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<h2> CHAPTER IV </h2>
<p>Kitty Conover had inherited brains and beauty, and nothing else but the
furniture. Her father had been a famous reporter, the admiration of cubs
from New York to San Francisco; handsome, happy-go-lucky, generous, rather
improvident, and wholly lovable. Her mother had been a comedy actress
noted for her beauty and wit and extravagance. Thus it will be seen that
Kitty was in luck to inherit any furniture at all.</p>
<p>Kitty was twenty-four. A body is as old as it is, but a brain is as old as
the facts it absorbs; and Kitty had absorbed enough facts to carry her
brain well into the thirties.</p>
<p>Conover had been dead twenty years; and Kitty had scarcely any
recollections of him. Improvident as the run of newspaper writers are,
Conover had fulfilled one obligation to his family—he had kept up
his endowment policies; and for eighteen years the insurance had taken
care of Kitty and her mother, who because of a weak ankle had not been
able to return to the scenes of her former triumphs. In 1915 this darling
mother, whom Kitty loved to idolatry, had passed on.</p>
<p>There was enough for the funeral and the cleaning up of the bills; but
that was all. The income ceased with Mrs. Conover's demise. Kitty saw that
she must give up writing short stories which nobody wanted, and go to
work. So she proceeded at once to the newspaper office where her father's
name was still a tradition, and applied for a job. It was frankly a
charity job, but Kitty was never to know that because she fell into the
newspaper game naturally; and when they discovered her wide acquaintance
among theatrical celebrities they switched her into the dramatic
department, where she had astonishing success as a raconteur. She was now
assistant dramatic editor of the Sunday issue, and her pay envelope had
four crisp ten-dollar notes in it each Monday.</p>
<p>She still remained in the old apartment; sentiment as much as anything.
She had been born in it and her happiest days had been spent there. She
lived alone, without help, being one of that singular type of womanhood
that is impervious to the rust of loneliness. Her daily activities
sufficed the gregarious instincts, and it was often a relief to move about
in silence.</p>
<p>Among other things Kitty had foresight. She had learned that a little
money in the background was the most satisfying thing in existence. So
many times she and her mother had just reached the insurance check, with
grumbling bill collectors in the hall, that she was determined never to be
poor. She had to fight constantly her love of finery inherited from her
mother, and her love of good times inherited from her father. So she
established a bank account, and to date had not drawn a check against it;
which speaks well for her will power, an attribute cultivated, not
inherited.</p>
<p>Kitty was as pleasing to the eye as a basket of fruit. Her beauty was
animated. There was an expression in her eyes and on her lips that spoke
of laughter always on tiptoe. An enviable inheritance, this, the desire to
laugh, to be searching always for a vent to laughter; it is something
money cannot buy, something not to be cultivated; a true gift of the gods.
This desire to laugh is found invariably in the tender and valorous; and
Kitty was both. Brown hair with running threads of gold that was always
catching light; slate-blue eyes with heavy black fringe-Irish; colour that
waxed and waned; and a healthy, shapely body. Topped by a sparkling
intellect these gifts made Kitty desirable of men.</p>
<p>Kitty had no beau. After the adolescent days beaux ceased to interest her.
