A START IN LIFE
In the late ’seventies and early
’eighties the most important shop in the town
of Gabriella’s birth was known to its patrons
(chiefly ladies in long basques, tightly
tied back skirts, and small eccentric bonnets) as
Brandywine & Plummer’s drygoods store. At
that period, when old Mrs. Carr, just completing her
ninetieth year with a mind fixed upon heaven, would
have dropped dead at the idea that her granddaughter
should ever step out of her class, Gabriella’s
mother bought her dresses (grosgrain of the very best
quality) from Major Brandywine. To be sure, even
in those days, there were other shops in the city for
was not Broad Street already alluded to in the newspapers
as “the shopping thoroughfare of the South?” but,
though they were as numerous as dandelions in June,
these places were by no means patronized so widely
by “the best people.” Small shops,
of course, carrying a single line of goods and supplying
their particular products to an exacting and discriminating
class, held their own even against the established
reputation of Brandywine & Plummer’s. O’Connell’s
linen store, Twitlow’s china store, Mrs. Tonk’s
doll store, and Green & Brady’s store for notions all
these were situated in Broad Street hardly a stone’s
throw from the Second Market. But none of these,
excellent as they were, could bear comparison with
the refined atmosphere, so different from the vulgar
bustle of a modern department store, which enveloped
one in the quiet gloom of Brandywine & Plummer’s.
In the first place, one could be perfectly sure that
one would be waited on by a lady for Brandywine
& Plummer’s, with a distinguished Confederate
soldier at its head and front, provided an almost
conventual shelter for distressed feminine gentility.
There was, for instance, Miss Marye of the black silk
counter, whose father had belonged to Stuart’s
cavalry and had fallen at Yellow Tavern; there was
Miss Meason of the glove counter, and there was Mrs.
Burwell Smith of the ribbon counter for,
though she had married beneath her, it was impossible
to forget that she was a direct descendant of Colonel
Micajah Burwell, of Crow’s Nest Plantation.
Then, if one happened to be in search
of cotton goods, one would be almost certain to remark
on the way home: “Miss Peters, who waited
on me in Brandywine’s this morning, has unmistakably
the manner of a lady,” or “that Mrs. Jones
in Brandywine’s must be related to the real Joneses,
she has such a refined appearance.” And,
at last, in the middle ’nineties, after the
opening of the new millinery department, which was
reached by a short flight of steps, decorated at discreet
intervals with baskets of pink paper roses, customers
were beginning to ask: “May I speak to
Miss Gabriella for a minute? I wish to speak to
Miss Gabriella about the hat she is having trimmed
for me.”
For here, also, because of what poor
Jane called her “practical mind,” the
patrons of Brandywine & Plummer’s were learning
that Gabriella was “the sort you could count
on.” As far as the actual work went, she
could not, of course, hold a candle (this was Mr. Plummer’s
way of putting it) to Miss Kemp or Miss Treadway,
who had a decided talent for trimming; but no customer
in balloon sleeves and bell-shaped skirt was ever
heard to remark of these young women as they remarked
of Gabriella, “No, I don’t want anybody
else, please. She takes such an interest.”
To take an interest in other people might become quite
as marketable an asset, Mr. Plummer was discovering,
after fifty years of adherence to strictly business
methods, as a gift for the needle; and, added to her
engaging interest, Gabriella appeared to know by instinct
exactly what a customer wanted.
“I declare Miss Kemp had almost
persuaded me to take that brown straw with the green
velvet bandeau before I thought of asking Gabriella’s
advice,” Mrs. Spencer was overheard saying to
her daughter, as she paused, panting and breathless,
at the head of the short flight of steps.
“Oh, Gabriella always had taste;
I’ll ask her about mine,” Florrie tossed
back gaily in the high fluting notes which expressed
so perfectly the brilliant, if slightly metallic,
quality of her personality.
Beside her mother, a plump, bouncing
person, with a noisy though imperfectly articulate
habit of speech, and the prominent hips and bust which
composed the “fine figure” of the period,
Florrie seemed to float with all the elusive, magic
loveliness of a sunbeam. From the shining nimbus
of her hair to her small tripping feet she was the
incarnation of girlhood of that white and
gold girlhood which has intoxicated the imagination
of man. She shed the allurement of sex as unconsciously
as a flower sheds its perfume. Though her eyes
were softly veiled by her lashes, every male clerk
in Brandywine & Plummer’s was dazzled by the
deep blue light of her glances. In her red mouth,
with its parted lips, in the pure rose and white of
her flesh, in the rich curve of her bosom, which promised
already the “fine figure” of her mother,
youth and summer were calling as they called in the
velvet softness of the June breeze. Innocent
though she was, the powers of Life had selected her
as a vehicle for their inscrutable ends.
“Where is Miss Carr? I
must speak to Miss Carr, please,” she said to
one of the shop girls who came up, eager to serve
her. “Will you tell her that Miss Spencer
is waiting to speak to her?”
Responding to the girl’s artless
stare of admiration, she threw a friendly glance at
her before she turned away to try on a monstrous white
Leghorn hat decorated around the crown with a trellis
of pink roses. Unless she happened to be in a
particularly bad humour and this was not
often the case Florrie was imperturbably
amiable. She enjoyed flattery as a cat enjoys
the firelight on its back, and while she purred happily
in the pleasant warmth, she had something of the sleek
and glossy look of a pretty kitten.
