A PARTNERSHIP
All the adjectives in the social register
were exhausted by the daily papers in describing Mrs.
Festus Willard’s dance. Without following
them into that verbal borderland wherein “recherché”
vies with “exclusive,” and “chic”
disputes precedence with “distingué,” it
is sufficient for the purposes of this narrative to
chronicle the fact that the pick of Worthington society
was there, and not much else. Also, if I may borrow
from the Society Editor’s convenient phrase-book,
“Among those present” was Mr. Harrington
Surtaine.
For reasons connected with his new
venture, Hal had come late. He was standing near
the doorway wondering by what path to attain to an
unidentified hostess, when Miss Esmé Elliot, at the
moment engaged with that very hostess on some matter
of feminine strategy with which we have no concern,
spied him.
“Who is the young Greek godling,
hopelessly lost in the impenetrable depths of your
drawing-room?” she propounded suddenly.
“Who? What? Where?”
queried Mrs. Willard, thus abruptly recalled to her
duties.
“Yonder by the doorway, looking
as if he didn’t know a soul.”
“It’s some stranger,”
said the hostess, trying to peer around an intervening
palm. “I must go and speak to him.”
“Wait. Festus has got him.”
For the host, a powerful, high-colored
man in his early forties, with a slight limp, had
noticed the newcomer and was now introducing himself.
Miss Elliot watched the process with interest.
“Jinny,” she announced
presently, “I want that to play with.”
The stranger turned a little, so that
his full face was shown. “It’s Hal
Surtaine!” exclaimed Mrs. Willard.
“I don’t care who it is.
It looks nice. Please, mayn’t I have it
to play with?”
“Will you promise not to break
it? It used to be a particular pet of mine.”
“When?”
“Oh, years ago. When you were in your cradle.”
“Where?”
“On the St. Lawrence. Several
summers. He was my boy-knight, and chaperon,
and protector. Such a dear, chivalrous boy!”
“Was he in love with you?” demanded Miss
Elliot with lively interest.
“Of course he wasn’t.
He was a boy of fifteen, and I a mature young woman
of twenty-one.”
“He was in love with
you,” accused the girl, noting a brightness in
her friend’s color.
“There was a sort of knightly
devotion,” admitted the other demurely.
“There always is, isn’t there, in a boy
of that age, for a woman years older?”
“And you didn’t know him at first?”
“It’s ten years since
I’ve set eyes on him. He doesn’t even
know that I am the Mrs. Festus Willard who is giving
this party.”
“Festus is looking around for
you. They’ll be over here in a minute.
No! Don’t get up yet. I want you to
do something for me.”
“What is it, Norrie?”
“I’m not going to feel well, about supper-time.”
“Why not?”
“Would you feel well
if you’d been in to dinner three times in the
last week with Will Douglas, and then had to go in
to supper with him, too?”
“But I thought you and Will—”
“I’m tired of having people
think,” said Miss Elliot plaintively. “Too
much Douglas! Yes; I shall be quite indisposed,
about one dance before supper.”
“I’ll send you home.”
“No, you won’t, Jinny,
dear. Because I shall suddenly recover, about
two minutes before the oysters arrive.”
“Norrie!”
“Truly I shall. Quite miraculously.
And you’re to see that the young Greek godling
doesn’t get any other partner for supper—”
“Esmé!!”
“—because I’m
sure he’d rather have me,” she concluded
superbly.
“Eleanor Stanley Maxwell Elliot!”
“Oh, you may call me all
my names. I’m accustomed to abuse from you.
But you’ll arrange it, dear Jinny, won’t
you!”
“Did you ever fail of anything
when you put on that wheedling face and tone?”
“Never,” said Miss Elliot
with composure, but giving her friend a little hug.
“Here they come. I fly. Bring him to
me later.”
Piloted by Festus Willard, Hal crossed
the floor, and beheld, moving to meet him with outstretched
hands, a little woman with an elfin face and the smile
of a happy child.
“Have you forgotten me, Hal?”
“Lady Jeannette!” he cried,
the old boyhood name springing to his lips. “What
are you doing here?”
“Didn’t Festus tell you?”
She looked fondly up at her big husband. “I
didn’t know that the surprise would last up to
the final moment.”
“It’s the very best surprise
that has happened to me in Worthington,” declared
Hal emphatically.
“We’re quite prepared
to adopt you, Surtaine,” said Willard pleasantly.
“Jinny has never ceased to wonder why she heard
nothing from you in reply to her note telling of our
engagement.”
