<h2><SPAN name="XXV" id="XXV"></SPAN>XXV</h2>
<p class="nind"><span class="letra">W</span>HEN I left the train with my bag in my hand, I felt excited and a
little bit afraid. I realized that I had no special destination, and the
part of the city where the station was did not look as if it was a place
to find a room. There were many cars passing, and I finally got on one,
a Columbus Avenue.</p>
<p>As we rode along I looked out of the window and watched the houses for a
“Room to Let” sign, and presently we came to some tall stone houses, all
very much alike, and ugly-and severe-looking after our pretty Montreal
houses with their bits of lawn and sometimes even little gardens in
front. There were “Room to Let” signs on nearly all the houses in this
block. So I got out and went up the high steps of the one I thought
looked the cleanest.</p>
<p>I rang the bell and a black woman opened the door. I said:</p>
<p>“Is your mistress in?” And she said: “How?”</p>
<p>We never say “How?” like that in Canada. If we aren’t polite enough to
say: “I beg your<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_139" id="page_139">{139}</SPAN></span> pardon,” then we say: “What?” So I thought she meant,
how many rooms did I want, and I said: “Just one, thank you.”</p>
<p>She walked down the hall, and I heard her say to some one behind a
curtain there:</p>
<p>“Say, Miss Darling, there’s a girl at the door. I think she’s a
forriner. She sure talks and looks like no folks I knows.”</p>
<p>There was a quiet laugh, and then a faded little woman in a faded little
kimono came hurrying down the hall. I call her “faded-looking,” because
that describes her very well. Her face, once pretty, no doubt, made me
think of a half-washed-out painting. Her hair was almost colorless,
though I suppose it had once been dull brown. Now wisps of grayish hair
stood out about her face as if ash had blown against it. She had dim,
near-sighted eyes, and there was something pathetically worn-and
tired-looking about her.</p>
<p>“Well? What is it you want?” she inquired.</p>
<p>I told her I wanted a little room, and said:</p>
<p>“I’ve just arrived from Montreal.”</p>
<p>“Dear me!” she exclaimed, “you <i>must</i> be tired!” She seemed to think
Montreal was as far away as Siberia.</p>
<p>She showed me up three flights of stairs to a tiny room in which was a
folding bed. As I had never seen a folding bed before, she opened it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_140" id="page_140">{140}</SPAN></span> up
and showed me how it worked. When it was down there was scarcely an inch
of room left and I had to put the one chair out into the hall.</p>
<p>She explained that it would be much better for me to have a folding bed,
because when it was up I could use the room as a sitting-room and see my
company there. I told her I did not expect any company as I was a
perfect stranger in Boston. She laughed—that queer little bird-like
laugh I had heard behind the curtain, and said:</p>
<p>“I’ll take a bet you’ll have all the company this room will hold soon.”</p>
<p>There was something kindly about her tired face and when I asked her if
I had to pay in advance—the room was three dollars a week—she
hesitated, and then said:</p>
<p>“Well, it’s the custom, but you can suit yourself. There’s no hurry.”</p>
<p>I sometimes think that nearly every one in the world has a story, and,
if we only knew it, those nearest to us might surprise us with a history
or romance of which we never dreamed. Take my little faded landlady. She
was the last person in the world one would have imagined the heroine of
a real romance, but perhaps her romance was too pitiful and tiny to be
worth the telling. Nevertheless, when I heard it—from another lodger in
the house—I felt drawn to poor Miss<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_141" id="page_141">{141}</SPAN></span> Darling. To the world she might
seem a withered old maid. I knew she was capable of a great and
unselfish passion.</p>
<p>She had come from Vermont to Boston, and had worked as a cashier in a
down-town restaurant. She had slowly saved her money until she had a
sufficient sum with which to buy this rooming-house, which I sometimes
thought was as sad and faded as she.</p>
<p>While she was working so hard, she had fallen in love with a young
medical student. He had even less money than Miss Darling. When she
opened her rooming-house she took him in, and for three years she gave
him rent free and supported him entirely, even buying his medical books,
paying his tuition, his clothes and giving him pocket money. He had
promised to marry her as soon as he passed, but within a few days after
he became a doctor he married a wealthy girl who lived in Brookline and
on whom he had been calling all the time he had been living with Miss
