Once a month Marrineal gave a bachelor
dinner of Lucullan repute. The company, though
much smaller than the gatherings at The House With
Three Eyes, covered a broader and looser social range.
Having declined several of his employer’s invitations
in succession on the well-justified plea of work,
Banneker felt it incumbent upon him to attend one of
these events, and accordingly found himself in a private
dining-room of the choicest of restaurants, tabled
with a curiously assorted group of financiers, editors,
actors, a small selection of the more raffish members
of The Retreat including Delavan Eyre; Ely Ives; an
elderly Jewish lawyer of unsavory reputation, enormous
income, and real and delicate scholarship; Herbert
Cressey, a pair of the season’s racing-kings,
an eminent art connoisseur, and a smattering of men-about-town.
Seated between the lawyer and one of the racing-men,
Banneker, as the dinner progressed, found himself watching
Delavan Eyre, opposite, who was drinking with sustained
intensity, but without apparent effect upon his debonair
bearing. Banneker thought to read a haunting
fear in his eyes, and was cogitating upon what it might
portend, when his attention was distracted by Ely Ives,
who had been requested (as he announced) to exhibit
his small skill at some minor sleight-of-hand tricks.
The skill, far from justifying its possessor’s
modest estimate, was so unusual as to provoke expressions
of admiration from Mr. Stecklin, the lawyer on Banneker’s
right.
“Oh, yes; hypnotism too,”
said Ely Ives briskly, after twenty minutes of legerdemain.
“Child’s play.”
“Now, who suggested hypnotism?”
murmured Stecklin in his limpid and confidential undertone,
close to Banneker’s ear. “You?
I? No! No one, I think.”
So Banneker thought, and was the more
interested in Ives’s procedure. Though
the drinking had been heavy at his end of the table,
he seemed quite unaffected, was now tripping from
man to man, peering into the eyes of each, “to
find an appropriate subject,” as he said.
Delavan Eyre roused himself out of a semi-torpor as
the wiry little prowler stared down at him.
“What’s the special idea?” he demanded.
“Just a bit of mesmerism,”
explained the other. “I’ll try you
for a subject. If you’ll stand up, feet
apart, eyes closed, I’ll hypnotize you so that
you’ll fall over at a movement.”
“You can’t do it,” retorted Eyre.
“For a bet,” Ives came back.
“A hundred?”
“Double it if you like.”
“You’re on.”
Eyre, slowly swallowing the last of a brandy-and-soda,
rose, reaching into his pocket.
“Not necessary, between gentlemen,”
said Ely Ives with a gesture just a little too suave.
“Ah, yes,” muttered the
lawyer at Banneker’s side. “Between
gentlemen. Eck-xactly.”
Pursuant to instructions, Eyre stood
with his feet a few inches apart and his eyes closed.
“At the word, you bring your heels together.
Click! And you keep your balance. If you
can. For the two hundred. Any one else want
in?... No?... Ready, Mr. Eyre. Now!
Hep!”
The heels clicked, but with a stuttering,
weak impact. Eyre, bulky and powerful, staggered,
toppled to the left.
“Hold up there!” His neighbor
propped him, and was clutched in his grasp.
“Hands off!” said Eyre
thickly. “Sorry, Banks! Let me try
that again. Oh, the bet’s yours, Mr. Ives,”
he added, as that keen gambler began to enter a protest.
“Send you a check in the morning—if
that’ll be all right.”
Herbert Cressey, hand in pocket, was
at his side instantly. “Pay him now, Del,”
he said in a tone which did not conceal his contemptuous
estimate of Ives. “Here’s money, if
you haven’t it.”
“No; no! A check will be
quite all right,” protested Ives.
“At your convenience.”
Others gathered about, curious and
interested. Banneker, puzzled by a vague suspicion
which he sought to formulate, was aware of a low runnel
of commentary at his ear.
“Very curious. Shrewd;
yes. A clever fellow…. Sad, too.”
“Sad?” He turned sharply
on the lawyer of unsavory suits. “What is
sad about it? A fool and his money! Is that
tragedy?”
