complicated and infinitely astounding epics over a span
of threescore years.
With such men as these two Anthony Patch drank and
discussed and drank and argued. He liked them because they knew
nothing about him, because they lived in the obvious and had not
the faintest conception of the inevitable continuity of life. They
sat not before a motion-picture with consecutive reels, but at a
musty old-fashioned travelogue with all values stark and hence all
implications confused. Yet they themselves were not confused,
because there was nothing in them to be confused—they changed
phrases from month to month as they changed neckties.
Anthony, the courteous, the subtle, the
perspicacious, was drunk each day—in Sammy’s with these men, in the
apartment over a book, some book he knew, and, very rarely, with
Gloria, who, in his eyes, had begun to develop the unmistakable
outlines of a quarrelsome and unreasonable woman. She was not the
Gloria of old, certainly—the Gloria who, had she been sick, would
have preferred to inflict misery upon every one around her rather
than confess that she needed sympathy or assistance. She was not
above whining now; she was not above being sorry for herself. Each
night when she prepared for bed she smeared her face with some new
unguent which she hoped illogically would give back the glow and
freshness to her vanishing beauty. When Anthony was drunk he
taunted her about this. When he was sober he was polite to her, on
occasions even tender; he seemed to show for short hours a trace of
that old quality of understanding too well to blame—that quality
which was the best of him and had worked swiftly and ceaselessly
toward his ruin.
But he hated to be sober. It made him conscious of
the people around him, of that air of struggle, of greedy ambition,
of hope more sordid than despair, of incessant passage up or down,
which in every metropolis is most in evidence through the unstable
middle class. Unable to live with the rich he thought that his next
choice would have been to live with the very poor. Anything was
better than this cup of perspiration and tears.
The sense of the enormous panorama of life, never
strong in Anthony, had become dim almost to extinction. At long
intervals now some incident, some gesture of Gloria’s, would take
his fancy—but the gray veils had come down in earnest upon him. As
he grew older those things faded—after that there was wine.
There was a kindliness about intoxication—there was
that indescribable gloss and glamour it gave, like the memories of
ephemeral and faded evenings. After a few high-balls there was
magic in the tall glowing Arabian night of the Bush Terminal
Building—its summit a peak of sheer grandeur, gold and dreaming
against the inaccessible sky. And Wall Street, the crass, the
banal—again it was the triumph of gold, a gorgeous sentient
spectacle; it was where the great kings kept the money for their
wars....
... The fruit of youth or of the grape, the
transitory magic of the brief passage from darkness to darkness—the
old illusion that truth and beauty were in some way entwined.
As he stood in front of Delmonico’s lighting a
cigarette one night he saw two hansoms drawn up close to the curb,
waiting for a chance drunken fare. The outmoded cabs were worn and
dirty—the cracked patent leather wrinkled like an old man’s face,
the cushions faded to a brownish lavender; the very horses were
ancient and weary, and so were the white-haired men who sat aloft,
cracking their whips with a grotesque affectation of gallantry. A
relic of vanished gaiety!
Anthony Patch walked away in a sudden fit of
depression, pondering the bitterness of such survivals. There was
nothing, it seemed, that grew stale so soon as pleasure.
On Forty-second Street one afternoon he met
Richard Caramel for the first time in many months, a prosperous,
fattening Richard Caramel, whose face was filling out to match the
Bostonian brow.
“Just got in this week from the coast. Was going to
call you up, but I didn’t know your new address.”
“We’ve moved.”
Richard Caramel noticed that Anthony was wearing a
soiled shirt, that his cuffs were slightly but perceptibly frayed,
that his eyes were set in half-moons the color of
cigar-smoke.
“So I gathered,” he said, fixing his friend with
his bright-yellow eye. “But where and how is Gloria? My God,
Anthony, I’ve been hearing the dog-gonedest stories about you two
even out in California—and when I get back to New York I find
you’ve sunk absolutely out of sight. Why don’t you pull yourself
together?”
“Now, listen,” chattered Anthony unsteadily, “I
can’t stand a long lecture. We’ve lost money in a dozen ways, and
naturally people have talked—on account of the lawsuit, but the
thing’s coming to a final decision this winter, surely—”
“You’re talking so fast that I can’t understand
you,” interrupted Dick calmly.
“Well, I’ve said all I’m going to say,” snapped
Anthony. “Come and see us if you like—or don’t!”
With this he turned and started to walk off in the
crowd, but Dick overtook him immediately and grasped his arm.
“Say, Anthony, don’t fly off the handle so easily!
You know Gloria’s my cousin, and you’re one of my oldest friends,
so it’s natural for me to be interested when I hear that you’re
going to the dogs—and taking her with you.”
“I don’t want to be preached to.”
“Well, then, all right—How about coming up to my
apartment and having a drink? I’ve just got settled. I’ve bought
three cases of Gordon gin from a revenue officer.”
As they walked along he continued in a burst of
exasperation:
“And how about your grandfather’s money—you going
to get it?”
“Well,” answered Anthony resentfully, “that old
fool Haight seems hopeful, especially because people are tired of
reformers right now—you know it might make a slight difference, for
instance, if some judge thought that Adam Patch made it harder for
him to get liquor.”
“You can’t do without money,” said Dick
sententiously. “Have you tried to write any—lately?”
Anthony shook his head silently.
“That’s funny,” said Dick. “I always thought that
you and Maury would write some day, and now he’s grown to be a sort
of tightfisted aristocrat, and you’re—”
“I’m the bad example.”
“I wonder why?”
“You probably think you know,” suggested Anthony,
with an effort at concentration. “The failure and the success both
believe in their hearts that they have accurately balanced points
of view, the success because he’s succeeded, and the failure
because he’s failed. The successful man tells his son to profit by
his father’s good fortune, and the failure tells his son to
profit by his father’s mistakes.”
“I don’t agree with you,” said the author of “A
Shave-tail in France.” “I used to listen to you and Maury when we
were young, and I used to be impressed because you were so
consistently cynical, but now—well, after all, by God, which of us
three has taken to the—to the intellectual life? I don’t want to
sound vainglorious, but—it’s me, and I’ve always believed that
moral values existed, and I always will.”