“How does this look on me, mother?”
she asked over her shoulder of Mrs. Spencer, who was
babbling cheerfully in her loud tones to Miss Lancaster,
the forewoman.
Though some of the best blood in Virginia,
profusely diluted with some of the worst, flowed comfortably
in Mrs. Spencer’s veins, it was impossible even
for her relatives to deny that she could be at times
decidedly vulgar. Having been a conspicuous belle
and beauty of a bold and dashing type in her youth,
she now devoted her middle-age to the enjoyment of
those pleasures which she had formerly sacrificed to
the preservation of her figure and her complexion.
Though she still dyed her somewhat damaged hair, and
strenuously pinched in her widening waist, she had
ceased, since her fiftieth birthday, to forego the
lesser comforts of the body. As she was a person
of small imagination, and of no sentiment, it is probable
that she was happier now than she had been in the
days when she suffered the deprivations and enjoyed
the triumphs of beauty.
“What’s that, Florrie?”
she inquired shrilly. “No, I shouldn’t
get that if I were you. It doesn’t flare
enough. I’m crazy about a flare.”
“But I want a pink bandeau,
mother,” replied Florrie a little pettishly,
as she patted her golden-red fringe. “I
wonder where Gabriella is? Isn’t she ever
coming, Miss Lancaster?”
“I thought I saw her when I
came in,” observed Mrs. Spencer, craning her
handsome neck, which was running to fat, in the direction
of the trimming room. “Florrie, just turn
your head after a minute and look at the hat Patty
Carrington is buying pea green, and it makes
her face look like a walnut. She hasn’t
the faintest idea how to dress. Do you think
I ought to speak to her about it?”
“No, let her alone,” replied
Florrie impatiently. “Is this any better
than the Leghorn?”
“Well, I must say I don’t
think there is much style about it, though, of course,
with your hair, you can carry off anything. Isn’t
it odd how exactly she inherited my hair, Miss Lancaster?
I remember her father used to say that he would have
fallen in love with a gatepost if it had had golden-red
hair.”
Miss Lancaster, a thin, erect woman
of fifty, with impassive features, and iron-gray hair
that looked as if it were rolled over wood, glanced
resignedly from Mrs. Spencer’s orange-coloured
crimps to the imprisoned sunlight in Florrie’s
hair.
“I’d know you were mother
and daughter anywhere,” she remarked in the
noncommittal manner she had acquired in thirty years
of independence; “and she is going to have your
beautiful figure, too, Mrs. Spencer.”
“Well, I reckon I’ll lose
my figure now that I’ve stopped dieting,”
remarked the lively lady, casting an appreciative glance
in the mirror. “Florrie tells me I wear
my sleeves too large, but I think they make me look
smaller.”
“They are wearing them very
large in Paris,” replied Miss Lancaster, as
if she were reciting a verse out of a catalogue.
She had, as she sometimes found occasion to remark,
been “born tired,” and this temperamental
weariness showed now in her handsome face, so wrinkled
and dark around her bravely smiling eyes. Where
she came from, or how she spent her time between the
hour she left the shop and the hour she returned to
it, the two women knew as little as they knew the intimate
personal history of the Leghorn hat on the peg by the
mirror. Beyond the fact that she played the part
of a sympathetic chorus, they were without curiosity
about her life. Their own personalities absorbed
them, and for the time at least appeared to absorb
Miss Lancaster.
“I like the Leghorn hat,”
said Florrie decisively, as she tried it on for the
third time, “but I’ll wait till I ask Gabriella’s
opinion.”
“I hope she’s getting
on well here,” said Mrs. Spencer, who found it
impossible to concentrate on Florrie’s hat.
“Don’t you think it was very brave of
her to go to work, Miss Lancaster?”
“I understood that she was obliged
to,” rejoined Miss Lancaster, with the weary
amiability of her professional manner.
“She might have married, I happen
to know that,” returned Mrs. Spencer. “Arthur
Peyton has been in love with her ever since she was
a child, and there was a young man from New York last
winter who seemed crazy about her. Florrie, don’t
you think George Fowler was just crazy about Gabriella?”
“I’m sure I don’t
know, mother. He paid her a great deal of attention,
but you never can tell about men.”
“Julia Caperton told me, and,
of course, she’s very intimate with George’s
sister, that he went back to New York because he heard
that Gabriella was engaged to Arthur. Florrie,
do you suppose she is really engaged to Arthur?”
Thus appealed to, Florrie removed
the Leghorn hat from her head, and answered abstractedly:
“Jane thought so, but if she is engaged, I don’t
see why she should have started to work. I know
Arthur would hate it.”
“But isn’t he too poor
to marry?” inquired Mrs. Spencer, whose curiosity
was as robust as her constitution. “Haven’t
you always understood that the Peytons were poor,
Miss Lancaster, in spite of the lovely house they
live in?”