“Comedy, my friend. Always
comedy. This also, perhaps. But grim….
Our friend there who is so clever of hand and eye;
he is not perhaps a medical man?”
“Yes; he is. What connection—Good
God!” he cried, as a flood of memory suddenly
poured light upon a dark spot in some of his forgotten
reading.
“Ah? You know? Yes;
I have had such a case in my legal practice. Died
of an—an error. He made a mistake—in
a bottle, which he purchased for that purpose.
But this one—he elects to live and face
it—”
“Does he know it?”
“Obviously. One can see
the dread in his eyes. Some of his friends know
it—and his family, I am told. But he
does not know this interesting little experiment of
our friend. Profitable, too, eh? One wonders
how he came to suspect. A medical man, though;
a keen eye. Of course.”
“Damn him,” said Banneker quietly.
“General paralysis?”
“Eck-xactly. Twelve, maybe
fifteen years ago, a little recklessness. A little
overheating of the blood. Perhaps after a dinner
like this. The poison lies dormant; a snake asleep.
Harms no one. Not himself; not another.
Until—something here”—he
tapped the thick black curls over the base of his
brain. “All that ruddy strength, that lusty
good-humor passing on courageously—for
he is a brave man, Eyre—to slow torture
and—and the end. Grim, eh?”
Banneker reached for a drink. “How long?”
he asked.
“As for that, he is very strong. It might
be slow. One prays not.”
“At any rate, that little reptile,
Ives, shan’t have his profit of it.”
Banneker rose and, disdaining even the diplomacy of
an excuse, drew Ely Ives aside.
“That bet of yours was a joke, Ives,”
he prescribed.
Ives studied him in silence, wishing
that he had watched, through the dinner, how much
drink he took.
“A joke?” he asked coolly. “I
don’t understand you.”
“Try,” advised Banneker
with earnestness. “I happen to have read
that luetic diagnosis, myself. A joke, Ives,
so far as the two hundred goes.”
“What do you expect me to do?” asked the
other.
“Tear up the check, when it
comes. Make what explanation your ingenuity can
devise. That’s your affair. But don’t
cash that check, Ives. For if you do—I
dislike to threaten—”
“You don’t need to threaten
me, Mr. Banneker,” interrupted Ives eagerly.
“If you think it wasn’t a fair bet, your
word is enough for me. That goes. It’s
off. I think just that of you. I’m
a friend of yours, as I hope to prove to you some
day. I don’t lay this up against you; not
for a minute.”
Not trusting himself to make answer
to this proffer, Banneker turned away to find his
host and make his adieus. As he left, he saw Delavan
Eyre, flushed but composed, sipping a liqueur and listening
with courteous appearance of appreciation to a vapid
and slobbering story of one of the racing magnates.
A debauchee, a cumberer of the earth, useless, selfish,
scandalous of life—and Banneker, looking
at him with pitiful eyes, paid his unstinted tribute
to the calm and high courage of the man.
Walking slowly home in the cool air,
Banneker gave thanks for a drink-proof head.
He had need of it; he wanted to think and think clearly.
How did this shocking revelation about Eyre affect
his own hopes of Io? That she would stand by
her husband through his ordeal Banneker never doubted
for an instant. Her pride of fair play would
compel her to that. It came to his mind that this
was her other and secret reason for not divorcing
Eyre; for maintaining still the outward form of a
marriage which had ceased to exist long before.
For a lesser woman, he realized with a thrill, it
would have been a reason for divorcing him….
Well, here was a barrier, indeed, against which he
was helpless. Opposed by a loyalty such as Io’s
he could only be silent and wait.
In the next few weeks she was very
good to him. Not only did she lunch with him
several times, but she came to the Saturday nights
of The House With Three Eyes, sometimes with Archie
Densmore alone, more often with a group of her own
set, after a dinner or a theater party. Always
she made opportunity for a little talk apart with
her host; talks which any one might have heard, for
they were concerned almost exclusively with the affairs
of The Patriot, especially in its relation to the mayoralty
campaign now coming to a close. Yet, impersonal
though the discussions might be, Banneker took from
them a sense of ever-increasing intimacy and communion,
if it were only from a sudden, betraying quiver in
her voice, an involuntary, unconscious look from the
shadowed eyes. Whatever of resentment he had
cherished for her earlier desertion was now dissipated;
he was wholly hers, content, despite all his passionate
longing for her, with what she chose to give.