“Well,” objected Anthony, who was rather enjoying
himself, “even granting that, you know that in practice life never
presents problems as clear cut, does it?”
“It does to me. There’s nothing I’d violate certain
principles for.”
“But how do you know when you’re violating them?
You have to guess at things just like most people do. You have to
apportion the values when you look back. You finish up the portrait
then—paint in the details and shadows.”
Dick shook his head with a lofty
stubbornness.
“Same old futile cynic,” he said, “It’s just a mode
of being sorry for yourself. You don’t do anything—so nothing
matters.”
“Oh, I’m quite capable of self-pity,” admitted
Anthony, “nor am I claiming that I’m getting as much fun out of
life as you are.”
“You say—at least you used to—that happiness is the
only thing worth while in life. Do you think you’re any happier for
being a pessimist?”
Anthony grunted savagely. His pleasure in the
conversation began to wane. He was nervous and craving for a
drink.
“My golly!” he cried, “where do you live? I can’t
keep walking forever.”
“Your endurance is all mental, eh?” returned Dick
sharply. “Well, I live right here.”
He turned in at the apartment-house on Forty-ninth
Street, and a few minutes later they were in a large new room with
an open fireplace and four walls lined with books. A colored butler
served them gin rickeys, and an hour vanished politely with the
mellow shortening of their drinks and the glow of a light
mid-autumn fire.
“The arts are very old,” said Anthony after a
while. With a few glasses the tension of his nerves relaxed and he
found that he could think again.
“Which art?”
“All of them. Poetry is dying first. It’ll be
absorbed into prose sooner or later. For instance, the beautiful
word, the colored and glittering word, and the beautiful simile
belong in prose now. To get attention poetry has got to strain for
the unusual word, the harsh, earthy word that’s never been
beautiful before. Beauty, as the sum of several beautiful parts,
reached its apotheosis in Swinburne. It can’t go any further—except
in the novel, perhaps.”
Dick interrupted him impatiently:
“You know these new novels make me tired. My God!
Everywhere I go some silly girl asks me if I’ve read ‘This Side of
Paradise.’ y Are
our girls really like that? If it’s true to life, which I don’t
believe, the next generation is going to the dogs. I’m sick of all
this shoddy realism. I think there’s a place for the romanticist in
literature.”
Anthony tried to remember what he had read lately
of Richard Caramel’s. There was “A Shave-tail in France,” a novel
called “The Land of Strong Men,” and several dozen short stories,
which were even worse. It had become the custom among young and
clever reviewers to mention Richard Caramel with a smile of scorn.
“Mr.” Richard Caramel, they called him. His corpse was dragged
obscenely through every literary supplement. He was accused of
making a great fortune by writing trash for the movies. As the
fashion in books shifted he was becoming almost a byword of
contempt.
While Anthony was thinking this, Dick had got to
his feet and seemed to be hesitating at an avowal.
“I’ve gathered quite a few books,” he said
suddenly.
“So I see.”
“I’ve made an exhaustive collection of good
American stuff, old and new. I don’t mean the usual
Longfellow-Whittier thing—in fact, most of it’s modern.”
He stepped to one of the walls and, seeing that it
was expected of him, Anthony arose and followed.
“Look!”
Under a printed tag Americana he displayed
six long rows of books, beautifully bound and, obviously, carefully
chosen.
“And here are the contemporary novelists.”
Then Anthony saw the joker. Wedged in between Mark
Twain and Dreiser were eight strange and inappropriate volumes, the
works of Richard Caramel—“The Demon Lover,” true enough ... but
also seven others that were execrably awful, without sincerity or
grace.
Unwillingly Anthony glanced at Dick’s face and
caught a slight uncertainty there.
“I’ve put my own books in, of course,” said Richard
Caramel hastily, “though one or two of them are uneven—I’m afraid I
wrote a little too fast when I had that magazine contract. But I
don’t believe in false modesty. Of course some of the critics
haven’t paid so much attention to me since I’ve been
established—but, after all, it’s not the critics that count.
They’re just sheep.”
For the first time in so long that he could
scarcely remember, Anthony felt a touch of the old pleasant
contempt for his friend. Richard Caramel continued:
“My publishers, you know, have been advertising me
as the Thackeray of America—because of my New York novel.”
“Yes,” Anthony managed to muster, “I suppose
there’s a good deal in what you say.”
He knew that his contempt was unreasonable. He knew
that he would have changed places with Dick unhesitatingly. He
himself had tried his best to write with his tongue in his cheek.
Ah, well, then—can a man disparage his life-work so readily?
...
—And that night while Richard Caramel was hard at
toil, with great hittings of the wrong keys and screwings up of his
weary, unmatched eyes, laboring over his trash far into those
cheerless hours when the fire dies down, and the head is swimming
from the effect of prolonged concentration—Anthony, abominably
drunk, was sprawled across the back seat of a taxi on his way to
the flat on Claremont Avenue.
The Beating
As winter approached it seemed that a sort of
madness seized upon Anthony. He awoke in the morning so nervous
that Gloria could feel him trembling in the bed before he could
muster enough vitality to stumble into the pantry for a drink. He
was intolerable now except under the influence of liquor, and as he
seemed to decay and coarsen under her eyes, Gloria’s soul and body
shrank away from him; when he stayed out all night, as he did
several times, she not only failed to be sorry but even felt a
measure of dismal relief Next day he would be faintly repentant,
and would remark in a gruff, hang-dog fashion that he guessed he
was drinking a little too much.
For hours at a time he would sit in the great
armchair that had been in his apartment, lost in a sort of
stupor—even his interest in reading his favorite books seemed to
have departed, and though an incessant bickering went on between
husband and wife, the one subject upon which they ever really
conversed was the progress of the will case. What Gloria hoped in
the tenebrous depths of her soul, what she expected that great gift
of money to bring about, is difficult to imagine. She was being
bent by her environment into a grotesque similitude of a housewife.