“Never got it,” said Hal
promptly. “And I’ve wondered why she
dropped me so unaccountably. It’s rather
luck for me, you know,” he added, smiling, “to
find friends ready-made in a strange town.”
“Oh, you’ll make friends
enough,” declared Mrs. Willard. “The
present matter is to make acquaintances. Come
and dance this dance out with me and then I’ll
take you about and introduce you. Are you as good
a dancer as you used to be?”
Hal was, and something more.
And in his hostess he had one of the best partners
in Worthington. Cleverly she had judged that the
“Boston” with her, if he were proficient,
would be the strongest recommendation to the buds
of the place. And, indeed, before they had gone
twice about the floor, many curious and interested
eyes were turned upon them. Not the least interested
were those of Miss Elliot, who privately decided, over
a full and overflowing programme, that she would advance
her recovery to one dance before the supper announcement.
“You’re going to be a
social success, Hal,” whispered his partner.
“I feel it. And where did you learn
that delightful swing after the dip?”
“Picked it up on shipboard.
But I shan’t have much time for gayeties.
You see, I’ve become a workingman.”
“Tell me about it to-morrow.
You’re to dine with us; quite en famille.
You must like Festus, Hal.”
“I should think that would be easy.”
“It is. He is just the
finest, cleanest, straightest human being in the world,”
she said soberly. “Now, come away and meet
a million people.”
So late was it that most of the girls
had no vacancies on their programmes. But Jeannette
Willard was both a diplomat and a bit of a despot,
socially, and several of the young eligibles relinquished,
with surprisingly good grace, so Hal felt, their partners,
in favor of the newcomer. He did not then know
the tradition of Worthington’s best set, that
hospitality to a stranger well vouched for should be
the common concern of all. Very pleasant and
warming he found this atmosphere, after his years
abroad, with its happy, well-bred frankness, its open
comradeship, and obvious, “first-name”
intimacies. But though every one he met seemed
ready to extend to him, as a friend of the Willards,
a ready welcome, he could not but feel himself an
outsider, and at the conclusion of a dance he drew
back into a side passage, to watch for a time.
Borne on a draught of air from some
invisibly opening door behind him there came to his
nostrils the fairy-spice of the arbutus-scent.
He turned quickly, and saw her almost at his shoulder,
the girl of the lustrous face. Behind her was
Festus Willard.
“Ah, there you are, Surtaine,”
he said. “I’ve been looking for you
to present you to Miss Elliot. Esmé, this is
Mr. Harrington Surtaine.”
She neither bowed nor moved in acknowledgment
of Hal’s greeting, but looked at him with still,
questioning eyes. The springtide hue of the wild
flower at her breast was matched in her cheek.
Her head was held high, bringing out the pure and
lovely line of chin and throat. To Hal it seemed
that he had never seen anything so beautiful and desirable.
“Is it a bet?” Festus
Willard’s quiet voice was full of amusement.
“Have you laid a wager as to which will keep
silent longest?”
At this, Hal recovered himself, though stumblingly.
“‘Fain would I speak,’” he
paraphrased, “‘but that I fear to—to—to—’”
“Stutter,” suggested Willard,
with solicitous helpfulness. The girl broke into
a little trill of mirth, too liquid for laughter; being
rather the sound of a brooklet chuckling musically
over its private delectations.
“If I could have a dance with
you,” suggested Hal, “I’m sure it
would help my aphasia.”
“I’m afraid,” she
began dubiously, “that—No; here’s
one just before supper. If you haven’t
that—”
“No: I haven’t,”
said Hal hastily. “It’s awfully good
of you—and lucky for me.”
“I’ll be with Mrs. Willard,”
said the girl, nodding him a cheerful farewell.
Just what or who his partners for
the next few dances were, Hal could not by any effort
recall the next day. He was conscious, on the
floor, only of an occasional glimpse of her, a fugitive
savor of the wildwood fragrance, and then she had
disappeared.
Later, as he returned from a talk
with Festus Willard outside, he became aware of the
challenge of deep-hued, velvety eyes, regarding him
with a somewhat petulant expression, and recognized
his acquaintance of the motor car and the railroad
terminal.
“You’d forgotten me,”
accused Miss Kathleen Pierce, pouting, as he came
to greet her.
Hal’s disclaimer had sufficient
diplomatic warmth to banish her displeasure.
