<h2><SPAN name="IX"></SPAN>IX</h2>
<br/>
<p>The day was set. Marna was to sing. It seemed to the little
group of friends as if the whole city palpitated with the fact. At
any rate, the Caravansary did so. They talked of little else, and
Mary Morrison wept for envy. Not that it was mean envy. Her weeping
was a sort of tribute, and Marna felt it to be so.</p>
<p>"You're going to be wonderful," Mary sobbed. "The rest of us are
merely young, or just women, or men. We can't be anything more no
matter how hard we try, though we keep feeling as if we were
something more. But you're going to SING! Oh, Marna!"</p>
<p>Time wore on, and Marna grew hectic with anticipation. Her lips
were too red, her breath came too quickly; she intensified herself;
and she practiced her quivering, fitful, passionate songs with
religious devotion. So many things centered around the girl that it
was no wonder that she began to feel a disproportionate sense of
responsibility. All of her friends were taking it for granted that
she would make a success.</p>
<p>Mrs. Barsaloux was giving a supper at the Blackstone after the
performance. The opera people were coming and a number of other
distinguished ones; and Marna was having a frock made of the color
of a gold-of-Ophir rose satin which was to clothe her like
sunshine. Honora brought out a necklace of yellow opals whimsically
fashioned.</p>
<p>"I no longer use such things, child," she said with a touch of
emotion. "And I want you to wear them with your yellow dress."</p>
<p>"Why, they're like drops of water with the sun in them!" cried
Marna. "How good you all are to me! I can't imagine why."</p>
<p>When the great night came, the audience left something to be
desired, both as to numbers and fashion. Although Marna's
appearance had been well advertised, it was evident that the public
preferred to listen to the great stars. But the house was full
enough and enthusiastic enough to awaken in the little Irish girl's
breast that form of elation which masks as self-obliteration, and
which is the fuel that feeds the fires of art.</p>
<p>Kate had gone with the Fulhams and they, with Blue-eyed Mary and
Dr. von Shierbrand, sat together in the box which Mrs. Barsaloux
had given them, and where, from time to time, she joined them. But
chiefly she hovered around Marna in that dim vast world back of the
curtain.</p>
<p>They said of Marna afterward that she was like a spirit. She
seemed less and more than a woman, an evanescent essence of
feminine delight. Her laughter, her tears, her swift emotions were
all as something held for a moment before the eye and snatched
away, to leave but the wavering eidolon of their loveliness. She
sang with a young Italian who responded exquisitely to the swift,
bright, unsubstantial beauty of her acting, and whom she seemed
fairly to bathe in the amber loveliness of her voice.</p>
<p>Kate, quivering for her, seeming indefinably to be a part of
her, suffering at the hesitancies of the audience and shaken with
their approval, was glad when it was all over. She hastened out to
be with the crowd and to hear what they were saying. They were warm
in their praise, but Kate was dissatisfied. She longed for
something more emphatic--some excess of acclaim. She wondered if
they were waiting for more authoritative audiences to set the stamp
of approval on Marna. It did not occur to her that they had found
the performance too opalescent and elusive.</p>
<p>Kate wondered if the girl would feel that anything had been
missing, but Marna seemed to be basking in the happiness of the
hour. The great German prima donna had kissed her with tears in her
eyes; the French baritone had spoken his compliments with
convincing ardor; dozens had crowded about her with
congratulations; and now, at the head of the glittering table in an
opulent room, the little descendant of minstrels sat and smiled
upon her friends. A gilded crown of laurel leaves rested on her
dark hair; her white neck arose delicately from the yellowed lace
and the shining silk; the sunny opals rested upon her
shoulders.</p>
<p>"I drink," cried the French baritone, "to a voice of honey and
an ivory throat."</p>
<p>"To a great career," supplemented David Fulham.</p>
<p>"And happiness," Kate broke in, standing with the others and
forgetting to be abashed by the presence of so many. Then she
called to Marna:--</p>
<p>"I was afraid they would leave out happiness."</p>
<p>Kate might have been the belated fairy godmother who brought
this gift in the nick of time. Those at the table smiled at her
indulgently,--she was so eager, so young, so almost fierce. She had
dressed herself in white without frill or decoration, and the