She who until three years before had never made coffee, prepared
sometimes three meals a day. She walked a great deal in the
afternoons, and in the evenings she read—books, magazines, anything
she found at hand. If now she wished for a child, even a child of
the Anthony who sought her bed blind drunk, she neither said so nor
gave any show or sign of interest in children. It is doubtful if
she could have made it clear to any one what it was she wanted, or
indeed what there was to want—a lonely, lovely woman, thirty now,
retrenched behind some impregnable inhibition born and coexistent
with her beauty.
One afternoon when the snow was dirty again along
Riverside Drive, Gloria, who had been to the grocer’s, entered the
apartment to find Anthony pacing the floor in a state of aggravated
nervousness. The feverish eyes he turned on her were traced with
tiny pink lines that reminded her of rivers on a map. For a moment
she received the impression that he was suddenly and definitely
old.
“Have you any money?” he inquired of her
precipitately.
“What? What do you mean?”
“Just what I said. Money! Money! Can’t you speak
English?”
She paid no attention but brushed by him and into
the pantry to put the bacon and eggs in the ice-box. When his
drinking had been unusually excessive he was invariably in a
whining mood. This time he followed her and, standing in the pantry
door, persisted in his question.
“You heard what I said. Have you any money?”
She turned about from the ice-box and faced
him.
“Why, Anthony, you must be crazy! You know I
haven’t any money—except a dollar in change.”
He executed an abrupt about-face and returned to
the living-room, where he renewed his pacing. It was evident that
he had something portentous on his mind—he quite obviously wanted
to be asked what was the matter. Joining him a moment later she sat
upon the long lounge and began taking down her hair. It was no
longer bobbed, and it had changed in the last year from a rich gold
dusted with red to an unresplendent light brown. She had brought
some shampoo soap and meant to wash it now; she had considered
putting a bottle of peroxide into the rinsing water.
“—Well?” she implied silently.
“That darn bank!” he quavered. “They’ve had my
account for over ten years—ten years. Well, it seems they’ve
got some autocratic rule that you have to keep over five hundred
dollars there or they won’t carry you. They wrote me a letter a few
months ago and told me I’d been running too low. Once I gave out
two bum checks—remember? that night in Reisenweber’s?—but I made
them good the very next day. Well, I promised old Halloran—he’s the
manager, the greedy Mick—that I’d watch out. And I thought I was
going all right; I kept up the stubs in my check-book pretty
regular. Well, I went in there to-day to cash a check, and Halloran
came up and told me they’d have to close my account. Too many bad
checks, he said, and I never had more than five hundred to my
credit—and that only for a day or so at a time. And by God! What do
you think he said then?”
“What?”
“He said this was a good time to do it because I
didn’t have a damn penny in there!”
“You didn’t?”
“That’s what he told me. Seems I’d given these
Bedros people a check for sixty for that last case of liquor—and I
only had forty-five dollars in the bank. Well, the Bedros people
deposited fifteen dollars to my account and drew the whole thing
out.”
In her ignorance Gloria conjured up a spectre of
imprisonment and disgrace.
“Oh, they won’t do anything,” he assured her.
“Boot-legging’s too risky a business. They’ll send me a bill for
fifteen dollars and I’ll pay it.”
“Oh.” She considered a moment. “—Well, we can sell
another bond.”
He laughed sarcastically.
“Oh, yes, that’s always easy. When the few bonds we
have that are paying any interest at all are only worth between
fifty and eighty cents on the dollar. We lose about half the bond
every time we sell.”
“What else can we do?”
“Oh, we’ll sell something—as usual. We’ve got paper
worth eighty thousand dollars at par.” Again he laughed
unpleasantly. “Bring about thirty thousand on the open
market.”
“I distrusted those ten per cent
investments.”
“The deuce you did!” he said. “You pretended you
did, so you could claw at me if they went to pieces, but you wanted
to take a chance as much as I did.”
She was silent for a moment as if considering,
then:
“Anthony,” she cried suddenly, “two hundred a month
is worse than nothing. Let’s sell all the bonds and put the thirty
thousand dollars in the bank—and if we lose the case we can live in
Italy for three years, and then just die.” In her excitement as she
talked she was aware of a faint flush of sentiment, the first she
had felt in many days.
“Three years,” he said nervously, “three years!
You’re crazy. Mr. Haight’ll take more than that if we lose. Do you
think he’s working for charity?”
“I forgot that.”
“—And here it is Saturday,” he continued, “and I’ve
only got a dollar and some change, and we’ve got to live till
Monday, when I can get to my broker’s.... And not a drink in the
house,” he added as a significant after-thought.
“Can’t you call up Dick?”
“I did. His man says he’s gone down to Princeton to
address a literary club or some such thing. Won’t be back till
Monday.”
“Well, let’s see—Don’t you know some friend you
might go to?”
“I tried a couple of fellows. Couldn’t find anybody
in. I wish I’d sold that Keatsz letter
like I started to last week.”
“How about those men you play cards with in that
Sammy place?”
“Do you think I’d ask them?” His voice rang
with righteous horror. Gloria winced. He would rather contemplate
her active discomfort than feel his own skin crawl at asking an
inappropriate favor. “I thought of Muriel,” he suggested.
“She’s in California.”
“Well, how about some of those men who gave you
such a good time while I was in the army? You’d think they might be
glad to do a little favor for you.”
She looked at him contemptuously, but he took no
notice.
“Or how about your old friend Rachael—or Constance
Merriam?”
“Constance Merriam’s been dead a year, and I
wouldn’t ask Rachael.”
“Well, how about that gentleman who was so anxious
to help you once that he could hardly restrain himself,
Bloeckman?”
“Oh—!” He had hurt her at last, and he was not too
obtuse or too careless to perceive it.
“Why not him?” he insisted callously.
“Because—he doesn’t like me any more,” she said
with difficulty, and then as he did not answer but only regarded
her cynically: “If you want to know why, I’ll tell you. A year ago
I went to Bloeckman—he’s changed his name to Black—and asked him to
put me into pictures.”
“You went to Bloeckman?”
“Yes.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?” he demanded
incredulously, the smile fading from his face.
“Because you were probably off drinking somewhere.
He had them give me a test, and they decided that I wasn’t young
enough for anything except a character part.”
“A character part?”
