CHAPTER I
I
Price Ruyler knew that many secrets
had been inhumed by the earthquake and fire of San
Francisco and wondered if his wife’s had been
one of them. After all, she had been born in
this city of odd and whispered pasts, and there were
moments when his silent mother-in-law suggested a
past of her own.
That there was a secret of some sort
he had been progressively convinced for quite six
months. Moreover, he felt equally sure that this
impalpable gray cloud had not drifted even transiently
between himself and his wife during the first year
and a half of their marriage. They had been uncommonly
happy; they were happy yet … the difference lay not
in the quality of Hélène’s devotion, enhanced
always by an outspoken admiration for himself and
his achievements, but in subtle changes of temperament
and spirits.
She had been a gay and irresponsible
young creature when he married her, so much so that
he had found it expedient to put her on an allowance
and ask her not to ran up staggering bills in the
fashionable shops; which she visited daily, as much
for the pleasure of the informal encounter with other
lively and irresponsible young luminaries of San Francisco
society as for the excitement of buying what she did
not want.
He had broached the subject with some
trepidation, for they had never had a quarrel; but
she had shown no resentment whatever, merely an eager
desire to please him. She even went directly down
to the Palace Hotel and reproached her august parent
for failing to warn her that a dollar was not capable
of infinite expansion.
But no wonder she had been extravagant,
she told Ruyler plaintively. It had been like
a fairy tale, this sudden release from the rigid economies
of her girlhood, when she had rarely had a franc in
her pocket, and they had lived in a suite of the old
family villa on one of the hills of Rouen, Madame
Delano paying her brother for their lodging, and dressing
herself and Hélène with the aid of a half paralyzed
seamstress with a fiery red nose. Ma foi!
It was the nightmare of her youth, that nose and that
croaking voice. But the woman had fingers, and
a taste! And her mother could have concocted a
smart evening frock out of an old window curtain.
But the petted little daughter was
never asked to go out and buy a spool of thread, much
less was she consulted in the household economies.
All she noticed was that her clothes were smarter
than Cousin Marthe’s, who had a real dressmaker,
and was subject to fits of jealous sulks. No
wonder that when money was poured into her lap out
in this wonderful California she had assumed that
it was made only to spend.
But she would learn! She would
learn! She would ask her mother that very day
to initiate her into the fascinating secrets of personal
economies, teach her how to portion out her quarterly
allowance between her wardrobe, club dues, charities,
even her private automobile.
This last heroic suggestion was her
own, and although her husband protested he finally
agreed; it was well she should learn just what it
cost to be a woman of fashion in San Francisco, and
the allowance was very generous. His old steward,
Mannings, ran the household, although as he went through
the form of laying the bills before his little mistress
on the third of every month, she knew that the upkeep
of the San Francisco house and the Burlingame villa
ran into a small fortune a year.
“It is not that I am threatened
with financial disaster,” Ruyler had said to
her. “But San Francisco has not recovered
yet, and it is impossible to say just when she will
recover. I want to be absolutely sure of my expenditures.”
She had promised vehemently, and,
as far as he knew, she had kept her promise.
He had received no more bills, and it was obvious that
her haughty chauffeur was paid on schedule time, until,
seized with another economical spasm, she sold her
car and bought a small electric which she could drive
herself.
Ruyler, little as he liked his mother-in-law,
was intensely grateful to her for the dexterity with
which she had adjusted Hélène’s mind to the
new condition. She even taught her how to keep
books in an elemental way and balanced them herself
on the first of every month. As Hélène Ruyler
had a mind as quick and supple as it was cultivated
in les graces, she soon ceased to feel the
chafing of her new harness, although she did squander
the sum she had reserved for three months mere pocket
money upon a hat; which was sent to the house by her
wily milliner on the first day of the second quarter.
She confessed this with tears, and her husband, who
thought her feminine passion for hats adorable, dried
her tears and took her to the opening night of a new
play. But he did not furnish the pathetic little
gold mesh bag, and as he made her promise not to borrow,
she did not treat her friends to tea or ices at any
of the fashionable rendezvous for a month. Then
her native French thrift came to her aid and she sold
a superfluous gold purse, a wedding present, to an
envious friend at a handsome bargain.
That was ancient history now.
It was twenty months since Price had received a bill,
and secret inquiries during the past two had satisfied
him that his wife’s name was written in the books
of no shop in San Francisco that she would condescend
to visit. Therefore, this maddening but intangible
barrier had nothing to do with a change of habit that
had not caused an hour of tears and sulks. Hélène
had a quick temper but a gay and sweet disposition,
normally high spirits, little apparent selfishness,
and a naïve adoration of masculine superiority and
strength; altogether, with her high bred beauty and
her dignity in public, an enchanting creature and
an ideal wife for a busy man of inherited social position
and no small degree of pride.