This would indicate that she was inclined toward suffrage. Nothing of the
kind. Intensely romantic, she determined to await the grand passion or go
it alone. No experimental adventures for her. Be assured that she weighed
every new man she met, and finding some flaw discarded him as a
matrimonial possibility. Besides, her unusual facilities to view and judge
men had shown her masculine phases the average woman would have discovered
only after the fatal knot was tied. She did not suspect that she was
romantical. She attributed her wariness to common sense.</p>
<p>If there is one place where a pretty young woman may labour without having
to build a wall of liquid air about her to fend off amatory advances that
place is the editorial room of a great metropolitan daily. One must have
leisure to fall in love; and only the office boys could assemble enough
idle time to call it leisure.</p>
<p>Her desk faced Burlingame's; and Burlingame was the dramatic editor, a
scholar and a gentleman. He liked to hear Kitty talk, and often he lured
her into the open; and he gathered information about theatrical folks that
was outside even his wide range of knowledge.</p>
<p>A drizzly fog had hung over New York since morning. Kitty was finishing up
some Sunday special. Burlingame was reading proofs. All day theatrical
folks had been in and out of this little ten-by-twelve cubby-hole; and now
there would be quiet.</p>
<p>But no. The door opened and an iron-gray head intruded.</p>
<p>"Will I be in the way?"</p>
<p>"Lord, no!" cried Burlingame, throwing down his proofs. "Come along in,
Cutty."</p>
<p>The great war correspondent came in and sat down, sighing gratefully.</p>
<p>Cutty was a nickname; he carried and smoked—everywhere they would
permit him—the worst-looking and the worst-smelling pipe in
Christendom. You may not realize it, but a nickname is a round-about
Anglo-Saxon way of telling a fellow you love him. He was Cutty, but only
among his dear intimates, mind you; to the world at large, to presidents,
kings, ambassadors, generals, and capitalists he is known by another name.
You will find it on the roster of the Royal Geographical; on the title
page of several unique books on travel, jewels, and drums; in magazines
and newspapers; on the membership roll of the Savage in London and the
Lambs in New York. But you will not find it in this story; because it
would not be fair to set his name against the unusual adventures that
crossed his line of life with that of the young man who wore the tobacco
pouch suspended from his neck.</p>
<p>Tall, bony, graceful enough except in a chair, where his angles became
conspicuous; the ruddy, weather-bitten complexion of a deep-sea sailor,
and a sailor man's blue eye; the brow of a thinker and the mouth of a
humourist. Men often call another man handsome when a woman knows they
mean manly. Among men Cutty was handsome.</p>
<p>Kitty considerately rose and gathered up her manuscript.</p>
<p>"No, no, Kitty! I'd rather talk to you than Burly, here. You're always
reminding me of that father of yours. Best comrade I ever had. You laugh
just like him. Did your mother ever tell you that old Cutty is your
godfather?"</p>
<p>"Good gracious!"</p>
<p>"Fact. I told your dad I'd watch over you."</p>
<p>"And a fat lot of watching you've done to date," jeered Burlingame.</p>
<p>"Couldn't help that. But I can be on the job until I return to the
Balkans."</p>
<p>Kitty laughed joyously and sat down, perhaps a little thrilled. She had
always admired Cutty from afar, shyly. Once in a blue moon he had in the
old days appeared for tea; and he and Mrs. Conover would spend the balance
of the afternoon discussing the lovable qualities of Tommy Conover. Kitty
had seen him but twice during the war.</p>
<p>"Every so often," began Cutty, "I have to find listeners. Fact. I used to
hate crowds, listeners; but those ten days in an open boat, a thousand
miles from anywhere, made me gregarious. I'm always wanting company and
hating to go to bed, which is bad business for a man of fifty-two."
