The Saturday Evening Post (28 July 1928)
I
It was a hidden Broadway restaurant in the dead of the night, and
a brilliant and mysterious group of society people, diplomats and members of
the underworld were there. A few minutes ago the sparkling wine had been
flowing and a girl had been dancing gaily upon a table, but now the whole crowd
were hushed and breathless. All eyes were fixed upon the masked but
well-groomed man in the dress suit and opera hat who stood nonchalantly in the
door.
‘Don’t move, please,’ he said, in a well-bred, cultivated voice
that had, nevertheless, a ring of steel in it. ‘This thing in my hand might —
go off.’
His glance roved from table to table — fell upon the malignant man
higher up with his pale saturnine face, upon Heatherly, the suave secret agent
from a foreign power, then rested a little longer, a little more softly
perhaps, upon the table where the girl with dark hair and dark tragic eyes sat
alone.
‘Now that my purpose is accomplished, it might interest you to
know who I am.’ There was a gleam of expectation in every eye. The breast of
the dark-eyed girl heaved faintly and a tiny burst of subtle French perfume
rose into the air.‘I am none other than that elusive gentleman, Basil Lee,
better known as the Shadow.’
Taking off his well-fitting opera hat, he bowed ironically from
the waist. Then, like a flash, he turned and was gone into the night.
‘You get up to New York only once a month,’ Lewis Crum was saying,
‘and then you have to take a master along.’
Slowly, Basil Lee’s glazed eyes turned from the barns and
billboards of the Indiana countryside to the interior of the Broadway Limited.
The hypnosis of the swift telegraph poles faded and Lewis Crum’s stolid face
took shape against the white slipcover of the opposite bench.
‘I’d just duck the master when I got to New York,’ said Basil.
‘Yes, you would!’
‘I bet I would.’
‘You try it and you’ll see.’
‘What do you mean saying I’ll see, all the time, Lewis? What’ll I
see?’
His very bright dark-blue eyes were at this moment fixed upon his
companion with boredom and impatience. The two had nothing in common except
their age, which was fifteen, and the lifelong friendship of their fathers —
which is less than nothing. Also they were bound from the same Middle-Western
city for Basil’s first and Lewis’s second year at the same Eastern school.
But, contrary to all the best traditions, Lewis the veteran was
miserable and Basil the neophyte was happy. Lewis hated school. He had grown
entirely dependent on the stimulus of a hearty vital mother, and as he felt her
slipping farther and farther away from him, he plunged deeper into misery and
homesickness. Basil, on the other hand, had lived with such intensity on so
many stories of boarding-school life that, far from being homesick, he had a
glad feeling of recognition and familiarity. Indeed, it was with some sense of
doing the appropriate thing, having the traditional rough-house, that he had
thrown Lewis’s comb off the train at Milwaukee last night for no reason at all.
To Lewis, Basil’s ignorant enthusiasm was distasteful — his
instinctive attempt to dampen it had contributed to the mutual irritation.
‘I’ll tell you what you’ll see,’ he said ominously. ‘They’ll catch
you smoking and put you on bounds.’
‘No, they won’t, because I won’t be smoking. I’ll be in training
for football.’
‘Football! Yeah! Football!’
‘Honestly, Lewis, you don’t like anything, do you?’
‘I don’t like football. I don’t like to go out and get a crack in
the eye.’ Lewis spoke aggressively, for his mother had canonized all his
timidities as common sense. Basil’s answer, made with what he considered kindly
intent, was the sort of remark that creates lifelong enmities.
‘You’d probably be a lot more popular in school if you played
football,’ — he suggested patronizingly.
Lewis did not consider himself unpopular. He did not think of it
in that way at all. He was astounded.
‘You wait!’ he cried furiously. ‘They’ll take all that freshness
out of you.’
‘Clam yourself,’ said Basil, coolly plucking at the creases of his
first long trousers. ‘Just clam yourself.’
‘I guess everybody knows you were the freshest boy at the Country
Day!’
‘Clam yourself,’ repeated Basil, but with less assurance. ‘Kindly
clam yourself.’
‘I guess I know what they had in the school paper about you — ’
Basil’s own coolness was no longer perceptible.
‘If you don’t clam yourself,’ he said darkly, ‘I’m going to throw
your brushes off the train too.’
The enormity of this threat was effective. Lewis sank back in his
seat, snorting and muttering, but undoubtedly calmer. His reference had been to
one of the most shameful passages in his companion’s life. In a periodical
issued by the boys of Basil’s late school there had appeared under the heading
Personals:
If someone will please poison young Basil, or find some other
means to stop his mouth, the school at large and myself will be much obliged.
