Caroline takes Command
Ruth left the gaming house of Frederic
Fernand entirely convinced that she must do as John
Mark had told her—work for him as she had
never worked before. The determination made her
go home to Beekman Place as fast as a taxicab would
whirl her along.
It was not until she had climbed to
Caroline Smith’s room and opened the door that
her determination faltered. For there she saw
the girl lying on her bed weeping. And it seemed
to the poor, bewildered brain of Ruth Tolliver, as
if the form of Ronicky Doone, passionate and eager
as before, stood at her side and begged her again
to send Caroline Smith across the street to a lifelong
happiness, and she could do it. Though Mark had
ordered the girl to be confined to her room until further
commands were given on the subject, no one in the house
would think of questioning Ruth Tolliver, if she took
the girl downstairs to the street and told her to
go on her way.
She closed the door softly and, going
to the bed, touched the shoulder of Caroline.
The poor girl sat up slowly and turned a stained and
swollen face to Ruth. If there was much to be
pitied there was something to be laughed at, also.
Ruth could not forbear smiling. But Caroline was
clutching at her hands.
“He’s changed his mind?”
she asked eagerly. “He’s sent you
to tell me that he’s changed his mind, Ruth?
Oh, you’ve persuaded him to it—like
an angel—I know you have!”
Ruth Tolliver freed herself from the
reaching hands, moistened the end of a towel in the
bathroom and began to remove the traces of tears from
the face of Caroline Smith. That face was no longer
flushed, but growing pale with excitement and hope.
“It’s true?” she kept asking.
“It is true, Ruth?”
“Do you love him as much as that?”
“More than I can tell you—so much
more!”
“Try to tell me then, dear.”
Talking of her love affair began to
brighten the other girl, and now she managed a wan
smile. “His letters were very bad.
But, between the lines, I could read so much real
manhood, such simple honesty, such a heart, such a
will to trust! Ruth, are you laughing at me?”
“No, no, far from that! It’s a thrilling
thing to hear, my dear.”
For she was remembering that in another
man there might be found these same qualities.
Not so much simplicity, perhaps, but to make up for
it, a great fire of will and driving energy.
“But I didn’t actually
know that I was in love. Even when I made the
trip West and wrote to him to meet the train on my
return—even then I was only guessing.
When he didn’t appear at the station I went cold
and made up my mind that I would never think of him
again.”
“But when you saw him in the street, here?”
“John Mark had prepared me and
hardened me against that meeting, and I was afraid
even to think for myself. But, when Ronicky Doone—bless
him!—talked to me in your room, I knew what
Bill Gregg must be, since he had a friend who would
venture as much for him as Ronicky Doone did.
It all came over me in a flash. I did love him—I
did, indeed!”
“Yes, yes,” whispered
Ruth Tolliver, nodding and smiling faintly. “I
remember how he stood there and talked to you.
He was like a man on fire. No wonder that a spark
caught in you, Caroline. He—he’s
a—very fine-looking fellow, don’t
you think, Caroline?”
“Bill Gregg? Yes, indeed.”
“I mean Ronicky.”
“Of course! Very handsome!”
There was something in the voice of
Caroline that made Ruth look down sharply to her face,
but the girl was clever enough to mask her excitement
and delight.
“Afterward, when you think over
what he has said, it isn’t a great deal, but
at the moment he seems to know a great deal—about
what’s going on inside one, don’t you
think, Caroline?”
These continual appeals for advice,
appeals from the infallible Ruth Tolliver, set the
heart of Caroline beating. There was most certainly
something in the wind.
“I think he does,” agreed
Caroline, masking her eyes. “He has a way,
when he looks at you, of making you feel that he isn’t
thinking of anything else in the world but you.”
“Does he have that same effect
on every one?” asked Ruth. She added, after
a moment of thought, “Yes, I suppose it’s
just a habit of his. I wish I knew.”
“Why?” queried Caroline,
unable to refrain from the stinging little question.
“Oh, for no good reason—just
that he’s an odd character. In my work,
you know, one has to study character. Ronicky
Doone is a different sort of man, don’t you
think?”
“Very different, dear.”
Then a great inspiration came to Caroline.
Ruth was a key which, she knew, could unlock nearly
any door in the house of John Mark.
“Do you know what we are going
to do?” she asked gravely, rising.
“Well?”
“We’re going to open that
door together, and we’re going down the stairs—together.”
“Together? But we—Don’t
you know John Mark has given orders—”
“That I’m not to leave
the room. What difference does that make?
They won’t dare stop us if you are with me,
leading the way.”