Darling.</p>
<p>The lodger who told me about her said she never said a word to any one
about it, but just began to fade away. She lost thirty pounds in a
single month, but she was the “pluckiest little sport ever,” said the
lodger.</p>
<p>It seemed to me our stories were not unlike, and I wondered to myself
whether Reggie was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_142" id="page_142">{142}</SPAN></span> capable of being as base as was Miss Darling’s
lover.</p>
<p>While I was taking my things out of my suitcase, Miss Darling watched me
with a rather curious expression, and suddenly she said:</p>
<p>“I don’t know what you intend to do, but take my advice. Don’t be too
easy. If I were as young and pretty as you, I tell you, I would make
every son of a gun pay me well.”</p>
<p>I said:</p>
<p>“I’ll be contented if I can just get work soon.”</p>
<p>She looked at me with a queer, bitter little smile, and then she said:</p>
<p>“It doesn’t pay to work. I’ve worked all my life.”</p>
<p>Then she laughed bitterly, and went out suddenly, closing the door
behind her.</p>
<p>As soon as I had washed and changed from my heavy Canadian coat to a
little blue cloth suit I had made myself, I started out at once to look
up the artist, Mr. Sands, whose address papa had given me.</p>
<p>I lost my way several times. I always got lost in Boston. The streets
were like a maze, winding around and running off in every direction. I
finally found the studio building on Boylston, and climbed up four
flights of stairs. When I got to the top, I came to a door with a neat
little visiting card with Mr. Sands’ name upon it. I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_143" id="page_143">{143}</SPAN></span> remembered that
Count von Hatzfeldt had his card on the door like this, and for the
first time I had an instinctive feeling that my own large japanned sign:
“Miss Ascough, Artist,” etc., was funny and provincial. Even papa had
never put up such a sign, and when he first saw mine, he had laughed and
then had run his hand absently through his hair and said he “supposed it
was all right” for the kind of work I expected to do. Dear papa! He
wouldn’t have hurt my feelings for worlds. With what pride had I not
shown him my sign and “studio!”</p>
<p>I knocked on Mr. Sands’ door, and presently he himself opened it. At
first he did not know me, but when I stammered:</p>
<p>“I’m—Miss Ascough. D-don’t you remember me? I did some work for you in
Montreal eight years ago, and you told me to come to Boston. Well—I’ve
come!”</p>
<p>“Good Lord!” he ejaculated. “Did I ever tell anybody to come to Boston?
Good Lord!” And he stood staring at me as if he still were unable to
place me. Then after another pause, during which he stared at me
curiously, he said:</p>
<p>“Come in, come in!”</p>
<p>While he was examining me, with his palette stuck on his thumb and a
puzzled look on his face as if he didn’t quite know what to say to me or
to do with me, I looked about me.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_144" id="page_144">{144}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was a very luxurious studio, full of beautiful draperies and
tapestries. I was surprised, as the bare stairs I had climbed and the
outside of the building was most unbeautiful. Sitting on a raised
platform was a very lovely girl, dressed in a Greek costume, but the
face on the canvas of the easel was not a bit like hers.</p>
<p>Mr. Sands, as though he had all of a sudden really placed me in his
mind, held out his hand and shook mine heartily, exclaiming:</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, yes, now I remember. Ascough’s little girl. Well, well, and
how is dear old Montreal? And your father, and his friend—what was his
name? Mmmmum—let me see—that German artist—you remember him? He was
crazy—a madman!”</p>
<p>Lorenz was the artist he meant. He was a great friend of my father’s.
Papa thought him a genius, but mama did not like him at all, because she
said he used such blasphemous language and was a bad influence on papa.
I remember I used to love to hear him shout and declaim and denounce all
the shams in art and the church. He was a man of immense stature, with a
huge head like Walt Whitman’s. He used to come to the Château to see the
Count, with whom he had long arguments and quarrels. He was German and
the Count a Dane. He would shout excitedly at the Count and wave his
arms, and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_145" id="page_145">{145}</SPAN></span> Count would shriek and double up with laughter sometimes,
and Mr. Lorenz would shout: “Bravo! Bravo!”</p>
<p>They talked in German, and I couldn’t understand them, but I think they
were making fun of English and American art. And as for the Canadian—!