The two boys sat there fuming wordlessly at each other. Then,
resolutely, Basil tried to re-inter this unfortunate souvenir of the past. All
that was behind him now. Perhaps he had been a little fresh, but he was making
a new start. After a moment, the memory passed and with it the train and
Lewis’s dismal presence — the breath of the East came sweeping over him again
with a vast nostalgia. A voice called him out of the fabled world; a man stood
beside him with a hand on his sweater-clad shoulder.
‘Lee!’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘It all depends on you now. Understand?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘All right,’ the coach said, ‘go in and win.’
Basil tore the sweater from his stripling form and dashed out on
the field. There were two minutes to play and the score was 3 to 0 for the
enemy, but at the sight of young Lee, kept out of the game all year by a
malicious plan of Dan Haskins, the school bully, and Weasel Weems, his toady, a
thrill of hope went over the St Regis stand.
‘33-12-16-22!’ barked Midget Brown, the diminutive little
quarterback.
It was his signal —
‘Oh, gosh!’ Basil spoke aloud, forgetting the late unpleasantness.
‘I wish we’d get there before tomorrow.’
II
St Regis School, Eastchester,
November 18, 19--
Dear Mother:
There is not much to say today, but I thought I would write you
about my allowance. All the boys have a bigger allowance than me, because there
are a lot of little things I have to get, such as shoe laces, etc. School is
still very nice and am having a fine time, but football is over and there is
not much to do. I am going to New York this week to see a show. I do not know
yet what it will be, but probably the Quacker Girl or little boy Blue as they
are both very good. Dr Bacon is very nice and there’s a good phycission in the
village. No more now as I have to study Algebra.
Your affectionate Son,
Basil D. Lee.
As he put the letter in its envelope, a wizened little boy came
into the deserted study hall where he sat and stood staring at him.
‘Hello,’ said Basil, frowning.
‘I been looking for you,’ said the little boy, slowly and judicially.
‘I looked all over — up in your room and out in the gym, and they said you
probably might of sneaked off in here.’
‘What do you want?’ Basil demanded.
‘Hold your horses, Bossy.’
Basil jumped to his feet. The little boy retreated a step.
‘Go on, hit me!’ he chirped nervously. ‘Go on, hit me, cause I’m
just half your size — Bossy.’
Basil winced. ‘You call me that again and I’ll spank you.’
‘No, you won’t spank me. Brick Wales said if you ever touched any
of us — ’
‘But I never did touch any of you.’
‘Didn’t you chase a lot of us one day and didn’t Brick Wales — ’
‘Oh, what do you want?’ Basil cried in desperation.
‘Doctor Bacon wants you. They sent me after you and somebody said
maybe you sneaked in here.’
Basil dropped his letter in his pocket and walked out — the little
boy and his invective following him through the door. He traversed a long
corridor, muggy with that odour best described as the smell of stale caramels
that is so peculiar to boys’ schools, ascended a stairs and knocked at an unexceptional
but formidable door.
Doctor Bacon was at his desk. He was a handsome, redheaded
Episcopal clergyman of fifty whose original real interest in boys was now
tempered by the flustered cynicism which is the fate of all headmasters and
settles on them like green mould. There were certain preliminaries before Basil
was asked to sit down — gold-rimmed glasses had to be hoisted up from nowhere
by a black cord and fixed on Basil to be sure that he was not an impostor;
great masses of paper on the desk had to be shuffled through, not in search of
anything but as a man nervously shuffles a pack of cards.
‘I had a letter from your mother this morning — ah — Basil.’ The
use of his first name had come to startle Basil. No one else in school had yet
called him anything but Bossy or Lee. ‘She feels that your marks have been
poor. I believe you have been sent here at a certain amount of — ah — sacrifice
and she expects — ’
Basil’s spirit writhed with shame, not at his poor marks but that
his financial inadequacy should be so bluntly stated. He knew that he was one
of the poorest boys in a rich boys’ school.
Perhaps some dormant sensibility in Doctor Bacon became aware of
his discomfort; he shuffled through the papers once more and began on a new
note.
‘However, that was not what I sent for you about this afternoon.
You applied last week for permission to go to New York on Saturday, to a
matinée. Mr Davis tells me that for almost the first time since school opened
you will be off bounds tomorrow.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘That is not a good record. However, I would allow you to go to
New York if it could be arranged. Unfortunately, no masters are available this
Saturday.’