But all this lovely equipment was
blurred, almost obscured at times, by the shadow that
he was beginning to liken to the San Francisco fogs
that drifted through the Golden Gate and settled down
into the deep hollows of the Marin hills; moving gently
but restlessly even there, like ghostly floating tides.
He could see them from his library window, where he
often finished his afternoon’s work with his
secretaries.
But the fog drifted back to the Pacific,
and the shadow that encompassed his wife did not,
or rarely. It chilled their ardors, even their
serene domesticity. She was often as gay and
impulsive as ever, but with abrupt reserves, an implication
not only of a new maturity of spirit, but of watchfulness,
even fear. She had once gone so far as to give
voice passionately to the dogma that no two mortals
had the right to be as happy as they were; then laughed
apologetically and “guessed” that the
old Puritan spirit of her father’s people was
coming to life in her Gallic little soul; then, with
another change of mood, added defiantly that it was
time America were rid of its baneful inheritance, and
that she would be happy to-day if the skies fell to-morrow.
She had flung herself into her husband’s arms,
and even while he embraced her the eyes of his spirit
searched for the girl wife who had fled and left this
more subtly fascinating but incomprehensible creature
in her place.
II
The morning was Sunday and he sat
in the large window of his library that overlooked
the Bay of San Francisco. The house, which stood
on one of the highest hills, he had bought and remodeled
for his bride. The books that lined these walls
had belonged to his Ruyler grandfather, bought in a
day when business men had time to read and it was
the fashion for a gentleman to cultivate the intellectual
tracts of his brain. The portraits that hung
above, against the dark paneling, were the work of
his mother’s father, one of the celebrated portrait
painters of his time, and were replicas of the eminent
and mighty he had painted. Maharajas, kings,
emperors, famous diplomats, men of letters, artists
of his own small class, statesmen and several of the
famous beauties of their brief day; these had been
the favorite grandson’s inheritance from Masewell
Price, and they made an impressive frieze, unique
in the splendid homes of the city of Ruyler’s
adoption.
He had brought them from New York
when he had decided to live in California, and hung
them in his bachelor quarters. He had soon made
up his mind that he must remain in San Francisco for
at least ten years if he would maintain the business
he had rescued from the disaster of 1906 at the level
where he had, by the severest application of his life,
placed it by the end of 1908. Meanwhile he had
grown to like San Francisco better than he would have
believed possible when he arrived in the wrecked city,
still smoking, and haunted with the subtle odors of
fires that had consumed more than products of the vegetable
kingdom.
The vast ruin with its tottering arches
and broken columns, its lonely walls looking as if
bitten by prehistoric monsters that must haunt this
ancient coast, the soft pastel colors the great fire
had given as sole compensation for all it had taken,
the grotesque twisted masses of steel and the aged
gray hills that had looked down on so many fires, had
appealed powerfully to his imagination, and made him
feel, when wandering alone at night, as if his brain
cells were haunted by old memories of Antioch when
Nature had annihilated in an instant what man had lavished
upon her for centuries. Nowhere, not even in what
was left of ancient Rome, had he ever received such
an impression of the age of the world and of the nothingness
of man as among the ruins of this ridiculously modern
city of San Francisco. It fascinated him, but
he told himself then that he should leave it without
a pang. He was a New Yorker of the seventh generation
of his house, and the rest of the United States of
America was merely incidental.
The business, a branch of the great
New York firm founded in 1840 by an ancestor grown
weary of watching the broad acres of Ruyler Manor
automatically transmute themselves into the yearly
rent-roll, and reverting to the energy and merchant
instincts of his Dutch ancestors, had been conducted
skillfully for the thirty years preceding the disaster
by Price’s uncle, Dryden Ruyler. But the
earthquake and fire in which so many uninsured millions
had vanished, had also wrecked men past the rebounding
age, and Dryden Ruyler was one of them. He might
have borne the destruction of the old business building
down on Front Street, or even the temporary stagnation
of trade, but when the Pacific Union Club disappeared
in the raging furnace, and, like many of his old cronies
who had no home either in the country or out in the
Western Addition, he was driven over to Oakland for
lodgings, this ghastly climax of horrors—he
escaped in a milk wagon after sleeping for two nights
without shelter on the bare hills behind San Francisco,
while the fire roared its defiance to the futile detonations
of dynamite, and his sciatica was as fiery as the
atmosphere—had broken the old man’s
spirit, and he had announced his determination to return
to Ruyler-on-Hudson and die as a gentleman should.