The mere mention of Canadian art was enough to make the old Count and
Lorenz explode.</p>
<p>Poor old Lorenz! He never made any money, and was awfully shabby. One
day papa sent him to Reggie’s office to try to sell a painting to the
senior partner, who professed to be a connoisseur. Mr. Jones, the
partner, came out from his private office in a hurry and, seeing Lorenz
waiting, mistook him for a beggar. He put his hand in his pocket and
gave Lorenz a dime. Then he passed out. Lorenz looked at the dime and
said:</p>
<p>“Vell, it vill puy me two beers.”</p>
<p>Reggie had told me about that. He was irritated at papa for sending
Lorenz there, and he said he hoped he would not appear again.</p>
<p>I told Mr. Sands all about Lorenz and also about the Count I had worked
for; about papa, some of whose work the Duke of Argyle had taken back to
England with him, as representative of Canadian art (which it was
not—papa had studied in France, and was an Englishman, not a Canadian),
and of my own “studio.” While<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_146" id="page_146">{146}</SPAN></span> I talked, Mr. Sands went on painting. The
model watched me with, I thought, a very sad expression. Her dark eyes
were as gentle and mournful as a Madonna’s. She didn’t look unlike our
family, being dark and foreign-looking. She was French. Mr. Sands was
painting her arms and hands on the figure on the canvas. He explained
that the face belonged to the wife of Senator Chase. She was the leader
of a very smart set in Brookline. He said the ladies who sat for their
portraits usually got tired by the time their faces were finished, and
he used models for the figures, and especially the hands.</p>
<p>“The average woman,” said Mr. Sands, “has extreme ugly hands. The hands
of Miss St. Denis, as you see, are beautiful—the most beautiful hands
in America.”</p>
<p>I was standing by him at the easel, watching him paint, and I asked him
if it were really a portrait, for the picture looked more like a Grecian
dancing figure. Mr. Sands smiled and said:</p>
<p>“That’s the secret of my success, child. I never paint portraits as
portraits. I dress my sitters in fancy costumes and paint them as some
character. There is Mrs. Olivet. Her husband is a wholesale grocer. I am
going to paint her as Carmen. This spirituelle figure with the filmy
veil about her is Mrs. Ash Browning, a dead-and-alive, wishy-washy
individual; but, as you see, her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_147" id="page_147">{147}</SPAN></span> ‘beauty’ lends itself peculiarly to
the nymph she there represents.”</p>
<p>I was so much interested in listening to him, and watching him work,
that I had forgotten what I had come to see him about, till presently he
said:</p>
<p>“So you are going to join the classes at the Academy?”</p>
<p>That question recalled me, and I said hastily:</p>
<p>“I hope so, by-and-by. First, though, I shall have to get some work to
do.”</p>
<p>He stopped painting and stared at me, with his palette in his hand, and
as he had looked at me when he opened the door.</p>
<p>I unwrapped the package I had brought along with me, and showed him the
piano scarf I had painted as a sample, a landscape I had copied from one
of papa’s and some miniatures I had painted on celluloid. I said:</p>
<p>“People won’t be able to tell the difference from ivory when they are
framed, and I can do them very quickly, as I can trace them from a
photograph underneath, do you see?”</p>
<p>His eyes bulged and he stared at me harder than ever. I also showed him
some charcoal sketches I had done from casts, and a little painting of
our kitten playing on the table. He picked this up and looked at it, and
then set it down, muttering something I thought was: “Not so<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_148" id="page_148">{148}</SPAN></span> bad.”
After a moment, he picked it up again and then stared at me a moment and
said:</p>
<p>“I think you have some talent, and you have come to the right place to
<i>study</i>.”</p>
<p>“And work, Mr. Sands,” I said. “I’ve come here to earn my living. Can
you give me some painting to do?”</p>
<p>He put down his palette and nodded to Miss St. Clair to rest. Then he
took hold of my hand and said:</p>
<p>“Now, Miss Ascough, I am going to give you some good advice, chiefly
because you are from my old Montreal (Mr. Sands was a Canadian), because
of your father and our friend, good old man Lorenz. Finally, because I
think it is my duty. Now, young lady, take my advice. If your parents
can afford to pay your expenses here, stay and go to the art schools.
