<h2><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
<p>Montague had now been officially pronounced complete by his tailor; and Réval
had sent home the first of Alice’s street gowns, elaborately plain, but
fitting her conspicuously, and costing accordingly. So the next morning they
were ready to be taken to call upon Mrs. Devon.</p>
<p>Of course Montague had heard of the Devons, but he was not sufficiently
initiated to comprehend just what it meant to be asked to call. But when Oliver
came in, a little before noon, and proceeded to examine his costume and to put
him to rights, and insisted that Alice should have her hair done over, he began
to realize that this was a special occasion. Oliver was in quite a state of
excitement; and after they had left the hotel, and were driving up the Avenue,
he explained to them that their future in Society depended upon the outcome of
this visit. Calling upon Mrs. Devon, it seemed, was the American equivalent to
being presented at court. For twenty-five years this grand lady had been the
undisputed mistress of the Society of the metropolis; and if she liked them,
they would be invited to her annual ball, which took place in January, and then
for ever after their position would be assured. Mrs. Devon’s ball was the
one great event of the social year; about one thousand people were asked, while
ten thousand disappointed ones gnashed their teeth in outer darkness.</p>
<p>All of which threw Alice into a state of trepidation.</p>
<p>“Suppose we don’t suit her!” she said.</p>
<p>To that the other replied that their way had been made smooth by Reggie Mann,
who was one of Mrs. Devon’s favourites.</p>
<p>A century and more ago the founder of the Devon line had come to America, and
invested his savings in land on Manhattan Island. Other people had toiled and
built a city there, and generation after generation of the Devons had sat by
and collected the rents, until now their fortune amounted to four or five
hundred millions of dollars. They were the richest old family in America, and
the most famous; and in Mrs. Devon, the oldest member of the line, was centred
all its social majesty and dominion. She lived a stately and formal life,
precisely like a queen; no one ever saw her save upon her raised chair of
state, and she wore her jewels even at breakfast. She was the arbiter of social
destinies, and the breakwater against which the floods of new wealth beat in
vain. Reggie Mann told wonderful tales about the contents of her enormous
mail—about wives and daughters of mighty rich men who flung themselves at
her feet and pleaded abjectly for her favour—who laid siege to her house
for months, and intrigued and pulled wires to get near her, and even bought the
favour of her servants! If Reggie might be believed, great financial wars had
been fought, and the stock-markets of the world convulsed more than once,
because of these social struggles; and women of wealth and beauty had offered
to sell themselves for the privilege which was so freely granted to them.</p>
<p>They came to the old family mansion and rang the bell, and the solemn butler
ushered them past the grand staircase and into the front reception-room to
wait. Perhaps five minutes later he came in and rolled back the doors, and they
stood up, and beheld a withered old lady, nearly eighty years of age, bedecked
with diamonds and seated upon a sort of throne. They approached, and Oliver
introduced them, and the old lady held out a lifeless hand; and then they sat
down.</p>
<p>Mrs. Devon asked them a few questions as to how much of New York they had seen,
and how they liked it, and whom they had met; but most of the time she simply
looked them over, and left the making of conversation to Oliver. As for
Montague, he sat, feeling perplexed and uncomfortable, and wondering, deep down
in him, whether it could really be America in which this was happening.</p>
<p>“You see,” Oliver explained to them, when they were seated in their
carriage again, “her mind is failing, and it’s really quite
difficult for her to receive.”</p>
<p>“I’m glad I don’t have to call on her more than once,”
was Alice’s comment. “When do we know the verdict?”</p>
<p>“When you get a card marked ‘Mrs. Devon at home,’” said
Oliver. And he went on to tell them about the war which had shaken Society long
ago, when the mighty dame had asserted her right to be “Mrs.