Basil’s mouth dropped ajar. ‘Why, I— why, Doctor Bacon, I know two
parties that are going. Couldn’t I go with one of them?’
Doctor Bacon ran through all his papers very quickly.
‘Unfortunately, one is composed of slightly older boys and the other group made
arrangements some weeks ago.’
‘How about the party that’s going to the Quaker Girl with
Mr Dunn?’
‘It’s that party I speak of. They feel that the arrangements are
complete and they have purchased seats together.’
Suddenly Basil understood. At the look in his eye Doctor Bacon
went on hurriedly.
‘There’s perhaps one thing I can do. Of course there must be
several boys in the party so that the expenses of the master can be divided up
among all. If you can find two other boys who would like to make up a party,
and let me have their names by five o’clock, I’ll send Mr Rooney with you.’
‘Thank you,’ Basil said.
Doctor Bacon hesitated. Beneath the cynical incrustations of many
years an instinct stirred to look into the unusual case of this boy and find
out what made him the most detested boy in school. Among boys and masters there
seemed to exist an extraordinary hostility towards him, and though Doctor Bacon
had dealt with many sorts of schoolboy crimes, he had neither by himself nor
with the aid of trusted sixth-formers been able to lay his hands on its
underlying cause. It was probably no single thing, but a combination of things;
it was most probably one of those intangible questions of personality. Yet he
remembered that when he first saw Basil he had considered him unusually
prepossessing.
He sighed. Sometimes these things worked themselves out. He wasn’t
one to rush in clumsily. ‘Let us have a better report to send home next month,
Basil.’
‘Yes, sir.’
Basil ran quickly downstairs to the recreation room. It was
Wednesday and most of the boys had already gone into the village of
Eastchester, whither Basil, who was still on bounds, was forbidden to follow.
When he looked at those still scattered about the pool tables and piano, he saw
that it was going to be difficult to get anyone to go with him at all. For
Basil was quite conscious that he was the most unpopular boy at school.
It had begun almost immediately. One day, less than a fortnight
after he came, a crowd of the smaller boys, perhaps urged on to it, gathered
suddenly around him and began calling him Bossy. Within the next week he had
two fights, and both times the crowd was vehemently and eloquently with the
other boy. Soon after, when he was merely shoving indiscriminately, like
everyone else, to get into the dining-room, Carver, the captain of the football
team, turned about and, seizing him by the back of the neck, held him and
dressed him down savagely. He joined a group innocently at the piano and was
told, ‘Go on away. We don’t want you around.’
After a month he began to realize the full extent of his
unpopularity. It shocked him. One day after a particularly bitter humiliation
he went up to his room and cried. He tried to keep out of the way for a while,
but it didn’t help. He was accused of sneaking off here and there, as if bent
on a series of nefarious errands. Puzzled and wretched, he looked at his face
in the glass, trying to discover there the secret of their dislike — in the
expression of his eyes, his smile.
He saw now that in certain ways he had erred at the outset — he
had boasted, he had been considered yellow at football, he had pointed out
people’s mistakes to them, he had showed off his rather extraordinary fund of
general information in class. But he had tried to do better and couldn’t
understand his failure to atone. It must be too late. He was queered forever.
He had, indeed, become the scapegoat, the immediate villain, the
sponge which absorbed all malice and irritability abroad — just as the most
frightened person in a party seems to absorb all the others’ fear, seems to be
afraid for them all. His situation was not helped by the fact, obvious to all,
that the supreme self-confidence with which he had come to St Regis in
September was thoroughly broken. Boys taunted him with impunity who would not
have dared raise their voices to him several months before.
This trip to New York had come to mean everything to him —
surcease from the misery of his daily life as well as a glimpse into the
long-waited heaven of romance. Its postponement for week after week due to his
sins — he was constantly caught reading after lights, for example, driven by
his wretchedness into such vicarious escapes from reality — had deepened his
longing until it was a burning hunger. It was unbearable that he should not go,
and he told over the short list of those whom he might get to accompany him.
The possibilities were Fat Gaspar, Treadway, and Bugs Brown. A quick journey to
their rooms showed that they had all availed themselves of the Wednesday
permission to go into Eastchester for the afternoon.
