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    The Professor's House

    Page 6
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    Country Club--"

      "Yes, Lillian; the Country Club is a big affair, and needs money. The

      Arts and Letters is a little group of fellows, and, as I said, fussy."

      "Scott belongs," said Mrs. St. Peter rebelliously. "Did he tell you?"

      "No, he didn't, and I shall not tell you who did. But if you're

      tactful, you can save Louie's feelings."

      Mrs. St. Peter closed her book without glancing down at it. A new

      interest shone in her eyes and made them look quite through and beyond

      her husband. "I must see what I can do with Scott," she murmured.

      St. Peter turned away to hide a smile. An old student of his, a friend

      who belonged to "the Outland period," had told him laughingly that he

      was sure Scott would blackball Marsellus if his name ever came to the

      vote. "You know Scott is a kid in some things," the friend had said.

      "He's a little sore at Marsellus, and says a secret ballot is the only

      way he can ever get him where it wouldn't hurt Mrs. St. Peter."

      While the Professor was eating his soup, he studied his wife's face in

      the candlelight. It had changed so much since he found her laughing with

      Louie, and especially since he had dropped the hint about the Arts and

      Letters. It had become, he thought, too hard for the orchid velvet in

      her hair. Her upper lip had grown longer, and stiffened as it always did

      when she encountered opposition.

      "Well," he reflected, "it will be interesting to see what she can do

      with Scott. That will make rather a test case."

      Chapter 7

      Early in November there was a picturesque snow-storm, and that day

      Kathleen telephoned her father at the university, asking him to stop on

      his way home in the afternoon and help her to decide upon some new furs.

      As he approached McGregor's spick-and-span bungalow at four o'clock, he

      saw Louie's Pierce-Arrow standing in front, with Ned, the chauffeur and

      gardener, in the driver's seat. Just then Rosamond came out of the

      bungalow alone, and down the path to the sidewalk, without seeing her

      father. He noticed a singularly haughty expression on her face; her

      brows drawn together over her nose. The curl of her lips was handsome,

      but terrifying. He observed also something he had not seen before--a

      coat of soft, purple-grey fur, that quite disguised the wide, slightly

      stooping shoulders he regretted in his truly beautiful daughter. He

      called to her, very much interested. "Wait a minute, Rosie. I've not

      seen that before. It's extraordinarily becoming." He stroked his

      daughter's sleeve with evident pleasure. "You know, these things with a

      kind of lurking purple and lavender in them are splendid for you. They

      make your colour prettier than ever. It's only lately you've begun to

      wear them. Louie's taste, I suppose?"

      "Of course. He selects all my things for me," said Rosamond proudly.

      "Well, he does a good job. He knows what's right for you." St. Peter

      continued to look her up and down with satisfaction. "And Kathleen is

      getting new furs. You were advising her?"

      "She didn't mention it to me," Rosamond replied in a guarded voice.

      "No? And what do you call this, what beast?" he asked ingenuously, again

      stroking the fur with his bare hand.

      "It's taupe."

      "Oh, moleskin!" He drew back a little. "Couldn't be better for your

      complexion. And is it warm?"

      "Very warm--and so light."

      "I see, I see!" He took Rosamond's arm and escorted her to her car.

      "Give Louie my compliments on his choice." The motor glided away--he

      wished he could escape as quickly and noiselessly, for he was a coward.

      But he had a feeling that Kathleen was watching him from behind the sash

      curtains. He went up to the door and made a long and thorough use of the

      foot-scraper before he tapped on the glass. Kathleen let him in. She was

      very pale; even her lips, which were always pink, like the inside of a

      white shell, were without colour. Neither of them mentioned the

      just-departed guest.

      "Have you been out in the park, Kitty? This is a pretty little storm.

      Perhaps you'll walk over to the old house with me presently." He talked

      soothingly while he took off his coat and rubbers. "And now for the

      furs!"

