Complete Works of Frank Norris

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Complete Works of Frank Norris Page 155

by Frank Norris


  “The carriage is right here,” she said. “I don’t have to call for Charlie. He’s got a man from Cincinnati in tow, and they are going to dine at the Calumet Club.”

  It ended by the two sisters and Mrs. Wessels getting into Mrs. Cressler’s carriage. Landry excused himself. He lived on the South Side, on Michigan Avenue, and declaring that he knew they had had enough of him for one day, took himself off.

  But whatever Mrs. Cressler had to tell Laura, she evidently was determined to save for her ears only. Arrived at the Dearborns’ home, she sent her footman in to tell the “girl” that the family would not be home that night. The Cresslers lived hard by on the same street, and within ten minutes’ walk of the Dearborns. The two sisters and their aunt would be back immediately after breakfast.

  When they had got home with Mrs. Cressler, this latter suggested hot tea and sandwiches in the library, for the ride had been cold. But the others, worn out, declared for bed as soon as Mrs. Cressler herself had dined.

  “Oh, bless you, Carrie,” said Aunt Wess’; “I couldn’t think of tea. My back is just about broken, and I’m going straight to my bed.”

  Mrs. Cressler showed them to their rooms. Page and Mrs. Wessels elected to sleep together, and once the door had closed upon them the little girl unburdened herself.

  “I suppose Laura thinks it’s all right, running off like this for the whole blessed night, and no one to look after the house but those two servants that nobody knows anything about. As though there weren’t heaven knows what all to tend to there in the morning. I just don’t see,” she exclaimed decisively, “how we’re going to get settled at all. That Landry Court! My goodness, he’s more hindrance than help. Did you ever see! He just dashes in as though he were doing it all, and messes everything up, and loses things, and gets things into the wrong place, and forgets this and that, and then he and Laura sit down and spoon. I never saw anything like it. First it’s Corthell and then Landry, and next it will be somebody else. Laura regularly mortifies me; a great, grown-up girl like that, flirting, and letting every man she meets think that he’s just the one particular one of the whole earth. It’s not good form. And Landry — as if he didn’t know we’ve got more to do now than just to dawdle and dawdle. I could slap him. I like to see a man take life seriously and try to amount to something, and not waste the best years of his life trailing after women who are old enough to be his grandmother, and don’t mean that it will ever come to anything.”

  In her room, in the front of the house, Laura was partly undressed when Mrs. Cressler knocked at her door. The latter had put on a wrapper of flowered silk, and her hair was bound in “invisible nets.”

  “I brought you a dressing-gown,” she said. She hung it over the foot of the bed, and sat down on the bed itself, watching Laura, who stood before the glass of the bureau, her head bent upon her breast, her hands busy with the back of her hair. From time to time the hairpins clicked as she laid them down in the silver trays close at hand. Then putting her chin in the air, she shook her head, and the great braids, unlooped, fell to her waist.

  “What pretty hair you have, child,” murmured Mrs. Cressler. She was settling herself for a long talk with her protege. She had much to tell, but now that they had the whole night before them, could afford to take her time.

  Between the two women the conversation began slowly, with detached phrases and observations that did not call necessarily for answers — mere beginnings that they did not care to follow up.

  “They tell me,” said Mrs. Cressler, “that that Gretry girl smokes ten cigarettes every night before she goes to bed. You know the Gretrys — they were at the opera the other night.”

  Laura permitted herself an indefinite murmur of interest. Her head to one side, she drew the brush in slow, deliberate movements downward underneath the long, thick strands of her hair. Mrs. Cressler watched her attentively.

  “Why don’t you wear your hair that new way, Laura,” she remarked, “farther down on your neck? I see every one doing it now.”

  The house was very still. Outside the double windows they could hear the faint murmuring click of the frozen snow. A radiator in the hallway clanked and strangled for a moment, then fell quiet again.

  “What a pretty room this is,” said Laura. “I think I’ll have to do our guest room something like this — a sort of white and gold effect. My hair? Oh, I don’t know. Wearing it low that way makes it catch so on the hooks of your collar, and, besides, I was afraid it would make my head look so flat.”