Cutty's ship had been torpedoed.</p>
<p>To Kitty, with his tired eyes and weather-bitten face, his bony, gangling
body, he had the appearance of a lazy man. Actually she knew him to be a
man of tremendous vitality and endurance. Eagles when they roost are
heavy-lidded and clumsy. She wondered if there was a corner on the globe
he had not peered into.</p>
<p>For thirty years he had been following two gods—Rumour and War. For
thirty years he had been the slave of cables and telegrams. Even now he
was preparing to return to the Balkans, where the great fire had started
and where there were still some threatening embers to watch.</p>
<p>Cutty was not well known in America; his reputation was European. He
played the game because he loved it, being comfortably fortified with
worldly goods. He was a linguist of rare attainments, specializing in the
polyglot of southeastern Europe. He came and went like cloud shadow. His
foresight was so keen he was seldom ordered to go here or there; he was
generally on the spot when the orders arrived.</p>
<p>He was interested in socialism and its bewildering ramifications, but only
as an analytical student. He could fit himself into any environment,
interview a prime minister in the afternoon and take potluck that night
with the anarchist who was planning to blow up the prime minister.</p>
<p>Burlingame, an intimate, often exposed for Kitty's delectation the amazing
and colourful facets of Cutty's diamond-brilliant mind. Cutty wrote
authoritatively on famous gems and collected drums. He had one of the
finest collections of chrysoprase in the world. He loved these
semi-precious stones because of their unmatchable, translucent green—like
the pulp of a grape. From Burlingame Kitty had learned that Cutty, rather
indifferent to women, carried about with him the photographs—large
size—of famous professional beauties and a case filled with polished
chrysoprase. He would lay a photograph on a table and adorn the lovely
throat with astonishing necklaces and the head with wonderful tiaras, all
the while his brain at work with some intricate political puzzle.</p>
<p>And he collected drums. The walls of his apartment—part of the loft
of a midtown office building—were covered with a most startling
assortment of drums: drums of war, of the dance, of the temples of the
feast, ancient and modern, some of them dreadful looking objects, as Kitty
had cause to remember.</p>
<p>Though Cutty had known her father and mother intimately, Kitty was a
comparative stranger. He recollected seeing her perhaps a dozen times. She
had been a shy child, not given to climbing over visitors' knees; not the
precocious offspring of the average theatrical mother. So in the past he
had somewhat overlooked her. Then one day recently he had dropped in to
see Burlingame and had seen Kitty instead; which accounts for his presence
here this day. Neither Kitty nor Burlingame suspected the true attraction.
The dramatic editor accepted the advent as a peculiar compliment to
himself. And it is to be doubted if Cutty himself realized that there was
a true magnetic pole in this cubbyhole of a room.</p>
<p>Kitty, however, had vivid recollections. Actually the first strange man
she had ever met. But not having been visible on her horizon, except in
flashes, she knew of the man only what she had read and what Burlingame
had casually offered during discussions.</p>
<p>"Well, anyhow," said Burlingame, complacently, "the war is over."</p>
<p>Cutty smiled indulgently. "That's the trouble with us chaps who tramp
round the world for news. We can't bamboozle ourselves like you folks who
stay at home. The war was only the first phase. There's a mess over there;
wanting something and not knowing exactly what, those millions; milling
cattle, with neither shed nor pasture. The Lord only knows how long it
will take to clarify. Would you mind if I smoked?"</p>
<p>"Wow!" cried Burlingame.</p>
<p>"Not at all," answered Kitty. "I don't see how any pipe could be worse
than Mr. Burlingame's."</p>
<p>"I apologize," said the dramatic editor, humbly.</p>
<p>"You needn't," replied the girl. She turned to the war correspondent. "Any
new drums?"</p>
<p>"I remember that day. You were scared half to death at my walls."</p>
<p>"Small wonder! I was only twelve; and I dreamed of cannibals for weeks."</p>
<p>"Drums! I wonder if any living man has heard a greater variety than I?
What a lot of them! I have heard them calling a jehad in the Sudan.
Tumpi-tum-tump! tumpitum-tump! Makes a white man's hair stand up when he
hears it in the night. I don't know what it is, but the sound drives the
Oriental mad. And that reminds me—I've had them in mind all day—the
drums of jeopardy!"</p>
<p>"What an odd phrase! And what are the drums of jeopardy?" asked Kitty,
leaning on her arms. Odd, but suddenly she felt a longing to go somewhere,
thousands and thousands of miles away. She had never been west of Chicago
or east of Boston. Until this moment she had never felt the call of the
blood—her father's. Cocoanut palms and birds of paradise! And drums
in the night going tumpi-tum-tump! tumpi-tum-tump!</p>
<p>"I've always been mad over green things," began Cutty. "A wheat field in
the spring, leafing maples. It's Nature's choice and mine. My passion is
emeralds; and I haven't any because those I want are beyond reach. They
are owned by the great houses of Europe and Asia, and lie in royal
caskets; or did. If I could go into a mine and find an emerald as big as
my fist I should be only partly happy if it chanced to be of fine colour.