In her own time she would be generous, as she was
brave and honorable….
She was warmly interested in the election
of Robert Laird to the mayoralty, partly because she
knew him personally, partly because the younger element
of society had rather “gone in for politics”
that year, on the reform side. Banneker had to
admit to her, as the day drew close, that the issue
was doubtful. Though The Patriot’s fervid
support had been a great asset to the cause, it was
now, for the moment, a liability to the extent that
it was being fiercely denounced in the Socialist organ,
The Summons, as treasonable to the interests of the
working-classes. The Summons charged hypocrisy,
citing the case of the Veridian strike.
“That is McClintick?” asked Io.
“He’s back of it, naturally.
But The Summons has been waiting its chance.
Jealous of our influence in the field it’s trying
to cultivate.”
“McClintick is right,” remarked Io thoughtfully.
Banneker laughed. “Oh,
Io! It’s such a relief to get a clear view
and an honest one from some one else. There’s
no one in the office except Russell Edmonds, and he’s
away now…. You think McClintick is right?
So do I.”
“But so are you. You had
to do as you did about the story. If any one is
to blame, it is Mr. Marrineal. Yet how can one
blame him? He had to protect his mother.
It’s a fearfully complicated phenomenon, a newspaper,
isn’t it, Ban?”
“Io, the soul of man is simple
and clear compared with the soul of a newspaper.”
“If it has a soul.”
“Of course it has. It’s
got to have. Otherwise what is it but a machine?”
“Which is The Patriot’s;
yours or Mr. Marrineal’s? I can’t,”
said Io quaintly, “quite see them coalescing.”
“I wonder if Marrineal has a soul,” mused
Banneker.
“If he hasn’t one of his
own, let him keep his hands off yours!” said
Io in a flash of feminine jealousy. “He’s
done enough already with his wretched mills.
What shall you do about the attack in The Summons?”
“Ignore it. It would be
difficult to answer. Besides, people easily forget.”
“A dangerous creed, Ban.
And a cynical one. I don’t want you to be
cynical.”
“I never shall be again, unless—”
“Unless?” she prompted.
“It rests with you, Io,” he said quietly.
At once she took flight. “Am
I to be keeper of your spirit?” she protested.
“It’s bad enough to be your professional
adviser. Why don’t you invite a crowd of
us down to get the election returns?” she suggested.
“Make up your party,”
assented Banneker. “Keep it small; say a
dozen, and we can use my office.”
On the fateful evening there duly
appeared Io with a group of a dozen friends.
From the first, it was a time of triumph. Laird
took the lead and kept it. By midnight, the result
was a certainty. In a balcony speech from his
headquarters the victor had given generous recognition
for his success to The Patriot, mentioning Banneker
by name. When the report reached them Esther
Forbes solemnly crowned the host with a wreath composed
of the “flimsy” on which the rescript of
the speech had come in.
“Skoal to Ban!” she cried.
“Maker of kings and mayors and things. Skoal!
As you’re a viking or something of the sort,
the Norse salutation is appropriate.”
“It ought to be Danish to be accurate,”
he smiled.
“Well, that’s a hardy,
seafaring race,” she chattered. “And
that reminds me. Come on out to the South Seas
with us.”
“Charmed,” he returned. “When
do we start? To-morrow?”
“Oh, I’m not joking.
You’ve certainly earned a vacation. And
of course you needn’t enlist for the whole six
months if that is too long. Dad has let me have
the yacht. There’ll only be a dozen.
Io’s going along.”
Banneker shot one startled, incredulous
look at Io Eyre, and instantly commanded himself,
to the point of controlling his voice to gayety as
he replied:
“And who would tell the new
mayor how he should run the city, if I deserted him?
No, Esther, I’m afraid I’m chained to this
desk. Ask me sometime when you’re cruising
as far as Coney Island.”