Basil did not hesitate. He had until five o’clock and his only
chance was to go after them. It was not the first time he had broken bounds,
though the last attempt had ended in disaster and an extension of his
confinement. In his room, he put on a heavy sweater — an overcoat was a
betrayal of intent — replaced his jacket over it and hid a cap in his back
pocket. Then he went downstairs and with an elaborate careless whistle struck
out across the lawn for the gymnasium. Once there, he stood for a while as if
looking in the windows, first the one close to the walk, then one near the corner
of the building. From here he moved quickly, but not too quickly, into a grove
of lilacs. Then he dashed around the corner, down a long stretch of lawn that
was blind from all windows and, parting the strands of a wire fence, crawled
through and stood upon the grounds of a neighbouring estate. For the moment he
was free. He put on his cap against the chilly November wind, and set out along
the half-mile road to town.
Eastchester was a suburban farming community, with a small shoe
factory. The institutions which pandered to the factory workers were the ones
patronized by the boys — a movie house, a quick-lunch wagon on wheels known as
the Dog and the Bostonian Candy Kitchen. Basil tried the Dog first and happened
immediately upon a prospect.
This was Bugs Brown, a hysterical boy, subject to fits and
strenuously avoided. Years later he became a brilliant lawyer, but at that time
he was considered by the boys of St Regis to be a typical lunatic because of
the peculiar series of sounds with which he assuaged his nervousness all day
long.
He consorted with boys younger than himself, who were without the
prejudices of their elders, and was in the company of several when Basil came
in.
‘Who-ee!’ he cried. ‘Ee-ee-ee!’ He put his hand over his mouth and
bounced it quickly, making a wah-wah-wah sound.‘It’s Bossy Lee! It’s Bossy Lee!
It’s Boss-Boss-Boss-Boss-Bossy Lee!’
‘Wait a minute, Bugs,’ said Basil anxiously, half afraid that Bugs
would go finally crazy before he could persuade him to come to town. ‘Say,
Bugs, listen. Don’t, Bugs — wait a minute. Can you come up to New York Saturday
afternoon?’
‘Whe-ee-ee!’ cried Bugs to Basil’s distress.’ Wee-ee-ee!’
‘Honestly, Bugs, tell me, can you? We could go up together if you
could go.’
‘I’ve got to see a doctor,’ said Bugs, suddenly calm. ‘He wants to
see how crazy I am.’
‘Can’t you have him see about it some other day?’ said Basil
without humour.
‘Whee-ee-ee!’ cried Bugs.
‘All right then,’ said Basil hastily. ‘Have you seen Fat Gaspar in
town?’
Bugs was lost in shrill noise, but someone had seen Fat: Basil was
directed to the Bostonian Candy Kitchen.
This was a gaudy paradise of cheap sugar. Its odour, heavy and
sickly and calculated to bring out a sticky sweat upon an adult’s palms, hung
suffocatingly over the whole vicinity and met one like a strong moral
dissuasion at the door. Inside, beneath a pattern of flies, material as black
point lace, a line of boys sat eating heavy dinners of banana splits, maple
nut, and chocolate marshmallow nut sundaes. Basil found Fat Gaspar at a table
on the side.
Fat Gaspar was at once Basil’s most unlikely and most ambitious
quest. He was considered a nice fellow — in fact he was so pleasant that he had
been courteous to Basil and had spoken to him politely all fall. Basil realized
that he was like that to everyone, yet it was just possible that Fat liked him,
as people used to in the past, and he was driven desperately to take a chance.
But it was undoubtedly a presumption, and as he approached the table and saw
the stiffened faces which the other two boys turned towards him, Basil’s hope
diminished.
‘Say, Fat — ’ he said, and hesitated. Then he burst forth
suddenly. ‘I’m on bounds, but I ran off because I had to see you. Doctor Bacon
told me I could go to New York Saturday if I could get two other boys to go. I
asked Bugs Brown and he couldn’t go, and I thought I’d ask you.’
He broke off, furiously embarrassed, and waited. Suddenly the two
boys with Fat burst into a shout of laughter.
‘Bugs wasn’t crazy enough!’
Fat Gaspar hesitated. He couldn’t go to New York Saturday and
ordinarily he would have refused without offending. He had nothing against
Basil; nor, indeed, against anybody; but boys have only a certain resistance to
public opinion and he was influenced by the contemptuous laughter of the
others.
‘I don’t want to go,’ he said indifferently. ‘Why do you want to
ask me?’
Then, half in shame, he gave a deprecatory little laugh and bent
over his ice cream.
‘I just thought I’d ask you,’ said Basil.
Turning quickly away, he went to the counter and in a hollow and
unfamiliar voice ordered a strawberry sundae. He ate it mechanically, hearing
occasional whispers and snickers from the table behind. Still in a daze, he
started to walk out without paying his check, but the clerk called him back and
he was conscious of more derisive laughter.