She introduced to him as Dr. Merritt a striking-looking,
gray-haired young man, who had come up at the same
time with an anticipatory expression. This promptly
vanished when she said offhandedly to him:
“You’ve had three dances
with me already, Hugh. I’m going to give
this one to Mr. Surtaine if he wants it.”
“Of course I want it,” said Hal.
“Not that you deserve it,”
she went on. “You should have come around
earlier. I’m not in the habit of giving
dances this late in the evening.”
“How could I break through the
solid phalanx of supplicating admirers?”
“At least, you might have tried.
I want to try that new step I saw you doing with Mrs.
Willard. And I always get what I want.”
“Unfortunate young lady!”
“Why unfortunate?”
“To have nothing seem unattainable. Life
must pall on you terribly.”
“Indeed, it doesn’t.
I like being a spoiled child, don’t you?
Don’t you think it’s fun having everything
you want to buy, and having a leading citizen for
a father?”
“Is your father a leading citizen?” asked
Hal, amused.
“Of course. So’s
yours. Neither of them quite knows which is the
most leading. Dr. Surtaine is the most popular,
but I suppose Pop is the most influential. Between
the two of them they pretty much run this little old
burg. Of course,” she added with careless
insolence, “Pop has got it all over Dr. Surtaine
socially.
“I humbly feel that I am addressing
local royalty,” said Hal, smiling sardonically.
“Who? Me? Oh, I’m
only the irresponsible child of wealth and power.
Dr. Merritt called me that once—before
I got him tamed.” Turning to look at the
gray young man who stood not far off, and noting the
quiet force and competence of the face, Hal hazarded
a guess to himself that the very frank young barbarian
with whom he was talking was none too modest in her
estimate of her own capacities. “Mrs. Willard
is our local queen,” she continued. “And
Esmé Elliot is the princess. Have you met Esmé
yet?”
“Yes.”
“Then, of course, nobody else
has a chance—so long as you’re the
newest toy. Still, you might find a spare hour
between-times to come and call on us. Come on;
let’s dance.”
“Pert” was the mildest
term to which Hal reduced his characterization of
Miss Pierce, by the time the one-step ended. Nevertheless,
he admitted to himself that he had been amused.
His one chief concern now, however, was the engagement
with Miss Elliot.
When finally his number came around,
he found her calmly explaining to a well-favored young
fellow with a pained expression that he must have
made a mistake about the number, while Mrs. Willard
regarded her with mingled amusement and disfavor.
“Don’t expect me to dance,”
she said as Hal approached. “I’ve
twisted my foot.”
“I’m sorry,” said he blankly.
“Let’s find a quiet place
where we can sit. And then you may get me some
supper.”
His face lighted up. Esmé Elliot
remarked to herself that she had seldom seen a more
pleasing specimen of the youth of the species.
“This is rather like a fairy-gift,”
he began eagerly, as they made their way to a nook
under the stairway, specially adapted to two people
of hermit tastes. “I shouldn’t have
dared to expect such good fortune.”
“You’ll find me quite
a fairy-godmother if you’re good. Besides,”
she added with calm audacity, “I wanted you
to myself.”
“Why?” he asked, amused and intrigued.
“Curiosity. My besetting sin. You’re
a phenomenon.”
“An ambiguous term. It may mean merely
a freak.”
“A new young man in Worthington,”
she informed him, “is a phenomenon, a social
phenomenon. Of course he may be a freak, also,”
she added judicially.
“Newness is a charm that soon wears off.”
“Then you’re going to settle down here?”
“Yes. I’ve joined the laboring classes.”
“What kind of labor?”
“Journalism. I’ve just started in,
to-day.”
“Really! Which paper?”
“The ‘Clarion.’”
Her expressive face changed. “Oh,”
she said, a little blankly.
“You don’t like the ’Clarion’?”
“I almost never see it.
So I don’t know. And you’re going
to begin at the bottom? That’s quite brave
of you.”
“No; I’m going to begin
at the top. That’s braver. Anyway,
it’s more reckless. I’ve bought the
paper.”
“Have you! I hadn’t heard of it.”
“Nobody’s heard of it yet. No outsider.
You’re the first.”
“How delightful!” She
leaned closer and looked into his face with shining
eyes. “Tell me more. What are you going
to do with it?”
“Learn something about it, first.”
“It’s rather yellow, isn’t it?”
“Putting it mildly, yes. That’s one
of the things I want to change.”
“Oh, I wish I owned a newspaper!”
“Do you? Why?”
“For the power of it. To
say what you please and make thousands listen.”