Io sat silent, and with a set smile,
listening to Herbert Cressey’s account of an
election row in the district where he was volunteer
watcher. When the party broke up, she went home
with Densmore without giving Banneker the chance of
a word with her. It seemed to him that there
was a mute plea for pardon in her face as she bade
him good-night.
At noon next day she called him on the ’phone.
“Just to tell you that I’m coming as usual
Saturday evening,” she said.
“When do you leave on your cruise?” he
asked.
“Not until next week. I’ll tell you
when I see you. Good-bye.”
Never had Banneker seen Io in such
difficult mood as she exhibited on the Saturday.
She had come early to The House With Three Eyes, accompanied
by Densmore who looked in just for one drink before
going to a much-touted boxing-match in Jersey.
Through the evening she deliberately avoided seeing
Banneker alone for so much as the space of a query
put and answered, dividing her attention between an
enraptured master of the violin who had come after
his concert, and an aged and bewildered inventor who,
in a long career of secluded toil, had never beheld
anything like this brilliant creature with her intelligent
and quickening interest in what he had to tell her.
Rivalry between the two geniuses inspired the musician
to make an offer which he would hardly have granted
to royalty itself.
“After a time, when zese chatterers
are gon-away, I shall play for you. Is zere some
one here who can accompany properly?”
Necessarily Io sent for Banneker to
find out. Yes; young Mackey was coming a little
later; he was a brilliant amateur and would be flattered
at the opportunity. With a direct insistence difficult
to deny, Banneker drew Io aside for a moment.
Her eyes glinted dangerously as she faced him, alone
for the moment, with the question that was the salute
before the crossing of blades.
“Well?”
“Are you really going, Io?”
“Certainly. Why shouldn’t I?”
“Say that, for one reason”—he
smiled faintly, but resolutely—“The
Patriot needs your guiding inspiration.”
“All The Patriot’s troubles are over.
It’s plain sailing now.”
“What of The Patriot’s editor?”
“Quite able to take care of himself.”
Into his voice there suffused the
first ring of anger that she had ever heard from him;
cold and formidable. “That won’t do,
Io. Why?”
“Because I choose.”
“A child’s answer. Why?”
“Do you want to be flattered?”
She raised to his, eyes that danced with an impish
and perverse light. “Call it escape, if
you wish.”
“From me?”
“Or from myself. Wouldn’t you like
to think that I’m afraid of you?”
“I shouldn’t like to think that you’re
afraid of anything.”
“I’m not.”
But her tone was that of the defiance which seeks to
encourage itself.
“I’d call it a desertion,” he said
steadily.
“Oh, no! You’re secure.
You need nothing but what you’ve got. Power,
reputation, position, success. What more can heart
desire?” she taunted.
“You.”
She quivered under the blunt word,
but rallied to say lightly: “Six months
isn’t long. Though I may stretch it to a
year.”
“It’s too long for endurance.”
“Oh, you’ll do very well without me, Ban.”
“Shall I? When am I to see you again before
you go?”
Her raised eyebrows were like an affront.
“Are we to see each other again? Of course,
it would be polite of you to come to the train.”
There was a controlled and dangerous
gravity in his next question. “Io, have
we quarreled?”
“How absurd! Of course not.”
“Then—”
“If you knew how I dislike fruitless explanations!”
He rose at once. Io’s strong
and beautiful hands, which had been lying in her lap,
suddenly interlocked, clenching close together.
But her face disclosed nothing. The virtuoso,
who had been hopefully hovering in the offing, bore
down to take the vacated chair. He would have
found the lovely young Mrs. Eyre distrait and irresponsive
had he not been too happy babbling of his own triumphs
to notice.
“Soon zey haf growed thin, zis
crowd,” said the violinist, who took pride in
his mastery of idiom. “Zen, when zere remains
but a small few, I play for you. You sit zere,
in ze leetle garden of flowers.” He indicated
the secluded seat near the stairway, where she had
sat with Ban on the occasion of her first visit to
The House With Three Eyes. “Not too far;
not too near. From zere you shall not see; but
you shall think you hear ze stars make for you harmonies
of ze high places.”
Young Mackey, having arrived, commended
himself to the condescending master by a meekly worshipful
attitude. Barely a score of people remained in
the great room. The word went about that they
were in for one of those occasional treats which made
The House With Three Eyes unique. The fortunate
lingerers disposed themselves about the room.
Io slipped into the nook designated for her.
Banneker was somewhere in the background; her veiled
glance could not discover where. The music began.
They played Tschaikowsky first, the
tender and passionate “Melodie”; then
a lilting measure from Debussy’s “Faun,”
followed by a solemnly lovely Brahms arrangement devised
by the virtuoso himself. At the dying-out of
the applause, the violinist addressed himself to the
nook where Io was no more than a vague, faerie figure
to his eyes, misty through interlaced bloom and leafage.
“Now, Madame, I play you somezing
of a American. Ver’ beautiful, it is.
Not for violin. For voice, contralto. I sing
it to you—on ze G-string, which weep when
it sing; weep for lost dreams. It is called ‘Illusion,’
ze song.”
He raised his bow, and at the first
bar Io’s heart gave a quick, thick sob within
her breast. It was the music which Camilla Van
Arsdale had played that night when winds and forest
leaves murmured the overtones; when earth and heaven
were hushed to hear.
“Oh, Ban!” cried Io’s spirit.
Noiseless and swift, Banneker, answering
the call, bent over her. She whispered, softly,
passionately, her lips hardly stirring the melody-thrilled
air.
“How could I hurt you so!
I’m going because I must; because I daren’t
stay. You can understand, Ban!”
The music died. “Yes,”
said Banneker. Then, “Don’t go, Io!”
“I must. I’ll—I’ll
see you before. When we’re ourselves.
We can’t talk now. Not with this terrible
music in our blood.”
She rose and went forward to thank
the player with such a light in her eyes and such
a fervor in her words that he mentally added another
to his list of conquests.
The party broke up. After that
magic music, people wanted to be out of the light
and the stir; to carry its pure passion forth into
the dark places, to cherish and dream it over again….
Banneker sat before the broad fireplace in the laxity
of a still grief. Io was going away from him.
For a six-month. For a year. For an eternity.
Going away from him, bearing his whole heart with
her, as she had left him after the night on the river,
left him to the searing memory of that mad, sweet cleavage
of her lips to his, the passionate offer of her awakened
womanhood in uttermost surrender of life at the roaring
gates of death….
Footsteps, light, firm, unhesitant,
approached across the broad floor from the hallway.
Banneker sat rigid, incredulous, afraid to stir, as
the sleeper fears to break the spell of a tenuous and
lovely dream, until Io’s voice spoke his name.
He would have jumped to his feet, but the strong pressure
of her hands on his shoulders restrained him.
“No. Stay as you are.”
“I thought you had gone,” he said thickly.
A great log toppled in the fireplace,
showering its sparks in prodigal display.
“Do you remember our fire, on
the river-bank?” said the voice of the girl,
Io, across the years.
“While I live.”
“Just you and I. Man and woman.
Alone in the world. Sometimes I think it has
always been so with us.”
“We have no world of our own, Io,” he
said sadly.
“Heresy, Ban; heresy! Of
course we have. An inner world. If we could
forget—everything outside.”
“I am not good at forgetting.”
He felt her fingers, languid and tremulous,
at his throat, her heart’s strong throb against
his shoulder as she bent, the sweet breath of her
whisper stirring the hair at his temple:
“Try, Ban.”
Her mouth closed down upon his, flower-sweet,
petal-light, and was withdrawn. She leaned back,
gazing at him from half-closed, inscrutable eyes.
“That’s for good-bye,
Io?” With all his self-control, he could not
keep his voice steady.
“There have been too many good-byes
between us,” she murmured.
He lifted his head, attentive to a
stir at the door, which immediately passed.
“I thought that was Archie, come after you.”
“Archie isn’t coming.”
“Then I’ll send for the car and take you
home.”
“Won’t you understand, Ban? I’m
not going home.”