Devon,” and the only “Mrs. Devon.” He told them also about
her wonderful dinner-set of china, which had cost thirty thousand dollars, and
was as fragile as a humming-bird’s wing. Each piece bore her crest, and
she had a china expert to attend to washing and packing it—no common hand
was ever allowed to touch it. He told them, also, how Mrs. Devon’s
housekeeper had wrestled for so long, trying to teach the maids to arrange the
furniture in the great reception-rooms precisely as the mistress ordered; until
finally a complete set of photographs had been taken, so that the maids might
do their work by chart.</p>
<p class="p2">
Alice went back to the hotel, for Mrs. Robbie Walling was to call and take her
home to lunch; and Montague and his brother strolled round to Reggie
Mann’s apartments, to report upon their visit.</p>
<p>Reggie received them in a pair of pink silk pyjamas, decorated with ribbons and
bows, and with silk-embroidered slippers, set with pearls—a present from
a feminine adorer. Montague noticed, to his dismay, that the little man wore a
gold bracelet upon one arm! He explained that he had led a cotillion the night
before—or rather this morning; he had got home at five o’clock. He
looked quite white and tired, and there were the remains of a breakfast of
brandy-and-soda on the table.</p>
<p>“Did you see the old girl?” he asked. “And how does she hold
up?”</p>
<p>“She’s game,” said Oliver.</p>
<p>“I had the devil’s own time getting you in,” said the other.
“It’s getting harder every day.”</p>
<p>“You’ll excuse me,” Reggie added, “if I get ready. I
have an engagement.” And he turned to his dressing-table, which was
covered with an array of cosmetics and perfumes, and proceeded, in a
matter-of-fact way, to paint his face. Meanwhile his valet was flitting
silently here and there, getting ready his afternoon costume; and Montague, in
spite of himself, followed the man with his eyes. A haberdasher’s shop
might have been kept going for quite a while upon the contents of
Reggie’s dressers. His clothing was kept in a room adjoining the
dressing-room; Montague, who was near the door, could see the rosewood
wardrobes, each devoted to a separate article of clothing-shirts, for instance,
laid upon sliding racks, tier upon tier of them, of every material and colour.
There was a closet fitted with shelves and equipped like a little shoe
store—high shoes and low shoes, black ones, brown ones, and white ones,
and each fitted over a last to keep its shape perfect. These shoes were all
made to order according to Reggie’s designs, and three or four times a
year there was a cleaning out, and those which had gone out of fashion became
the prey of his “man.” There was a safe in one closet, in which
Reggie’s jewellery was kept.</p>
<p>The dressing-room was furnished like a lady’s boudoir, the furniture
upholstered with exquisite embroidered silk, and the bed hung with curtains of
the same material. There was a huge bunch of roses on the centre-table, and the
odour of roses hung heavy in the room.</p>
<p>The valet stood at attention with a rack of neckties, from which Reggie
critically selected one to match his shirt. “Are you going to take Alice
with you down to the Havens’s?” he was asking; and he added,
“You’ll meet Vivie Patton down there—she’s had another
row at home.”</p>
<p>“You don’t say so!” exclaimed Oliver.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the other. “Frank waited up all night for her,
and he wept and tore his hair and vowed he would kill the Count. Vivie told him
to go to hell.”</p>
<p>“Good God!” said Oliver. “Who told you that?”</p>
<p>“The faithful Alphonse,” said Reggie, nodding toward his valet.
“Her maid told him. And Frank vows he’ll sue—I half expected
to see it in the papers this morning.”</p>
<p>“I met Vivie on the street yesterday,” said Oliver. “She
looked as chipper as ever.”</p>
<p>Reggie shrugged his shoulders. “Have you seen this week’s
paper?” he asked. “They’ve got another of Ysabel’s
suppressed poems in.”—And then he turned toward Montague to explain
that “Ysabel” was the pseudonym of a young débutante who had fallen
under the spell of Baudelaire and Wilde, and had published a volume of poems of
such furious eroticism that her parents were buying up stray copies at fabulous
prices.</p>
<p>Then the conversation turned to the Horse Show, and for quite a while they
talked about who was going to wear what. Finally Oliver rose, saying that they
would have to get a bite to eat before leaving for the Havens’s.
“You’ll have a good time,” said Reggie. “I’d have
gone myself, only I promised to stay and help Mrs. de Graffenried design a
dinner. So long!”</p>
<p class="p2">
Montague had heard nothing about the visit to the Havens’s; but now, as
they strolled down the Avenue, Oliver explained that they were to spend the
weekend at Castle Havens. There was quite a party going up this Friday
afternoon, and they would find one of the Havens’s private cars waiting.