There was no question of Price’s
father, Morgan Ruyler, leaving New York, even if he
had contemplated the sacrifice for a moment; that his
second son and general manager of the several branches
of the great business of Ruyler and Sons—as
integral a part of the ancient history of San Francisco
as of the comparatively modern history of New York—should
go, was so much a matter of course that Price had taken
the first Overland train that left New York after
the receipt of his uncle’s despairing telegram.
In spite of the fortune behind him
and his own expert training, the struggle to rebuild
the old business to its former standard had been unintermittent.
The terrific shock to the city’s energies was
followed by a general depression, and the insane spending
of a certain class of San Franciscans when their insurance
money was paid, was like a brief last crackling in
a cold stove, and, moreover, was of no help to the
wholesale houses.
But Price Ruyler, like so many of
his new associates in like case, had emerged triumphant;
and with the unqualified approval and respect of the
substantial citizens of San Francisco.
It was this position he had won in
a community where he had experienced the unique sensation
of being a pioneer in at the rebirth of a great city,
as well as the outdoor sports that kept him fit, that
had endeared California to Ruyler, and in time caused
him whimsically to visualize New York as a sternly
accusing instead of a beckoning finger. Long before
he found time to play polo at Burlingame he had conceived
a deep respect for a climate where a man might ride
horseback, shoot, drive a racing car, or tramp, for
at least eight months of the year with no menace of
sudden downpour, and hardly a change in the weight
of his clothes.
To-day the rain was dashing against
his windows and the wind howled about the exposed
angles of his house with that personal fury of assault
with which storms brewed out in the vast wastes of
the Pacific deride the enthusiastic baptism of a too
confident explorer. All he could see of the bay
was a mad race of white caps, and dark blurs which
only memory assured him were rocky storm-beaten islands;
mountain tops, so geological tradition ran, whose
roots were in an unquiet valley long since dropped
from mortal gaze.
The waves were leaping high against
the old forts at the entrance to the Golden Gate,
and occasionally he saw a small craft drift perilously
near to the rocks. But he loved the wild weather
of San Francisco, for he was by nature an imaginative
man and he liked to think that he would have followed
the career of letters had not the traditions of the
great commercial house of Ruyler and Sons, forced
him to carry on the burden.
The men of his family had never been
idlers since the recrudescence of ancestral energy
in the person of Morgan Ruyler I; it was no part of
their profound sense of aristocracy to retire on inherited
or invested wealth; they believed that your fine American
of the old stock should die in harness; and if the
harness had been fashioned and elaborated by ancestors
whose portraits hung in the Chamber of Commerce, all
the more reason to keep it spic and up to date instead
of letting it lapse into those historic vaults where
so many once honored names lay rotting. They
were a hard, tight-fisted lot, the Ruylers, and Price
in one secluded but cherished wing of his mind was
unlike them only because his mother was the daughter
of Masefield Price and would have been an artist herself
if her scandalized husband would have consented.
Morgan Ruyler IV had overlooked his father-in-law’s
divagation from the orthodox standards of his own
family because he had been a spectacular financial
success; bringing home ropes of enormous pearls from
India in addition to the fantastic sums paid him by
enraptured native princes. But while Morgan Ruyler
believed that rich men should work and make their sons
work, if only because an idle class was both out of
place in a republic and conducive to unrest in the
masses, it was quite otherwise with women. They
were for men to shelter, and it was their sole duty
to be useful in the home, and, wherever possible,
ornamental in public. Nor had he the least faith
in female talent.
Marian Ruyler had yielded the point
and departed hopefully for a broader sphere when her
second and favorite son was eight. Morgan Ruyler
married again as soon as convention would permit,
this time carefully selecting a wife of the soundest
New York predispositions and with a personal admiration
of Queen Victoria; and he had watched young Price like
an affectionate but inexorable parent hawk until the
young man followed his brother—a quintessential
Ruyler—into the now historic firm.
However, he suffered little from anxiety. Price,
too, was conservative, intensely proud of the family
traditions, an almost impassioned worker, and unselfish
as men go. Two sons in every generation must enter
the firm. It was not in the Ruyler blood to take
long chances.
III
Life out here in California had been
too hurried for more than fleeting moments of self-study,
but on this idle Sunday morning Price Ruyler’s
perturbed mind wandered to that inner self of his to
which he once had longed to give a freer expression.
It was odd that the conservative training, the rigid
traditions of his family, conventional, old-fashioned,
Puritanical, as became the best stock of New York,
a stock that in the Ruyler family had seemed to carry
its own antidote for the poisons ever seeking entrance
to the spiritual conduits of the rich, had left any
place for that sentimental romantic tide in his nature
which had swept him into marriage with a girl outside
of his own class; a girl of whose family he had known
practically nothing until his outraged father had
cabled to a correspondent in Paris to make investigation
of the Perrin family of Rouen, to which the girl’s
mother claimed to belong.