      Kathleen went slowly into her bedroom. She was gone a great

      while--perhaps ten actual minutes. When she came back, the rims of her

      eyes were red. She carried four large pasteboard boxes, tied together

      with twine. St. Peter sprang up, took the parcel, and began untying the

      string. He opened the first and pulled out a brown stole. "What is it,

      mink?"

      "No, it's Hudson Bay sable."

      "Very pretty." He put the collar round her neck and drew back to look at

      it. But after a sharp struggle Kathleen broke down. She threw off the

      fur and buried her face in a fresh handkerchief.

      "I'm so sorry, Daddy, but it's no use to-day. I don't want any furs,

      really. She spoils everything for me."

      "Oh, my dear, my dear, you hurt me terribly!" St. Peter put his hands

      tenderly on her soft hazel-coloured hair. "Face it squarely, Kitty; you

      must not, you cannot, be envious. It's self-destruction."

      "I can't help it, Father. I am envious. I don't think I would be if she

      let me alone, but she comes here with her magnificence and takes the

      life out of all our poor little things. Everybody knows she's rich, why

      does she have to keep rubbing it in?"

      "But, Kitty dear, you wouldn't have her go home and change her coat

      before coming to see you?"

      "Oh, it's not that, Father, it's everything! You know we were never

      jealous of each other at home. I was always proud of her good looks and

      good taste. It's not her clothes, it's a feeling she has inside her.

      When she comes toward me, I feel hate coming toward me, like a snake's

      hate!"

      St. Peter wiped his moist forehead. He was suffering with her, as if she

      had been in physical anguish. "We can't, dear, we can't, in this world,

      let ourselves think of things--of comparisons--like that. We are all too

      susceptible to ugly suggestions. If Rosamond has a grievance, it's

      because you've been untactful about Louie."

      "Even if I have, why should she be so revengeful? Does she think nobody

      else calls him a Jew? Does she think it's a secret? I don't mind being

      called a Gentile."

      "It's all in the way it's done, you know, Kitty. And you've shown that

      you were a little bored with all their new things, now haven't you?"

      "I've shown that I don't like the way she overdresses, I suppose. I

      would never have believed that Rosie could do anything in such bad

      taste. While she is here among her old friends, she ought to dress like

      the rest of us."

      "But doesn't she? It seems to me her things look about like yours."

      "Oh, Father, you're so simple! And Mother is very careful not to

      enlighten you. We go to the Guild to sew for the Mission fund, and Rosie

      comes in in a handmade French frock that cost more than all our dresses

      put together."

      "But if hers are no prettier, what does it matter how much they cost?"

      He was watching Kathleen fearfully. Her pale skin had taken on a

    &nb
    sp; greenish tinge--there was no doubt about it. He had never happened to

      see that change occur in a face before, and he had never realized to

      what an ugly, painful transformation the common phrase "green with envy"

      referred.

      "Oh, foolish, they are prettier, though you may not see it. It's not

      just the clothes"--she looked at him intently, and her eyes, in their

      reddened rims, expanded and cleared. "It's everything. When we were at

      home, Rosamond was a kind of ideal to me. What she thought about

      anything decided it for me. But she's entirely changed. She's become

      Louie. Indeed, she's worse than Louie. He and all this money have ruined

      her. Oh, Daddy, why didn't you and Professor Crane get to work and stop

      all this before it began? You were to blame. You knew that Tom had left

      something that was worth a lot, both of you. Why didn't you do

      something? You let it lie there in Crane's laboratory for this--this

      Marsellus to come along and exploit, until he almost thinks it's his own

      idea."

      "Things might have turned out the same, anyway," her father protested.

      "Whatever the process earned was Rosamond's. I wasn't in the mood to

      struggle with manufacturers, I know nothing of such things. And Crane

      needs every ounce of his strength for his own experiments. He doesn't

      care anything but the extent of space."

      "He'd better have taken a few days off and saved his friend's

      reputation. Tom trusted him with everything. It's too foolish; that poor

      man being cut to pieces by surgeons all the time, and picking up the

      little that's left of himself and bothering about the limitations of

      space--much good they'll do him!"