  There was a silence. Laura braided a long strand, with quick, regular motions of both hands, and letting it fall over her shoulder, shook it into place with a twist of her head. She stepped out of her skirt, and Mrs. Cressler handed her her dressing-gown, and brought out a pair of quilted slippers of red satin from the wardrobe.

  In the grate, the fire that had been lighted just before they had come upstairs was crackling sharply. Laura drew up an armchair and sat down in front of it, her chin in her hand. Mrs. Cressler stretched herself upon the bed, an arm behind her head.

  “Well, Laura,” she began at length, “I have some real news for you. My dear, I believe you’ve made a conquest.”

  “I!” murmured Laura, looking around. She feigned a surprise, though she guessed at once that Mrs. Cressler had Corthell in mind.

  “That Mr. Jadwin — the one you met at the opera.”

  Genuinely taken aback, Laura sat upright and stared wide-eyed.

  “Mr. Jadwin!” she exclaimed. “Why, we didn’t have five minutes’ talk. Why, I hardly know the man. I only met him last night.”

  But Mrs. Cressler shook her head, closing her eyes and putting her lips together.

  “That don’t make any difference, Laura. Trust me to tell when a man is taken with a girl. My dear, you can have him as easy as that.” She snapped her fingers.

  “Oh, I’m sure you’re mistaken, Mrs. Cressler.”

  “Not in the least. I’ve known Curtis Jadwin now for fifteen years — nobody better. He’s as old a family friend as Charlie and I have. I know him like a book. And I tell you the man is in love with you.”

  “Well, I hope he didn’t tell you as much,” cried Laura, promising herself to be royally angry if such was the case. But Mrs. Cressler hastened to reassure her.

  “Oh my, no. But all the way home last night — he came home with us, you know — he kept referring to you, and just so soon as the conversation got on some other subject he would lose interest. He wanted to know all about you — oh, you know how a man will talk,” she exclaimed. “And he said you had more sense and more intelligence than any girl he had ever known.”

  “Oh, well,” answered Laura deprecatingly, as if to say that that did not count for much with her.

  “And that you were simply beautiful. He said that he never remembered to have seen a more beautiful woman.”

  Laura turned her head away, a hand shielding her cheek. She did not answer immediately, then at length:

  “Has he — this Mr. Jadwin — has he ever been married before?”

  “No, no. He’s a bachelor, and rich! He could buy and sell us. And don’t think, Laura dear, that I’m jumping at conclusions. I hope I’m woman of the world enough to know that a man who’s taken with a pretty face and smart talk isn’t going to rush right into matrimony because of that. It wasn’t so much what Curtis Jadwin said — though, dear me suz, he talked enough about you — as what he didn’t say. I could tell. He was thinking hard. He was hit, Laura. I know he was. And Charlie said he spoke about you again this morning at breakfast. Charlie makes me tired sometimes,” she added irrelevantly.

  “Charlie?” repeated Laura.

  “Well, of course I spoke to him about Jadwin, and how taken he seemed with you, and the man roared at me.”

  “He didn’t believe it, then.”

  “Yes he did — when I could get him to talk seriously about it, and when I made him remember how Mr. Jadwin had spoken in the carriage coming home.”
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br />   Laura curled her leg under her and sat nursing her foot and looking into the fire. For a long time neither spoke. A little clock of brass and black marble began to chime, very prettily, the half hour of nine. Mrs. Cressler observed:

  “That Sheldon Corthell seems to be a very agreeable kind of a young man, doesn’t he?”

  “Yes,” replied Laura thoughtfully, “he is agreeable.”

  “And a talented fellow, too,” continued Mrs. Cressler. “But somehow it never impressed me that there was very much to him.”

  “Oh,” murmured Laura indifferently, “I don’t know.”

  “I suppose,” Mrs. Cressler went on, in a tone of resignation, “I suppose he thinks the world and all of you?”

  Laura raised a shoulder without answering.

  “Charlie can’t abide him,” said Mrs. Cressler. “Funny, isn’t it what prejudices men have? Charlie always speaks of him as though he were a higher order of glazier. Curtis Jadwin seems to like him.... What do you think of him, Laura — of Mr. Jadwin?”