The pink in her cheeks deepened. “There’s
nothing in the world like the thrill of that sense
of power. It’s the one reason why I’d
be almost willing to be a man.”
“Perhaps you wouldn’t
need to be. Couldn’t you exert the power
without actually owning the newspaper?”
“How?”
“By exercising your potent influence
upon the obliging proprietor,” he suggested
smiling.
There came a dancing light in her
eyes. “Do you think I’d make a good
Goddess-Outside-the-Machine, to the ’Daily Clarion’?”
“Charming! For a two-cent
stamp—no, for a spray of your arbutus, I’ll
sell you an editorial sphere of influence.”
“Generous!” she cried. “What
would my duties be?”
“To advise the editor and proprietor
on all possible points,” he laughed.
“And my privileges?”
“The right of a queen over a slave.”
“We move fast,” she said.
Her fingers went to the cluster of delicate-hued bells
in her bodice. But it was a false gesture.
Esmé Elliot was far too practiced in her chosen game
to compromise herself to comment by allowing a man
whom she had just met to display her favor in his
coat.
“Am I to have my price?”
His voice was eager now. She looked very lovely
and childlike, with her head drooping, consideringly,
above the flowers.
“Give me a little time,”
she said. “To undertake a partnership on
five minutes’ notice—that isn’t
business, is it?”
“Nor is this—wholly,” he said,
quite low.
Esmé straightened up. “I’m
starved,” she said lightly. “Are you
not going to get me any supper?”
After his return she held the talk
to more impersonal topics, advising him, with an adorable
assumption of protectiveness, whom he was to meet
and dance with, and what men were best worth his while.
At parting, she gave him her hand.
“I will let you know,”
she said, “about the—the sphere of
influence.”
Hal danced several more numbers, with
more politeness than enjoyment, then sought out his
hostess to say good-night.
“I’ll see you to-morrow,
then,” she said: “and you shall tell
me all your news.”
“You’re awfully good to
me, Lady Jeannette,” said he gratefully.
“Without you I’d be a lost soul in this
town.”
“Most people are good to you,
I fancy, Hal,” said she, looking him over with
approval. “As for being a lost soul, you
don’t look it. In fact you look like a
very well-found soul, indeed.”
“It is rather a cheerful
world to live in,” said Hal with apparent irrelevance.
“I hope they haven’t spoiled
you,” she said anxiously. “Are you
vain, Hal? No: you don’t look it.”
“What on earth should I be vain
about? I’ve never done anything in the
world.”
“No? Yet you’ve improved.
You’ve solidified. What have you been doing
to yourself? Not falling in love?”
“Not that, certainly,”
he replied, smiling. “Nothing much but
traveling.”
“How did you like Esmé Elliot?” she asked
abruptly.
“Quite attractive,” said Hal in a flat
tone.
“Quite attractive, indeed!”
repeated his friend indignantly. “In all
your travelings, I don’t believe you’ve
ever seen any one else half as lovely and lovable.”
“Local pride carries you far, Lady Jeannette,”
laughed Hal.
“And I had intended to
have her here to dine to-morrow; but as you’re
so indifferent—”
“Oh, don’t leave her out on my account,”
said Hal magnanimously.
“I believe you’re more than half in love
with her already.”
“Well, you ought to be a good
judge unless you’ve wholly forgotten the old
days,” retorted Hal audaciously.
Jeannette Willard laughed up at him.
“Don’t try to flirt with a middle-aged
lady who is most old-fashionedly in love with her husband,”
she advised. “Keep your bravo speeches for
Esmé! She’s used to them.”
“Rather goes in for that sort of thing, doesn’t
she?”
“You mean flirtation? Someone’s
been talking to you about her,” said Mrs. Willard
quickly. “What did they say?”
“Nothing in particular. I just gathered
the impression.”
“Don’t jump to any conclusions
about Esmé,” advised his friend. “Most
men think her a desperate flirt. She does like
attention and admiration. What woman doesn’t?
And Esmé is very much a woman.”
“Evidently!”
“If she seems heartless, it’s
because she doesn’t understand. She enjoys
her own power without comprehending it. Esmé has
never been really interested in any man. If she
had ever been hurt, herself, she would be more careful
about hurting others. Yet the very men who have
been hardest hit remain her loyal friends.”
“A tribute to her strategy.”
“A finer quality than that.