      St. Peter rose, took both of his daughter's hands and stood laughing at

      her. "Come now! You have more brains than that, Kitty. It happens you do

      understand that whatever poor Crane can find out about space is more

      good to him than all the money the Marselluses will ever have. But are

      you implying that if Crane and I had developed Tom's discovery, we might

      have kept Rosie and her money in the family, for ourselves?"

      Kathleen threw up her head. "Oh, I don't want her money!"

      "Exactly; nor do I. And we mustn't behave as if we did want it. If you

      permit yourself to be envious of Rosie, you'll be very foolish, and very

      unhappy."

      The Professor walked away across the snowy park with a tired step. He

      was heavy-hearted. For Kathleen he had a special kind of affection.

      Perhaps it was because he had had to take care of her for one whole

      summer when she was little. Just as Mrs. St. Peter was ready to start

      for Colorado with the children, the younger one developed whooping-cough

      and had to be left at home with her father. He had opportunity to

      observe all her ways. She was only six, but he found her a square-dealing,

      dependable little creature. They worked out a satisfactory plan

      of life together. She was to play in the garden all morning, and was not

      on any account to disturb him in his study. After lunch he would take

      her to the lake or the woods, or he would read to her at home. She took

      pride in keeping her part of the contract. One day when he came out of

      his study at noon, he found her sitting on the third floor stairs, just

      outside his door, with the arnica bottle in one hand and the fingers of

      the other puffed up like wee pink sausages. A bee had stung her in the

      garden, and she had waited half the morning for sympathy. She was very

      independent, and would tug at her leggings or overshoes a great while

      before she asked for help.

      When they were little girls, Kathleen adored her older sister and liked

      to wait on her, was always more excited about Rosie's new dresses and

      winter coat than about her own. This attachment had lasted even after

      they were grown. St. Peter had never seen any change in it until

      Rosamond announced her engagement to Louie Marsellus. Then, all at once,

      Kathleen seemed to be done with her sister. Her father believed she

      couldn't forgive Rosie's forgetting Tom so quickly.

      It was dark when the Professor got back to the old house and sat down at

      his writing-table. He would have an hour on his notes, he told himself,

      in spite of families and fortunes. And he had it. But when he looked up

      from his writing as the Angelus was ringing, two faces at once rose in

      the shadows outside the yellow circle of his lamp: the handsome face of

      his older daughter, surrounded by violet-dappled fur, with a cruel upper

      lip and scornful half-closed eyes, as she had approached her car that

      afternoon before she saw him; and Kathleen, her square little chin set

      so fiercely, her white cheeks actually becoming green under her swollen

      eyes. He couldn't believe it. He rose quickly and went to his one

      window, opened it wider, and stood looking at the dark clump of

      pine-trees that told where the Physics building stood. A sharp pain

      clutched his heart. Was it for this the light in Outland's laboratory

      used to burn so far into the night!

      Chapter 8

      The following week St. Peter went to Chicago to give his lectures. He

      had engaged rooms for himself and Lillian at a quiet hotel near the

      university. The Marselluses went down by the same train, and they all

      alighted at the station together, in a raging snow-storm. The St. Peters

      were to have tea with Louie at the Blackstone, before going to their own

      quarters.

      Tea was served in Louie's suite on the lake front, with a fine view of

      the falling snow from the windows. The Professor was in a genial mood;

      he was glad to be in a big city again, in a luxurious hotel, and

      especially pleased to be able to sit in comfort and watch the storm over

      the water.

      "How snug you are here, Louie! This is really very nice," he said,

      turning back from the window when Rosamond called him.

      Louie came and put both hands on St. Peter's shoulders, exclaiming

      delightedly: "And do you like these rooms, sir? Well, I'm glad, for

      they're yours! Rosie and I are farther down the corridor. Not a word!

      It's all arranged. You are our guests for this engagement. We won't have

      our great scholar staying off in some grimy place on the South side. We

      want him where we can keep an eye on him."

      Louie was so warm with his plan that the Professor could only express

      satisfaction. "And our luggage?"

