<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<p>The Horse Show was held in Madison Square Garden, a building occupying a whole
city block. It seemed to Montague that during the four days he attended he was
introduced to enough people to fill it to the doors. Each one of the exquisite
ladies and gentlemen extended to him a delicately gloved hand, and remarked
what perfect weather they were having, and asked him how long he had been in
New York, and what he thought of it. Then they would talk about the horses, and
about the people who were present, and what they had on.</p>
<p>He saw little of his brother, who was squiring the Walling ladies most of the
time; and Alice, too, was generally separated from him and taken care of by
others. Yet he was never alone—there was always some young matron ready
to lead him to her carriage and whisk him away to lunch or dinner.</p>
<p>Many times he wondered why people should be so kind to him, a stranger, and one
who could do nothing for them in return. Mrs. Billy Alden undertook to explain
it to him, one afternoon, as he sat in her box. There had to be some people to
enjoy, it appeared, or there would be no fun in the game. “Everything is
new and strange to you,” said she, “and you’re delicious and
refreshing; you make these women think perhaps they oughtn’t to be so
bored after all! Here’s a woman who’s bought a great painting;
she’s told that it’s great, but she doesn’t understand it
herself—all she knows is that it cost her a hundred thousand dollars. And
now you come along, and to you it’s really a painting—and
don’t you see how gratifying that is to her?”</p>
<p>“Oliver is always telling me it’s bad form to admire,” said
the man, laughing.</p>
<p>“Yes?” said the other. “Well, don’t you let that
brother of yours spoil you. There are more than enough of <i>blasé</i> people
in town—you be yourself.”</p>
<p>He appreciated the compliment, but added, “I’m afraid that when the
novelty is worn off, people will be tired of me.”</p>
<p>“You’ll find your place,” said Mrs. Alden—“the
people you like and who like you.” And she went on to explain that here
he was being passed about among a number of very different “sets,”
with different people and different tastes. Society had become split up in that
manner of late—each set being jealous and contemptuous of all the other
sets. Because of the fact that they overlapped a little at the edges, it was
possible for him to meet here a great many people who never met each other, and
were even unaware of each other’s existence.</p>
<p>And Mrs. Alden went on to set forth the difference between these
“sets”; they ran from the most exclusive down to the most
“yellow,” where they shaded off into the disreputable rich—of
whom, it seemed, there were hordes in the city. These included
“sporting” and theatrical and political people, some of whom were
very rich indeed; and these sets in turn shaded off into the criminals and the
<i>demi-monde</i>—who might also easily be rich. “Some day,”
said Mrs. Alden “you should get my brother to tell you about all these
people. He’s been in politics, you know, and he has a
racing-stable.”</p>
<p>And Mrs. Alden told him about the subtle little differences in the conventions
of these various sets of Society. There was the matter of women smoking, for
instance. All women smoked, nowadays; but some would do it only in their own
apartments, with their women friends; and some would retire to an
out-of-the-way corner to do it; while others would smoke in their own
dining-rooms, or wherever the men smoked. All agreed however, in never smoking
“in public”—that is, where they would be seen by people not
of their own set. Such, at any rate, had always been the rule, though a few
daring ones were beginning to defy even that.</p>
<p>Such rules were very rigid, but they were purely conventional, they had nothing
to do with right or wrong: a fact which Mrs. Alden set forth with her usual
incisiveness. A woman, married or unmarried, might travel with a man all over
Europe, and every one might know that she did it, but it would make no
difference, so long as she did not do it in America. There was one young matron
whom Montague would meet, a raging beauty, who regularly got drunk at dinner
parties, and had to be escorted to her carriage by the butler. She moved in the
most exclusive circles, and every one treated it as a joke. Unpleasant things
like this did not hurt a person unless they got “out”—that
is, unless they became a scandal in the courts or the newspapers. Mrs. Alden
herself had a cousin (whom she cordially hated) who had gotten a divorce from
her husband and married her lover forthwith and had for this been ostracized by
Society. Once when she came to some semi-public affair, fifty women had risen
at once and left the room! She might have lived with her lover, both before and
after the divorce, and every one might have known it, and no one would have
cared; but the <i>convenances</i> declared that she should not marry him until
a year had elapsed after the divorce.</p>
<p>One thing to which Mrs. Alden could testify, as a result of a lifetime’s
observation, was the rapid rate at which these conventions, even the most
essential of them, were giving way, and being replaced by a general “do
as you please.” Anyone could see that the power of women like Mrs. Devon,
who represented the old régime, and were dignified and austere and exclusive,
was yielding before the onslaught of new people, who were bizarre and fantastic
and promiscuous and loud. And the younger sets cared no more about
anyone—nor about anything under heaven, save to have a good time in their
own harum-scarum ways. In the old days one always received a neatly-written or
engraved invitation to dinner, worded in impersonal and formal style; but the
other day Mrs. Alden had found a message which had been taken from the
telephone: “Please come to dinner, but don’t come unless you can
bring a man, or we’ll be thirteen at the table.”</p>
<p>And along with this went a perfectly incredible increase in luxury and
extravagance. “You are surprised at what you see here to-day,” said
she—“but take my word for it, if you were to come back five years
later, you’d find all our present standards antiquated, and our present
pace-makers sent to the rear. You’d find new hotels and theatres opening,
and food and clothing and furniture that cost twice as much as they cost now.