For a moment he hesitated whether to go back to the table and hit
one of those boys in the face, but he saw nothing to be gained. They would say
the truth — that he had done it because he couldn’t get anybody to go to New
York. Clenching his fists with impotent rage, he walked from the store.
He came immediately upon his third prospect, Treadway. Treadway
had entered St Regis late in the year and had been put in to room with Basil
the week before. The fact that Treadway hadn’t witnessed his humiliations of
the autumn encouraged Basil to behave naturally towards him, and their
relations had been, if not intimate, at least tranquil.
‘Hey, Treadway,’ he called, still excited from the affair in the
Bostonian, ‘can you come up to New York to a show Saturday afternoon?’
He stopped, realizing that Treadway was in the company of Brick
Wales, a boy he had had a fight with and one of his bitterest enemies. Looking
from one to the other, Basil saw a look of impatience in Treadway’s face and a
faraway expression in Brick Wales’s, and he realized what must have been
happening. Treadway, making his way into the life of the school, had just been
enlightened as to the status of his room-mate. Like Fat Gaspar, rather than
acknowledge himself eligible to such an intimate request, he preferred to cut
their friendly relations short.
‘Not on your life,’ he said briefly. ‘So long.’ The two walked
past him into the Candy Kitchen.
Had these slights, so much the bitterer for their lack of passion,
been visited upon Basil in September, they would have been unbearable. But
since then he had developed a shell of hardness which, while it did not add to
his attractiveness, spared him certain delicacies of torture. In misery enough,
and despair and self-pity, he went the other way along the street for a little
distance until he could control the violent contortions of his face. Then,
taking a roundabout route, he started back to school.
He reached the adjoining estate, intending to go back the way he had
come. Half-way through a hedge, he heard footsteps approaching along the
sidewalk and stood motionless, fearing the proximity of masters. Their voices
grew nearer and louder; before he knew it he was listening with horrified
fascination:
‘ — so, after he tried Bugs Brown, the poor nut asked Fat Gaspar
to go with him and Fat said, “What do you ask me for?” It serves him right if
he couldn’t get anybody at all.’
It was the dismal but triumphant voice of Lewis Crum.
III
Up in his room, Basil found a package lying on his bed. He knew
its contents and for a long time he had been eagerly expecting it, but such was
his depression that he opened it listlessly. It was a series of eight colour
reproductions of Harrison Fisher girls ‘on glossy paper, without printing or
advertising matter and suitable for framing’.
The pictures were named Dora, Marguerite, Babette, Lucille,
Gretchen, Rose, Katherine, and Mina. Two of them —Marguerite and Rose — Basil
looked at, slowly tore up, and dropped in the waste-basket, as one who disposes
of the inferior pups from a litter. The other six he pinned at intervals around
the room. Then he lay down on his bed and regarded them.
Dora, Lucille, and Katherine were blonde; Gretchen was medium;
Babette and Mina were dark. After a few minutes, he found that he was looking
oftenest at Dora and Babette and, to a lesser extent, at Gretchen, though the
latter’s Dutch cap seemed unromantic and precluded the element of mystery.
Babette, a dark little violet-eyed beauty in a tight-fitting hat, attracted him
most; his eyes came to rest on her at last.
‘Babette,’ he whispered to himself — ‘beautiful Babette.’
The sound of the word, so melancholy and suggestive, like ‘Vilia’
or ‘I’m happy at Maxim’s’ on the phonograph, softened him and, turning over on
his face, he sobbed into the pillow. He took hold of the bed rails over his
head and, sobbing and straining, began to talk to himself brokenly — how he
hated them and whom he hated — he listed a dozen — and what he would do to them
when he was great and powerful. In previous moments like these he had always
rewarded Fat Gaspar for his kindness, but now he was like the rest. Basil set
upon him, pummelling him unmercifully, or laughed sneeringly when he passed him
blind and begging on the street.
He controlled himself as he heard Treadway come in, but did not
move or speak. He listened as the other moved about the room, and after a while
became conscious that there was an unusual opening of closets and bureau
drawers. Basil turned over, his arm concealing his tear-stained face. Treadway
had an armful of shirts in his hand.
‘What are you doing?’ Basil demanded.
His room-mate looked at him stonily. ‘I’m moving in with Wales,’
he said.
‘Oh!’
Treadway went on with his packing. He carried out a suitcase full,
then another, took down some pennants and dragged his trunk into the hall.