  “I don’t know,” she answered, looking vaguely into the fire. “I thought he was a strong man — mentally I mean, and that he would be kindly and — and — generous. Somehow,” she said, musingly, “I didn’t think he would be the sort of man that women would take to, at first — but then I don’t know. I saw very little of him, as I say. He didn’t impress me as being a woman’s man.”

  “All the better,” said the other. “Who would want to marry a woman’s man? I wouldn’t. Sheldon Corthell is that. I tell you one thing, Laura, and when you are as old as I am, you’ll know it’s true: the kind of a man that men like — not women — is the kind of a man that makes the best husband.”

  Laura nodded her head.

  “Yes,” she answered, listlessly, “I suppose that’s true.”

  “You said Jadwin struck you as being a kindly man, a generous man. He’s just that, and that charitable! You know he has a Sunday-school over on the West Side, a Sunday-school for mission children, and I do believe he’s more interested in that than in his business. He wants to make it the biggest Sunday-school in Chicago. It’s an ambition of his. I don’t want you to think that he’s good in a goody-goody way, because he’s not. Laura,” she exclaimed, “he’s a fine man. I didn’t intend to brag him up to you, because I wanted you to like him. But no one knows — as I say — no one knows Curtis Jadwin better than Charlie and I, and we just love him. The kindliest, biggest-hearted fellow — oh, well, you’ll know him for yourself, and then you’ll see. He passes the plate in our church.”

  “Dr. Wendell’s church?” asked Laura.

  “Yes you know — the Second Presbyterian.”

  “I’m Episcopalian myself,” observed Laura, still thoughtfully gazing into the fire.

  “I know, I know. But Jadwin isn’t the blue-nosed sort. And now see here, Laura, I want to tell you. J. — that’s what Charlie and I call Jadwin — J. was talking to us the other day about supporting a ward in the Children’s Hospital for the children of his Sunday-school that get hurt or sick. You see he has nearly eight hundred boys and girls in his school, and there’s not a week passes that he don’t hear of some one of them who has been hurt or taken sick. And he wants to start a ward at the Children’s Hospital, that can take care of them. He says he wants to get other people interested, too, and so he wants to start a contribution. He says he’ll double any amount that’s raised in the next six months — that is, if there’s two thousand raised, he’ll make it four thousand; understand? And so Charlie and I and the Gretrys are going to get up an amateur play — a charity affair — and raise as much money as we can. J. thinks it’s a good idea, and — here’s the point — we were talking about it coming home in the carriage, and J. said he wondered if that Miss Dearborn wouldn’t take part. And we are all wild to have you. You know you do that sort of thing so well. Now don’t say yes or no to-night. You sleep over it. J. is crazy to have you in it.”

  “I’d love to do it,” answered Laura. “But I would have to see — it takes so long to get settled, and there’s so much to do about a big house like ours, I might not have time. But I will let you know.”

  Mrs. Cressler told her in detail about the proposed play. Landry Court was to take part, and she enlisted Laura’s influence to get Sheldon Corthell to undertake a role. Page, it appeared, had already promised to help. Laura remembered now that she had heard her speak of it. However, the plan was so immature as yet, that it hardly admitted of very much discussion, and inevitably the conversation came back to its starting-point.

  “You know,” Laura had remarked in answer to one of Mrs. Cressler’s observations upon the capabilities and business ability of “J.,” “you know I never heard of him before you spoke of our theatre party. I don’t know anything about him.”

  But Mrs. Cressler promptly supplied the information. Curtis Jadwin was a man about thirty-five, who had begun life without a sou in his pockets. He was a native of Michigan. His people were farmers, nothing more nor less than hardy, honest fellows, who ploughed and sowed for a living. Curtis had only a rudimentary schooling, because he had given up the idea of finishing his studies in the High School in Grand Rapids, on the chance of going into business with a livery stable keeper. Then in time he had bought out the business and had run it for himself. Some one in Chicago owed him money, and in default of payment had offered him a couple of lots on Wabash Avenue. That was how he happened to come to Chicago. Naturally enough as the city grew the Wabash Avenue property — it was near Monroe Street — increased in value. He sold the lots and bought other real estate, sold that and bought somewhere else, and so on, till he owned some of the best business sites in the city. Just his ground rent alone brought him, heaven knew how many thousands a year. He was one of the largest real estate owners in Chicago. But he no longer bought and sold. His property had grown so large that just the management of it alone took up most of his time. He had an office in the Rookery, and perhaps being so close to the Board of Trade Building, had given him a taste for trying a little deal in wheat now and then. As a rule, he deplored speculation. He had no fixed principles about it, like Charlie. Only he was conservative; occasionally he hazarded small operations. Somehow he had never married. There had been affairs. Oh, yes, one or two, of course. Nothing very serious, He just didn’t seem to have met the right girl, that was all. He lived on Michigan Avenue, near the corner of Twenty-first Street, in one of those discouraging eternal yellow limestone houses with a basement dining-room. His aunt kept house for him, and his nieces and nephews overran the place. There was always a raft of them there, either coming or going; and the way they exploited him! He supported them all; heaven knew how many there were; such drabs and gawks, all elbows and knees, who soaked themselves with cologne and made companions of the servants. They and the second girls were always squabbling about their things that they found in each other’s rooms.

