<h2><SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>XI<br/> THE THING’S THE PLAY</h2>
<p>Being acquainted with a newspaper reporter who had a couple of free passes, I
got to see the performance a few nights ago at one of the popular vaudeville
houses.</p>
<p>One of the numbers was a violin solo by a striking-looking man not much past
forty, but with very gray thick hair. Not being afflicted with a taste for
music, I let the system of noises drift past my ears while I regarded the man.</p>
<p>“There was a story about that chap a month or two ago,” said the
reporter. “They gave me the assignment. It was to run a column and was to
be on the extremely light and joking order. The old man seems to like the funny
touch I give to local happenings. Oh, yes, I’m working on a farce comedy
now. Well, I went down to the house and got all the details; but I certainly
fell down on that job. I went back and turned in a comic write-up of an east
side funeral instead. Why? Oh, I couldn’t seem to get hold of it with my
funny hooks, somehow. Maybe you could make a one-act tragedy out of it for a
curtain-raiser. I’ll give you the details.”</p>
<p>After the performance my friend, the reporter, recited to me the facts over the
Würzburger.</p>
<p>“I see no reason,” said I, when he had concluded, “why that
shouldn’t make a rattling good funny story. Those three people
couldn’t have acted in a more absurd and preposterous manner if they had
been real actors in a real theatre. I’m really afraid that all the stage
is a world, anyhow, and all the players men and women. ‘The thing’s
the play,’ is the way I quote Mr. Shakespeare.”</p>
<p>“Try it,” said the reporter.</p>
<p>“I will,” said I; and I did, to show him how he could have made a
humorous column of it for his paper.</p>
<p>There stands a house near Abingdon Square. On the ground floor there has been
for twenty-five years a little store where toys and notions and stationery are
sold.</p>
<p>One night twenty years ago there was a wedding in the rooms above the store.
The Widow Mayo owned the house and store. Her daughter Helen was married to
Frank Barry. John Delaney was best man. Helen was eighteen, and her picture had
been printed in a morning paper next to the headlines of a “Wholesale
Female Murderess” story from Butte, Mont. But after your eye and
intelligence had rejected the connection, you seized your magnifying glass and
read beneath the portrait her description as one of a series of Prominent
Beauties and Belles of the lower west side.</p>
<p>Frank Barry and John Delaney were “prominent” young beaux of the
same side, and bosom friends, whom you expected to turn upon each other every
time the curtain went up. One who pays his money for orchestra seats and
fiction expects this. That is the first funny idea that has turned up in the
story yet. Both had made a great race for Helen’s hand. When Frank won,
John shook his hand and congratulated him—honestly, he did.</p>
<p>After the ceremony Helen ran upstairs to put on her hat. She was getting
married in a traveling dress. She and Frank were going to Old Point Comfort for
a week. Downstairs the usual horde of gibbering cave-dwellers were waiting with
their hands full of old Congress gaiters and paper bags of hominy.</p>
<p>Then there was a rattle of the fire-escape, and into her room jumps the mad and
infatuated John Delaney, with a damp curl drooping upon his forehead, and made
violent and reprehensible love to his lost one, entreating her to flee or fly
with him to the Riviera, or the Bronx, or any old place where there are Italian
skies and <i>dolce far niente</i>.</p>
<p>It would have carried Blaney off his feet to see Helen repulse him. With
blazing and scornful eyes she fairly withered him by demanding whatever he
meant by speaking to respectable people that way.</p>
<p>In a few moments she had him going. The manliness that had possessed him
departed. He bowed low, and said something about “irresistible
impulse” and “forever carry in his heart the memory
of”—and she suggested that he catch the first fire-escape going
down.</p>
<p>“I will away,” said John Delaney, “to the furthermost parts
of the earth. I cannot remain near you and know that you are another’s. I
will to Africa, and there amid other scenes strive to for—”</p>
<p>“For goodness sake, get out,” said Helen. “Somebody might
come in.”</p>
<p>He knelt upon one knee, and she extended him one white hand that he might give
it a farewell kiss.</p>
<p>Girls, was this choice boon of the great little god Cupid ever vouchsafed
you—to have the fellow you want hard and fast, and have the one you
don’t want come with a damp curl on his forehead and kneel to you and
babble of Africa and love which, in spite of everything, shall forever bloom,
an amaranth, in his heart? To know your power, and to feel the sweet security
of your own happy state; to send the unlucky one, broken-hearted, to foreign
climes, while you congratulate yourself as he presses his last kiss upon your
knuckles, that your nails are well manicured—say, girls, it’s