Basil watched him bundle his toilet things into a towel and take one last
survey about the room’s new barrenness to see if there was anything forgotten.
‘Good-bye,’ he said to Basil, without a ripple of expression on
his face.
‘Good-bye.’
Treadway went out. Basil turned over once more and choked into the
pillow.
‘Oh, poor Babette!’ he cried huskily. ‘Poor little Babette! Poor
little Babette!’ Babette, svelte and piquante, looked down at him coquettishly
from the wall.
IV
Doctor Bacon, sensing Basil’s predicament and perhaps the
extremity of his misery, arranged it that he should go into New York, after
all. He went in the company of Mr Rooney, the football coach and history
teacher. At twenty Mr Rooney had hesitated for some time between joining the
police force and having his way paid through a small New England college; in
fact he was a hard specimen and Doctor Bacon was planning to get rid of him at
Christmas. Mr Rooney’s contempt for Basil was founded on the latter’s ambiguous
and unreliable conduct on the football field during the past season — he had
consented to take him to New York for reasons of his own.
Basil sat meekly beside him on the train, glancing past Mr
Rooney’s bulky body at the Sound and the fallow fields of Westchester County.
Mr Rooney finished his newspaper, folded it up and sank into a moody silence.
He had eaten a large breakfast and the exigencies of time had not allowed him
to work it off with exercise. He remembered that Basil was a fresh boy, and it
was time he did something fresh and could be called to account. This
reproachless silence annoyed him.
‘Lee,’ he said suddenly, with a thinly assumed air of friendly
interest, ‘why don’t you get wise to yourself?’
‘What, sir?’ Basil was startled from his excited trance of this
morning.
‘I said why don’t you get wise to yourself?’ said Mr Rooney in a
somewhat violent tone. ‘Do you want to be the butt of the school all your time
here?’
‘No, I don’t.’ Basil was chilled. Couldn’t all this be left behind
for just one day?
‘You oughtn’t to get so fresh all the time. A couple of times in
history class I could just about have broken your neck.’ Basil could think of
no appropriate answer. ‘Then out playing football,’ continued Mr Rooney, ‘ —
you didn’t have any nerve. You could play better than a lot of ’em when you
wanted, like that day against the Pomfret seconds, but you lost your nerve.’
‘I shouldn’t have tried for the second team,’ said Basil. ‘I was
too light. I should have stayed on the third.’
‘You were yellow, that was all the trouble. You ought to get wise
to yourself. In class, you’re always thinking of something else. If you don’t
study, you’ll never get to college.’
‘I’m the youngest boy in the fifth form,’ Basil said rashly.
‘You think you’re pretty bright, don’t you?’ He eyed Basil
ferociously. Then something seemed to occur to him that changed his attitude
and they rode for a while in silence. When the train began to run through the
thickly clustered communities near New York, he spoke again in a milder voice
and with an air of having considered the matter for a long time:
‘Lee, I’m going to trust you.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘You go and get some lunch and then go on to your show. I’ve got
some business of my own I got to attend to, and when I’ve finished I’ll try to
get to the show. If I can’t, I’ll anyhow meet you outside.’ Basil’s heart
leaped up. ‘Yes, sir.’
‘I don’t want you to open your mouth about this at school — I
mean, about me doing some business of my own.’
‘No, sir.’
‘We’ll see if you can keep your mouth shut for once,’ he said,
making it fun. Then he added, on a note of moral sternness, ‘And no drinks, you
understand that?’
‘Oh, no, sir!’ The idea shocked Basil. He had never tasted a
drink, nor even contemplated the possibility, save the intangible and
nonalcoholic champagne of his café dreams.
On the advice of Mr Rooney he went for luncheon to the Manhattan
Hotel, near the station, where he ordered a club sandwich, French fried
potatoes, and a chocolate parfait. Out of the corner of his eye he watched the
nonchalant, debonair, blasé New Yorkers at neighbouring tables, investing them
with a romance by which these possible fellow citizens of his from the Middle
West lost nothing. School had fallen from him like a burden; it was no more
than an unheeded clamour, faint and far away. He even delayed opening the
letter from the morning’s mail which he found in his pocket, because it was
addressed to him at school.
He wanted another chocolate parfait, but being reluctant to bother
the busy waiter any more, he opened the letter and spread it before him
instead. It was from his mother:
Dear Basil:
This is written in great haste, as I didn’t want to frighten you
by telegraphing. Grandfather is going abroad to take the waters and he wants
you and me to come too. The idea is that you’ll go to school at Grenoble or
Montreux for the rest of the year and learn the language and we’ll be close by.