The inquiries were satisfactory; they
were quite respectable, bourgeois, silk merchants
in a small way—although at least two strata
below that haute bourgeoisie which now regarded itself
as the real upper class of the République Française.
A true Ruyler, however, would have fled at the first
danger signal, never have reached the point where
inquiries were in order.
California was replete with charming,
beautiful, and superlatively healthy girls; the climate
produced them as it did its superabundance of fruit,
flowers, and vegetables. But they had left Price
Ruyler untroubled. He had been far more interested
watching San Francisco rise from its ruins, transformed
almost overnight from a picturesque but ramshackle
city, a patchwork of different eras, into a staid metropolis
of concrete and steel, defiant alike of earthquake
and fire. He had liked the new experience of
being a pioneer, which so subtly expanded his starved
ego that he had, by unconscious degrees, made up his
mind to remain out here as the permanent head of the
San Francisco House; and in time, no doubt, marry
one of these fine, hardy, frank, out-of-door, wholly
unsubtle California girls. Moreover, he had found
in San Francisco several New Yorkers as well as Englishmen
of his own class—notably John Gwynne, who
had thrown over one of the greatest of English peerages
to follow his personal tastes in a legislative career—all
of whom had settled down into that free and independent
life from motives not dissimilar from his own.
But he had ceased to be an untroubled
spirit from the moment he met Hélène Delano.
He had gone down to Monterey for polo, and he had
forgotten the dinner to which he had brought a keen
appetite, and stared at her as she entered the immense
dining room with her mother.
It was not her beauty, although that
was considerable, that had summarily transposed his
gallant if cool admiration for all charming well bred
women into a submerging recognition of woman in particular;
it was her unlikeness to any of the girls he had been
riding, dancing, playing golf and tennis with during
the past year and a half (for two years after his
arrival he had seen nothing of society whatever).
Later that evening he defined this dissimilarity from
the American girl as the result not only of her French
blood but of her European training, her quiet secluded
girlhood in a provincial town of great beauty, where
she had received a leisurely education rare in the
United States, seen or read little of the great world
(she had visited Paris only twice and briefly), her
mind charmingly developed by conscientious tutors.
But at the moment he thought that the compelling power
lay in some deep subtlety of eye, her little air of
lofty aloofness, her classic small features in a small
face, and the top-heavy masses of blue black hair which
she carried with a certain naïve pride as if it were
her only vanity; in her general unlikeness to the
gray-eyed fair-haired American—a type to
which himself belonged. Her only point in common
with this fashionable set patronizing Del Monte for
the hour, was the ineffable style with which she wore
her perfect little white frock; an American inheritance,
he assumed after he knew her; for, as he recalled
provincial French women, style was not their strong
point.
When he met her eyes some twenty minutes
later, he dismissed the impression of subtlety, for
their black depths were quick with an eager wonder
and curiosity. Later they grew wistful, and he
guessed that she knew none of these smart folk, down,
like himself, for the tournament; people who were
chattering from table to table like a large family.
That some of his girl acquaintances were interested
in the young stranger he inferred from speculative
and appraising eyes that were turned upon her from
time to time.
Price, with some irony, wondered at
their curiosity. The San Francisco girl, he had
discovered, possessed an extra sense all her own.
There was no lofty indifference about her. She
had the worth-while stranger detected and tabulated
and his or her social destiny settled before the Eastern
train had disgorged its contents at the Oakland mole.
And even the immense florid mother of this lovely
girl, with her own masses of snow white hair dressed
in a manner becoming her age, and a severe gown of
black Chantilly net, relieved by the merest trifle
of jet, looked the reverse of the nondescript tourist.
The girl wore white embroidered silk muslin and a
thin gold chain with a small ruby pendant. She
was rather above the average height, although not
as tall as her mother, and if she were as thin as
fashion commanded, her bones were so small that her
neck and arms looked almost plump. Her expressive
eyes were as black as her hair, and her only large
feature. Her skin was of a quite remarkably pink
whiteness, although there was a pink color in her lips
and cheeks. The older men stared at her more
persistently than the younger ones, who liked their
own sort and not girls who looked as if they might
be “booky” and “spring things on
a fellow.”
There was a ball in the evening and
once more mother and daughter sat apart, while the
flower of San Francisco—an inclusive term
for the select circles of Menlo Park, Atherton, Burlingame,
San Mateo, far San Rafael and Belvedere—romped
as one great family. Newport, Ruyler reflected
for the twentieth time, did it no better. To the
stranger peering through the magic bars they were
now as insensible as befitted their code. These
two people knew nobody and that was the end of it.