“Caroline, are you mad? When I come back—”
“You’re not coming back.”
“Not coming back!”
“No, you’re going on with me!”
She took Ruth by the arms and turned
her until the light struck into her eyes. Ruth
Tolliver, aghast at this sudden strength in one who
had always been a meek follower, obeyed without resistance.
“But where?” she demanded.
“Where I’m going.”
“What?”
“To Ronicky Doone, my dear. Don’t
you see?”
The insistence bewildered Ruth Tolliver.
She felt herself driven irresistibly forward, with
or without her own will.
“Caroline,” she protested,
trying feebly to free herself from the commanding
hands and eyes of her companion, “are you quite
mad? Go to him? Why should I? How can
I?”
“Not as I’m going to Bill
Gregg, with my heart in my hands, but to ask Ronicky
Doone—bless him!—to take you
away somewhere, so that you can begin a new life.
Isn’t that simple?”
“Ask charity of a stranger?”
“You know he isn’t a stranger,
and you know it isn’t charity. He’ll
be happy. He’s the kind that’s happy
when he’s being of use to others?”
“Yes,” answered Ruth Tolliver, “of
course he is.”
“And you’d trust him?”
“To the end of the world. But to leave—”
“Ruth, you’ve kept cobwebs
before your eyes so long that you don’t see
what’s happening around you. John Mark hypnotizes
you. He makes you think that the whole world
is bad, that we are simply making capital out of our
crimes. As a matter of fact, the cold truth is
that he has made me a thief, Ruth, and he has made
you something almost as bad—a gambler!”
The follower had become the leader,
and she was urging Ruth Tolliver slowly to the door.
Ruth was protesting—she could not throw
herself on the kindness of Ronicky Doone—it
could not be done. It would be literally throwing
herself at his head. But here the door opened,
and she allowed herself to be led out into the hall.
They had not made more than half a dozen steps down
its dim length when the guard hurried toward them.
“Talk to him,” whispered
Caroline Smith. “He’s come to stop
me, and you’re the only person who can make
him let me pass on!”
The guard hurriedly came up to them.
“Sorry,” he said. “Got an idea
you’re going downstairs, Miss Smith.”
“Yes,” she said faintly.
The fellow grinned. “Not
yet. You’ll stay up here till the chief
gives the word. And I got to ask you to step
back into your room, and step quick.” His
voice grew harsh, and he came closer. “He
told me straight, you’re not to come out.”
Caroline had shrunk back, and she
was on the verge of turning when the arm of Ruth was
passed strongly around her shoulders and stayed her.
“She’s going with me,”
she told John Mark’s bulldog. “Does
that make a difference to you?”
He ducked his head and grinned feebly
in his anxiety. “Sure it makes a difference.
You go where you want, any time you want, but this—”
“I say she’s going with
me, and I’m responsible for her.”
She urged Caroline forward, and the
latter made a step, only to find that she was directly
confronted by the guard.
“I got my orders,” he said desperately
to Ruth.
“Do you know who I am?” she asked hotly.
“I know who you are,”
he answered, “and, believe me, I would not start
bothering you none, but I got to keep this lady back.
I got the orders.”
“They’re old orders,”
insisted Ruth Tolliver, “and they have been
changed.”
“Not to my knowing,” replied
the other, less certain in his manner.
Ruth seized the critical moment to
say: “Walk on, Caroline. If he blocks
your way—” She did not need to finish
the sentence, for, as Caroline started on, the guard
slunk sullenly to one side of the corridor.
“It ain’t my doings,”
he said. “But they got two bosses in this
joint, and one of them is a girl. How can a gent
have any idea which way he ought to step in a pinch?
Go on, Miss Smith, but you’ll be answered for!”
They hardly heard the last of these
words, as they turned down the stairway, hurrying,
but not fast enough to excite the suspicion of the
man behind them.
“Oh, Ruth,” whispered Caroline Smith.
“Oh, Ruth!”
“It was close,” said Ruth
Tolliver, “but we’re through. And,
now that I’m about to leave it, I realize how
I’ve hated this life all these years. I’ll
never stop thanking you for waking me up to it, Caroline.”
They reached the floor of the lower
hall, and a strange thought came to Ruth. She
had hurried home to execute the bidding of John Mark.
She had left it, obeying the bidding of Ronicky Doone.
They scurried to the front door.
As they opened it the sharp gust of night air blew
in on them, and they heard the sound of a man running
up the steps. In a moment the dim hall light
showed on the slender form and the pale face of John
Mark standing before them.