In a little while I should lose interest in it. It wouldn't be alive, if
you can get what I mean. Just as a man would rather have a homely woman to
talk to than a beautiful window dummy to admire. A stone to interest me
must have a story—a story of murder and loot, of beautiful women,
palaces.</p>
<p>"Br-r-r!" cried Burlingame.</p>
<p>"Why, I've seen emeralds I would steal with half a chance. I couldn't help
it. Fact," declared Cutty, earnestly. "Think of the loot in the Romanoff
palaces! What's become of all those magnificent stones? In a little while
they'll be turning up in Amsterdam to be cut—some of them. Or maybe
Mister Bolsheviki's inamorata will be stringing them round her neck.
Loot."</p>
<p>"But the drums of jeopardy!" said Kitty.</p>
<p>"Emeralds, green as an English lawn in May after a shower, Kitty. By the
way, do you mind if I call you Kitty? I used to."</p>
<p>"And I've always thought of you as Cutty. Fifty-fifty."</p>
<p>"It's a bargain. Well, the drums to my thinking are the finest two
examples of the green beryl in the world. Polished, of course, as emeralds
always should be. I should say that they were about the size of those
peppermint chocolate drops there."</p>
<p>"Have one?" said Kitty.</p>
<p>"No. Spoil the taste of the pipe."</p>
<p>"You ought to spoil that taste once in a while," was Burlingame's
observation. "But go on."</p>
<p>"I suppose originally there was a single stone, later cut into halves,
because they are perfect matches. The drums proper are exquisitely carved
ivory statuettes, of Hindu or Mohammedan drummers, squatting, the golden
base of the drums between the knees, and the drumheads the emeralds. Lord,
how they got to me! I wanted to run off with them. The history of murder
and loot they could tell! Some Delhi mogul owned them first. Then Nadir
Shah carried them off to Persia, along with the famous peacock throne. I
saw them in a palace on the Caspian in 1912. Russia was very strong in
Persia at one time. Perhaps they were gifts; perhaps they were stolen—these
emeralds. Anyhow, I'd never heard of them until that year. And I travelled
all the way up from Constantinople to get a glimpse of them if it were
possible. I had to do some mighty fine wire-pulling. For one of those
stones I would give half of all I own. To see them in the possession of
another man would be a supreme test to my honesty."</p>
<p>"You old pirate!" said Burlingame.</p>
<p>"But why the word jeopardy?" persisted Kitty, who was intrigued by the
phrase.</p>
<p>"Probably some Hindu trick. It is a language of flowery metaphors. It
means, I suppose, that when you touch the drums they bite. In journeying
from one spot to another they always leave misfortune behind, as I
understand it. Just coincidence; but you couldn't drive that into an
Oriental skull. This is what makes the study of precious stones so
interesting. There is always some enchantment, some evil spell. To handle
the drums is to invite a minor accident. Call it twaddle; probably is; and
yet I have reason to believe that there's something to the superstition."</p>
<p>Burlingame sniffed.</p>
<p>"I can prove it," Cutty declared. "I held those drums in my hands one day.
I carried them to a window the better to observe them. On my return to the
hotel I was knocked down by a horse and laid up in bed for a week. That
same night someone tried to kill the man who showed me the emeralds.
Coincidence? Perhaps. But these days I'm shying at thirteen, the wrong
side of the street, ladders, and religious curses."</p>
<p>"An old hard-boiled egg like you?" Burlingame threw up his hands in mock
despair.</p>
<p>"I laugh, too; but I duck, nevertheless. The chap who showed me the stones
was what you'd call the honorary custodian; a privileged character because
of his genius. Before approaching him I sent him a copy of my monograph on
green stones. I found that he was quite as crazy over green as I. That
brought us together; and while I drew him out I kept wondering where I had
seen him before. Both his name and his face were vaguely familiar. It
seems a superstition had come along with the stones, from India to Persia,
from there to Russia. A maid fortunate enough to see the drums would marry
and be happy. The old fellow confessed that occasionally he secretly
admitted a peasant maid to gaze upon the stones. But he never let the male
inmates of the palace find this out. He knew them a little too intimately.