Not so long ago a private car was a luxury; now it’s as much a necessity
as an opera-box or a private ball-room, and people who really count have
private trains. I can remember when our girls wore pretty muslin gowns in
summer, and sent them to wash; now they wear what they call <i>lingerie</i>
gowns, dimity <i>en princesse</i>, with silk embroidery and real lace and
ribbons, that cost a thousand dollars apiece and won’t wash. Years ago
when I gave a dinner, I invited a dozen friends, and my own chef cooked it and
my own servants served it. Now I have to pay my steward ten thousand a year,
and nothing that I have is good enough. I have to ask forty or fifty people,
and I call in a caterer, and he brings everything of his own, and my servants
go off and get drunk. You used to get a good dinner for ten dollars a plate,
and fifteen was something special; but now you hear of dinners that cost a
thousand a plate! And it’s not enough to have beautiful flowers on the
table—you have to have ‘scenery’; there must be a rural
landscape for a background, and goldfish in the finger-bowls, and five thousand
dollars’ worth of Florida orchids on the table, and floral favours of
roses that cost a hundred and fifty dollars a dozen. I attended a dinner at the
Waldorf last year that had cost fifty thousand dollars; and when I ask those
people to see me, I have to give them as good as I got. The other day I paid a
thousand dollars for a table-cloth!”</p>
<p>“Why do you do it?” asked Montague, abruptly.</p>
<p>“God knows,” said the other; “I don’t. I sometimes
wonder myself. I guess it’s because I’ve nothing else to do.
It’s like the story they tell about my brother—he was losing money
in a gambling-place in Saratoga, and some one said to him, ‘Davy, why do
you go there—don’t you know the game is crooked?’ ‘Of
course it’s crooked,’ said he, ‘but, damn it, it’s the
only game in town!’”</p>
<p>“The pressure is more than anyone can stand,” said Mrs. Alden,
after a moment’s thought. “It’s like trying to swim against a
current. You have to float, and do what every one expects you to do—your
children and your friends and your servants and your tradespeople. All the
world is in a conspiracy against you.”</p>
<p>“It’s appalling to me,” said the man.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the other, “and there’s never any end to
it. You think you know it all, but you find you really know very little. Just
think of the number of people there are trying to go the pace! They say there
are seven thousand millionaires in this country, but I say there are twenty
thousand in New York alone—or if they don’t own a million,
they’re spending the income of it, which amounts to the same thing. You
can figure that a man who pays ten thousand a year for rent is paying fifty
thousand to live; and there’s Fifth Avenue—two miles of it, if you
count the uptown and downtown parts; and there’s Madison Avenue, and half
a dozen houses adjoining on every side street; and then there are the hotels
and apartment houses, to say nothing of the West Side and Riverside Drive. And
you meet these mobs of people in the shops and the hotels and the theatres, and
they all want to be better dressed than you. I saw a woman here to-day that I
never saw in my life before, and I heard her say she’d paid two thousand
dollars for a lace handkerchief; and it might have been true, for I’ve
been asked to pay ten thousand for a lace shawl at a bargain. It’s a
common enough thing to see a woman walking on Fifth Avenue with twenty or
thirty thousand dollars’ worth of furs on her. Fifty thousand is often
paid for a coat of sable, and I know of one that cost two hundred thousand. I
know women who have a dozen sets of furs—ermine, chinchilla, black fox,
baby lamb, and mink and sable; and I know a man whose chauffeur quit him
because he wouldn’t buy him a ten-thousand-dollar fur coat! And once
people used to pack their furs away and take care of them; but now they wear
them about the street, or at the sea-shore, and you can fairly see them fade.