Her large, good-humoured face, which
had once been as delicate as a flower, but was now
growing puffed and mottled under a plentiful layer
of rice powder, became almost violently animated, while
she adjusted her belt with a single effective jerk
of her waist. Though Bessie Spencer was admitted
to have one of the kindest hearts in the world, she
was chiefly remarkable for her unhappy faculty of
saying the wrong thing at the wrong time. An
inveterate, though benevolent, gossip, she would babble
on for hours, reciting the private affairs of her relatives,
her friends, and her neighbours. Everybody feared
her, and yet everybody was assured that “she
never meant any harm.” The secrets of the
town flowed through her mind as grist flows through
a mill, and though she was entirely without malice,
she contrived, in the most innocent manner, to do
an incalculable amount of injury. Possessing a
singularly active intelligence, and having reached
middle-age without acquiring sufficient concentration
to enjoy books, she directed a vigorous, if casual,
understanding toward the human beings among whom she
lived. She knew everything that it was possible
to know about the people who lived in Franklin Street,
and yet her mind was so constituted that she never
by any chance knew it correctly. Though she was
not old, she had already passed into a proverb.
To receive any statement with the remark, “You
have heard that from Bessie Spencer,” was to
cast doubt upon it.
“You don’t think I’m
getting any stouter, do you, Miss Lancaster?”
she inquired dubiously, with her hands on her hips
and her eyes measuring the dimensions of her waist.
“I’m making up my mind to try one of those
B. and T. corsets that Mrs. Murray is wearing.
She told me it reduced her waist at least three inches.”
“Oh, you aren’t like Mrs.
Murray she didn’t measure a fraction
under thirty inches,” replied Miss Lancaster,
with her patient politeness. Then, after a pause,
which Mrs. Spencer’s nimble wit filled with a
story about the amazing number of mint juleps Mrs.
Murray was seen to drink at the White Sulphur Springs
last summer, Florrie exclaimed eagerly:
“Why, there is Gabriella!
Won’t you get her for us, Miss Lancaster?”
Near one of the long windows, beyond
which large greenish flies were buzzing around the
branch of a mulberry tree in the alley, Gabriella was
trying a purple hat on a prim-looking lady who regarded
herself in the mirror with a furtive and deprecating
air as if she were afraid of being unjustly blamed
for her appearance. “I’m not sure but
I don’t think it suits me exactly,” she
appeared to murmur in a strangled whisper, while she
twisted her mouth, which held a jet-headed hatpin,
into a quivering grimace.
“She’s waiting on Matty
French,” said Mrs. Spencer, and she added impulsively,
“I wonder what it is that men see in Gabriella.
You wouldn’t call her really pretty, would you,
Miss Lancaster?”
“Well, not exactly pretty, but
she has an interesting face. It is so full of
life.”
“Can’t you get her, mother?”
asked Florrie; and Mrs. Spencer, always eager to oblige,
rustled across the room and pounced vivaciously upon
the prim lady and Gabriella.
“We’ve been looking for
you everywhere, Gabriella,” she began, nodding
agreeably to Miss French. “Florrie has tried
on all the hats in the room, and she wants you to
tell her if that white Leghorn is becoming. Good
morning, Matty! That blue wing is so stylish.
I think you are very sensible to wear colours and
not to stick to black as Susie Chamberlain does.
It makes her look as old as the hills, and I believe
she does it just to depress people. Life is too
short, as I said when I left off mourning, to be an
ink blot wherever you go. And it doesn’t
mean that she grieves a bit more for her husband than
anybody else does. Everybody knows they led a
cat and dog’s life together, and I’ve even
heard, though I can’t remember who told me,
that she was on the point of getting a divorce when
he died. Are you going? Well, I’m glad
you decided on that blue hat. I don’t believe
you’ll ever regret it. Good-bye. Be
sure and come to see me soon. Gabriella, will
you help Florrie about her hat now? I declare,
I thought Matty would never get through with you.
And, of course, we didn’t want anybody but you
to wait on us. We were just saying that you had
the most beautiful taste, and it is so wise of you
to go out to work and not sit down and sew at home
in order to support your position. A position
that can’t support itself isn’t much of
a prop, my husband used to say. But I don’t
believe you’ll stay here long, you sly piece.
You’ll be married before the year is up, mark
my word. The men are all crazy about you, everybody
knows that. Why, Florrie met George Fowler in
the street this morning, and when he asked after you,
his face turned as hot as fire, she said ”
Gabriella’s face, above her
starched collar with its neat red tie, was slowly
flooded with colour. Her brown eyes shone golden
under her dark lashes, and Mrs. Spencer told herself
that the girl looked almost pretty for a minute.
“If she wasn’t so sallow, she’d be
really good looking.”
Happily unaware that her face had
betrayed her, Gabriella slid back a glass door, took
a hat out of the case, and answered indifferently,
while she adjusted the ribbon bow on one side of the
crown:
“I didn’t know Mr. Fowler
had come back. I haven’t seen him for ages.”
From her small, smooth head to her
slender feet she had acquired in three months the
composed efficiency of Miss Lancaster; and one might
have imagined, as Mrs. Spencer remarked to Florrie
afterwards, that “she had been born in a hat
shop.”