They had nothing to do meantime, for their valets would attend to their
packing, and Alice and her maid would meet them at the depot.</p>
<p>“Castle Havens is one of the show places of the country,” Oliver
added. “You’ll see the real thing this time.” And while they
lunched, he went on to entertain his brother with particulars concerning the
place and its owners. John had inherited the bulk of the enormous Havens
fortune, and he posed as his father’s successor in the Steel Trust. Some
day some one of the big men would gobble him up; meantime he amused himself
fussing over the petty details of administration. Mrs. Havens had taken a fancy
to a rural life, and they had built this huge palace in the hills of
Connecticut, and she wrote verses in which she pictured herself as a simple
shepherdess—and all that sort of stuff. But no one minded that, because
the place was grand, and there was always so much to do. They had forty or
fifty polo ponies, for instance, and every spring the place was filled with
polo men.</p>
<p>At the depot they caught sight of Charlie Carter, in his big red touring-car.
“Are you going to the Havens’s?” he said. “Tell them
we’re going to pick up Chauncey on the way.”</p>
<p>“That’s Chauncey Venable, the Major’s nephew,” said
Oliver, as they strolled to the train. “Poor Chauncey—he’s in
exile!”</p>
<p>“How do you mean?” asked Montague.</p>
<p>“Why, he daren’t come into New York,” said the other.
“Haven’t you read about it in the papers? He lost one or two
hundred thousand the other night in a gambling place, and the district
attorney’s trying to catch him.”</p>
<p>“Does he want to put him in jail?” asked Montague.</p>
<p>“Heavens, no!” said Oliver. “Put a Venable in jail? He wants
him for a witness against the gambler; and poor Chauncey is flitting about the
country hiding with his friends, and wailing because he’ll miss the Horse
Show.”</p>
<p>They boarded the palatial private car, and were introduced to a number of other
guests. Among them was Major Venable; and while Oliver buried himself in the
new issue of the fantastic-covered society journal, which contained the poem of
the erotic “Ysabel,” his brother chatted with the Major. The latter
had taken quite a fancy to the big handsome stranger, to whom everything in the
city was so new and interesting.</p>
<p>“Tell me what you thought of the Snow Palace,” said he.
“I’ve an idea that Mrs. Winnie’s got quite a crush on you.
You’ll find her dangerous, my boy—she’ll make you pay for
your dinners before you get through!”</p>
<p>After the train was under way, the Major got himself surrounded with some
apollinaris and Scotch, and then settled back to enjoy himself. “Did you
see the ‘drunken kid’ at the ferry?” he asked.
“(That’s what our abstemious district attorney terms my precious
young heir-apparent.) You’ll meet him at the Castle—the Havens are
good to him. They know how it feels, I guess; when John was a youngster his
piratical uncle had to camp in Jersey for six months or so, to escape the
strong arm of the law.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you know about it?” continued the Major, sipping at
his beverage. “<i>Sic transit gloria mundi!</i> That was when the great
Captain Kidd Havens was piling up the millions which his survivors are spending
with such charming <i>insouciance</i>. He was plundering a railroad, and the
original progenitor of the Wallings tried to buy the control away from him, and
Havens issued ten or twenty millions of new stock overnight, in the face of a
court injunction, and got away with most of his money. It reads like opera
bouffe, you know—they had a regular armed camp across the river for about
six months—until Captain Kidd went up to Albany with half a million
dollars’ worth of greenbacks in a satchel, and induced the legislature to
legalize the proceedings. That was just after the war, you know, but I remember
it as if it were yesterday. It seems strange to think that anyone
shouldn’t know about it.”</p>
<p>“I know about Havens in a general way,” said Montague.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the Major. “But I know in a particular way,
because I’ve carried some of that railroad’s paper all these years,
and it’s never paid any dividends since. It has a tendency to interfere
with my appreciation of John’s lavish hospitality.”</p>
<p>Montague was reminded of the story of the Roman emperor who pointed out that
money had no smell.</p>
<p>“Maybe not,” said the Major. “But all the same, if you were
superstitious, you might make out an argument from the Havens fortune. Take
that poor girl who married the Count.”</p>
<p>And the Major went on to picture the dénouement of that famous international
alliance, which, many years ago, had been the sensation of two continents. All
Society had attended the gorgeous wedding, an archbishop had performed the
ceremony, and the newspapers had devoted pages to describing the gowns and the
jewels and the presents and all the rest of the magnificence. And the Count was
a wretched little degenerate, who beat and kicked his wife, and flaunted his