      "It's on the way. I cancelled your reservations and did everything in

      order. Now have your tea, but not too much. You dine early; you have an

      engagement for to-night. You and Dearest are going to the opera--Oh,

      not with us! We have other fish to fry. You are going off alone."

      "Very well, Louie! And what are they giving to-night?"

      "Mignon. It will remind you of your student days in Paris."

      "It will. I always had abonnement at the Op�ra Comique, and Mignon came

      round frequently. It's one of my favourites."

      "I thought so!" Louie kissed both the ladies, to express his

      satisfaction. The Professor had forgotten his scruples about accepting

      lavish hospitalities. He was really very glad to have windows on the

      lake, and not to have to go away to another hotel. Aft
    er the Marselluses

      went to their own apartment, he remarked to his wife, while he unpacked

      his bag, that it was much more convenient to be on the same floor with

      Louie and Rosamond.

      "Much better than cabbing across Chicago to meet them all the time,

      isn't it?"

      At eight o'clock he and his wife were in their places in the Auditorium.

      The overture brought a smile to his lips and a gracious mood to his

      heart. The music seemed extraordinarily fresh and genuine still. It

      might grow old-fashioned, he told himself, but never old, surely, while

      there was any youth left in men. It was an expression of youth,--that,

      and no more; with the sweetness and foolishness, the lingering accent,

      the heavy stresses--the delicacy, too--belonging to that time. After the

      entrance of the hero, Lillian leaned toward him and whispered: "Am I

      over-credulous? He looks to me exactly like the pictures of Goethe in

      his youth."

      "So he does to me. He is certainly as tall as Goethe. I didn't know

      tenors were ever so tall. The Mignon seems young, too."

      She was slender, at any rate, and very fragile beside the courtly

      Wilhelm. When she began her immortal song, one felt that she was right

      for the part, the pure lyric soprano that suits it best, and in her

      voice there was something fresh and delicate, like deep wood flowers.

      "Connais-tu--le pays"--it stirred one like the odours of early spring,

      recalled the time of sweet, impersonal emotions.

      When the curtain fell on the first act, St. Peter turned to his wife. "A

      fine cast, don't you think? And the harps are very good. Except for the

      wood-winds, I should say it was as good as any performance I ever heard

      at the Comique."

      "How it does make one think of Paris, and of so many half-forgotten

      things!" his wife murmured. It had been long since he had seen her face

      so relaxed and reflective and undetermined.

      Through the next act he often glanced at her. Curious, how a young mood

      could return and soften a face. More than once he saw a starry moisture

      shine in her eyes. If she only knew how much more lovely she was when

      she wasn't doing her duty!

      "My dear," he sighed when the lights were turned on and they both looked

      older, "it's been a mistake, our having a family and writing histories

      and getting middle-aged. We should have been picturesquely shipwrecked

      together when we were young."

      "How often I've thought that!" she replied with a faint, melancholy

      smile.

      "You? But you're so occupied with the future, you adapt yourself so

      readily," he murmured in astonishment.

      "One must go on living, Godfrey. But it wasn't the children who came

      between us." There was something lonely and forgiving in her voice,

      something that spoke of an old wound, healed and hardened and hopeless.

      "You, you too?" he breathed in amazement.

      He took up one of her gloves and began drawing it out through his

      fingers. She said nothing, but he saw her lip quiver, and she turned

      away and began looking at the house through the glasses. He likewise

      began to examine the audience. He wished he knew just how it seemed to

      her. He had been mistaken, he felt. The heart of another is a dark

      forest, always, no matter how close it has been to one's own. Presently

      the melting music of the tenor's last aria brought their eyes together

      in a smile not altogether sad.

      That night, after he was in bed, among unaccustomed surroundings and a

      little wakeful, St. Peter still played with his idea of a picturesque

      shipwreck, and he cast about for the particular occasion he would have

      chosen for such a finale. Before he went to sleep he found the very day,

      but his wife was not in it. Indeed, nobody was in it but himself, and a

     


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