But instead of the weary patience
of Miss Lancaster, she brought to her work the brimming
energy and the joyous self-confidence of youth.
It was impossible to watch her and not realize that
she had given both ability and the finer gift of personality
to the selling of hats. Had she started life
as a funeral director instead of a milliner, it is
probable that she would have infused into the dreary
business something of the living quality of genius.
“Oh, Florrie hadn’t seen
him for ages either,” chirped Mrs. Spencer,
with her restless eyes on the hat in Gabriella’s
hand. “I don’t know whether I ought
to tell you or not, but you and Florrie are so intimate
I suppose I might as well Julia Caperton
told Florrie that George came back because he heard
in some way that you had broken your engagement to
Arthur. Of course, as I told Julia afterwards,
you hadn’t mentioned a word of it to me, but
I’ve got eyes and I can’t help using them.
I was obliged to see that George was simply out of
his mind about you. It would be a splendid match,
too, for they say his father has made quite a large
fortune since he went to New York ”
“Mother!” interrupted
Florrie sternly, over her shoulder, “you know
Julia told you not to breathe a single word as coming
from her. She is the bosom friend of George’s
sister.”
“But, Florrie, I haven’t
told a soul except Gabriella, and I know she wouldn’t
repeat a thing that I said to her.”
“Now, isn’t that exactly
like mother?” observed Florrie, with the casual
disapprobation of youth. “She was on the
point of telling Miss Lancaster all about it when
I stopped her.”
“Why, Florrie, I didn’t
say a word except that men were crazy about Gabriella you
know I didn’t. Of course, I talk a great
deal,” she pursued in an aggrieved, explanatory
tone to Gabriella, “but I never repeat a word not
a single word that is told me in confidence. If
Julia had asked me not to tell Gabriella what she
said, I shouldn’t have dreamed of doing so.”
“Oh, it doesn’t matter
in the least, Mrs. Spencer,” said Gabriella
hastily, “only there isn’t a word of truth
in it.”
The becoming flush was still in her
cheeks, and she poised a hat over Florrie’s
head with a swift, flying grace which Mrs. Spencer
had never noticed in her before. “I wonder
if Gabriella can really care about George?”
she thought quickly. “But if it is George
she is in love with, why on earth did she start to
work in a shop?” Then suddenly, following a
flash of light, she reasoned it out to her complete
satisfaction. “It must have been that she
didn’t know that George cared that
is why she is blushing so at this minute.”
An hour or so later, when Florrie
and her mother had fluttered volubly downstairs, and
the exhausted assistants were putting the hats away
before closing the cases, Gabriella went into the dressing-room,
where Miss Nash, a stout, pleasant-looking girl, was
sitting in a broken chair, with her shoes off, her
blue serge skirt rolled back from her knees, and her
head bowed, over her crossed arms, on the window-sill.
At Gabriella’s entrance she
glanced up, and remarked cheerfully: “My
feet were killing me. I just had to take off my
shoes.”
“They do get dreadfully tired,”
assented Gabriella in the tone of sympathetic intimacy
she had caught from the other girls.
Her naturally friendly spirit had
refused to “hold aloof” from her companions,
as her mother had begged her to do, and at the end
of three months she had learned things about most
of them which interested her profoundly. One
supported an invalid father, another had a family of
six little brothers and sisters to care for, and still
another had lost her lover through a railroad accident
only two days before her marriage. Several of
them were extravagantly loud, one or two were inclined
to be vulgar; but the others were quite as refined
and gentle as the girls with whom she had grown up,
and what impressed her about them all was their courageous
and yet essentially light-hearted Southern spirit.
To her surprise, she found an utter absence of jealousy
among them. The elder women were invariably kind
and helpful, and though she liked the girls, she soon
discovered in herself a growing feeling of respect
for these older women. They represented a different
type, for the hardness she noticed in some of the
younger girls was entirely lacking in the women of
Miss Lancaster’s generation. Many of them
even her mother would have called well born, and one
and all, they were almost painfully ladylike.
With their thin, erect figures, their wan, colourless
faces, their graying hair, and their sweet Southern
voices, they imparted a delicate social air to the
shop.
Usually Gabriella stopped to talk
to the girls who crowded in from the workroom, brushing
shreds of silk or ribbon from their skirts, but to-day
her mind wandered while she answered Miss Nash, and
when, a minute later, Miss Lancaster spoke to her
on her way out, and asked her to match the flowers
for Florrie’s hat, she was obliged to make an
effort before she could recall her roving attention.
She was thinking not of Florrie’s hat, but of
Mrs. Spencer’s words, “He has come back
because he heard that your engagement was broken.”
And at the first insurgent rise of emotion, she ceased
to be the business woman and became merely an imaginative
girl, dreaming of love.
“They aren’t quite the
right shade, are they?” she asked with an uncertainty
which was tactful rather than sincere, “or, perhaps,
the ribbon might be darker?”
Her eyes questioned Miss Lancaster,
who moved a step nearer the window as she held the
bolt of ribbon toward the daylight.
“Well, we’d better look
at it again in the morning. You are in a hurry,
Miss Carr?”