galluptious—don’t ever let it get by you.</p>
<p>And then, of course—how did you guess it?—the door opened and in
stalked the bridegroom, jealous of slow-tying bonnet strings.</p>
<p>The farewell kiss was imprinted upon Helen’s hand, and out of the window
and down the fire-escape sprang John Delaney, Africa bound.</p>
<p>A little slow music, if you please—faint violin, just a breath in the
clarinet and a touch of the ‘cello. Imagine the scene. Frank, white-hot,
with the cry of a man wounded to death bursting from him. Helen, rushing and
clinging to him, trying to explain. He catches her wrists and tears them from
his shoulders—once, twice, thrice he sways her this way and
that—the stage manager will show you how—and throws her from him to
the floor a huddled, crushed, moaning thing. Never, he cries, will he look upon
her face again, and rushes from the house through the staring groups of
astonished guests.</p>
<p>And, now because it is the Thing instead of the Play, the audience must stroll
out into the real lobby of the world and marry, die, grow gray, rich, poor,
happy or sad during the intermission of twenty years which must precede the
rising of the curtain again.</p>
<p>Mrs. Barry inherited the shop and the house. At thirty-eight she could have
bested many an eighteen-year-old at a beauty show on points and general
results. Only a few people remembered her wedding comedy, but she made of it no
secret. She did not pack it in lavender or moth balls, nor did she sell it to a
magazine.</p>
<p>One day a middle-aged money-making lawyer, who bought his legal cap and ink of
her, asked her across the counter to marry him.</p>
<p>“I’m really much obliged to you,” said Helen, cheerfully,
“but I married another man twenty years ago. He was more a goose than a
man, but I think I love him yet. I have never seen him since about half an hour
after the ceremony. Was it copying ink that you wanted or just writing
fluid?”</p>
<p>The lawyer bowed over the counter with old-time grace and left a respectful
kiss on the back of her hand. Helen sighed. Parting salutes, however romantic,
may be overdone. Here she was at thirty-eight, beautiful and admired; and all
that she seemed to have got from her lovers were approaches and adieus. Worse
still, in the last one she had lost a customer, too.</p>
<p>Business languished, and she hung out a Room to Let card. Two large rooms on
the third floor were prepared for desirable tenants. Roomers came, and went
regretfully, for the house of Mrs. Barry was the abode of neatness, comfort and
taste.</p>
<p>One day came Ramonti, the violinist, and engaged the front room above. The
discord and clatter uptown offended his nice ear; so a friend had sent him to
this oasis in the desert of noise.</p>
<p>Ramonti, with his still youthful face, his dark eyebrows, his short, pointed,
foreign, brown beard, his distinguished head of gray hair, and his
artist’s temperament—revealed in his light, gay and sympathetic
manner—was a welcome tenant in the old house near Abingdon Square.</p>
<p>Helen lived on the floor above the store. The architecture of it was singular
and quaint. The hall was large and almost square. Up one side of it, and then
across the end of it ascended an open stairway to the floor above. This hall
space she had furnished as a sitting room and office combined. There she kept
her desk and wrote her business letters; and there she sat of evenings by a
warm fire and a bright red light and sewed or read. Ramonti found the
atmosphere so agreeable that he spent much time there, describing to Mrs. Barry
the wonders of Paris, where he had studied with a particularly notorious and
noisy fiddler.</p>
<p>Next comes lodger No. 2, a handsome, melancholy man in the early 40’s,
with a brown, mysterious beard, and strangely pleading, haunting eyes. He, too,
found the society of Helen a desirable thing. With the eyes of Romeo and
Othello’s tongue, he charmed her with tales of distant climes and wooed
her by respectful innuendo.</p>
<p>From the first Helen felt a marvelous and compelling thrill in the presence of
this man. His voice somehow took her swiftly back to the days of her
youth’s romance. This feeling grew, and she gave way to it, and it led
her to an instinctive belief that he had been a factor in that romance. And
then with a woman’s reasoning (oh, yes, they do, sometimes) she leaped
over common syllogisms and theory, and logic, and was sure that her husband had
come back to her. For she saw in his eyes love, which no woman can mistake, and
a thousand tons of regret and remorse, which aroused pity, which is perilously
near to love requited, which is the <i>sine qua non</i> in the house that Jack
built.</p>
<p>But she made no sign. A husband who steps around the corner for twenty years
and then drops in again should not expect to find his slippers laid out too
conveniently near nor a match ready lighted for his cigar. There must be
expiation, explanation, and possibly execration. A little purgatory, and then,
maybe, if he were properly humble, he might be trusted with a harp and crown.