  It was growing late. At length Mrs. Cressler rose.

  “My goodness, Laura, look at the time; and I’ve been keeping you up when you must be killed for sleep.”

  She took herself away, pausing at the doorway long enough to say:

  “Do try to manage to take part in the play. J. made me promise that I would get you.”

  “Well, I think I can,” Laura answered. “Only I’ll have to see first how our new regime is going to run — the house I mean.”

  When Mrs. Cressler had gone Laura lost no time in getting to bed. But after she turned out the gas she remembered that she had not “covered” the fire, a custom that she still retained from the daily round of her life at Barrington. She did not light the gas again, but guided by the firelight, spread a shovelful of ashes over the top of the grate. Yet when she had done this, she still knelt there a moment, looking wide-eyed into the glow, thinking over the events of the last twenty-four hours. When all was said and done, she had, after all, found more in Chicago than the clash and trepidation of empire-making, more than the reverberation of the thunder of
battle, more than the piping and choiring of sweet music.

  First it had been Sheldon Corthell, quiet, persuasive, eloquent. Then Landry Court with his exuberance and extravagance and boyishness, and now — unexpectedly — behold, a new element had appeared — this other one, this man of the world, of affairs, mature, experienced, whom she hardly knew. It was charming she told herself, exciting. Life never had seemed half so delightful. Romantic, she felt Romance, unseen, intangible, at work all about her. And love, which of all things knowable was dearest to her, came to her unsought.

  Her first aversion to the Great Grey City was fast disappearing. She saw it now in a kindlier aspect.

  “I think,” she said at last, as she still knelt before the fire, looking deep into the coals, absorbed, abstracted, “I think that I am going to be very happy here.”

  III

  On a certain Monday morning, about a month later, Curtis Jadwin descended from his office in the Rookery Building, and turning southward, took his way toward the brokerage and commission office of Gretry, Converse and Co., on the ground floor of the Board of Trade Building, only a few steps away.

  It was about nine o’clock; the weather was mild, the sun shone. La Salle Street swarmed with the multitudinous life that seethed about the doors of the innumerable offices of brokers and commission men of the neighbourhood. To the right, in the peristyle of the Illinois Trust Building, groups of clerks, of messengers, of brokers, of clients, and of depositors formed and broke incessantly. To the left, where the facade of the Board of Trade blocked the street, the activity was astonishing, and in and out of the swing doors of its entrance streamed an incessant tide of coming and going. All the life of the neighbourhood seemed to centre at this point — the entrance of the Board of Trade. Two currents that trended swiftly through La Salle and Jackson streets, and that fed, or were fed by, other tributaries that poured in through Fifth Avenue and through Clarke and Dearborn streets, met at this point — one setting in, the other out. The nearer the currents the greater their speed. Men — mere flotsam in the flood — as they turned into La Salle Street from Adams or from Monroe, or even from as far as Madison, seemed to accelerate their pace as they approached. At the Illinois Trust the walk became a stride, at the Rookery the stride was almost a trot. But at the corner of Jackson Street, the Board of Trade now merely the width of the street away, the trot became a run, and young men and boys, under the pretence of escaping the trucks and wagons of the cobbles, dashed across at a veritable gallop, flung themselves panting into the entrance of the Board, were engulfed in the turmoil of the spot, and disappeared with a sudden fillip into the gloom of the interior.

 

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