“Oh, no, I’ve all the
time in the world,” answered Gabriella, though
she longed to be out with the June scents and her
dreams, “but I am sure the ribbon ought to be
a deeper blue to tone with the ragged robins.”
“You’ve a wonderful eye
for colour, that’s why I ask your advice,”
said the other, and a sudden friendliness shone in
her tired eyes, for she had liked Gabriella from the
beginning. That the girl possessed a genuine
gift of taste, the elder woman had already discovered.
For herself, Miss Lancaster had always hated the sight
of hats, and had taken up the work merely because
a place in Brandywine & Plummer’s had been offered
her shortly after her father, a gallant fighter but
a poor worker, had gone to end his kindly anecdotal
days in the Home for Confederate Soldiers. She
was a repressed, conscientious woman, who had never
been younger than she was now at fifty, and who regarded
youth, not with envy, but with admiring awe.
For she, also, patient and uncomplaining creature,
belonged to that world of decay and inertia from which
Gabriella had revolted. It was a world where things
happened to-day just as they happened yesterday, where
no miracles had occurred since the miracles of Scripture,
where people hated change, not because they were satisfied,
but because they were incapable of imagination.
Miss Lancaster, who had never wanted anything with
passion, except to be a perfect lady, was proud of
the fact that she had been twenty years in business
without losing her “shrinking manner.”
“Yes, you have an eye for colour,”
she repeated gently; “if you could only learn
to sew, you might command a most desirable position.”
“I despise sewing,” replied
Gabriella, with serene good-humour, “and I could
never learn, even at school, anything that I despised.
But I suppose I can always tell somebody else how
it ought to be done.”
Then, because her work always interested
her, she forgot the disturbing words Mrs. Spencer
had spoken she forgot even her impatience
to feel the June air in her face. Her best gift,
the power of mental control, enabled her to bring
the needed discipline to her emotion; and when the
moment of her release came, she found that the brief
restlessness had passed from her mind. “There’s
no use letting myself get impatient,” she thought;
“I’ve got to stick to it, so it won’t
do a bit of good to begin wriggling.”
All the other girls had gone home
before her, and on the sidewalk Miss Meason, of the
glove counter, stood talking about the spring sales
to Mr. Brandywine. As Gabriella passed them,
in her white shirtwaist and dark belted skirt, they
looked thoughtfully after her until her sailor hat,
with the scarlet band, crossed Broad Street and disappeared
on the opposite side.
“She’s a remarkable girl,”
observed Mr. Brandywine, with his paternal manner.
“I hope she is beginning to feel at home with
us.”
“I believe she’d feel
at home anywhere,” replied Miss Meason, “and
she’s obliged to get on. There’s
no doubt of it.”
“A pleasant face, too.
Not exactly pretty, I suppose, but you would call
it a pleasant face.”
“Oh, well, I’d call her
pretty in her way,” answered Miss Meason.
“Her eyes are lovely, and she has a singularly
bright expression. I always say that a bright
expression makes up for anything.”
“Her mother was a beauty in
her day,” said Mr. Brandywine reminiscently;
“she was the snow and roses sort, and her eldest
daughter took after her, though she is a wreck now,
poor lady.”
“That’s Charley Gracey,”
remarked Miss Meason tartly, for she had the self-supporting
woman’s contempt for the rake. “Yes,
she was lovely as a girl. I remember as well
as if it were yesterday how happy she looked when
I sold her her wedding gloves. She is a beautiful
character, too, they say, but somehow Gabriella, even
as a child, appealed to me more. She has three
times the sense of her sister.”
Then they shook hands and parted,
while Gabriella, tripping through the Second Market,
was saying to herself: “There’s not
the least bit of sense in your thinking about him,
Gabriella.”
In Hill Street, maple and poplar trees
were in full leaf, and little flakes of sunshine,
as soft as flowers, were scattered over the brick
pavement. Beyond the housetops the sky was golden,
and at the corner the rusty ironwork of an old balcony
had turned to the colour of bronze. The burning
light of the sunset blinded her eyes, while an intense
sweetness came to her from the honeysuckle clambering
over a low white porch; and this light and this sweetness
possessed an ineffable quality. Life, which had
been merely placid a few hours before, had become suddenly
poignant every instant was pregnant with
happiness, every detail was piercingly vivid.
Her whole being was flooded with a sensation of richness
and wonder, as if she had awakened with surprise to
a different world from the one she had closed her
eyes on a minute before.
As she crossed the street she saw
her mother’s head above a box of clove pinks
in the window; and a little later the front door opened
and Miss Polly Hatch, a small, indomitable spinster
who sewed out by the day, walked rapidly between the
iron urns and stopped under the creamy blossoms of
the old magnolia tree in the yard.
“It’s too late for your
ma to be workin’, Gabriella. You’d
better stop her.”
Pausing in the middle of the walk,
she comfortably tucked under her arm an unwieldy bundle
she carried, and added, with the shrewdness which was
the result of a long and painful experience with human
nature: “It’s funny ain’t
it? how downright mulish your ma can be
when she wants to?”
“I can’t do a thing on
earth with her,” answered Gabriella in distress.
“You have more influence over her than I have,
Miss Polly.”
Miss Polly, who had the composed and
efficient bearing of a machine, shook her head discouragingly
as she opened the gate and passed out.