“The ‘woman of thirty’ sort of thing. I wasn’t
thirty, and I didn’t think I—looked thirty.”
“Why, damn him!” cried Anthony, championing her
violently with a curious perverseness of emotion, “why—”
“Well, that’s why I can’t go to him.”
“Why, the insolence!” insisted Anthony nervously,
“the insolence!”
“Anthony, that doesn’t matter now; the thing is
we’ve got to live over Sunday and there’s nothing in the house but
a loaf of bread and a half-pound of bacon and two eggs for
breakfast.” She handed him the contents of her purse. “There’s
seventy, eighty, a dollar fifteen. With what you have that makes
about two and a half altogether, doesn’t it? Anthony, we can get
along on that. We can buy lots of food with that—more than we can
possibly eat.”
Jingling the change in his hand he shook his
head.
“No. I’ve got to have a drink. I’m so darn nervous
that I’m shivering.” A thought struck him. “Perhaps Sammy’d cash a
check. And then Monday I could rush down to the bank with the
money.”
“But they’ve closed your account.”
“That’s right, that’s right—I’d forgotten. I’ll
tell you what: I’ll go down to Sammy’s and I’ll find somebody there
who’ll lend me something. I hate like the devil to ask them,
though....” He snapped his fingers suddenly. “I know what I’ll do.
I’ll hock my watch. I can get twenty dollars on it, and get it back
Monday for sixty cents extra. It’s been hocked before—when I was at
Cambridge.”
He had put on his overcoat, and with a brief
good-by he started down the hall toward the outer door.
Gloria got to her feet. It had suddenly occurred to
her where he would probably go first.
“Anthony!” she called after him, “hadn’t you better
leave two dollars with me? You’ll only need car-fare.”
The outer door slammed—he had pretended not to hear
her. She stood for a moment looking after him; then she went into
the bathroom among her tragic unguents and began preparations for
washing her hair.
Down at Sammy’s he found Parker Allison and Pete
Lytell sitting alone at a table, drinking whiskey sours. It was
just after six o’clock, and Sammy, or Samuele Bendiri, as he had
been christened, was sweeping an accumulation of cigarette butts
and broken glass into a corner.
“Hi, Tony!” called Parker Allison to Anthony.
Sometimes he addressed him as Tony, at other times it was Dan. To
him all Anthonys must sail under one of these diminutives.
“Sit down. What’ll you have?”
On the subway Anthony had counted his money and
found that he had almost four dollars. He could pay for two rounds
at fifty cents a drink—which meant that he would have six drinks.
Then he would go over to Sixth Avenue and get twenty dollars and a
pawn-ticket in exchange for his watch.
“Well, roughnecks,” he said jovially, “how’s the
life of crime?”
“Pretty good,” said Allison. He winked at Pete
Lytell. “Too bad you’re a married man. We’ve got some pretty good
stuff lined up for about eleven o’clock, when the shows let out.
Oh, boy! Yes, sir—too bad he’s married—isn’t it, Pete?”
“’Sa shame.”
At half past seven, when they had completed the six
rounds, Anthony found that his intentions were giving audience to
his desires. He was happy and cheerful now—thoroughly enjoying
himself. It seemed to him that the story which Pete had just
finished telling was unusually and profoundly humorous—and he
decided, as he did every day at about this point, that they were
“damn good fellows, by golly!” who would do a lot more for him than
any one else he knew. The pawnshops would remain open until late
Saturday nights, and he felt that if he took just one more drink he
would attain a gorgeous rose-colored exhilaration.
Artfully, he fished in his vest pockets, brought up
his two quarters, and stared at them as though in surprise.
“Well, I’ll be darned,” he protested in an
aggrieved tone, “here I’ve come out without my pocketbook.”
“Need some cash?” asked Lytell easily.
“I left my money on the dresser at home. And I
wanted to buy you another drink.”
“Oh—knock it.” Lytell waved the suggestion away
disparagingly. “I guess we can blow a good fella to all the drinks
he wants. What’ll you have—same?”
“I tell you,” suggested Parker Allison, “suppose we
send Sammy across the street for some sandwiches and eat dinner
here.”
The other two agreed.
“Good idea.”
“Hey, Sammy, wantcha do somep’m for us....”
Just after nine o’clock Anthony staggered to his
feet and, bidding them a thick good night, walked unsteadily to the
door, handing Sammy one of his two quarters as he passed out. Once
in the street he hesitated uncertainly and then started in the
direction of Sixth Avenue, where he remembered to have frequently
passed several loan-offices. He went by a news-stand and two
drug-stores—and then he realized that he was standing in front of
the place which he sought, and that it was shut and barred.
Unperturbed he continued; another one, half a block down, was also
closed—so were two more across the street, and a fifth in the
square below. Seeing a faint light in the last one, he began to
knock on the glass door; he desisted only when a watchman appeared
in the back of the shop and motioned him angrily to move on. With
growing discouragement, with growing befuddlement, he crossed the
street and walked back toward Forty-third. On the corner near
Sammy’s he paused undecided—if he went back to the apartment, as he
felt his body required, he would lay himself open to bitter
reproach; yet, now that the pawnshops were closed, he had no notion
where to get the money. He decided finally that he might ask Parker
Allison, after all—but he approached Sammy’s only to find the door
locked and the lights out. He looked at his watch; nine-thirty. He
began walking.
Ten minutes later he stopped aimlessly at the
corner of Forty-third Street and Madison Avenue, diagonally across
from the bright but nearly deserted entrance to the Biltmore Hotel.
Here he stood for a moment, and then sat down heavily on a damp
board amid some debris of construction work. He rested there for
almost half an hour, his mind a shifting pattern of surface
thoughts, chiefest among which were that he must obtain some money
and get home before he became too sodden to find his way.
Then, glancing over toward the Biltmore, he saw a
man standing directly under the overhead glow of the porte-cochère
lamps beside a woman in an ermine coat. As Anthony watched, the
couple moved forward and signalled to a taxi. Anthony perceived by
the infallible identification that lurks in the walk of a friend
that it was Maury Noble.
He rose to his feet.
“Maury!” he shouted.
Maury looked in his direction, then turned back to
the girl just as the taxi came up into place. With the chaotic idea
of borrowing ten dollars, Anthony began to run as fast as he could
across Madison Avenue and along Forty-third Street.
As he came up Maury was standing beside the yawning
door of the taxicab. His companion turned and looked curiously at
Anthony.
“Hello, Maury!” he said, holding out his hand. “How
are you?”
“Fine, thank you.”
Their hands dropped and Anthony hesitated. Maury
made no move to introduce him, but only stood there regarding him
with an inscrutable feline silence.
“I wanted to see you—” began Anthony uncertainly.
He did not feel that he could ask for a loan with the girl not four
feet away, so he broke off and made a perceptible motion of his
head as if to beckon Maury to one side.
“I’m in rather a big hurry, Anthony.”
“I know—but can you, can you—” Again he
hesitated.
“I’ll see you some other time,” said Maury.
“It’s important.”
“I’m sorry, Anthony.”
Before Anthony could make up his mind to blurt out
his request, Maury had turned coolly to the girl, helped her into
the car and, with a polite “good evening,” stepped in after her. As
he nodded from the window it seemed to Anthony that his expression
had not changed by a shade or a hair. Then with a fretful clatter
the taxi moved off, and Anthony was left standing there alone under
the lights.
Anthony went on into the Biltmore, for no reason in
particular except that the entrance was at hand, and ascending the
wide stair found a seat in an alcove. He was furiously aware that
he had been snubbed; he was as hurt and angry as it was possible
for him to be when in that condition. Nevertheless, he was
stubbornly preoccupied with the necessity of obtaining some money
before he went home, and once again he told over on his fingers the
acquaintances he might conceivably call on in this emergency. He
thought, eventually, that he might approach Mr. Howland, his
broker, at his home.
After a long wait he found that Mr. Howland was
out. He returned to the operator, leaning over her desk and
fingering his quarter as though loath to leave unsatisfied.
“Call Mr. Bloeckman,” he said suddenly. His own
words surprised him. The name had come from some crossing of two
suggestions in his mind.
“What’s the number, please?”
Scarcely conscious of what he did, Anthony looked
up Joseph Bloeckman in the telephone directory. He could find no
such person, and was about to close the book when it flashed into
his mind that Gloria had mentioned a change of name. It was the
matter of a minute to find Joseph Black—then he waited in the booth
while central called the number.
“Hello-o. Mr. Bloeckman—I mean Mr. Black in?”
“No, he’s out this evening. Is there any message?”
The intonation was cockney; it reminded him of the rich vocal
deferences of Bounds.
“Where is he?”
“Why, ah, who is this, please, sir?”
“This Mr. Patch. Matter of vi’al importance.”
“Why, he’s with a party at the Boul’ Mich’,
sir.”
“Thanks.”
Anthony got his five cents change and started for
the Boul’ Mich‘, a popular dancing resort on Forty-fifth Street. It
was nearly ten but the streets were dark and sparsely peopled until
the theatres should eject their spawn an hour later. Anthony knew
the Boul’ Mich’, for he had been there with Gloria during the year
before, and he remembered the existence of a rule that patrons must
be in evening dress. Well, he would not go up-stairs—he would send
a boy up for Bloeckman and wait for him in the lower hall. For a
moment he did not doubt that the whole project was entirely natural
and graceful. To his distorted imagination Bloeckman had become
simply one of his old friends.
The entrance-hall of the Boul’ Mich’ was warm.
There were high yellow lights over a thick green carpet, from the
centre of which a white stairway rose to the dancing floor.
Anthony spoke to the hallboy:
“I want to see Mr. Bloeckman—Mr. Black,” he said.
“He’s up-stairs—have him paged.”
The boy shook his head.
“’Sagainsa rules to have him paged. You know what
table he’s at?”
“No. But I’ve got see him.”
“Wait an’ I’ll getcha waiter.”
After a short interval a head waiter appeared,
bearing a card on which were charted the table reservations. He
darted a cynical look at Anthony—which, however, failed of its
target. Together they bent over the cardboard and found the table
without difficulty—a party of eight, Mr. Black’s own.
“Tell him Mr. Patch. Very, very important.”
Again he waited, leaning against the banister and
listening to the confused harmonies of “Jazz-mad” which came
floating down the stairs. A check-girl near him was singing:
“Out in—the shimmee sanitarium
The jazz-mad nuts reside.
Out in—the shimmee sanitarium
I left my blushing bride.
She went and shook herself insane,
So let her shiver back again—”
The jazz-mad nuts reside.
Out in—the shimmee sanitarium
I left my blushing bride.
She went and shook herself insane,
So let her shiver back again—”
Then he saw Bloeckman descending the staircase, and
took a step forward to meet him and shake hands.
“You wanted to see me?” said the older man
coolly.
“Yes,” answered Anthony, nodding, “personal matter.
Can you jus’ step over here?”
Regarding him narrowly Bloeckman followed Anthony
to a half bend made by the staircase where they were beyond
observation or earshot of any one entering or leaving the
restaurant.
“Well?” he inquired.
“Wanted talk to you.”
“What about?”
Anthony only laughed—a silly laugh; he intended it
to sound casual.
“What do you want to talk to me about?” repeated
Bloeckman.
“Wha’s hurry, old man?” He tried to lay his hand in
a friendly gesture upon Bloeckman’s shoulder, but the latter drew
away slightly. “How’ve been?”
“Very well, thanks.... See here, Mr. Patch; I’ve
got a party up-stairs. They’ll think it’s rude if I stay away too
long. What was it you wanted to see me about?”
For the second time that evening Anthony’s mind
made an abrupt jump, and what he said was not at all what he had
intended to say.
“Un’erstand you kep’ my wife out of the
movies.”
“What?” Bloeckman’s ruddy face darkened in parallel
planes of shadows.
“You heard me.”
“Look here, Mr. Patch,” said Bloeckman, evenly and
without changing his expression, “you’re drunk. You’re disgustingly
and insultingly drunk.”
“Not too drunk talk to you,” insisted Anthony with
a leer. “Firs’ place, my wife wants nothin’ whatever do with you.
Never did. Un’erstand me?”
“Be quiet!” said the older man angrily. “I should
think you’d respect your wife enough not to bring her into the
conversation under these circumstances.”
“Never you min’ how I expect my wife. One thing—you
leave her alone. You go to hell!”
“See here—I think you’re a little crazy!” exclaimed
Bloeckman. He took two paces forward as though to pass by, but
Anthony stepped in his way.
“Not so fas’, you Goddam Jew”
For a moment they stood regarding each other,
Anthony swaying gently from side to side, Bloeckman almost
trembling with fury.
“Be careful!” he cried in a strained voice.
Anthony might have remembered then a certain look
Bloeckman had given him in the Biltmore Hotel years before. But he
remembered nothing, nothing—
“I’ll say it again, you God—”
Then Bloeckman struck out, with all the strength in
the arm of a well-conditioned man of forty-five, struck out and
caught Anthony squarely in the mouth. Anthony cracked up against
the staircase, recovered himself and made a wild drunken swing at
his opponent, but Bloeckman, who took exercise every day and knew
something of sparring, blocked it with ease and struck him twice in
the face with two swift smashing jabs. Anthony gave a little grunt
and toppled over onto the green-plush carpet, finding, as he fell,
that his mouth was full of blood and seemed oddly loose in front.
He struggled to his feet, panting and spitting, and then as he
started toward Bloeckman, who stood a few feet away, his fists
clenched but not up, two waiters who had appeared from nowhere
seized his arms and held him, helpless. In back of them a dozen
people had miraculously gathered.
“I’ll kill him,” cried Anthony, pitching and
straining from side to side. “Let me kill—”
“Throw him out!” ordered Bloeckman excitedly, just
as a small man with a pockmarked face pushed his way hurriedly
through the spectators.
“Any trouble, Mr. Black?”
“This bum tried to blackmail me!” said Bloeckman,
and then, his voice rising to a faintly shrill note of pride: “He
got what was coming to him!”
The little man turned to a waiter.
“Call a policeman!” he commanded.
“Oh, no,” said Bloeckman quickly. “I can’t be
bothered. Just throw him out in the street.... Ugh! What an
outrage!” He turned and with conscious dignity walked toward the
wash-room just as six brawny hands seized upon Anthony and dragged
him toward the door. The “bum” was propelled violently to the
sidewalk, where he landed on his hands and knees with a grotesque
slapping sound and rolled over slowly onto his side.
The shock stunned him. He lay there for a moment in
acute distributed pain. Then his discomfort became centralized in
his stomach, and he regained consciousness to discover that a large
foot was prodding him.
“You’ve got to move on, y’ bum! Move on!”
It was the bulky doorman speaking. A town car had
stopped at the curb and its occupants had disembarked—that is, two
of the women were standing on the dashboard, waiting in offended
delicacy until this obscene obstacle should be removed from their
path.
“Move on! Or else I’ll throw y’on!”
“Here—I’ll get him.”
This was a new voice; Anthony imagined that it was
somehow more tolerant, better disposed than the first. Again arms
were about him, half lifting, half dragging him into a welcome
shadow four doors up the street and propping him against the stone
front of a millinery shop.
“Much obliged,” muttered Anthony feebly. Some one
pushed his soft hat down upon his head and he winced.
“Just sit still, buddy, and you’ll feel better.
Those guys sure give you a bump.”
“I’m going back and kill that dirty—” He tried to
get to his feet but collapsed backward against the wall.
“You can’t do nothin’ now,” came the voice. “Get
’em some other time. I’m tellin’ you straight, ain’t I? I’m helpin’
you.”
Anthony nodded.
“An’ you better go home. You dropped a tooth
to-night, buddy. You know that?”
Anthony explored his mouth with his tongue,
verifying the statement. Then with an effort he raised his hand and
located the gap.
“I’m agoin’ to get you home, friend. Whereabouts do
you live—”
“Oh, by God! By God!” interrupted Anthony,
clenching his fists passionately. “I’ll show the dirty bunch. You
help me show’em and I’ll fix it with you. My grandfather’s Adam
Patch, of Tarrytown—”
“Who?”
“Adam Patch, by God!”
“You wanna go all the way to Tarrytown?”
“No.”
“Well, you tell me where to go, friend, and I’ll
get a cab.”
Anthony made out that his Samaritan was a short,
broad-shouldered individual, somewhat the worse for wear.
“Where d’you live, hey?”
Sodden and shaken as he was, Anthony felt that his
address would be poor collateral for his wild boast about his
grandfather.
“Get me a cab,” he commanded, feeling in his
pockets.
A taxi drove up. Again Anthony essayed to rise, but
his ankle swung loose, as though it were in two sections. The
Samaritan must needs help him in—and climb in after him.
“See here, fella,” said he, “you’re soused and
you’re bunged up, and you won’t be able to get in your house less
somebody carries you in, so I’m going with you, and I know you’ll
make it all right with me. Where d’you live?”
With some reluctance Anthony gave his address.
Then, as the cab moved off, he leaned his head against the man’s
shoulder and went into a shadowy, painful torpor. When he awoke,
the man had lifted him from the cab in front of the apartment on
Claremont Avenue and was trying to set him on his feet.
“Can y’ walk?”
“Yes—sort of. You better not come in with me.”
Again he felt helplessly in his pockets. “Say,” he continued,
apologetically, swaying dangerously on his feet, “I’m afraid I
haven’t got a cent.”
“Huh?”
“I’m cleaned out.”
“Sa-a-ay! Didn’t I hear you promise you’d fix it
with me? Who’s goin’ to pay the taxi bill?” He turned to the driver
for confirmation. “Didn’t you hear him say he’d fix it? All that
about his grandfather?”
“Matter of fact,” muttered Anthony imprudently, “it
was you did all the talking; however, if you come round,
to-morrow—”
At this point the taxi-driver leaned from his cab
and said ferociously:
“Ah, poke him one, the dirty cheap skate. If he
wasn’t a bum they wouldn’ta throwed him out.”
In answer to this suggestion the fist of the
Samaritan shot out like a battering-ram and sent Anthony crashing
down against the stone steps of the apartment-house, where he lay
without movement, while the tall buildings rocked to and fro above
him....
After a long while he awoke and was conscious that
it had grown much colder. He tried to move himself but his muscles
refused to function. He was curiously anxious to know the time, but
he reached for his watch, only to find the pocket empty.
Involuntarily his lips formed an immemorial phrase:
“What a night!”
Strangely enough, he was almost sober. Without
moving his head he looked up to where the moon was anchored in
mid-sky, shedding light down into Claremont Avenue as into the
bottom of a deep and uncharted abyss. There was no sign or sound of
life save for the continuous buzzing in his own ears, but after a
moment Anthony himself broke the silence with a distinct and
peculiar murmur. It was the sound that he had consistently
attempted to make back there in the Boul’ Mich’, when he had been
face to face with Bloeckman—the unmistakable sound of ironic
laughter. And on his torn and bleeding lips it was like a pitiful
retching of the soul.
Three weeks later the trial came to an end. The
seemingly endless spool of legal red tape having unrolled over a
period of four and a half years, suddenly snapped off. Anthony and
Gloria and, on the other side, Edward Shuttleworth and a platoon of
beneficiaries testified and lied and ill-behaved generally in
varying degrees of greed and desperation. Anthony awoke one morning
in March realizing that the verdict was to be given at four that
afternoon, and at the thought he got up out of his bed and began to
dress. With his extreme nervousness there was mingled an
unjustified optimism as to the outcome. He believed that the
decision of the lower court would be reversed, if only because of
the reaction, due to excessive prohibition, that had recently set
in against reforms and reformers. He counted more on the personal
attacks that they had levelled at Shuttleworth than on the more
sheerly legal aspects of the proceedings.
Dressed, he poured himself a drink of whiskey and
then went into Gloria’s room, where he found her already wide
awake. She had been in bed for a week, humoring herself, Anthony
fancied, though the doctor had said that she had best not be
disturbed.
“Good morning,” she murmured, without smiling. Her
eyes seemed unusually large and dark.
“How do you feel?” he asked grudgingly.
“Better?”
“Yes.”
“Much?”
“Yes.”
“Do you feel well enough to go down to court with
me this afternoon?”
She nodded.
“Yes. I want to. Dick said yesterday that if the
weather was nice he was coming up in his car and take me for a ride
in Central Park—and look, the room’s all full of sunshine.”
Anthony glanced mechanically out the window and
then sat down upon the bed.
“God, I’m nervous!” he exclaimed.
“Please don’t sit there,” she said quickly.
“Why not?”
“You smell of whiskey. I can’t stand it.”
He got up absent-mindedly and left the room. A
little later she called to him and he went out and brought her some
potato salad and cold chicken from the delicatessen.
At two o’clock Richard Caramel’s car arrived at the
door and, when he phoned up, Anthony took Gloria down in the
elevator and walked with her to the curb.
She told her cousin that it was sweet of him to
take her riding. “Don’t be simple,” Dick replied disparagingly.
“It’s nothing.”
But he did not mean that it was nothing and this
was a curious thing. Richard Caramel had forgiven many people for
many offenses. But he had never forgiven his cousin, Gloria
Gilbert, for a statement she had made just prior to her wedding,
seven years before. She had said that she did not intend to read
his book.
Richard Caramel remembered this—he had remembered
it well for seven years.
“What time will I expect you back?” asked
Anthony.
“We won’t come back,” she answered, “we’ll meet you
down there at four.”
“All right,” he muttered, “I’ll meet you.”
Up-stairs he found a letter waiting for him. It was
a mimeographed notice urging “the boys” in condescendingly
colloquial language to pay the dues of the American Legion. He
threw it impatiently into the waste-basket and sat down with his
elbows on the window-sill, looking down blindly into the sunny
street.
Italy—if the verdict was in their favor it meant
Italy.3 The word
had become a sort of talisman to him, a land where the intolerable
anxieties of life would fall away like an old garment. They would
go to the watering-places first and among the bright and colorful
crowds forget the gray appendages of despair. Marvellously renewed,
he would walk again in the Piazza di Spogna at twilight, moving in
that drifting flotsam of dark women and ragged beggars, of austere,
barefooted friars. The thought of Italian women stirred him
faintly—when his purse hung heavy again even romance might fly back
to perch upon it—the romance of blue canals in Venice, of the
golden green hills of Fiesole after rain, and of women, women who
changed, dissolved, melted into other women and receded from his
life, but who were always beautiful and always young.
But it seemed to him that there should be a
difference in his attitude. All the distress that he had ever
known, the sorrow and the pain, had been because of women. It was
something that in different ways they did to him, unconsciously,
almost casually—perhaps finding him tender-minded and afraid, they
killed the things in him that menaced their absolute sway.
Turning about from the window he faced his
reflection in the mirror, contemplating dejectedly the wan, pasty
face, the eyes with their crisscross of lines like shreds of dried
blood, the stooped and flabby figure whose very sag was a document
in lethargy. He was thirty-three—he looked forty. Well, things
would be different.
The door-bell rang abruptly and he started as
though he had been dealt a blow. Recovering himself, he went into
the hall and opened the outer door. It was Dot.
The Encounter
He retreated before her into the living-room,
comprehending only a word here and there in the slow flood of
sentences that poured from her steadily, one after the other, in a
persistent monotone. She was decently and shabbily dressed—a
somehow pitiable little hat adorned with pink and blue flowers
covered and hid her dark hair. He gathered from her words that
several days before she had seen an item in the paper concerning
the lawsuit, and had obtained his address from the clerk of the
Appellate Division. She had called up the apartment and had been
told that Anthony was out by a woman to whom she had refused to
give her name.
In the living-room he stood by the door regarding
her with a sort of stupefied horror as she rattled on.... His
predominant sensation was that all the civilization and convention
around him was curiously unreal.... She was in a milliner’s shop on
Sixth Avenue, she said. It was a lonesome life. She had been sick
for a long while after he left for Camp Mills; her mother had come
down and taken her home again to Carolina.... She had come to New
York with the idea of finding Anthony.
She was appallingly in earnest. Her violet eyes
were red with tears; her soft intonation was ragged with little
gasping sobs.
That was all. She had never changed. She wanted him
now, and if she couldn’t have him she must die....
“You’ll have to get out,” he said at length,
speaking with tortuous intensity. “Haven’t I enough to worry me now
without you coming here? My God ! You’ll have to get
out!”
Sobbing, she sat down in a chair.
“I love you,” she cried; “I don’t care what you say
to me! I love you.”
“I don’t care!” he almost shrieked; “get out—oh,
get out! Haven’t you done me harm enough?
Haven’t—you—done—enough?”
“Hit me!” she implored him—wildly, stupidly. “Oh,
hit me, and I’ll kiss the hand you hit me with!”
His voice rose until it was pitched almost at a
scream. “I’ll kill you!” he cried. “If you don’t get out I’ll kill
you, I’ll kill you!”
There was madness in his eyes now, but,
unintimidated, Dot rose and took a step toward him.
“Anthony! Anthony!—”
He made a little clicking sound with his teeth and
drew back as though to spring at her—then, changing his purpose, he
looked wildly about him on the floor and wall.
“I’ll kill you!” he was muttering in short, broken
gasps. “I’ll kill you!” He seemed to bite at the word as
though to force it into materialization. Alarmed at last she made
no further movement forward, but meeting his frantic eyes took a
step back toward the door. Anthony began to race here and there on
his side of the room, still giving out his single cursing cry. Then
he found what he had been seeking—a stiff oaken chair that stood
beside the table. Uttering a harsh, broken shout, he seized it,
swung it above his head and let it go with all his raging strength
straight at the white, frightened face across the room ... Then a
thick, impenetrable darkness came down upon him and blotted out
thought, rage, and madness together—with almost a tangible snapping
sound the face of the world changed before his eyes....
Gloria and Dick came in at five and called his
name. There was no answer—they went into the living-room and found
a chair with its back smashed lying in the doorway, and they
noticed that all about the room there was a sort of disorder—the
rugs had slid, the pictures and bric-à-brac were upset upon the
centre-table. The air was sickly sweet with cheap perfume.
They found Anthony sitting in a patch of sunshine
on the floor of his bedroom. Before him, open, were spread his
three big stamp-books, and when they entered he was running his
hands through a great pile of stamps that he had dumped from the
back of one of them. Looking up and seeing Dick and Gloria he put
his head critically on one side and motioned them back.
“Anthony!” cried Gloria tensely, “we’ve won! They
reversed the decision!”
“Don’t come in,” he murmured wanly, “you’ll muss
them. I’m sorting, and I know you’ll step in them. Everything
always gets mussed.”
“What are you doing?” demanded Dick in
astonishment. “Going back to childhood? Don’t you realize you’ve
won the suit? They’ve reversed the decision of the lower courts.
You’re worth thirty millions!”
Anthony only looked at him reproachfully.
“Shut the door when you go out.” He spoke like a
pert child.
With a faint horror dawning in her eyes, Gloria
gazed at him—
“Anthony!” she cried, “what is it? What’s the
matter? Why didn’t you come—why, what is it?”
“See here,” said Anthony softly, “you two get
out—now, both of you. Or else I’ll tell my grandfather.”
He held up a handful of stamps and let them come
drifting down about him like leaves, varicolored and bright,
turning and fluttering gaudily upon the sunny air: stamps of
England and Ecuador, Venezuela and Spain—Italy....
Together with the Sparrows
That exquisite heavenly irony which has tabulated
the demise of so many generations of sparrows doubtless records the
subtlest verbal inflections of the passengers of such ships as
The Berengaria. And doubtless it was listening when the
young man in the plaid cap crossed the deck quickly and spoke to
the pretty girl in yellow.
“That’s him,” he said, pointing to a bundled figure
seated in a wheel-chair near the rail. “That’s Anthony Patch. First
time he’s been on deck.”
“Oh—that’s him?”
“Yes. He’s been a little crazy, they say, ever
since he got his money, four or five months ago. You see, the other
fellow, Shuttleworth, the religious fellow, the one that didn’t get
the money, he locked himself up in a room in a hotel and shot
himself—”
“Oh, he did—”
“But I guess Anthony Patch don’t care much. He got
his thirty million. And he’s got his private physician along in
case he doesn’t feel just right about it. Has she been on
deck?” he asked.
The pretty girl in yellow looked around
cautiously.
“She was here a minute ago. She had on a
Russian-sable coat that must have cost a small fortune.” She
frowned and then added decisively: “I can’t stand her, you know.
She seems sort of—sort of dyed and unclean, if you know what
I mean. Some people just have that look about them whether they are
or not.”
“Sure, I know,” agreed the man with the plaid cap.
“She’s not bad-looking, though.” He paused. “Wonder what he’s
thinking about—his money, I guess, or maybe he’s got remorse about
that fellow Shuttleworth.”
“Probably....”
But the man in the plaid cap was quite wrong.
Anthony Patch, sitting near the rail and looking out at the sea,
was not thinking of his money, for he had seldom in his life been
really preoccupied with material vainglory, nor of Edward
Shuttleworth, for it is best to look on the sunny side of these
things. No—he was concerned with a series of reminiscences, much as
a general might look back upon a successful campaign and analyze
his victories. He was thinking of the hardships, the insufferable
tribulations he had gone through. They had tried to penalize him
for the mistakes of his youth. He had been exposed to ruthless
misery, his very craving for romance had been punished, his friends
had deserted him—even Gloria had turned against him. He had been
alone, alone—facing it all.
Only a few months before people had been urging him
to give in, to submit to mediocrity, to go to work. But he had
known that he was justified in his way of life—and he had stuck it
out stanchly. Why, the very friends who had been most unkind had
come to respect him, to know he had been right all along. Had not
the Lacys and the Merediths and the Cartwright-Smiths called on
Gloria and him at the Ritz-Carlton just a week before they
sailed?
Great tears stood in his eyes, and his voice was
tremulous as he whispered to himself.
“I showed them,” he was saying. “It was a hard
fight, but I didn’t give up and I came through!”4