Or else their cut goes out of fashion, and so they have to have new
ones!”</p>
<p>All that was material for thought. It was all true—there was no question
about that. It seemed to be the rule that whenever you questioned a tale of the
extravagances of New York, you would hear the next day of something several
times more startling. Montague was staggered at the idea of a
two-hundred-thousand-dollar fur coat; and yet not long afterward there arrived
in the city a titled Englishwoman, who owned a coat worth a million dollars,
which hard-headed insurance companies had insured for half a million. It was
made of the soft plumage of rare Hawaiian birds, and had taken twenty years to
make; each feather was crescent-shaped, and there were wonderful designs in
crimson and gold and black. Every day in the casual conversation of your
acquaintances you heard of similar incredible things; a tiny antique Persian
rug, which could be folded into an overcoat pocket, for ten thousand dollars; a
set of five “art fans,” each blade painted by a famous artist and
costing forty-three thousand dollars; a crystal cup for eighty thousand; an
<i>edition de luxe</i> of the works of Dickens for a hundred thousand; a ruby,
the size of a pigeon’s egg, for three hundred thousand. In some of these
great New York palaces there were fountains which cost a hundred dollars a
minute to run; and in the harbour there were yachts which cost twenty thousand
a month to keep in commission.</p>
<p>And that same day, as it chanced, he learned of a brand-new kind of
squandering. He went home to lunch with Mrs. Winnie Duval, and there met Mrs.
Caroline Smythe, with whom he had talked at Castle Havens. Mrs. Smythe, whose
husband had been a well-known Wall Street plunger, was soft and mushy, and very
gushing in manner; and she asked him to come home to dinner with her, adding,
“I’ll introduce you to my babies.”</p>
<p>From what Montague had so far seen, he judged that babies played a very small
part in the lives of the women of Society; and so he was interested, and asked,
“How many have you?”</p>
<p>“Only two, in town,” said Mrs. Smythe. “I’ve just come
up, you see.”</p>
<p>“How old are they?” he inquired politely; and when the lady added,
“About two years,” he asked, “Won’t they be in bed by
dinner time?”</p>
<p>“Oh my, no!” said Mrs. Smythe. “The dear little lambs wait up
for me. I always find them scratching at my chamber door and wagging their
little tails.”</p>
<p>Then Mrs. Winnie laughed merrily and said, “Why do you fool him?”
and went on to inform Montague that Caroline’s “babies” were
<i>griffons Bruxelloises. Griffons</i> suggested to him vague ideas of dragons
and unicorns and gargoyles; but he said nothing more, save to accept the
invitation, and that evening he discovered that <i>griffons Bruxelloises</i>
were tiny dogs, long-haired, yellow, and fluffy; and that for her two priceless
treasures Mrs. Smythe had an expert nurse, to whom she paid a hundred dollars a
month, and also a footman, and a special cuisine in which their complicated
food was prepared. They had a regular dentist, and a physician, and gold plate
to eat from. Mrs. Smythe also owned two long-haired St. Bernards of a very rare
breed, and a fierce Great Dane, and a very fat Boston bull pup—the last
having been trained to go for an airing all alone in her carriage, with a
solemn coachman and footman to drive him.</p>
<p>Montague, deftly keeping the conversation upon the subject of pets, learned
that all this was quite common. Many women in Society artificially made
themselves barren, because of the inconvenience incidental to pregnancy and
motherhood; and instead they lavished their affections upon cats and dogs. Some
of these animals had elaborate costumes, rivalling in expensiveness those of
their step-mothers. They wore tiny boots, which cost eight dollars a
pair—house boots, and street boots lacing up to the knees; they had
house-coats, walking-coats, dusters, sweaters, coats lined with ermine, and
automobile coats with head and chest-protectors and hoods and goggles—and
each coat fitted with a pocket for its tiny handkerchief of fine linen or lace!