clinging folds of her gown draped her like a slender, chaste
statue. She wore no jewels,--she had none, indeed,--and her dark
coiled hair in no way disguised the shape of her fine head. The
elaborate Polish contralto across from her, splendid as a mediaeval
queen, threw Kate's simplicity into sharp contrast. Marna turned
adoring eyes upon her; Mrs. Barsaloux, that inveterate encourager
of genius, grieved that the girl had no specialty for her to
foster; the foreigners paid her frank tribute, and there was no
question but that the appraisement upon her that night was
high.</p>
<p>As for Mama's happiness, for which Kate had put in her
stipulation, it was coming post-haste, though by a circuitous
road.</p>
<p>Mrs. Dennison, who had received tickets from Marna, and who had
begged her nephew, George Fitzgerald, to act as her escort, was, in
her fashion, too, wondering about the question of happiness for the
girl. She was an old-fashioned creature, mid-Victorian in her
sincerity. She had kissed one man and one only, and him had she
married, and sorrowing over her childless estate she had become,
when she laid her husband in his grave, "a widow indeed." Her
abundant affection, disused by this accident of fate, had spent
itself in warm friendships, and in her devotion to her dead
sister's child. She had worked for him till the silver came into
her hair; had sent him through his classical course and through the
medical college, and the day when she saw him win his title of
doctor of medicine was the richest one of her middle life.</p>
<p>He sat beside her now, strangely pale and disturbed. The opera,
she was sorry to note, had not interested him as she had expected
it would. He had, oddly enough, been reluctant to accompany her,
and, as she was accustomed to his quick devotion, this distressed
her not a little. Was he growing tired of her? Was he ashamed to be
seen at the opera with a quiet woman in widow's dress, a touch
shabby? Was her much-tired heart to have a last cruel blow dealt
it? Accustomed to rather somber pathways of thought, she could not
escape this one; yet she loyally endeavored to turn from it, and
from time to time she stole a look at the stern, pale face beside
her to discover, if she could, what had robbed him of his good
cheer.</p>
<p>For he had been a happy boy. His high spirits had constituted a
large part of his attraction for her. When he had come to her
orphaned, it had been with warm gratitude in his heart, and with
the expectation of being loved. As he grew older, that policy of
life had become accentuated. He was expectant in all that he did.
His temperamental friendliness had carried him through college,
winning for him a warm group of friends and the genuine regard of
his professors. It was helping him to make his way in the place he
had chosen for his field of action. He had not gone into the more
fashionable part of town, but far over on the West Side, where the
slovenliness of the central part of the city shambles into a
community of parks and boulevards, crude among their young trees
surrounded by neat, self-respecting apartment houses. Such
communities are to be found in all American cities; communities
which set little store by fashion, which prize education (always
providing it does not prove exotic and breed genius or any form of
disturbing beauty), live within their incomes and cultivate the
manifest virtues. The environment suited George Fitzgerald. He had
an honest soul without a bohemian impulse in him. He recognized
himself as being middle-class, and he was proud and glad of it. He
liked to be among people who kept their feet on the earth--people
whose yea was yea and whose nay was nay. What was Celtic in him
could do no more for him than lend a touch of almost flaring
optimism to the Puritan integrity of his character.</p>
<p>Sundays, as a matter of habit, and occasionally on other days,
he was his aunt's guest at the Caravansary. The intellectual
coöperatives there liked him, as indeed everybody did,
everywhere. Invariably Mrs. Dennison was told after his departure
that she was a fortunate woman to have such an adopted son. Yet
Fitzgerald knew very well that he was unable to be completely
himself among his aunt's patrons. Their conversation was too
glancing; they too often said what they did not mean, for mere
conversation's sake; they played with ideas, tossing them about
like juggler's balls; and they attached importance to matters which
seemed to him of little account.</p>
<p>Of late he had been going to his aunt's but seldom, and he had
stayed away because he wanted, above all things in the world, to
go. It had become an agony to go--an anguish to absent himself.