“I reckon she’s set for
good and all,” she remarked emphatically, and
went on her way.
“Mother, it’s time to
stop sewing and think about supper,” called
Gabriella gaily, as she ran into the room and bent
to kiss her mother, who turned a flat, soft cheek
in her direction, and remarked gloomily: “Gabriella,
you’ve had a visitor.”
Not for worlds would Mrs. Carr have
surrendered to the disarming cheerfulness of her daughter’s
manner; for since Gabriella had gone to work in a
shop, her mother’s countenance implied that she
was piously resigned to disgrace as well as to poverty.
It was inconceivable to her that any girl with Berkeley
blood in her veins could be so utterly devoid of proper
pride as Gabriella had proved herself to be; and the
shock of this discovery had left a hurt look in her
face. There were days when she hardly spoke to
the girl, when refusing food, she opened her lips
only to moisten her thread, when the slow tears seemed
forever welling between her reddened eyelids.
As they had just passed through one of these painful
periods, Gabriella was surprised to find that, for
the moment at least, her mother appeared to have forgotten
her righteous resentment. Though it could hardly
be said that Mrs. Carr spoke cheerfully since
cheerfulness was foreign to her nature at
least she had spoken. Of her own accord, unquestioned
and unurged, she had volunteered a remark to her daughter;
and Gabriella felt that, for a brief respite, the
universe had ceased to be menacing.
“Gabriella, you have had a visitor,”
repeated Mrs. Carr, and it was clear that her sorrow
(she never yielded to passion) had been overcome by
a natural human eagerness to tell her news.
“Not Cousin Jimmy?” asked the girl lightly.
“No, you could never guess, if you guessed all
night.”
“Not Charley Gracey surely? I wouldn’t
speak to him for the world.”
Though Jane had returned to Charley,
and even Mrs. Carr, feeling in her heart that her
younger daughter had dealt her the hardest blow, had
been heard to say that she “pitied her son-in-law
more than she censured him,” Gabriella had not
softened in her implacable judgment.
“Of course it wasn’t Charley.
I shouldn’t have mentioned it if it had been,
because you are so bitter against him. But it
was somebody you haven’t seen for months.
Do you remember Evelyn Randolph’s son who paid
you so much attention last winter?”
“George Fowler! Has he
been here?” asked Gabriella, and her voice quivered
like a harp.
“I told Marthy to say you were
out. Of course I wasn’t fit to see company,
but he caught sight of me on his way to the gate and
came back on the porch to speak to me. He remembered
all about my having gone to school with his mother,
and it seems she had told him about the time she was
Queen of May and I maid of honour. I asked him
how Evelyn stood living in New York, but he said she
likes it better than his father does. Archie
Fowler insists that he is coming back to Virginia to
end his days. They seem to have plenty of money.
I expect Archie has made a fortune up there or he
wouldn’t be satisfied to live out of Virginia.”
“Did George ask when I’d be at home?”
inquired Gabriella.
Though she knew that it was unwise
to divert her mother’s attention from the main
narrative, her whole body ached with the longing to
hear what George had said of her, and she felt that
it was impossible to resist the temptation to question.
“He said something about you
as he was going away, but I can’t remember whether
he asked when you would be in or not.” In
spite of the fact that Mrs. Carr had the most tenacious
memory for useless detail, she was never able to recall
the significant points of an interview.
“He didn’t ask where I was?”
The question was indiscreet, for it
jerked Mrs. Carr’s mind back with violence from
its innocent ramble into the past, while it reminded
her of Gabriella’s present unladylike occupation.
She shut her lips with soft but obstinate determination,
and Gabriella, watching her closely, told herself
that “wild horses couldn’t drag another
word out of her mother to-night.” The girl
longed to talk it over; but she might have tried as
successfully to gossip with the angel on a marble tombstone.
She wanted to hear what George had said, to ask how
he was looking, and to wonder aloud why he had come
back. She wanted to throw herself into her mother’s
arms and listen to all the little important things
that filled the world for her. If only the aloof
virtue in Mrs. Carr’s face would relax into
a human expression!
Taking off her hat, Gabriella went
into the bedroom, and then, coming back again after
a short absence, remarked with forced gaiety:
“I suppose he didn’t have anything interesting
to tell you, did he?”
“No.” Though the
light had almost waned, Mrs. Carr broke off a fresh
piece of thread and leaned nearer the window, while
she tried to find the eye of the needle.
“Let me thread your needle,
mother. It is too late to work, anyway. You
will ruin your eyesight.”
“I have never considered my eyesight, Gabriella.”
“I know you haven’t, and that’s
why you ought to begin.”
As it was really growing too dark
to see, Mrs. Carr rolled the thread back on the spool,
stuck the needle into the last buttonhole, and folding
the infant’s dress on which she was working,
laid it away in her straw work-basket.
“Will you light the gas, Gabriella?”
“Don’t work any more to-night, mother.
It is almost supper time.”
Without replying, Mrs. Carr moved
with her basket to a chair under the chandelier.
Once seated there, she unfolded the dress, took the
needle from the unfinished buttonhole, and tried again
unsuccessfully to run the thread through the eye.