It is her own loyalty, I think, that makes others
loyal to her. But the men here aren’t up
to her standard. She is complex, and she is ambitious,
without knowing it. Fine and clean as our Worthington
boys are, there isn’t one of them who could appeal
to the imagination and idealism of a girl like Esmé
Elliot. For Esmé, under all that lightness, is
an idealist; the idealist who hasn’t found her
ideal.”
“And therefore hasn’t found herself.”
She flashed a glance of inquiry and
appraisal at him. “That’s rather
subtle of you,” she said. “I hope
you don’t know too much about women,
Hal.”
“Not I! Just a shot in the dark.”
“I said there wasn’t a
man here up to her standard. That isn’t
quite true. There is one,—you met
him to-night,—but he has troubles of his
own, elsewhere,” she added, smiling. “I
had hoped—but there has always been a friendship
too strong for the other kind of sentiment between
him and Esmé.”
“For a guess, that might be Dr. Merritt,”
said Hal.
“How did you know?” she cried.
“I didn’t. Only,
he seems, at a glance, different and of a broader gauge
than the others.”
“You’re a judge of men,
at least. As for Esmé, I suppose she’ll
marry some man much older than herself. Heaven
grant he’s the right one! For when she
gives, she will give royally, and if the man does not
meet her on her own plane—well, there will
be tragedy enough for two!”
“Deep waters,” said Hal.
The talk had changed to a graver tone.
“Deep and dangerous. Shipwreck
for the wrong adventurer. But El Dorado for the
right. Such a golden El Dorado, Hal! The
man I want for Esmé Elliot must have in him something
of woman for understanding, and something of genius
for guidance, and, I’m afraid, something of the
angel for patience, and he must be, with all this,
wholly a man.”
“A pretty large order, Lady
Jeannette. Well, I’ve had my warning.
Good-night.”
“Perhaps it wasn’t so
much warning as counsel,” she returned, a little
wistfully. “How poor Esmé’s ears must
be burning. There she goes now. What a picture!
Come early to-morrow.”
Hal’s last impression of the
ballroom, as he turned away, was summed up in one
glance from Esmé Elliot’s lustrous eyes, as they
met his across her partner’s shoulder, smiling
him a farewell and a remembrance of their friendly
pact.
“Honey-Jinny,” said Mrs.
Willard’s husband, after the last guest had
gone; “I don’t understand about young Surtaine.
Where did he get it?”
“Get what, dear? One might
suppose he was a corrupt politician.”
“One might suppose he might
be anything crooked or wrong, knowing his old, black
quack of a father. But he seems to be clean stuff
all through. He looks it. He acts it.
He carries himself like it. And he talks it.
I had a little confab with him out in the smoking-room,
and I tell you, Jinny-wife, I believe he’s a
real youngster.”
“Well, he had a mother, you know.”
“Did he? What about her?”
“She was an old friend of my
mother’s. Dr. Surtaine eloped with her out
of her father’s country place in Midvale.
He was an itinerant peddler of some cure-all then.
She was a gently born and bred girl, but a mere child,
unworldly and very romantic, and she was carried away
by the man’s personal beauty and magnetism.”
“I can’t imagine it in a girl of any sort
of family.”
“Mother has told me that he
had a personal force that was almost hypnotic.
There must have been something else to him, too, for
they say that Hal’s mother died, as desperately
in love as she had been when she ran away with him,
and that he was almost crushed by her loss and never
wholly got over it. He transferred his devotion
to the child, who was only three years old when the
mother died. When Hal was a mere child my mother
saw him once taking in dollars at a country fair booth,—just
think of it, dearest,—and she said he was
the picture of his girl-mother then. Later, when
Professor Certain, as he called himself then, got
rich, he gave Hal the best of education. But he
never let him have anything to do with the Ellersleys—that
was Mrs. Surtaine’s name. All the family
are dead now.”
“Well, there must be some good
in the old boy,” admitted Willard. “But
I don’t happen to like him. I do like the
boy. Blood does tell, Jinny. But if he’s
really as much of an Ellersley as he looks, there’s
a bitter enlightenment before him when he comes to
see Dr. Surtaine as he really is.”
Meantime Hal, home at a reasonable
hour, in the interest of his new profession, had taken
with him the pleasantest impressions of the Willards’
hospitality. He slept soundly and awoke in buoyant
spirits for the dawning enterprise. On the breakfast
table he found, in front of his plate, a bunchy envelope
addressed in a small, strong, unfamiliar hand.
Within was no written word; only a spray of the trailing
arbutus, still unwithered of its fairy-pink, still
eloquent, in its wayward, woodland fragrance, of her
who had worn it the night before.