Part 5 (2/2)

Anthony, he thinks every woman who walks the New York streets a bleached pattern of virtue. I don't believe he'd know a painted Jezebel unless she wore a scarlet letter.”

Anthony turned upon him resentfully. ”Confound it, Nevins,” he said, ”I am not a born fool!”

”Only an innocent,” retorted Mr. Nevins, complacently.

A resounding rap upon the panels of the door interrupted them. Mr.

Nevins rose.

”That's Ardly,” he said. ”He and I are doing New York to-night.”

Ardly came inside, and stood with his hand upon the door-k.n.o.b.

”Come on, Nevins,” he said. ”I've got to do a column on that new _danseuse_. She dances like a midge, but, by Jove! she has a figure to swear by--”

”And escape perjury,” added Mr. Nevins. ”Mariana says it is false.”

”Mariana,” replied Ardly, ”is a sworn enemy to polite illusions. She surveys the stage through a microscope situated upon the end of a lorgnette. It is a mistake. One should never look at a woman through gla.s.ses unless they be rose-colored ones. A man preserves this principle, and his faith in plumpness and curves along with it; a woman penetrates to the padding and powder. Come on, Nevins.”

Mr. Nevins followed him into the hall, and then turned to look in again.

”Algarcife, won't you join us on a jolly little drunk? Won't you, Mr.

Paul?”

When they had gone, and Mr. Paul had gone likewise, though upon a different way, Anthony heated the coffee, drank two cups, and resumed his work.

”Taken collectively,” he remarked, ”the human race is a consummate nuisance. What a deuced opportunity for work the last man will have--only, most likely, he'll be an a.s.s.”

The next day he pa.s.sed Mariana on the stairs without seeing her. He was returning from the college laboratory, and his mind was full of his experiments. Later in the afternoon, when he watered his plants, he turned his can, in absent-minded custom, upon the geranium, and saw that there was a scarlet bloom among the leaves. The sight pleased him. It was as if he had given sustenance to a famished life.

But Mariana, engrossed in lesser things, had seen him upon the stairs and upon the balcony. She still cherished an unreasonable resentment at what she considered his trespa.s.s upon her individual rights; and yet, despite herself, the trenchant quality in the dark, ma.s.sive-browed face had not been without effect upon her. The ascetic self-repression that chastened his lips, and the utter absence of emotion in the mental heat of his glance tantalized her in its very unlikeness to her own nature.

She, who thrilled into responsive joy or gloom at reflected light or shade, found her quick senses awake to each pa.s.sing impression, and had learned to recognize her neighbor's step upon the stair; while he, wrapped in an intellectual trance, created his environment at will, and was as oblivious of the girl at the other end of the fire-escape as he was to the articles of furniture in his room.

It was as if semi-barbarism, in all its exuberance of undisciplined emotion, had converged with the highest type of modern civilization--the civilization in which the flesh is degraded from its pedestal and forced to serve as a jangled vehicle for the progress of the mind.

The next night, as Algarcife stood at his window looking idly down upon the street below, he heard the sound of a woman sobbing in the adjoining room. His first impulse was to hasten in the direction from whence the sound came. He curbed the impulse with a shake.

”Hang it,” he said, ”it is no business of mine!”

But the suppressed sobbing from the darkness beyond invited him with its enlistment of his quick sympathies.

The electric light, falling upon the fire-escape, cast inky shadows from end to end. They formed themselves into dense outlines, which s.h.i.+vered as if stirred by a phantom breeze.

He turned and went back to his desk. Upon the table he had spread the supper of which he intended partaking at eleven o'clock. For an unknown reason he had conceived an aversion to the restaurant in the bas.e.m.e.nt, and seldom entered it. He slept late in the day and worked at night, and his meals were apt to be at irregular hours.

He wrote a line, and rose and went back to the window. For an instant he stood and listened, then stepped out upon the fire-escape and walked across the s.h.i.+vering shadows towards the open window beyond.

Upon the little door beneath the window a girl was leaning, her head bowed upon her outstretched arm. The light in the room beyond was low, but he could see distinctly the slight outlines of her figure and the confusion of her heavy hair. She was sobbing softly.

”I beg your pardon,” he said, the sympathetic quality in his voice dominating, ”but I am sure that I can help you.”

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