Then, while Gabriella rushed to her aid, she removed
her glasses and patiently polished them on a bit of
chamois skin she kept in her basket.
“Don’t you feel as if you could eat a
chop to-night, mother?”
“I haven’t been able to swallow a morsel
all day, Gabriella.”
“I’ve saved you a little cream. Shall
I make you a toddy?”
“I don’t want it. Drink it yourself,
dear.”
After this there followed one of those
pauses which fill not only the room, but the universe
with a fury of sound. There were times when Gabriella
felt that she could stand anything if only her mother
would fly into a rage when she positively
envied Florrie Spencer because her plebeian parent
scolded her at the top of her voice instead of maintaining
a calm and ladylike reticence. But Mrs. Carr was
one of those women who never, even in the most trying
circumstances, cease to be patient, who never lose
for an instant so much as the palest or the thinnest
of the Christian virtues.
Going into the bedroom, Gabriella
changed from her shirtwaist into a gown of flowered
muslin, with sleeves that looked small beside the
balloon ones of the season, and a skirt which was shrunken
and pale from many washings the summer before.
She had worn the frock when she met George, and though
it was old, she knew it was becoming, and she told
herself joyfully that if she put it on to-night, “something
must come of it.” As she smoothed her hair
by the dim gas-jet over the mirror, she saw again
the face of George as it had first smiled down on her
beneath the boughs of a mimosa tree in Mrs. Spencer’s
front garden. At the time, a year ago, she was
engaged to Arthur she had even called the
placid preference she felt for him “being in
love” but while she talked to George
she had found herself thinking, “I wonder how
it would feel to be engaged to a man like this instead
of to Arthur?” Then, since all Southern engagements
of the period were secret, she had seen a good deal
of George during the summer; and in the autumn, while
she was still trying to make believe that it was merely
a friendship, he had gone back to New York without
saying good-bye. She had tried her best to stop
thinking of him, and until this evening, she had never
really let herself confess that she cared. But
if she didn’t care why was she so happy to-night?
If she didn’t care why was there such intoxicating
sweetness in the thought of his return? If she
didn’t care why had she dressed herself so carefully
in the flowered muslin he had once said that he liked?
Her face, smiling back at her from the mirror, was
suffused with a delicate glow not pink,
not white, but softly luminous as if a lamp, shining
behind it, enkindled its expression. She had never
seen herself so nearly pretty, and with this thought
in her mind, she went back to her mother, who was
still working buttonholes under the chandelier.
“Marthy has brought the lamp,
mother. Why don’t you move over to the
table?”
“I can see perfectly, thank you, Gabriella.”
“I hate to see you working. Let me finish
those buttonholes.”
“I’d rather get through them myself, dear.”
“Have you seen Jane to-day?”
“No.”
“Has Cousin Pussy been here?”
“No.”
“Did you get out for a walk?”
“No.”
The appalling silence again filled
the room like a fog, and Gabriella, moving cautiously
about in it, began straightening chairs and picking
up shreds of cambric from the carpet. She felt
suddenly that she could not endure the strain for
another minute, and glancing at Mrs. Carr’s bent
head, where the thin hair was wound into a tight knot
and held in place by a tortoise-shell comb with a
carved top, she wondered how her mother could possibly
keep it up day after day as she did? But, if she
had only known it, this silence, which tried her nerves
to the breaking point, was positively soothing to
her mother. Mrs. Carr could keep it up not only
for days and weeks, but, had it been necessary, she
could have kept it up with equal success for half
a lifetime. While she sat there, working buttonholes
in a bad light, she thought quite as passionately as
Gabriella, though her mental processes were different.
She thought sadly, but firmly, with a pensive melancholy
not untinged with pleasure, that “life was becoming
almost too much for her.” It seemed incredible
to her that after all her struggles to keep up an appearance
things should have turned out as they had; it seemed
incredible that after all her sacrifices her children
should not consider her more. “They have
no consideration for me,” she reflected, while
she took the finest stitch possible to the needle
she held. “If Jane had considered me she
would never have married Charley. If Gabriella
had considered me, or anybody but herself, she would
not have gone to work in a store.” No, they
had never considered her, they had never asked her
advice before acting, though she had brought them
into the world and had worked like a slave in order
to keep them in that respected station of life in which
they had been born. Then, her sorrow getting
the better of her resolution, she turned her head
and spoke:
“I know you never tell me anything
on purpose, Gabriella, but I think I have a right
to know whether or not you have discarded Arthur for
good.”
“I told you all about it, mother. I told
you I found I was mistaken.”
“I suppose you never thought
for a moment how much it would distress me? Though
Lydia Peyton is so much older than I am, she was always
my best friend we often stayed in the room
together when we were girls. I had set my heart
on your marrying her son.”
“I know that, mother, and I
am very sorry, but when it came to the point I couldn’t
marry him. You can’t make yourself care ”
“I should have thought that
my wishes might influence you. I should never
wish you to do anything that wasn’t for your
good, Gabriella.”
“Of course, mother, you’ve
given up your life to us. I know that, and Jane
knows it as well as I do. That’s why I want
to earn money enough to let you rest. I want
you to stop work for good and be happy.”