And they had collars set with rubies and pearls and diamonds—one had a
collar that cost ten thousand dollars! Sometimes there would be a coat to match
every gown of the owner. There were dog nurseries and resting-rooms, in which
they might be left temporarily; and manicure parlours for cats, with a
physician in charge. When these pets died, there was an expensive cemetery in
Brooklyn especially for their interment; and they would be duly embalmed and
buried in plush-lined casket, and would have costly marble monuments. When one
of Mrs. Smythe’s best loved pugs had fallen ill of congestion of the
liver, she had had tan-bark put upon the street in front of her house; and when
in spite of this the dog died, she had sent out cards edged in black, inviting
her friends to a “memorial service.” Also she showed Montague a
number of books with very costly bindings, in which were demonstrated the
unity, simplicity, and immortality of the souls of cats and dogs.</p>
<p>Apparently the sentimental Mrs. Smythe was willing to talk about these pets all
through dinner; and so was her aunt, a thin and angular spinster, who sat on
Montague’s other side. And he was willing to listen—he wanted to
know it all. There were umbrellas for dogs, to be fastened over their backs in
wet weather; there were manicure and toilet sets, and silver medicine-chests,
and jewel-studded whips. There were sets of engraved visiting-cards; there were
wheel-chairs in which invalid cats and dogs might be taken for an airing. There
were shows for cats and dogs, with pedigrees and prizes, and nearly as great
crowds as the Horse Show; Mrs. Smythe’s St. Bernards were worth seven
thousand dollars apiece, and there were bull-dogs worth twice that. There was a
woman who had come all the way from the Pacific coast to have a specialist
perform an operation upon the throat of her Yorkshire terrier! There was
another who had built for her dog a tiny Queen Anne cottage, with rooms papered
and carpeted and hung with lace curtains! Once a young man of fashion had come
to the Waldorf and registered himself and “Miss Elsie Cochrane”;
and when the clerk made the usual inquiries as to the relationship of the young
lady, it transpired that Miss Elsie was a dog, arrayed in a prim little
tea-gown, and requiring a room to herself. And then there was a tale of a cat
which had inherited a life-pension from a forty-thousand-dollar estate; it had
a two-floor apartment and several attendants, and sat at table and ate shrimps
and Italian chestnuts, and had a velvet couch for naps, and a fur-lined basket
for sleeping at night!</p>
<p class="p2">
Four days of horses were enough for Montague, and on Friday morning, when
Siegfried Harvey called him up and asked if he and Alice would come out to
“The Roost” for the week-end, he accepted gladly. Charlie Carter
was going, and volunteered to take them in his car; and so again they crossed
the Williamsburg Bridge—“the Jewish passover,” as Charlie
called it—and went out on Long Island.</p>
<p>Montague was very anxious to get a “line” on Charlie Carter; for he
had not been prepared for the startling promptness with which this young man
had fallen at Alice’s feet. It was so obvious, that everybody was smiling
over it—he was with her every minute that he could arrange it, and he
turned up at every place to which she was invited. Both Mrs. Winnie and Oliver
were quite evidently complacent, but Montague was by no means the same. Charlie
had struck him as a good-natured but rather weak youth, inclined to melancholy;
he was never without a cigarette in his fingers, and there had been signs that
he was not quite proof against the pitfalls which Society set about him in the
shape of decanters and wine-cups: though in a world where the fragrance of
spirits was never out of one’s nostrils, and where people drank with such
perplexing frequency, it was hard to know where to draw a line.</p>
<p>“You won’t find my place like Havens’s,” Siegfried
Harvey had said. “It is real country.” Montague found it the most
attractive of all the homes he had seen so far. It was a big rambling house,
all in rustic style, with great hewn logs outside, and rafters within, and a
winding oak stairway, and any number of dens and cosy corners, and broad
window-seats with mountains of pillows. Everything here was built for
comfort—there was a billiard-room and a smoking-room, and a real library
with readable books and great chairs in which one sank out of sight. There were
log fires blazing everywhere, and pictures on the walls that told of sport, and
no end of guns and antlers and trophies of all sorts. But you were not to
suppose that all this elaborate rusticity would be any excuse for the absence
of attendants in livery, and a chef who boasted the <i>cordon bleu</i>, and a
dinner-table resplendent with crystal and silver and orchids and ferns. After
all, though the host called it a “small” place, he had invited
twenty guests, and he had a hunter in his stables for each one of them.</p>
<p>But the most wonderful thing about “The Roost” was the fact that,
at a touch of a button, all the walls of the lower rooms vanished into the