And so she made no sign that she knew or suspected.</p>
<p>And my friend, the reporter, could see nothing funny in this! Sent out on an
assignment to write up a roaring, hilarious, brilliant joshing story
of—but I will not knock a brother—let us go on with the story.</p>
<p>One evening Ramonti stopped in Helen’s hall-office-reception-room and
told his love with the tenderness and ardor of the enraptured artist. His words
were a bright flame of the divine fire that glows in the heart of a man who is
a dreamer and doer combined.</p>
<p>“But before you give me an answer,” he went on, before she could
accuse him of suddenness, “I must tell you that ‘Ramonti?’ is
the only name I have to offer you. My manager gave me that. I do not know who I
am or where I came from. My first recollection is of opening my eyes in a
hospital. I was a young man, and I had been there for weeks. My life before
that is a blank to me. They told me that I was found lying in the street with a
wound on my head and was brought there in an ambulance. They thought I must
have fallen and struck my head upon the stones. There was nothing to show who I
was. I have never been able to remember. After I was discharged from the
hospital, I took up the violin. I have had success. Mrs. Barry—I do not
know your name except that—I love you; the first time I saw you I
realized that you were the one woman in the world for
me—and”—oh, a lot of stuff like that.</p>
<p>Helen felt young again. First a wave of pride and a sweet little thrill of
vanity went all over her; and then she looked Ramonti in the eyes, and a
tremendous throb went through her heart. She hadn’t expected that throb.
It took her by surprise. The musician had become a big factor in her life, and
she hadn’t been aware of it.</p>
<p>“Mr. Ramonti,” she said sorrowfully (this was not on the stage,
remember; it was in the old home near Abingdon Square), “I’m
awfully sorry, but I’m a married woman.”</p>
<p>And then she told him the sad story of her life, as a heroine must do, sooner
or later, either to a theatrical manager or to a reporter.</p>
<p>Ramonti took her hand, bowed low and kissed it, and went up to his room.</p>
<p>Helen sat down and looked mournfully at her hand. Well she might. Three suitors
had kissed it, mounted their red roan steeds and ridden away.</p>
<p>In an hour entered the mysterious stranger with the haunting eyes. Helen was in
the willow rocker, knitting a useless thing in cotton-wool. He ricocheted from
the stairs and stopped for a chat. Sitting across the table from her, he also
poured out his narrative of love. And then he said: “Helen, do you not
remember me? I think I have seen it in your eyes. Can you forgive the past and
remember the love that has lasted for twenty years? I wronged you
deeply—I was afraid to come back to you—but my love overpowered my
reason. Can you, will you, forgive me?”</p>
<p>Helen stood up. The mysterious stranger held one of her hands in a strong and
trembling clasp.</p>
<p>There she stood, and I pity the stage that it has not acquired a scene like
that and her emotions to portray.</p>
<p>For she stood with a divided heart. The fresh, unforgettable, virginal love for
her bridegroom was hers; the treasured, sacred, honored memory of her first
choice filled half her soul. She leaned to that pure feeling. Honor and faith
and sweet, abiding romance bound her to it. But the other half of her heart and
soul was filled with something else—a later, fuller, nearer influence.
And so the old fought against the new.</p>
<p>And while she hesitated, from the room above came the soft, racking,
petitionary music of a violin. The hag, music, bewitches some of the noblest.
The daws may peck upon one’s sleeve without injury, but whoever wears his
heart upon his tympanum gets it not far from the neck.</p>
<p>This music and the musician called her, and at her side honor and the old love
held her back.</p>
<p>“Forgive me,” he pleaded.</p>
<p>“Twenty years is a long time to remain away from the one you say you
love,” she declared, with a purgatorial touch.</p>
<p>“How could I tell?” he begged. “I will conceal nothing from
you. That night when he left I followed him. I was mad with jealousy. On a dark
street I struck him down. He did not rise. I examined him. His head had struck
a stone. I did not intend to kill him. I was mad with love and jealousy. I hid
near by and saw an ambulance take him away. Although you married him,
Helen—”</p>
<p>“<i>Who Are You?</i>” cried the woman, with wide-open eyes,
snatching her hand away.</p>
<p>“Don’t you remember me, Helen—the one who has always loved
you best? I am John Delaney. If you can forgive—”</p>
<p>But she was gone, leaping, stumbling, hurrying, flying up the stairs toward the
music and him who had forgotten, but who had known her for his in each of his
two existences, and as she climbed up she sobbed, cried and sang: “Frank!
Frank! Frank!”</p>
<p>Three mortals thus juggling with years as though they were billiard balls, and
my friend, the reporter, couldn’t see anything funny in it!</p>
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