mistresses in her face, and wasted fourteen million dollars of her money in a
couple of years. The mind could scarcely follow the orgies of this half-insane
creature—he had spent two hundred thousand dollars on a banquet, and half
as much again for a tortoise-shell wardrobe in which Louis the Sixteenth had
kept his clothes! He had charged a diamond necklace to his wife, and taken two
of the four rows of diamonds out of it before he presented it to her! He had
paid a hundred thousand dollars a year to a jockey whom the Parisian populace
admired, and a fortune for a palace in Verona, which he had promptly torn down,
for the sake of a few painted ceilings. The Major told about one outdoor fête,
which he had given upon a sudden whim: ten thousand Venetian lanterns, ten
thousand metres of carpet; three thousand gilded chairs, and two or three
hundred waiters in fancy costumes; two palaces built in a lake, with sea-horses
and dolphins, and half a dozen orchestras, and several hundred
chorus—girls from the Grand Opera! And in between adventures such as
these, he bought a seat in the Chamber of Deputies, and made speeches and
fought duels in defence of the Holy Catholic Church—and wrote articles
for the yellow journals of America. “And that’s the fate of my lost
dividends!” growled the Major.</p>
<p>There were several automobiles to meet the party at the depot, and they were
whirled through a broad avenue up a valley, and past a little lake, and so to
the gates of Castle Havens.</p>
<p>It was a tremendous building, a couple of hundred feet long. One entered into a
main hall, perhaps fifty feet wide, with a great fireplace and staircase of
marble and bronze, and furniture of gilded wood and crimson velvet, and a huge
painting, covering three of the walls, representing the Conquest of Peru. Each
of the rooms was furnished in the style of a different period—one Louis
Quatorze, one Louis Quinze, one Marie Antoinette, and so on. There was a
drawing-room and a regal music-room; a dining-room in the Georgian style, and a
billiard-room, also in the English fashion, with high wainscoting and open
beams in the ceiling; and a library, and a morning-room and conservatory.
Upstairs in the main suite of rooms was a royal bedstead, which alone was
rumoured to have cost twenty-five thousand dollars; and you might have some
idea of the magnificence of things when you learned that underneath the gilding
of the furniture was the rare and precious Circassian walnut.</p>
<p>All this was beautiful. But what brought the guests to Castle Havens was the
casino, so the Major had remarked. It was really a private athletic
club—with tan-bark hippodrome, having a ring the size of that in Madison
Square Garden, and a skylight roof, and thirty or forty arc-lights for night
events. There were bowling-alleys, billiard and lounging-rooms, hand-ball,
tennis and racket-courts, a completely equipped gymnasium, a shooting-gallery,
and a swimming-pool with Turkish and Russian baths. In this casino alone there
were rooms for forty guests.</p>
<p>Such was Castle Havens; it had cost three or four millions of dollars, and
within the twelve-foot wall which surrounded its grounds lived two world-weary
people who dreaded nothing so much as to be alone. There were always guests,
and on special occasions there might be three or four score. They went whirling
about the country in their autos; they rode and drove; they played games,
outdoor and indoor, or gambled, or lounged and chatted, or wandered about at
their own sweet will. Coming to one of these places was not different from
staying at a great hotel, save that the company was selected, and instead of
paying a bill, you gave twenty or thirty dollars to the servants when you left.</p>
<p>It was a great palace of pleasure, in which beautiful and graceful men and
women played together in all sorts of beautiful and graceful ways. In the
evenings great logs blazed in the fireplace in the hall, and there might be an
informal dance—there was always music at hand. Now and then there would
be a stately ball, with rich gowns and flashing jewels, and the grounds ablaze
with lights, and a full orchestra, and special trains from the city. Or a whole
theatrical company would be brought down to give an entertainment in the
theatre; or a minstrel show, or a troupe of acrobats, or a menagerie of trained
animals. Or perhaps there would be a great pianist, or a palmist, or a trance
medium. Anyone at all would be welcome who could bring a new thrill—it
mattered nothing at all, though the price might be several hundred dollars a
minute.</p>
<p>Montague shook hands with his host and hostess, and with a number of others;
among them Billy Price who forthwith challenged him, and carried him off to the
shooting-gallery. Here he took a rifle, and proceeded to satisfy her as to his
skill. This brought him to the notice of Siegfried Harvey, who was a famous
cross-country rider and “polo-man.” Harvey’s father owned a
score of copper-mines, and had named him after a race-horse; he was a big
broad-shouldered fellow, a favourite of every one; and next morning, when he