<i>But</i> if you expect to make a living by your painting in Boston, take
the next train and go home!”</p>
<p>“I can’t go home!” I cried. “Oh, I’m sure you must be mistaken. Lots of
women earn their livings as artists. Why shouldn’t I? I worked for Count
von Hatzfeldt, and he said I had more talent than the average woman who
paints.”</p>
<p>“How much did he pay you?” demanded Mr. Sands.</p>
<p>“Five dollars a week and sometimes extra,” I said.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i_177_lg.jpg"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_177_sml.jpg" width-obs="449" height-obs="500" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></SPAN> <div class="caption"><p>I was so interested in listening to him and watching him work that I had forgotten what I had come to see him about.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_149" id="page_149">{149}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mr. Sands laughed.</p>
<p>“You would starve on that here even if you could make it, which I doubt.
In Montreal you had your home and friends. It’s a different matter here
altogether.”</p>
<p>I felt as I once did when, as a child, I climbed to the top of a cherry
tree, and Charles had taken away the ladder, and I tried to climb down
without it. I kept repeating desperately:</p>
<p>“I won’t go back! I tell you, I won’t! No, no, nothing will induce me to
go back!”</p>
<p>I gathered up all my paintings. I felt distracted and friendless. Mr.
Sands had returned to his painting and he seemed to have forgotten me. I
saw the model watching me, and she leaned over and said something in a
whisper to Mr. Sands. He put his palette down again and said:</p>
<p>“Come, Miss St. Denis. This will do for to-day. We all need a bit of
refreshment. Miss Ascough looks tired.”</p>
<p>I was, and hungry, too. I had had no lunch, for I lost so much time
looking for Mr. Sands’ studio.</p>
<p>He brought out a bottle wrapped in a napkin, and a big plate of cakes.
He said:</p>
<p>“I want you to taste my own special brand of champagne cocktail.”</p>
<p>He talked a great deal then about brands of wines and mixtures, etc.,
while I munched on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_150" id="page_150">{150}</SPAN></span> cakes which I found difficulty in swallowing,
because of the lump in my throat. But I was determined not to break down
before them, and I even drank some of the cocktail he had mixed for me.
Presently, I said:</p>
<p>“Well, I guess I’ll go,” and I gathered up my things. Mr. Sands stood up
and put his hands on my shoulders. Miss St. Denis was standing at his
elbow, and she watched me all the time he was speaking.</p>
<p>“Now, Miss Ascough, I am going to make a suggestion to you. I see you
are determined not to go back. Now the only way I can think of your
making a living is by posing.”</p>
<p>I drew back from him.</p>
<p>“I am an artist,” I said, “and the daughter of an artist.”</p>
<p>He patted me on the back.</p>
<p>“That’s all right. I know how you feel. I’ve been a Canadian myself; but
there’s no use getting mad with me for merely trying to help you. You
will starve here in Boston, and I’m simply pointing out to you a method
of earning your living. There’s no disgrace connected with such work, if
it is done in the proper spirit. As far as that goes, many of the art
students are earning extra money to help pay their tuition that way. The
models here get pretty good pay. Thirty-five cents an hour for costume
posing and fifty<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_151" id="page_151">{151}</SPAN></span> cents for the nude. We here in Boston pay better than
they do in New York, and we treat them better, too. Of course, there are
not so many of us here and we haven’t as much work, but a model can make
a fair living, isn’t that so, Miss St. Denis?”</p>
<p>She nodded slowly, her eyes still on me; but there was something warm
and pitying in their dark depths.</p>
<p>“Now,” went on Mr. Sands, “I don’t doubt that you will get plenty of
work. You are an exceedingly pretty girl. I don’t need to tell you that,
for, of course, you know it. What’s more, I’ll safely bet that you have
just the figure we find hard to get. A perfect nude is not so easy as
people seem to think—one whose figure is still young. Most models don’t
take care of themselves and it’s the hardest thing to find a model with
firm breasts. They all sag, the result of wearing corsets. So we are
forced to use one model for the figure, another for the legs, another
for the bust—and so on, before we get a perfect figure, and when we get
through, as you may guess, it’s a patchwork affair at best. Your figure,
I can see, is young and—er—has life—<i>esprit</i>. Are you eighteen yet?”</p>
<p>“I’m nearly twenty-two.”</p>
<p>“You don’t look it. Um! The hands are all right—fine!—and the
feet”—he smiled as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_152" id="page_152">{152}</SPAN></span> I shrank under his gaze—“they seem very little.