Which being interpreted, means that he was in love. And whom should
he love but Marna? Why should any man trouble himself to love
another woman when this glancing, flashing, singing bird was
winging it through the blue? Were any other lips so tender, so
tremulous, so arched, so sweet? The breath that came between them
was perfumed with health; the little rows of gleaming teeth were
indescribably provocative. Actually, the little red tongue itself
seemed to fold itself upward, at the edges, like a tender leaf. As
for her nostrils, they were delicately flaring like those of some
wood creature, and fashioned for the enjoyment of odorous banquets
undreamed of by duller beings. Her eyes, like pools in shade,
breathing mystery and dreams, got between him and his sleep and
held him intoxicated in his bed.</p>
<p>Yes, that was Marna as she looked to the eye of love. She was
made for one man's love and nothing else, yet she was about to
become the well-loved of the great world! She was not for him--was
not made for a man of his mould. She had flashed from obscurity to
something rich and plenteous, obviously the child of Destiny--a
little princess waiting for her crown. He had not even talked to
her many times, and she had no notion that when she entered the
room he trembled; and that when she spoke to him and turned the
swimming loveliness of her eyes upon him, he had trouble to keep
his own from filling with tears.</p>
<p>And this was the night of her dedication to the world; the world
was seating her upon her throne, acclaiming her coronation. There
was nothing for him but to go on through an interminably long life,
bearing a brave front and hiding his wound.</p>
<p>He loathed the incoherent music; detested the conductor;
despised the orchestra; felt murderous toward the Italian tenor;
and could have slain the man who wrote the opera, since it made his
bright girl a target for praise and blame. He feared his aunt's
scrutiny, for she had sharp perceptions, and he could have endured
anything better than that she should spy upon his sacred pain. So
he sat by her side, passionately solitary amid a crowd and longing
to hide himself from the society of all men.</p>
<p>But he must be distrait, indeed, if he could forget the claim
his good aunt had upon him. He knew how she loved gayety; and her
daily life offered her little save labor and monotony.</p>
<p>"Supper next," he said with forced cheerfulness as they came out
of the opera-house together. "I'll do the ordering. You'll enjoy a
meal for once which is served independently of you."</p>
<p>He tried to talk about this and that as they made their way on
to a glaring below-stairs restaurant, where after-theater folk
gathered. The showy company jarred hideously on Fitzgerald, yet
gave him a chance to save his face by pretending to watch it. He
could tell his aunt who some of the people were, and she would
transfer her curiosity from him to them.</p>
<p>"They'll be having a glorious time at Miss Cartan's supper,"
mused Mrs. Dennison. "How she shines, doesn't she, George? And when
you think of her beginnings there on that Wisconsin farm, isn't it
astonishing?"</p>
<p>"Those weren't her beginnings, I fancy," George said, venturing
to taste of discussion concerning her as a brandy-lover may smell a
glass he swears he will not drink. "Her beginnings were very long
ago. She's a Celt, and she has the witchery of the Celts. How I'd
love to hear her recite some of the new Irish poems!"</p>
<p>"She'd do it beautifully, George. She does everything
beautifully. If I'd had a daughter like that, boy, what a different
thing my life would be! Or if you were to give me--"</p>
<p>George clicked his ice sharply in his glass. "See," he said,
"there's Hackett coming in--Hackett the actor. Handsome devil,
isn't he?"</p>
<p>"Don't use that tone, George," said his aunt reprovingly.
"Handsome devil, indeed! He's a good-looking man. Can't you say
that in a proper way? I don't want you to be sporty in your talk,
George. I always tried when you were a little boy to keep you from
talking foolishly."</p>
<p>"Oh, there's no danger of my being foolish," he said. "I'm as
staid and dull as ever you could wish me to be!"</p>
<p>For the first time in her life she found him bitter, but she had
the sense at last to keep silent. His eyes were full of pain, and
as he looked about the crowded room with its suggestions of
indulgent living, she saw something in his face leap to meet
it--something that seemed to repudiate the ideals she had passed on
to him. Involuntarily, Anne Dennison reached out her firm warm hand
and laid it on the quivering one of her boy.</p>
<p>"A new thought has just come to you!" she said softly. "Before
you were through with your boast, lad, your temptation came. I saw
it. Are you lonely, George? Are you wanting something that Aunt
Anne can give you? Won't you speak out to me?"</p>
<p>He drew his hand away from hers.</p>
<p>"No one in the world can give me what I want," he said
painfully. "Forgive me, auntie; and let's talk of other
things."</p>
<p>He had pushed her back into that lonely place where the old
often must stand, and she shivered a little as if a cold wind blew
over her. He saw it and bent toward her contritely.</p>
<p>"You must help me," he said. "I am very unhappy. I suppose
almost everybody has been unhappy like this sometime. Just bear
with me, Aunt Anne, dear, and help me to forget for an hour or
two."</p>
<p>Anne Dennison regarded him understandingly.</p>
<p>"Here comes our lobster," she said, "and while we eat it, I'll
tell you the story of the first time I ever ate at a
restaurant."</p>
<p>He nodded gratefully. After all, while she lived, he could not
be utterly bereft.</p>
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