IV
But Price noted that now the girl’s
eyes were merely wistful, and once or twice he saw
them fill with tears. As three of the dowagers
merely sniffed when he sought possible information,
he finally had recourse to the manager of the hotel,
D.V. Bimmer. They were a Madame and Mademoiselle
Delano from Rouen, and had been at the hotel for a
fortnight, not seeming to mind its comparative emptiness,
but enjoying the sea bathing and the drives.
The girl rode, and went out every morning with a groom.
“But didn’t they bring
any letters?” asked Ruyler. “They
are ladies and one letter would have done the business.
That poor girl is having the deuce of a time.”
“D.V.,” who knew “everybody”
in California, and all their secrets, shook his head.
“’Fraid not. The French maid told
the floor valet that although the father was American—from
New England somewheres—and the girl born
in California, accidentally as it were, she had lived
in France all her life—she’s just
eighteen—never crossed the ocean before.
Can you beat it? Until last month, and then they
came from Hong Kong—taking a trip round
the world in good old style. The madame, who scarcely
opens her month, did condescend to tell me that she
had admired California very much when she was here
before, and intended to travel all over the state.
Perhaps I met her in that far off long ago, for I was
managing a hotel in San Francisco about that time,
and her face haunts me somehow—although
when features get all swallowed up by fat like that
you can’t locate them. The girl, too, reminds
me of some one, but of course she was in arms when
she left and as I ain’t much on cathedrals I
never went to Rouen. Of course it’s the
old trick, bringing a pretty girl to a fashionable
watering place to marry her off, but these folks are
not poor. Not what we’d call rich, perhaps,
but good and solid. I don’t fall for the
old lady; she’s a cool proposition or I miss
my guess, but the girl’s all right. I’ve
seen too many girls in this Mecca for adventurous
females and never made a mistake yet. I wish some
of our grand dames would extend the glad hand.
But I’m afraid they won’t. Terrible
exclusive, this bunch.”
Ruyler scowled and walked back to
the ballroom. The exclusiveness of this young
society on the wrong side of the continent sometimes
made him homesick and sometimes made him sick.
He saw little chance for this poor girl to enjoy the
rights of her radiant youth if her mother had not taken
the precaution to bring letters. France was full
of Californians. Many lived there. Surely
she must have met some one she could have made use
of. It was tragic to watch a pathetic young thing
staring at two or three hundred young men and maidens
disporting themselves with the natural hilarity of
youth, and but few of them too ill-natured to welcome
a young and lovely stranger if properly introduced.
He experienced a desperate impulse
to go up to the mother and offer her the hospitality
of the evening, ask her to regard him as her host.
But Madame Delano had a frozen eye, and no doubt orthodox
French ideas on the subject of young girls. A
moment later his eye fell on Mrs. Ford Thornton.
“Fordy” was many times
a millionaire, and his handsome intelligent wife lived
the life of her class. But she was far less conservative
than any woman Price had met in San Francisco.
Although she was no longer young he had more than
once detected symptoms of a wild and insurgent spirit,
and an impatient contempt for the routine she was
compelled to follow or go into retirement. She
was always leaving abruptly for Europe, and every
once in a while she did something quite uncanonical;
enjoying wickedly the consternation she caused among
the serenely regulated, and betraying to the keen
eyes of the New Yorker an ironic appreciation of the
immense wealth which enabled her to do as she chose,
answerable to no one. Her husband was uxorious
and she had no children. She had seemed to Price
more restless than usual of late and showing unmistakable
signs of abrupt departure. (He was sure she dusted
the soles of her boots as she locked the door of drawing-room
A.) Perhaps to-night she might be in a schismatic
mood.
She was standing apart, a tall, dark,
almost fiercely haughty woman, but dressed with a
certain arrogant simplicity, without jewels, her hair
in a careless knot at the base of her head. There
were times when she was impeccably groomed, others
when she looked as if an infuriated maid had left
her helpless. She was, as Ruyler well knew, a
kind and generous woman (in certain of her moods),
with whom the dastardly cradle fates had experimented,
hoping for high drama when the whip of life snapped
once too often. Perhaps she had found her revenge
as well as her consolation in cheating them.
It was evident to Price that she had
been snubbing somebody, for a group of matrons, flushed
and drawn apart, were whispering resentfully.
Price Ruyler stood in no awe of her. He could
match her arrogance, and he liked and admired her
more than any of his new friends. They quarreled
furiously but she had never snubbed him.