“There are worse things than
work,” replied Mrs. Carr in a tone which implied
that Gabriella had brought them upon her.
After a pause, in which her needle
flew mournfully, she added: “I hope for
your own sake that you will marry some good man before
you lose your attractions. Poor Becky Bollingbroke
proved to me how unfortunate it is for a woman to
remain unmarried.”
For an instant Gabriella looked at
her mother without replying. She felt tempted strongly
tempted, she told herself to say something
cross. Then the sight of the bent gray head,
of the bowed shoulders, of the knotted needle-pricked
fingers, pierced her heart. Though she could not
always agree with her mother, she loved her devotedly,
and the thought that she must lose her some day had
been the most terrible nightmare of her childhood.
“Don’t worry about me,
mother, dear,” she answered tenderly. “I
can always take care of myself. I can manage
my life, you know that, don’t you?” Then
she stopped quickly while her heart gave a single bound
and lay quiet. She had heard the click of the
gate, and a minute later, as Mrs. Carr gathered up
her sewing, there was a ring at the bell.
“It can’t be a visitor before supper,
can it, Gabriella?”
“I think not, mother, but I shouldn’t
run away if I were you.”
“I’d better go. I
don’t feel dressed. Wait a minute, Marthy,
and let me get out of the room before you open the
door.” She fled, clutching her work-basket,
while Gabriella, turning to lower the flaming wick
of the lamp, heard George’s voice at the door
and his footsteps crossing the hall.
“I knew something would happen,”
she thought wildly, as she went forward to meet him.
“I saw you pull down the shade
as I was going by,” he began rather lamely;
and she hardly heard his words because of the divine
tumult in her brain. Her heart sang; her pulses
throbbed; every drop of her blood seemed to become
suddenly alive with ecstasy. Under the tarnished
garlands of the chandelier his face looked younger,
gayer, more intensely vivid than it had looked in
her dreams. It was the face of her dreams made
real; but with what a difference! She saw his
crisp brown hair brushed smoothly back from its parting,
his blue eyes, with their gay and conquering look,
the firm red brown of his cheek, and even the bluish
shadow encircling his shaven mouth. In his eyes,
which said enchanting things, she could not read the
trivial and commonplace quality of his soul for
he was not only a man, he was romance, he was adventure,
he was the radiant miracle of youth!
“Florrie told me this morning
that you had come back,” she answered coldly,
as she held out her hand.
Her words seemed to come to her from
a distance from the next room, from the
street outside, from the farthest star but
while she uttered them, she knew that her words meant
nothing. She shed her joy as if it were fragrance;
and her softness was like the magnolia-scented softness
of the June night. Even her mother would not have
known her, so greatly had she changed in a minute.
Of the businesslike figure in the sailor hat and trim
shirtwaist of the Gabriella who had said,
“I can manage my life” there
remained only an outline. The very feet of the
capable woman had changed into the shrinking and timid
feet of a lovesick girl. She was afraid to go
forward, afraid to move, afraid to breathe lest she
break the wonderful spell of the magic. Not only
her basic common sense, but the very soul that shaped
her body had become as light, as sweet, as formless
as liquid honey.
But of course, she knew nothing of
this. She was innocent of deception; she was
innocent even of any definite purpose to allure.
The thought in her mind, if there were any thought,
which is doubtful, was that she must be composed,
she must be indifferent if it killed her.
“I know I’ve come at an
awkward hour, but I simply couldn’t go by after
I saw you.”
“Won’t you stay?”
she asked, trying in vain to shut out the ominous
sound of Marthy bringing their scant supper. She
remembered, with horror, that she had ordered only
two chops, and a wave of rebellion swept over her
because life always spoiled its divine instants.
“No, I can’t stay.
I’ve an engagement for supper. I merely
wanted to see you. You’ve no idea how I’ve
wanted to see you.”
“Have you?” said Gabriella
in so low a voice that he hardly heard her. Then,
lifting her glowing eyes, she added softly, “I
am glad that you wanted to.”
“There were times when I simply
couldn’t get you out of my mind,” he responded,
and went on almost joyously, with the romantic look
which had first enchanted her imagination. “You
see I believed that you were going to marry Arthur
Peyton. Julia told me that your engagement was
broken. That was why I came back. Didn’t
you guess it?”
“Yes, I guessed it,” she
answered simply, and all the softness, the sweetness,
the beauty of her feeling passed into her voice.
Then, in the very midst of her happiness,
there occurred one of those sordid facts which appear
to spring, like vultures, upon the ineffable moments.
She heard the bell the awful supper bell
which her mother insisted upon having rung because
her parents had had it rung for generations before
her. As the horrible sound reverberated through
the house, Gabriella felt that the noise passed through
her ears, not into her brain, but into the very depths
of her suffering soul.
“There, I must go,” said
George, without embarrassment, for which she blessed
him. From his manner, the supper bell might have
made a delightful harmony instead of a hideous discord.
“I’ll see you to-morrow, if I may.
May I, Gabriella?”
He smiled charmingly as he went, and
looking after him, a minute later, over the clove
pinks in the window-box, she saw him turn and gaze
back at her from the opposite pavement.