found that Montague sat a horse like one who was born to it, he invited him to
come out to his place on Long Island, and see some of the fox-hunting.</p>
<p>Then, after he had dressed for dinner, Montague came downstairs, and found
Betty Wyman, shining like Aurora in an orange-coloured cloud. She introduced
him to Mrs. Vivie Patton, who was tall and slender and fascinating, and had
told her husband to go to hell. Mrs. Vivie had black eyes that snapped and
sparkled, and she was a geyser of animation in a perpetual condition of
eruption. Montague wondered if she would have talked with him so gaily had she
known what he knew about her domestic entanglements.</p>
<p>The company moved into the dining-room, where there was served another of those
elaborate and enormously expensive meals which he concluded he was fated to eat
for the rest of his life. Only, instead of Mrs. Billy Alden with her Scotch,
there was Mrs. Vivie, who drank champagne in terrifying quantities; and
afterward there was the inevitable grouping of the bridge fiends.</p>
<p>Among the guests there was a long-haired and wild-looking foreign personage,
who was the “lion” of the evening, and sat with half a dozen
admiring women about him. Now he was escorted to the music-room, and revealed
the fact that he was a violin virtuoso. He played what was called “salon
music”—music written especially for ladies and gentlemen to listen
to after dinner; and also a strange contrivance called a <i>concerto</i>, put
together to enable the player to exhibit within a brief space the utmost
possible variety of finger gymnastics. To learn to perform these feats one had
to devote his whole lifetime to practising them, just like any circus acrobat;
and so his mind became atrophied, and a naïve and elemental vanity was all that
was left to him.</p>
<p>Montague stood for a while staring; and then took to watching the company, who
chattered and laughed all through the performance. Afterward, he strolled into
the billiard-room, where Billy Price and Chauncey Venable were having an
exciting bout; and from there to the smoking-room, where the stout little Major
had gotten a group of young bloods about him to play “Klondike.”
This was a game of deadly hazards, which they played without limit; the players
themselves were silent and impassive, but the spectators who gathered about
were tense with excitement.</p>
<p>In the morning Charlie Carter carried off Alice and Oliver and Betty in his
auto; and Montague spent his time in trying some of Havens’s jumping
horses. The Horse Show was to open in New York on Monday, and there was an
atmosphere of suppressed excitement because of this prospect; Mrs. Caroline
Smythe, a charming young widow, strolled about with him and told him all about
this Show, and the people who would take part in it.</p>
<p>And in the afternoon Major Venable took him for a stroll and showed him the
grounds. He had been told what huge sums had been expended in laying them out;
but after all, the figures were nothing compared with an actual view. There
were hills and slopes, and endless vistas of green lawns and gardens, dotted
with the gleaming white of marble staircases and fountains and statuary. There
was a great Italian walk, leading by successive esplanades to an electric
fountain with a basin sixty feet across, and a bronze chariot and marble
horses. There were sunken gardens, with a fountain brought from the South of
France, and Greek peristyles, and seats of marble, and vases and other
treasures of art.</p>
<p>And then there were the stables; a huge Renaissance building, with a perfectly
equipped theatre above. There was a model farm and dairy; a polo-field, and an
enclosed riding-ring for the children; and dog-kennels and pigeon-houses,
greenhouses and deer-parks—one was prepared for bear-pits and a
menagerie. Finally, on their way back, they passed the casino, where musical
chimes pealed out the quarter-hours. Montague stopped and gazed up at the tower
from which the sounds had come.</p>
<p>The more he gazed, the more he found to gaze at. The roof of this building had
many gables, in the Queen Anne style; and from the midst of them shot up the
tower, which was octagonal and solid, suggestive of the Normans. It was
decorated with Christmas-wreaths in white stucco, and a few miscellaneous
ornaments like the gilded tassels one sees upon plush curtains. Overtopping all
of this was the dome of a Turkish mosque. Rising out of the dome was something
that looked like a dove-cot; and out of this rose the slender white steeple of
a Methodist country church. On top of that was a statue of Diana.</p>
<p>“What are you looking at?” asked the Major.</p>
<p>“Nothing,” said Montague, as he moved on. “Has there ever
been any insanity in the Havens family?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” replied the other, puzzled. “They say
the old man never could sleep at night, and used to wander about alone in the
park. I suppose he had things on his conscience.”</p>
<p>They strolled away; and the Major’s flood-gates of gossip were opened.
