One of the traditional prerogatives of an Omnipotent Power is to look down at the activities of earth at any given moment and ascertain simultaneously the occupation of any number of people. Thus the Arch Creator—that Being of the Supreme Artistic Consciousness—is able to peer into segregated interiors at His own discretion and watch the plot thicken and the drama develop. Eleanor, who often visualized this proceeding, always imagined a huge finger projecting into space, cautiously tilting the roofs of the Houses of Man to allow the sweep of the Invisible Glance. Granting the hypothesis of the Divine privilege, and assuming for the purposes of this narrative the Omniscient focus on the characters most concerned in it, let us for the time being look over the shoulder of God and inform ourselves of their various occupations and preoccupations of a Saturday afternoon in late June during the hour before dinner. Eleanor, in her little white chamber on Thirtieth Street, was engaged in making a pink and green toothbrush case for a going-away gift for her Uncle Peter. To be sure she was going away with him when he started for the Long Island beach hotel from which he proposed to return every day to his office in the city, but she felt that a slight token of her affection would be fitting and proper on the eve of their joint departure. She was hurrying to get it done that she might steal softly into the dining-room and put it on his plate undetected. Her eyes were very wide, her brow intent and serious, and her delicate lips lightly parted. At that moment she bore a striking resemblance to the Botticelli head in Beulah’s drawing-room that she had so greatly admired. Of all the people concerned in her history, she was the most tranquilly occupied. Peter in the room beyond was packing his trunk and his suit-case. At this precise stage of his proceedings he was trying to make two decisions, equally difficult, but concerned with widely different departments of his consciousness. He was gravely considering whether or not to include among his effects the photograph before him on Up-town, Beulah, whose dinner hour came late, was rather more actively, though possibly not more significantly, occupied. She was doing her best to evade the wild onslaught of a young man in glasses who had been wanting to marry her for a Though he was assuredly in no condition to listen to reason, Beulah was reasoning with him, kindly and philosophically, paying earnest attention to the style and structure of her remarks as she did so. Her emotions, as is usual on such occasions, were decidedly mixed. She was conscious of a very real dismay at her unresponsiveness, a distress for the acute pain from which the distraught young man seemed to be suffering, and the thrill, which had she only known it, is the unfailing accompaniment to the first eligible proposal of marriage. In the back of her brain there was also, so strangely is the human mind constituted, a kind of relief at being able to use mature logic once more, instead of the dilute form of moral dissertation with which she tried to adapt herself to Eleanor’s understanding. “I never intend to marry any one,” she was explaining gently. “I not only never intend to, but I am pledged in a way that I consider irrevocably binding never to marry,”—and that was the text from which all the rest of her discourse developed. Jimmie, equally bound by the oath of celibacy, Margaret, dressed for an academic dinner party, in white net with a girdle of pale pink and lavender ribbons, had flung herself face downward on her bed in reckless disregard of her finery; and because it was hot and she was homesick for green fields and the cool stretches of dim wooded country, had transported herself in fancy and still in her recumbent attitude to the floor of a canoe that was drifting down-stream between lush banks of meadow grass studded with marsh lilies. After David, the only member of the group whose summer vacation had actually begun, was sitting on the broad veranda of an exclusive country club several hundreds of miles away from New York and looking soberly into the eyes of a blue ribbon bull dog, whose heavy jowl rested on his knees. His mother, in one of the most fashionable versions of the season’s foulards, sleekly corseted and coifed, was sitting less than a hundred yards away from him, fanning herself with three inches of hand woven fan and contemplating David. In the dressing-room above, just alighted from a limousine de luxe, was a raven-haired, crafty-eyed ingÉnue (whose presence David did not suspect or he would have recollected a sudden pressing Gertrude, in her studio at the top of the house in Fifty-sixth Street where she lived with her parents, was putting the finishing touches on a faun’s head; and a little because she had unconsciously used Jimmie’s head for her model, and a little because of her conscious realization at this moment that the roughly indicated curls over the brow were like nobody’s in the world but Jimmie’s, she was thinking of him seriously. She was thinking also of the dinner on a tray that would presently be brought up to her, since her mother and father were out of town, and of her coming two months with Eleanor and her recent inspiration concerning them. In Colhassett, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, the dinner hour and even the supper hour were long past. In the commodious kitchen of Eleanor’s former home two old people were sitting in calico valanced rockers, one by either window. The house was a pleasant old colonial structure, now badly run down but still marked with that distinction that only the instincts of aristocracy can bestow upon a decaying habitation. A fattish child made her way up the walk, toeing out unnecessarily, and let herself in by the back door without knocking. “Hello, Mis’ Chase and Mr. Amos,” she said, seating herself in a straight backed, yellow chair, and swinging her crossed foot nonchalantly, “I thought I would come in to inquire about Eleanor. Ma said that she heard that she was coming home to live again. Is she, Mr. Amos?” Albertina was not a peculiar favorite of Eleanor’s grandfather. Amos Chase had ideas of his own about the proper bringing up of children, and the respect due from them to their elders. Also Albertina’s father had come from “poor stock.” There was a strain of bad blood in her. The women of the Weston families hadn’t always “I don’t know nothing about it,” he said. “Why, father,” the querulous old voice of Grandmother Chase protested, “you know she’s comin’ home somewhere ’bout the end of July, she and one of her new aunties and a hired girl they’re bringing along to do the work. I don’t see why you can’t answer the child’s question.” “I don’t know as I’m obligated to answer any questions that anybody sees fit to put to me.” “Well, I be. Albertina, pass me my glasses from off the mantel-tree-shelf, and that letter sticking out from behind the clock and I’ll read what she says.” Albertina, with a reproachful look at Mr. Amos, who retired coughing exasperatedly behind a paper that he did not read, allowed herself to be informed through the medium of a letter from Gertrude and a postscript from Eleanor of the projected invasion of the Chase household. “I should think you’d rather have Eleanor come home by herself than bringing a strange woman and a hired girl,” Albertina contributed a trifle “All nonsense, I call it,” the old man ejaculated. “Well, Eleena, she writes that she can’t get away without one of ’em comin’ along with her and I guess we can manage someways. I dunno what work city help will make in this kitchen. You can’t expect much from city help. They ain’t clean like home folks. I shall certainly be dretful pleased to see Eleena, and so will her grandpa—in spite o’ the way he goes on about it.” A snort came from the region of the newspaper. “I shouldn’t think you’d feel as if you had a grandchild now that six rich people has adopted her,” Albertina suggested helpfully. “It’s a good thing for the child,” her grandmother said. “I’m so lame I couldn’t do my duty by her. Old folks is old folks, and they can’t do for others like young ones. I’d d’ruther have had her adopted by one father and mother instead o’ this passel o’ young folks passing her around among themselves, but you can’t have what you’d d’ruther have in this world. You got to take what comes and be thankful.” “Did she write you about having gold coffee spoons at her last place?” Albertina asked. “I think they was probably gilded over like ice-cream spoons, and she didn’t know the difference. I guess she has got a lot of new clothes. Well, I’ll have to be getting along. I’ll come in again.” At the precise moment that the door closed behind Albertina, the clock in Peter Stuyvesant’s apartment in New York struck seven and Eleanor, in a fresh white dress and blue ribbons, slipped into her chair at the dinner table and waited with eyes blazing with excitement for Peter to make the momentous discovery of the gift at his plate. |