second story, and there was one huge, log-lighted room, with violins tuning up
and calling to one’s feet. They set a fast pace here—the dancing
lasted until three o’clock, and at dawn again they were dressed and
mounted, and following the pink-coated grooms and the hounds across the
frost-covered fields.</p>
<p>Montague was half prepared for a tame fox, but this was spared him. There was a
real game, it seemed; and soon the pack gave tongue, and away went the hunt. It
was the wildest ride that Montague ever had taken—over ditches and
streams and innumerable rail-fences, and through thick coverts and densely
populated barnyards; but he was in at the death, and Alice was only a few yards
behind, to the immense delight of the company. This seemed to Montague the
first real life he had met, and he thought to himself that these full-blooded
and high-spirited men and women made a “set” into which he would
have been glad to fit—save only that he had to earn his living, and they
did not.</p>
<p>In the afternoon there was more riding, and walks in the crisp November air;
and indoors, bridge and rackets and ping-pong, and a fast and furious game of
roulette, with the host as banker. “Do I look much like a professional
gambler?” he asked of Montague; and when the other replied that he had
not yet met any New York gamblers, young Harvey went on to tell how he had gone
to buy this apparatus (the sale of which was forbidden by law) and had been
asked by the dealer how “strong” he wanted it!</p>
<p>Then in the evening there was more dancing, and on Sunday another hunt. That
night a gambling mood seemed to seize the company—there were two bridge
tables, and in another room the most reckless game of poker that Montague had
ever sat in. It broke up at three in the morning, and one of the company wrote
him a cheque for sixty-five hundred dollars; but even that could not entirely
smooth his conscience, nor reconcile him to the fever that was in his blood.</p>
<p>Most important to him, however, was the fact that during the game he at last
got to know Charlie Carter. Charlie did not play, for the reason that he was
drunk, and one of the company told him so and refused to play with him; which
left poor Charlie nothing to do but get drunker. This he did, and came and hung
over the shoulders of the players, and told the company all about himself.</p>
<p>Montague was prepared to allow for the “wild oats” of a youngster
with unlimited money, but never in his life had he heard or dreamed of anything
like this boy. For half an hour he wandered about the table, and poured out a
steady stream of obscenities; his mind was like a swamp, in which dwelt
loathsome and hideous serpents which came to the surface at night and showed
their flat heads and their slimy coils. In the heavens above or the earth
beneath there was nothing sacred to him; there was nothing too revolting to be
spewed out. And the company accepted the performance as an old story—the
men would laugh, and push the boy away, and say, “Oh, Charlie, go to the
devil!”</p>
<p>After it was all over, Montague took one of the company aside and asked him
what it meant; to which the man replied: “Good God! Do you mean that
nobody has told you about Charlie Carter?”</p>
<p>It appeared that Charlie was one of the “gilded youths” of the
Tenderloin, whose exploits had been celebrated in the papers. And after the
attendants had bundled him off to bed, several of the men gathered about the
fire and sipped hot punch, and rehearsed for Montague’s benefit some of
his leading exploits.</p>
<p>Charlie was only twenty-three, it seemed; and when he was ten his father had
died and left eight or ten millions in trust for him, in the care of a poor,
foolish aunt whom he twisted about his finger. At the age of twelve he was a
cigarette fiend, and had the run of the wine-cellar. When he went to a rich
private school he took whole trunks full of cigarettes with him, and finally
ran away to Europe, to acquire the learning of the brothels of Paris. And then
he came home and struck the Tenderloin; and at three o’clock one morning
he walked through a plate-glass window, and so the newspapers took him up. That
had suddenly opened a new vista in life for Charlie—he became a devotee
of fame; everywhere he went he was followed by newspaper reporters and a
staring crowd. He carried wads as big round as his arm, and gave away
hundred-dollar tips to bootblacks, and lost forty thousand dollars in a game of
poker. He gave a fête to the <i>demi-monde</i>, with a jewelled Christmas tree
in midsummer, and fifty thousand dollars’ worth of splendour. But the
greatest stroke of all was the announcement that he was going to build a
submarine yacht and fill it with chorus-girls!—Now Charlie had sunk out
of public attention, and his friends would not see him for days; he would be
lying in a “sporting house” literally wallowing in champagne.</p>
<p>And all this, Montague realized, his brother must have known! And he had said
not a word about it—because of the eight or ten millions which Charlie
would have when he was twenty-five!</p>
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