A bad lot."</p>
<p>"And this palace?" asked Kitty.</p>
<p>"Not one stone on another. The proletariat rose up and destroyed it. To
mobs anything beautiful is offensive. Palaces looted, banks, museums,
houses. The ignorant toying with hand grenades, thinking them sceptres.
All the scum in the world boiling to the top. After the Red Day comes the
Red Night."</p>
<p>"Whatever will become of them—the little kings and princes and
dukes?" After all, thought Kitty, they were human beings; they would not
suffer any the less because they had been born to the purple.</p>
<p>"Maybe they'll go to work," said Cutty, dryly. "Sooner or later, all
parasites will have to work if they want bread. And yet I've met some men
among them, big in the heart and the mind, who would have made bully
farmers and professors. The beautiful thing about the Anglo-Saxon
education is that the whole structure is based upon fair play. In eastern
and southeastern Europe few of them can play solitaire without cheating.
But I would give a good deal to know what has happened to those emeralds—the
drums of jeopardy. They'll probably be broken up and sold in carat
weights. The whole family was wiped out in a night.... I say, will you
take lunch with me to-morrow?"</p>
<p>"Gladly."</p>
<p>"All right. I'll drop in here at half after twelve. Here's my telephone
number, should anything alter your plans. If I'm going to be godfather I
might as well start right in."</p>
<p>"The drums of jeopardy; what a haunting phrase!"</p>
<p>"Haunting stones, too, Kitty. For picking them up in my hands I went to
bed with a banged-up leg. I can't forget that. We Occidentals laugh at
Orientals and their superstitions. We don't believe in the curse. And yet,
by George, those emeralds were accursed!"</p>
<p>"Piffle!" snorted Burlingame. "Mush! It's greed, pure and simple, that
gives precious stones their sinister histories. You'd have been hit by
that horse if you had picked up nothing more valuable than a rhinestone
buckle. Take away the gold lure, and precious stones wouldn't sell at the
price of window glass."</p>
<p>"Is that so? How about me? It isn't because a stone is worth so much that
makes me want it. I want it for the sheer beauty; I want it for the
tremendous panorama the sight of it unfolds in my mind. I imagine what
happened from the hour the stone was mined to the hour it came into my
possession. To me—to all genuine collectors—the intrinsic
value is nil. Can't you see? It is for me what Balzac's La Peau de Chagrin
would be to you if you had fallen on it for the first time—money,
love, tragedy, death."</p>
<p>An interruption came in the form of one of the office boys. The chief was
on the wire and wanted Cutty at once.</p>
<p>"At half after twelve, Kitty. And by the way," added Cutty as he rose,
"they say about the drums that a beautiful woman is immune to their
danger."</p>
<p>"There's your chance, Kitty," said Burlingame.</p>
<p>"Am I beautiful?" asked Kitty, demurely.</p>
<p>"Lord love the minx!" shouted Cutty. "A corner in Mouquin's."</p>
<p>"Rain or shine." After Cutty had departed Kitty said: "He's the most
fascinating man I know. What fun it would be to jog round the world with a
man like that, who knew everybody and everything. As a little girl I was
violently in love with him; but don't you ever dare give me away."</p>
<p>"You'll probably have nightmare to-night. And honestly you ought not to
live in that den alone. But Cutty has seen things," Burlingame admitted;
"things no white man ought to see. He's been shot up, mauled by animals,
marooned, torpedoed at sea, made prisoner by old Fuzzy-Wuzzy. An ordinary
man would have died of fatigue. Cutty is as tough and strong as a gorilla
and as active as a cat. But this jewel superstition is all rot. Odd,
though; he'll travel halfway round the world to see a ruby or an emerald.
He says no true collector cares a cent for a diamond. Says they are
vulgar."</p>
<p>"Except on the third finger of a lady's left hand; and then they are just
perfectly splendid!"</p>
<p>"Oho! Well, when you get yours I hope it's as big as the Koh-i-noor."</p>
<p>"Thank you! You might just as well wish a brick on me!"</p>
<p>Kitty left the office at a quarter of six. The phrase kept running through
her head—the drums of jeopardy. A little shiver ran up her spine.