He walked over to her, his cool gray
eyes lit with the pleasure in seeing her that she
had learned to expect. “Good evening, oh,
Queen of the Pacific,” he said lightly.
“You are looking quite wonderful as usual.
Are you standing alone almost in the middle of the
room to emphasize the—difference?”
“I am in no mood for compliments,
satiric or otherwise.” She looked him over
with cool penetration. “I may not massage
or have my old cuticle ripped off. If I choose
to look my age you must admit that it gives me one
more claim to originality.”
“You should have let the world
know long since just how original you are, instead
of settling down into the leadership of San Francisco
society—”
He enjoyed provoking her. Her
dark narrow eyes opened and flashed as they must have
done in their unchastened youth. “Don’t
dare call me the leader of this—this!”
“Granted. But the fact
remains that your word alone is law. Therefore
I am about to ask you to forget that I am a bungling
diplomat and do a kind act. For once you would
be able to be both kind and original.”
“I did not know you went in
for charities. I am sick of shelling out.”
“My only part in charities is shelling out.”
“Well, come to the point. What do you want?”
“I want you to go over to that
lady—Madame Delano, her name is—sitting
beside that beautiful girl, and introduce yourself
and then me. They are strangers and I’d
like to give them a good time.”
“How disinterested of you!”
She looked the isolated couple over. “The
girl is all right, but I don’t like the mother.
She is well dressed—oh, correct from tip
to toe—but not quite the lady.”
Ruyler’s cool insolent gaze
swept the dado of amiable overfed ladies who fanned
themselves against the wall.
“None of that! You know
that I do not tolerate the New York attitude.
At least we know who ours are; they came into their
own respectably, and with no uncertain touch.
Of course it is stupid of them to get fat. Naturally
it makes them look bourgeoise. But this
is a lazy climate. As to that woman: there
is something about her I do not like. She is
aggressively not massaged, not made up. Only a
woman of assured position can afford to be mid-Victorian.
It is now quite the smart thing to make up.”
“No doubt her position is assured
in her own provincial town. It will be easy enough
to drop her if she doesn’t go down. You
can’t deny that the girl is all right—and
a sweet pathetic figure.”
“If the girl marries one of
our boys—and no doubt that is what she was
brought here for—we shall not be able to
get rid of the mother. We’ve tried that
and failed.”
At that moment Ruyler’s eyes
met those of the girl. They flashed an irresistible
appeal. He drew a short breath. How different
she looked! She radiated a subtle promise of
perfect companionship. Price Ruyler did what
all men will do until the end of time. He made
up his mind that he had found his woman and without
vocal assistance.
Mrs. Thornton, who had been watching
the unusual mobility of his face, met his eyes with
a satirical smile in her own, her thin red curling
lips drawn almost straight for a moment. She
had played with the fancy, before anger banished it,
that if she had been twenty years younger….
Men had fallen madly in love with her in her own day….
She detected the symptoms in this man at once.
Her savage will compelled her to accept accumulating
years without a concession. But she had forgotten
nothing.
Ruyler may have read her thoughts.
“You know,” he said, with
an attempt at lightness, although the coast wind tan,
which was his only claim to coloring, had paled a little,
“that girl reminds me so much of you that I
have made up my mind to marry her. I don’t
care who she is. If you don’t help me to
meet her conventionally I’ll manage somehow,
but I should hate to practice any subterfuges on the
woman I intend to make my wife.”
For a moment he had the sensation
of being pinned to the wall by that narrow concentrated
gaze. Then Mrs. Thornton swung on her heel.
“I’ll do it,” she said.
She walked across the room with the
supple grace her slender figure had never lost and
sat down beside the older woman. In a moment the
astonished dowagers who had “suffered from her
fiendish temper all evening,” saw her talking
with spontaneous graciousness to both the strangers.
Madame Delano was at first more distant and reserved
than Mrs. Thornton had ever been, manifestly betraying
all the suspicion and unsocial instincts of her class;
but she thawed, and the two women chatted, while once
more the girl’s eyes wandered to the dancers.
When Mrs. Thornton had tormented Ruyler
for quite fifteen minutes she beckoned to him imperiously.
A moment later he was whirling the girl down the ball
room and thrilling at her contact.
V
The wooing had been as headlong as
his falling in love. Hélène Delano had a deep
sweet voice, which completed the conquest during the
hour they spent in the grounds under the shelter of
a great palm, until hunted down by a horrified parent.
Hélène talked frankly of her life.
Her mother had been visiting relatives in a small
New England town—Holbrook Centre, she believed
it was called, but hard American names did not cling
to her memory—she loved the soft Latin
and Indian names in California—and there
she had met and married her father, James Delano.