That is, if you want to. I know how you like St Regis and playing football and
baseball, and of course there would be none of that; but on the other hand, it
would be a nice change, even if it postponed your entering Yale by an extra
year. So, as usual, I want you to do just as you like. We will be leaving home
almost as soon as you get this and will come to the Waldorf in New York, where
you can come in and see us for a few days, even if you decide to stay. Think it
over, dear.
With love to my dearest boy,
Mother.
Basil got up from his chair with a dim idea of walking over to the
Waldorf and having himself locked up safely until his mother came. Then,
impelled to some gesture, he raised his voice and in one of his first basso
notes called boomingly and without reticence for the waiter. No more St Regis!
No more St Regis! He was almost strangling with happiness.
‘Oh, gosh!’ he cried to himself. ‘Oh, golly! Oh, gosh! Oh, gosh!’
No more Doctor Bacon and Mr Rooney and Brick Wales and Fat Gaspar. No more Bugs
Brown and on bounds and being called Bossy. He need no longer hate them, for
they were impotent shadows in the stationary world that he was sliding away
from, sliding past, waving his hand. ‘Good-bye!’ he pitied them. ‘Good-bye!’
It required the din of Forty-second Street to sober his maudlin
joy. With his hand on his purse to guard against the omnipresent pickpocket, he
moved cautiously towards Broadway. What a day! He would tell Mr Rooney — Why,
he needn’t ever go back! Or perhaps it would be better to go back and let them
know what he was going to do, while they went on and on in the dismal, dreary
round of school.
He found the theatre and entered the lobby with its powdery
feminine atmosphere of a matinée. As he took out his ticket, his gaze was
caught and held by a sculptured profile a few feet away. It was that of a
well-built blond young man of about twenty with a strong chin and direct grey
eyes. Basil’s brain spun wildly for a moment and then came to rest upon a name
— more than a name — upon a legend, a sign in the sky. What a day! He had never
seen the young man before, but from a thousand pictures he knew beyond the
possibility of a doubt that it was Ted Fay, the Yale football captain, who had
almost single-handed beaten Harvard and Princeton last fall. Basil felt a sort
of exquisite pain. The profile turned away; the crowd revolved; the hero
disappeared. But Basil would know all through the next hours that Ted Fay was
here too.
In the rustling, whispering, sweet-smelling darkness of the
theatre he read the programme. It was the show of all shows that he wanted to
see, and until the curtain actually rose the programme itself had a curious
sacredness — a prototype of the thing itself. But when the curtain rose it
became waste paper to be dropped carelessly to the floor.
Act I. The Village Green of a Small Town near New York
It was too bright and blinding to comprehend all at once, and it
went so fast that from the very first Basil felt he had missed things; he would
make his mother take him again when she came — next week — tomorrow.
An hour passed. It was very sad at this point — a sort of gay
sadness, but sad. The girl — the man. What kept them apart even now? Oh, those
tragic errors, and misconceptions. So sad. Couldn’t they look into each other’s
eyes andsee?
In a blaze of light and sound, of resolution, anticipation and
imminent trouble, the act was over.
He went out. He looked for Ted Fay and thought he saw him leaning
rather moodily on the plush wall at the rear of the theatre, but he could not
be sure. He bought cigarettes and lit one, but fancying at the first puff he
heard a blare of music he rushed back inside.
Act 2. The Foyer of the Hotel Astor
Yes, she was, indeed, like a song — a Beautiful Rose of the Night.
The waltz buoyed her up, brought her with it to a point of aching beauty and
then let her slide back to life across its last bars as a leaf slants to earth
across the air. The high life of New York! Who could blame her if she was
carried away by the glitter of it all, vanishing into the bright morning of the
amber window borders or into distant and entrancing music as the door opened
and closed that led to the ballroom? The toast of the shining town.
Half an hour passed. Her true love brought her roses like herself
and she threw them scornfully at his feet. She laughed and turned to the other,
and danced — danced madly, wildly. Wait! That delicate treble among the thin
horns, the low curving note from the great strings. There it was again,
poignant and aching, sweeping like a great gust of emotion across the stage,
catching her again like a leaf helpless in the wind:
‘Rose — Rose — Rose of the night
When the spring moon is
bright you’ll be fair — ’
A few minutes later, feeling oddly shaken and exalted, Basil
drifted outside with the crowd. The first thing upon which his eyes fell was
the almost forgotten and now curiously metamorphosed spectre of Mr Rooney.