Money, love, tragedy, death! This terrible and wonderful old world, of
which she had seen little else than city streets, suddenly exhibited wide
vistas. She knew now why she had begun to save—travel. Just as soon
as she had a thousand she would go somewhere. A great longing to hear
native drums in the night.</p>
<p>Even as the wish entered her mind a new sound entered her ears. The Subway
car wheels began to beat—tumpitum-tump! tumpitum-tump! Fudge! She
opened her evening paper and scanned the fashions, the dramatic news, and
the comics. Being a woman she read the world news last. On the front page
she saw a queer story, dated at Albany: Mysterious guests at a hotel; how
they had fought and fled in the early morning. There had been left behind
a case with foreign orders incrusted with several thousand dollars' worth
of gems. Bolsheviki, said the police; just as they said auto bandits a few
years ago when confronted with something they could not understand. The
orders had been turned over to the Federal authorities from whom it was
learned that they were all royal and demi-royal. Neither of the two guests
had returned up to noon, and one had fled, leaving even his hat and coat.
But there was nothing to indicate his identity.</p>
<p>"Loot!" murmured Kitty. "All the scum in the world rising to the top"—quoting
Cutty. "Poor things!" as she thought of the gentle ladies who had died
horribly in bedrooms and cellars.</p>
<p>Kitty was beginning to cast about for more congenial quarters. There were
too many foreigners in the apartments, and none of them especially good
housekeepers. Always, nowadays, somebody had a washing out on the line,
the odour of garlic was continuously in the air, and there were noisy
children under foot in the halls. The families she and her mother had
known were all gone; and Kitty was perhaps the oldest inhabitant in the
block.</p>
<p>The living-room windows faced Eightieth Street; bedrooms, dining room, and
kitchen looked out upon the court. From the latter windows one could step
out upon the fire-escape platform, which ran round the three sides of the
court.</p>
<p>Among the present tenants she knew but one, an old man by the name of
Gregory, who lived opposite. The acquaintance had never ripened into
friendship; but sometimes Kitty would borrow an egg and he would borrow
some sugar. In the summertime, when the windows were open at night, she
had frequently heard the music of a violin swimming across the court.
Polish, Russian, and Hungarian music, always speaking with a tragic note;
nothing she had ever heard in concerts. Once, however, she had heard him
begin something from Thais, and stop in the middle of it; and that
convinced her that he was a master. She was fond of good music. One day
she asked Gregory why he did not teach music instead of valeting at a
hotel. His answer had been illuminative. It was only his body that pressed
clothes; but it would have torn his soul to listen daily to the agonized
bow of the novice. Kitty was lonely through pride as much as anything. As
for friends, she had a regiment of them. But she rarely accepted their
hospitality, realizing that she could not return it. No young men called
because she never invited them. All this, however, was going to change
when she moved.</p>
<p>As she turned on the hail light she saw an envelope on the floor.
Evidently it had been shoved under the door. It was unstamped. She opened
it, and stepped out of the humdrum into the whirligig.</p>
<p>DEAR MISS CONOVER:<br/>
If anything should happen to me all the things in my apartment<br/>
I give to you without reservation.<br/>
STEPHEN GREGORY.<br/></p>
<p>She read the letter a dozen times to make sure that it meant exactly what
it said. He might be ill. After she had cooked her supper she would run
round and inquire. The poor lonely old man!</p>
<p>She went into the kitchen and took inventory. There was nothing but bacon
and eggs and coffee. She had forgotten to order that morning. She lit the
gas range and began to prepare the meal. As she broke an egg against the
rim of the pan the nearby Elevated train rushed by, drumming
tumpitum-tump! tumpitum-tump! She laughed, but it wasn't honest laughter.
She laughed because she was conscious that she was afraid of something.
Impulse drove her to the window. Contact with men—her unusual
experiences as a reporter—had developed her natural fearlessness to
a point where it was aggressive. As she pressed the tip of her nose
against the pane, however, she found herself gazing squarely into a pair
of exceedingly brilliant dark eyes; and all the blood in her body seemed
to rush violently into her throat.</p>
<p>Tableau!</p>
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