They were on their way to Japan when business detained
him in San Francisco much longer than he had expected
and she was born. She believed that he had owned
a ranch that he wanted to sell. He died on the
voyage across the Pacific and her mother had returned
to live among her own people in Rouen—very
plain bourgeois, but of a respectability, Oh, là!
là!
“But it was a tiresome life
for a young girl with American blood in her, monsieur.”
Her mother’s income from her husband’s
estate was not large, but they lived in a wing of
the old house and were very comfortable. From
her window there was a lovely view of the Seine winding
off to Paris. “Oh, monsieur, how I used
to long to go to Paris! America was too far.
I never even dreamed of it. But Paris! And
only two little glimpses of it—the last
when we spent a fortnight there before sailing, to
get me some nice frocks….”
She had studied hard—but
hard! She knew four languages, she told Ruyler
proudly. “I had no dot then, you
see. It was possible I might have to teach one
day. A governess in England, Oh, là! là!”
But six months ago a good old uncle
had died and left them some money. She would
have a little dot now, and they could travel.
Maman said she would not have a large enough dot
to make a fine marriage in France, but that the English
and American men were more romantic. They went
first to the Orient, as there were many Englishmen
of good family to be met there. “But maman
is difficult to please,” she added with her enchanting
artlessness, “as difficult as I myself, monsieur.
I wish to fall in love like the American girls.
Maman says it is not necessary, but I am half American,
so, why not? There was an English gentleman with
a nice title in Hong Kong and maman was quite pleased
with him until she discovered that he gambled or did
something equally horrid and she bought our tickets
for San Francisco right away.”
Yes, she was enjoying her travels,
but she was a little lonesome; in Rouen at least she
had her cousins. For the first time in her life
she was talking to a young man alone; even on the
steamer she was not permitted to speak to any of the
nice young men who looked as if they would like her
if only maman would relent.
“In our ugly old rooms in Rouen
maman cherished me like some rare little flower in
an old earthen pot,” she added quaintly.
“Now the pot has tinsel and tissue paper round
it, but until to-night I have felt as if I might just
as well be an old cabbage.”
But it had been heaven to dance with
a young man who was not a cousin; and to sit out alone
with him in the moonlight, Oh, grace à Dieu!
Traveling she had read modern novels
for the first time. There were many in the ship’s
library, oh, but dozens! and she knew now how American
and English girls enjoyed life. Her mother had
been ill nearly all the way over. She had given
her word not to speak to any one, but maman had been
ignorant of the library replete with the novelists
of the day, and although she was not untruthful, enfin,
she saw no reason to ask her too anxious parent for
another prohibition and condemn herself to yawn at
the sea.
Ruyler proposed at the end of a week.
She was the only really innocent, unspoiled, unselfconscious
girl he had ever met, almost as old-fashioned as his
great grandmother must have been. Not that he
set forth her virtues to bolster his determination
to marry a girl of no family even in her own country;
he was madly in love, and life without her was unthinkable;
but he tabulated the thousand points to her credit
for the benefit of his outraged father.
He did not pretend to like Madame
Delano. She was a hard, calculating, sordid old
bourgeoisie, but when he refused the little dot
she would have settled upon Hélène, he knew that he
had won her friendship and that she would give him
no trouble. She was not a mother-in-law to be
ashamed of, for her manners were coldly correct, her
education in youth had evidently been adequate, and
in her obese way she was imposing. She gave him
to understand that she had no more desire to live with
her son-in-law than he with her, and established herself
in a small suite in the Palace Hotel. After a
“lifetime” in a provincial town, economizing
mercilessly, she felt, she remarked in one of her
rare expansive moments, that she had earned the right
to look on at life in a great hotel.
The rainy season she spent in Southern
California, moving from one large hotel crowded with
Eastern visitors to another. This uncommon self-indulgence
and her devotion to Hélène were the only weak spots
Ruyler was able to discover in that cast-iron character.
She seldom attended the brilliant entertainments of
her daughter and refused the endowed car offered by
her son-in-law. Hélène married to the best parti
in San Francisco and quite happy, she seemed content
to settle down into the role of the onlooker at the
kaleidoscope of life. She spent eight hours of
the day and evening seated in an arm chair in the court
of the Palace Hotel, and for air rode out to the end
of the California Street car line, always on the front
seat of the dummy. She was dubbed a “quaint
old party” by her new acquaintances and left
to her own devices. If she didn’t want
them they could jolly well do without her.
VI
Hélène’s social success was
immediate and permanent. Californians rarely
do things by halves. Society was no exception.