Small feet are not always shapely, but I dare say yours are. Your
hair—and your coloring— Yes, I think you will do famously. It’s rather
late in the season—but I dare say you’ll get something. Now, what do
you say? Give over this notion of painting for a while, and perhaps I
can get you some work right away.”</p>
<p>“I’ll never, never, never pose—nude,” I said.</p>
<p>“Hm! Well, well—of course, that’s what we need most. It’s easy to get
costume models—many of our women friends even pose at that. However,
now would you consider it very <i>infra dig</i>. then to pose for me, say
to-morrow, in this Spanish scarf. You are just the type I need, and I
believe I can help you with some of the other artists.”</p>
<p>I thought of the few dollars I had left. I had only about twelve dollars
in all. Mr. Sands said he would pay me the regular rate, though I was
not experienced. After a moment’s thought I said:</p>
<p>“Yes, I’ll do it.”</p>
<p>“Now, that’s talking sensibly,” he said, smiling, “and Miss St. Denis
here will take you with her to other places to see about getting work.”</p>
<p>She said:</p>
<p>“Yes, certainement, I will do so. You come wiz me now.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_153" id="page_153">{153}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<p>I thanked Mr. Sands, and he patted me on the shoulder and told me not to
worry. He said he would give me some work regularly till about the
middle of May when he went away for the summer. I would get thirty-five
cents an hour, and pose two hours a day for him.</p>
<p>When we got to the street, the lights were all lit and the city looked
very big to me. Miss St. Denis invited me to have dinner with her. She
knew a place where they served a dinner for twenty-five cents. She
seemed to think that quite cheap. I told her I couldn’t afford to pay
that much every night and she said:</p>
<p>“Well you will do so by-and-by. Soon you will get ze work—especially
eef you pose in ze nude.”</p>
<p>I said:</p>
<p>“I will never do that.”</p>
<p>She shrugged. After dinner she took me to a night school where she
posed, as she said she wished me to see how it was done. Of course, I
had already seen Lil Markey pose for the Count, but she was just an
amateur model then. It did seem worse to me, moreover, to go out there
before a whole class than before one man. Miss St. Denis seemed
surprised when I said that, and she declared it was quite the other way.</p>
<p>That night I sat in my little narrow bedroom and looked out of the
window, and I thought of all I had learned that day, and it seemed
clear<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_154" id="page_154">{154}</SPAN></span> to me that Mr. Sands was right. There was little chance of my
making a living as an artist in Boston. What was to become of me then?
Should I return home? The thought of doing that made me clinch my hands
passionately together and cry to myself:</p>
<p>“No, no; never, never!”</p>
<p>I remembered something Mr. Davis had said to me when he was teaching me
to act. He said that I should forget my own personality and try to
imagine myself the person I was playing. Why should I not do this as a
model? I resolved to try it. It could not be so bad, since Mr. Sands had
recommended it. Yes, I would do it! I would be a model! But I should not
tell them at home. They would not understand, and I did not want to
disgrace them.</p>
<p>With the resolve came first a sense of calmness, and then suddenly a
rush of rage against Reggie who had driven me to this. I had the small
town English girl’s foolish contempt for a work I really had no reason
for despising. As the daughter of an artist, and, as I thought, an
artist myself, it seemed to me, I was signing the death warrant of my
best ambitions and, as I have said, I felt, with rage, that Reggie was
to blame for this. I looked out of that window, and lifting up my eyes
and clasped hands to the skies, I called:</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i_185_lg.jpg"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_185_sml.jpg" width-obs="297" height-obs="500" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></SPAN> <div class="caption"><p>“Oh, God in Heaven, hear me, and if I ever go back to Reggie, curse me, and may all kinds of ills come upon me. Amen.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_155" id="page_155">{155}</SPAN></span>”</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>“O God in heaven! hear me, and if ever I go back to Reggie, curse me,
and may all kinds of ills come upon me. Amen!”</p>
<p>Now, I thought, as I got into that folding bed, “I don’t dare to go
back, for God will curse me if I do.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_156" id="page_156">{156}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />