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<h2> Chapter II. THE WAY IT BEGAN </h2>
<p>It makes me angry every time I think how I tried to make that dinner a
success. I canceled a theater engagement, and I took the Mercer girls in
the electric brougham father had given me for Christmas. Their chauffeur
had been gone for hours with their machine, and they had telephoned all
the police stations without success. They were afraid that there had been
an awful smash; they could easily have replaced Bartlett, as Lollie said,
but it takes so long to get new parts for those foreign cars.</p>
<p>Jim had a house well up-town, and it stood just enough apart from the
other houses to be entirely maddening later. It was a three-story affair,
with a basement kitchen and servants’ dining room. Then, of course, there
were cellars, as we found out afterward. On the first floor there was a
large square hall, a formal reception room, behind it a big living room
that was also a library, then a den, and back of all a Georgian dining
room, with windows high above the ground. On the top floor Jim had a
studio, like every other one I ever saw—perhaps a little mussier.
Jim was really a grind at his painting, and there were cigarette ashes and
palette knives and buffalo rugs and shields everywhere. It is strange, but
when I think of that terrible house, I always see the halls, enormous,
covered with heavy rugs, and stairs that would have taken six housemaids
to keep in proper condition. I dream about those stairs, stretching above
me in a Jacob’s ladder of shining wood and Persian carpets, going up, up,
clear to the roof.</p>
<p>The Dallas Browns walked; they lived in the next block. And they brought
with them a man named Harbison, that no one knew. Anne said he would be
great sport, because he was terribly serious, and had the most exaggerated
ideas of society, and loathed extravagance, and built bridges or
something. She had put away her cigarettes since he had been with them—he
and Dallas had been college friends—and the only chance she had to
smoke was when she was getting her hair done. And she had singed off quite
a lot—a burnt offering, she called it.</p>
<p>“My dear,” she said over the telephone, when I invited her, “I want you to
know him. He’ll be crazy about you. That type of man, big and deadly
earnest, always falls in love with your type of girl, the appealing sort,
you know. And he has been too busy, up to now, to know what love is. But
mind, don’t hurt him; he’s a dear boy. I’m half in love with him myself,
and Dallas trots around at his heels like a poodle.”</p>
<p>But all Anne’s geese are swans, so I thought little of the Harbison man
except to hope that he played respectable bridge, and wouldn’t mark the
cards with a steel spring under his finger nail, as one of her “finds” had
done.</p>
<p>We all arrived about the same time, and Anne and I went upstairs together
to take off our wraps in what had been Bella’s dressing room. It was Anne
who noticed the violets.</p>
<p>“Look at that!” she nudged me, when the maid was examining her wrap before
she laid it down. “What did I tell you, Kit? He’s still quite mad about
her.”</p>
<p>Jim had painted Bella’s portrait while they were going up the Nile on
their wedding trip. It looked quite like her, if you stood well off in the
middle of the room and if the light came from the right. And just beneath
it, in a silver vase, was a bunch of violets. It was really touching, and
violets were fabulous. It made me want to cry, and to shake Bella soundly,
and to go down and pat Jim on his generous shoulder, and tell him what a
good fellow I thought him, and that Bella wasn’t worth the dust under his
feet. I don’t know much about psychology, but it would be interesting to
know just what effect those violets and my sympathy for Jim had in
influencing my decision a half hour later. It is not surprising, under the
circumstances, that for some time after the odor of violets made me ill.</p>
<p>We all met downstairs in the living room, quite informally, and Dallas was
banging away at the pianola, tramping the pedals with the delicacy and
feeling of a football center rush kicking a goal. Mr. Harbison was
standing near the fire, a little away from the others, and he was all that
Anne had said and more in appearance. He was tall—not too tall, and
very straight. And after one got past the oddity of his face being
bronze-colored above his white collar, and of his brown hair being
sun-bleached on top until it was almost yellow, one realized that he was
very handsome. He had what one might call a resolute nose and chin, and a
pleasant, rather humorous, mouth. And he had blue eyes that were, at that
moment, wandering with interest over the lot of us. Somebody shouted his
name to me above the Tristan and Isolde music, and I held out my hand.</p>
<p>Instantly I had the feeling one sometimes has, of having done just that
same thing, with the same surroundings, in the same place, years before, I
was looking up at him, and he was staring down at me and holding my hand.
And then the music stopped and he was saying:</p>
<p>“Where was it?”</p>
<p>“Where was what?” I asked. The feeling was stronger than ever with his
voice.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon,” he said, and let my hand drop. “Just for a second I
had an idea that we had met before somewhere, a long time ago. I suppose—no,
it couldn’t have happened, or I should remember.” He was smiling, half at
himself.</p>
<p>“No,” I smiled back at him. “It didn’t happen, I’m afraid—unless we
dreamed it.”</p>
<p>“We?”</p>
<p>“I felt that way, too, for a moment.”</p>
<p>“The Brushwood Boy!” he said with conviction. “Perhaps we will find a
common dream life, where we knew each other. You remember the Brushwood
Boy loved the girl for years before they really met.” But this was a
little too rapid, even for me.</p>
<p>“Nothing so sentimental, I’m afraid,” I retorted. “I have had exactly the
same sensation sometimes when I have sneezed.”</p>
<p>Betty Mercer captured him then and took him off to see Jim’s newest
picture. Anne pounced on me at once.</p>
<p>“Isn’t he delicious?” she demanded. “Did you ever see such shoulders? And
such a nose? And he thinks we are parasites, cumberers of the earth,
Heaven knows what. He says every woman ought to know how to earn her
living, in case of necessity! I said I could make enough at bridge, and he
thought I was joking! He’s a dear!” Anne was enthusiastic.</p>
<p>I looked after him. Oddly enough the feeling that we had met before stuck
to me. Which was ridiculous, of course, for we learned afterward that the
nearest we ever came to meeting was that our mothers had been school
friends! Just then I saw Jim beckoning to me crazily from the den. He
looked quite yellow, and he had been running his fingers through his hair.</p>
<p>“For Heaven’s sake, come in, Kit!” he said. “I need a cool head. Didn’t I
tell you this is my calamity day?”</p>
<p>“Cook gone?” I asked with interest. I was starving.</p>
<p>He closed the door and took up a tragic attitude in front of the fire.
“Did you ever hear of Aunt Selina?” he demanded.</p>
<p>“I knew there WAS one,” I ventured, mindful of certain gossip as to whence
Jimmy derived the Wilson income.</p>
<p>Jim himself was too worried to be cautious. He waved a brazen hand at the
snug room, at the Japanese prints on the walls, at the rugs, at the
teakwood cabinets and the screen inlaid with pearl and ivory.</p>
<p>“All this,” he said comprehensively, “every bite I eat, clothes I wear,
drinks I drink—you needn’t look like that; I don’t drink so darned
much—everything comes from Aunt Selina—buttons,” he finished
with a groan.</p>
<p>“Selina Buttons,” I said reflectively. “I don’t remember ever having known
any one named Buttons, although I had a cat once—”</p>
<p>“Damn the cat!” he said rudely. “Her name isn’t Buttons. Her name is
Caruthers, my Aunt Selina Caruthers, and the money comes from buttons.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” feebly.</p>
<p>“It’s an old business,” he went on, with something of proprietary pride.
“My grandfather founded it in 1775. Made buttons for the Continental
Army.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” I said. “They melted the buttons to make bullets, didn’t they?
Or they melted bullets to make buttons? Which was it?”</p>
<p>But again he interrupted.</p>
<p>“It’s like this,” he went on hurriedly. “Aunt Selina believes in me. She
likes pictures, and she wanted me to paint, if I could. I’d have given up
long ago—oh, I know what you think of my work—but for Aunt
Selina. She has encouraged me, and she’s done more than that; she’s paid
the bills.”</p>
<p>“Dear Aunt Selina,” I breathed.</p>
<p>“When I got married,” Jim persisted, “Aunt Selina doubled my allowance. I
always expected to sell something, and begin to make money, and in the
meantime what she advanced I considered as a loan.” He was eyeing me
defiantly, but I was growing serious. It was evident from the preamble
that something was coming.</p>
<p>“To understand, Kit,” he went on dubiously, “you would have to know her.
She won’t stand for divorce. She thinks it is a crime.”</p>
<p>“What!” I sat up. I have always regarded divorce as essentially
disagreeable, like castor oil, but necessary.</p>
<p>“Oh, you know well enough what I’m driving at,” he burst out savagely.
“She doesn’t know Bella has gone. She thinks I am living in a little
domestic heaven, and—she is coming tonight to hear me flap my
wings.”</p>
<p>“Tonight!”</p>
<p>I don’t think Jimmy had known that Dallas Brown had come in and was
listening. I am sure I had not. Hearing his chuckle at the doorway brought
us up with a jerk.</p>
<p>“Where has Aunt Selina been for the last two or three years?” he asked
easily.</p>
<p>Jim turned, and his face brightened.</p>
<p>“Europe. Look here, Dal, you’re a smart chap. She’ll only be here about
four hours. Can’t you think of some way to get me out of this? I want to
let her down easy, too. I’m mighty fond of Aunt Selina. Can’t we—can’t
I say Bella has a headache?”</p>
<p>“Rotten!” laconically.</p>
<p>“Gone out of town?” Jim was desperate.</p>
<p>“And you with a houseful of dinner guests! Try again, Jim.”</p>
<p>“I have it,” Jim said suddenly. “Dallas, ask Anne if she won’t play
hostess for tonight. Be Mrs. Wilson pro tem. Anne would love it. Aunt
Selina never saw Bella. Then, afterward, next year, when I’m hung in the
Academy and can stand on my feet”—(“Not if you’re hung,” Dallas
interjected.)—“I’ll break the truth to her.”</p>
<p>But Dallas was not enthusiastic.</p>
<p>“Anne wouldn’t do at all,” he declared. “She’d be talking about the kids
before she knew it, and patting me on the head.” He said it complacently;
Anne flirts, but they are really devoted.</p>
<p>“One of the Mercer girls?” I suggested, but Jimmy raised a horrified hand.</p>
<p>“You don’t know Aunt Selina,” he protested. “I couldn’t offer Leila in the
gown she’s got on, unless she wore a shawl, and Betty is too fair.”</p>
<p>Anne came in just then, and the whole story had to be told again to her.
She was ecstatic. She said it was good enough for a play, and that of
course she would be Mrs. Jimmy for that length of time.</p>
<p>“You know,” she finished, “if it were not for Dal, I would be Mrs. Jimmy
for ANY length of time. I have been devoted to you for years, Billiken.”</p>
<p>But Dallas refused peremptorily.</p>
<p>“I’m not jealous,” he explained, straightening and throwing out his chest,
“but—well, you don’t look the part, Anne. You’re—you are
growing matronly, not but what you suit ME all right. And then I’d forget
and call you ‘mammy,’ which would require explanation. I think it’s up to
you, Kit.”</p>
<p>“I shall do nothing of the sort!” I snapped. “It’s ridiculous!”</p>
<p>“I dare you!” said Dallas.</p>
<p>I refused. I stood like a rock while the storm surged around me and beat
over me. I must say for Jim that he was merely pathetic. He said that my
happiness was first; that he would not give me an uncomfortable minute for
anything on earth; and that Bella had been perfectly right to leave him,
because he was a sinking ship, and deserved to be turned out penniless
into the world. After which mixed figure, he poured himself something to
drink, and his hands were shaking.</p>
<p>Dal and Anne stood on each side of him and patted him on the shoulders and
glared across at me. I felt that if I was a rock, Jim’s ship had struck on
me and was sinking, as he said, because of me. I began to crumble.</p>
<p>“What—what time does she leave?” I asked, wavering.</p>
<p>“Ten: nine; KIT, are you going to do it?”</p>
<p>“No!” I gave a last clutch at my resolution. “People who do that kind of
thing always get into trouble. She might miss her train. She’s almost
certain to miss her train.”</p>
<p>“You’re temporizing,” Dallas said sternly. “We won’t let her miss her
train; you can be sure of that.”</p>
<p>“Jim,” Anne broke in suddenly, “hasn’t she a picture of Bella? There’s not
the faintest resemblance between Bella and Kit.”</p>
<p>Jim became downcast again. “I sent her a miniature of Bella a couple of
years ago,” he said despondently. “Did it myself.”</p>
<p>But Dal said he remembered the miniature, and it looked more like me than
Bella, anyhow. So we were just where we started. And down inside of me I
had a premonition that I was going to do just what they wanted me to do,
and get into all sorts of trouble, and not be thanked for it after all.
Which was entirely correct. And then Leila Mercer came and banged at the
door and said that dinner had been announced ages ago and that everybody
was famishing. With the hurry and stress, and poor Jim’s distracted face,
I weakened.</p>
<p>“I feel like a cross between an idiot and a criminal,” I said shortly,
“and I don’t know particularly why every one thinks I should be the victim
for the sacrifice. But if you will promise to get her off early to her
train, and if you will stand by me and not leave me alone with her, I—I
might try it.”</p>
<p>“Of course, we’ll stand by you!” they said in chorus. “We won’t let you
stick!” And Dal said, “You’re the right sort of girl, Kit. And after it’s
all over, you’ll realize that it’s the biggest kind of lark. Think how you
are saving the old lady’s feeling! When you are an elderly person
yourself, Kit, you will appreciate what you are doing tonight.”</p>
<p>Yes, they said they would stand by me, and that I was a heroine and the
only person there clever enough to act the part, and that they wouldn’t
let me stick! I am not bitter now, but that is what they promised. Oh, I
am not defending myself; I suppose I deserved everything that happened.
But they told me that she would be there only between trains, and that she
was deaf, and that I had an opportunity to save a fellow-being from ruin.
So in the end I capitulated.</p>
<p>When they opened the door into the living room, Max Reed had arrived and
was helping to hide a decanter and glasses, and somebody said a cab was at
the door.</p>
<p>And that was the way it began.</p>
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