She had “walked off” with the most desirable
man in town, but they were good gamblers. When
they lost they paid. She had married into “their
set.” They had accepted her. She was
one of them. No secret order is more loyal to
its initiates.
During that first year and a half
of ideal happiness Ruyler, in what leisure he could
command, found Hélène’s rapidly expanding mind
as companionable as he had hoped; and the girlish
dignity she never lost, for all her naiveté and vivacity,
gratified his pride and compelled, upon their second
brief visit to New York, even the unqualified approval
of his family.
She had inherited all the subtle adaptability
of her father’s race, nothing of the cold and
rigid narrowness of her mother’s class.
Price had feared that her lively mind might reveal
disconcerting shallows, but these little voids were
but the divine hiatuses of youth. He sometimes
wondered just how strong her character was. There
were times when she showed a pronounced inclination
for the line of least resistance … but her youth
... her too sheltered bringing up … those drab cramped
years … no wonder….
He was glad on the whole that his
was the part to mold. Nevertheless, he had his
inconsistencies. Unlike many men of strong will
and driving purpose he liked strength of character
and pronounced individuality in women; and he, too,
had had fleeting visions of what life might have been
had Flora Thornton entered life twenty years later.
He had been quite sincere in telling her that the
young stranger reminded him of the most powerful personality
he had met in California, and he believed that within
a reasonable time Hélène would be as variously cultivated,
as widely, if less erratically developed. But
was there any such insurgent force in her depths?
It was not within the possibilities that at any time
in her life Flora Thornton had been pliable.
A man had little time to study his
wife in California these days. Or at any time?
He sometimes wondered. Certainly happy marriages
were rare and divorces many. Fine weather nearly
all the year round played the deuce with domesticity,
and his business could not be neglected for the long
vacation abroad to which they both had looked forward
so ardently.
Sometimes, even before this vague
gray mist had risen between them, he had had moments
of wondering whether he knew his wife at all.
How could a man know a woman who did not yet know
herself? He sighed and wished he had more time
to explore the uncharted seas of a woman’s soul.
But the cause of the change in her
was something far less picturesque, something concrete
and sinister. He felt sure of that….
VII
Unless—but that was ridiculous! Impossible!
He sprang to his feet, incredulous,
disgusted at the mere thought.
But why not? She was very young,
and older and wiser women were afflicted with inconsistencies,
little tenacious desires and vanities never quite
to be grasped by the elemental male.
He went over to a bookcase containing
heavy works of reference and pressed his index finger
into the molding. It swung outward, revealing
the door of a safe. He manipulated the combination,
took from a drawer of the interior a box, opened it
and stared at a magnificent Burmah ruby. It was
or had been a royal jewel, presented to Masewell Price
by one of the great princes of India whose portrait
he had painted. The pearls had all been captured
long since by Price’s sisters and by Morgan V.
for his wife; but this ruby his mother had given him
as she lay dying. She had bidden him leave it
in his father’s safe until he was out of college,
and then keep it as closely in his personal possession
as possible. It would be turned over to him with
the rest of his private fortune.
“Never let any woman wear it,”
she had whispered. “It brings luck to men
but not to women. Nothing could have affected
my luck one way or the other—I was born
to have nothing I wanted, but you, dear little boy.
Keep it for your luck and in a safe place, but near
you.”
He had looked back upon this scene
as he grew older as the mere expression of a whim
of dissolution, but it had made so deep an impression
upon him at the time that insensibly the words sank
into his plastic mind creating a superstition that
refused to yield to reason. The ruby was Hélène’s
birthstone and she was passionately fond of it.
She had begged and coaxed to wear this jewel, and
upon one occasion had stamped her little foot and
sulked throughout the evening. He had given her
a ruby bar, had the clasp of her pearl necklace set
with rabies, and last Christmas had presented her
with a small but fine “pigeon blood” encircled
with diamonds. These had enraptured her for the
moment, but she had always circled back to the historic
stone, over which her indulgent husband was so unaccountably
obstinate.
Until lately. He recalled that
for several months she had not mentioned it.
Could she have been indulging in a prolonged attack
of interior sulks, which affected her spirits, dimmed
her radiant personality? He abominated the idea
but admitted the possibility. She would not be
the first person to be the victim of a secret but
furious passion for jewels. He recalled a novel
of Hichens; not the matter but the central idea.
Authors of other races had used the same motive.
Well, if his wife had an abnormal streak in her the
sooner he found out the truth the better.
He closed the door of the safe, swung
the bookcase into place, slipped the ruby with its
curious gold chain that looked massive but hardly
weighed an ounce, into his pocket, rang for a servant
and told him to ask Mrs. Ruyler to come down to the
library as soon as she was dressed.