There was an old merchant in New York, who had been Havens’s private
secretary. And Havens was always in terror of assassination, and so whenever
they travelled abroad he and the secretary exchanged places. “The old man
is big and imposing,” said the Major, “and it’s funny to hear
him tell how he used to receive the visitors and be stared at by the crowds,
while Havens, who was little and insignificant, would pretend to make himself
useful. And then one day a wild-looking creature came into the Havens office,
and began tearing the wrappings off some package that shone like
metal—and quick as a flash he and Havens flung themselves down on the
floor upon their faces. Then, as nothing happened, they looked up, and saw the
puzzled stranger gazing over the railing at them. He had a patent churn, made
of copper, which he wanted Havens to market for him!”</p>
<p class="p2">
Montague could have wished that this party might last for a week or two,
instead of only two days. He was interested in the life, and in those who lived
it; all whom he met were people prominent in the social world, and some in the
business world as well, and one could not have asked a better chance to study
them.</p>
<p>Montague was taking his time and feeling his way slowly. But all the time that
he was playing and gossiping he never lost from mind his real purpose, which
was to find a place for himself in the world of affairs; and he watched for
people from whose conversation he could get a view of this aspect of things. So
he was interested when Mrs. Smythe remarked that among his fellow-guests was
Vandam, an official of one of the great life-insurance companies.
“Freddie” Vandam, as the lady called him, was a man of might in the
financial world; and Montague said to himself that in meeting him he would
really be accomplishing something. Crack shots and polo-players and
four-in-hand experts were all very well, but he had his living to earn, and he
feared that the problem was going to prove complicated.</p>
<p>So he was glad when chance brought him and young Vandam together, and Siegfried
Harvey introduced them. And then Montague got the biggest shock which New York
had given him yet.</p>
<p>It was not what Freddie Vandam said; doubtless he had a right to be interested
in the Horse Show, since he was to exhibit many fine horses, and he had no
reason to feel called upon to talk about anything more serious to a stranger at
a house party. But it was the manner of the man, his whole personality. For
Freddie was a man of fashion, with all the exaggerated and farcical mannerisms
of the dandy of the comic papers. He wore a conspicuous and foppish costume,
and posed with a little cane; he cultivated a waving pompadour, and his silky
moustache and beard were carefully trimmed to points, and kept sharp by his
active fingers. His conversation was full of French phrases and French
opinions; he had been reared abroad, and had a whole-souled contempt for all
things American—even dictating his business letters in French, and
leaving it for his stenographer to translate them. His shirts were embroidered
with violets and perfumed with violets—and there were bunches of violets
at his horses’ heads, so that he might get the odour as he drove!</p>
<p>There was a cruel saying about Freddie Vandam—that if only he had had a
little more brains, he would have been half-witted. And Montague sat, and
watched his mannerisms and listened to his inanities, with his mind in a state
of bewilderment and dismay. When at last he got up and walked away, it was with
a new sense of the complicated nature of the problem that confronted him. Who
was there that could give him the key to this mystery—who could interpret
to him a world in which a man such as this was in control of four or five
hundred millions of trust funds?</p>
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