Caroline felt the start of Ruth Tolliver.
For her part she was on the verge of collapse, but
a strong pressure from the hand of her companion told
her that she had an ally in the time of need.
“Tut tut!” Mark was saying,
“what’s this? How did Caroline get
out of her room—and with you, Ruth?”
“It’s idiotic to keep
her locked up there all day and all night, in weather
like this,” said Ruth, with a perfect calm that
restored Caroline’s courage almost to the normal.
“When I talked to her this evening I made up
my mind that I’d take her out for a walk.”
“Well,” replied John Mark,
“that might not be so bad. Let’s step
inside and talk it over for a moment.”
They retreated, and he entered and
clicked the door behind him. “The main
question is, where do you intend to walk?”
“Just in the street below the house.”
“Which might not lead you across to the house
on the other side?”
“Certainly not! I shall be with her.”
“But suppose both of you go
into that house, and I lose two birds instead of one?
What of that, my clever Ruth?”
She knew at once, by something in
his voice rather than his words, that he had managed
to learn the tenor of the talk in Caroline’s
room. She asked bluntly: “What are
you guessing at?”
“Nothing. I only speak
of what I know. No single pair of ears is enough
for a busy man. I have to hire help, and I get
it. Very effective help, too, don’t you
agree?”
“Eavesdropping!” exclaimed
Ruth bitterly. “Well—it’s
true, John Mark. You sent me to steal her from
her lover, and I’ve tried to steal her for him
in the end. Do you know why? Because she
was able to show me what a happy love might mean to
a woman. She showed me that, and she showed me
how much courage love had given her. So I began
to guess a good many things, and, among the rest,
I came to the conclusion that I could never truly
love you, John Mark.
“I’ve spoken quickly,”
she went on at last. “It isn’t that
I have feared you all the time—I haven’t
been playing a part, John, on my word. Only—tonight
I learned something new. Do you see?”
“Heaven be praised,” said
John Mark, “that we all have the power of learning
new things, now and again. I congratulate you.
Am I to suppose that Caroline was your teacher?”
He turned from her and faced Caroline
Smith, and, though he smiled on her, there was a quality
in the smile that shriveled her very soul with fear.
No matter what he might say or do this evening to establish
himself in the better graces of the girl he was losing,
his malice was not dead. That she knew.
“She was my teacher,”
answered Ruth steadily, “because she showed me,
John, what a marvelous thing it is to be free.
You understand that all the years I have been with
you I have never been free?”
“Not free?” he asked,
the first touch of emotion showing in his voice.
“Not free, my dear? Was there ever the least
wish of yours since you were a child that I did not
gratify? Not one, Ruth; not one, surely, of which
I am conscious!”
“Because I had no wishes,”
she answered slowly, “that were not suggested
by something that you liked or disliked. You were
the starting point of all that I desired. I was
almost afraid to think until I became sure that you
approved of my thinking.”
“That was long ago,” he
said gravely. “Since those old days I see
you have changed greatly.”
“Because of the education you gave me,”
she answered.
“Yes, yes, that was the great
mistake. I begin to see. Heaven, one might
say, gave you to me. I felt that I must improve
on the gift of Heaven before I accepted you.
There was my fault. For that I must pay the great
penalty. Kismet! And now, what is it you
wish?”
“To leave at once.”
“A little harsh, but necessary,
if you will it. There is the door, free to you.
The change of identity of which I spoke to you is easily
arranged. I have only to take you to the bank
and that is settled. Is there anything else?”
“Only one thing—and that is not much.”
“Very good.”
“You have given so much,”
she ran on eagerly, “that you will give one
thing more—out of the goodness of that really
big heart of yours, John, dear!”
He winced under that pleasantly tender word.
And she said: “I want to
take Caroline with me—to freedom and the
man she loves. That is really all!”
The lean fingers of John Mark drummed
on the back of the chair, while he smiled down on
her, an inexplicable expression on his face.
“Only that?” he asked.
“My dear, how strange you women really are!
After all these years of study I should have thought
that you would, at least, have partially comprehended
me. I see that is not to be. But try to
understand that I divide with a nice distinction the
affairs of sentiment and the affairs of business.
There is only one element in my world of sentiment—that
is you. Therefore, ask what you want and take
it for yourself; but for Caroline, that is an entirely
different matter. No, Ruth, you may take what
you will for yourself, but for her, for any other
living soul, not a penny, not a cent will I give.
Can you comprehend it? Is it clear? As for
giving her freedom, nothing under Heaven could persuade
me to it!”