Mr Rooney had, in fact, gone a little to pieces. He was, to begin
with, wearing a different and much smaller hat than when he left Basil at noon.
Secondly, his face had lost its somewhat gross aspect and turned a pure and
even delicate white, and he was wearing his necktie and even portions of his
shirt on the outside of his unaccountably wringing-wet overcoat. How, in the
short space of four hours, Mr Rooney had got himself in such shape is
explicable only by the pressure of confinement in a boys’ school upon a fiery
outdoor spirit. Mr Rooney was born to toil under the clear light of heaven and,
perhaps half-consciously, he was headed towards his inevitable destiny.
‘Lee,’ he said dimly, ‘you ought to get wise to y’self. I’m going
to put you wise y’self.’
To avoid the ominous possibility of being put wise to himself in
the lobby, Basil uneasily changed the subject.
‘Aren’t you coming to the show?’ he asked, flattering Mr Rooney by
implying that he was in any condition to come to the show. ‘It’s a wonderful
show.’
Mr Rooney took off his hat, displaying wringing-wet matted hair. A
picture of reality momentarily struggled for development in the back of his
brain.
‘We got to get back to school,’ he said in a sombre and
unconvinced voice.
‘But there’s another act,’ protested Basil in horror. ‘I’ve got to
stay for the last act.’
Swaying, Mr Rooney looked at Basil dimly realizing that he had put
himself in the hollow of this boy’s hand.
‘All righ’,’ he admitted. ‘I’m going to get somethin’ to eat. I’ll
wait for you next door.’
He turned abruptly, reeled a dozen steps, and curved dizzily into
a bar adjoining the theatre. Considerably shaken, Basil went back inside.
Act 3. The Roof Garden of Mr Van Astor’s House.
Night
Half an hour passed. Everything was going to be all right, after
all. The comedian was at his best now, with the glad appropriateness of
laughter after tears, and there was a promise of felicity in the bright
tropical sky. One lovely plaintive duet, and then abruptly the long moment of
incomparable beauty was over.
Basil went into the lobby and stood in thought while the crowd
passed out. His mother’s letter and the show had cleared his mind of bitterness
and vindictiveness — he was his old self and he wanted to do the right thing.
He wondered if it was the right thing to get Mr Rooney back to school. He
walked towards the saloon, slowed up as he came to it and, gingerly opening the
swinging door, took a quick peer inside. He saw only that Mr Rooney was not one
of those drinking at the bar. He walked down the street a little way, came back
and tried again. It was as if he thought the doors were teeth to bite him, for
he had the old-fashioned Middle-Western boy’s horror of the saloon. The third
time he was successful. Mr Rooney was sound asleep at a table in the back of
the room.
Outside again Basil walked up and down, considering. He would give
Mr Rooney half an hour. If, at the end of that time, he had not come out, he
would go back to school. After all, Mr Rooney had laid for him ever since
football season —Basil was simply washing his hands of the whole affair, as in
a day or so he would wash his hands of school.
He had made several turns up and down, when glancing up an alley
that ran beside the theatre his eye was caught by the sign, Stage Entrance. He
could watch the actors come forth.
He waited. Women streamed by him, but those were the days before
Glorification and he took these drab people for wardrobe women or something.
Then suddenly a girl came out and with her a man, and Basil turned and ran a
few steps up the street as if afraid they would recognize him — and ran back,
breathing as if with a heart attack — for the girl, a radiant little beauty of
nineteen, was Her and the young man by her side was Ted Fay.
Arm in arm, they walked past him, and irresistibly Basil followed.
As they walked, she leaned towards Ted Fay in a way that gave them a
fascinating air of intimacy. They crossed Broadway and turned into the
Knickerbocker Hotel, and twenty feet behind them Basil followed, in time to see
them go into a long room set for afternoon tea. They sat at a table for two,
spoke vaguely to a waiter, and then, alone at last, bent eagerly towards each
other. Basil saw that Ted Fay was holding her gloved hand.
The tea room was separated only by a hedge of potted firs from the
main corridor. Basil went along this to a lounge which was almost up against
their table and sat down.
Her voice was low and faltering, less certain than it had been in
the play, and very sad: ‘Of course I do, Ted.’ For a long time, as their
conversation continued, she repeated, ‘Of course I do,’ or ‘But I do, Ted.’ Ted
Fay’s remarks were too low for Basil to hear.
‘ — says next month, and he won’t be put off any more . . . I do
in a way, Ted. It’s hard to explain, but he’s done everything for mother and me
. . . There’s no use kidding myself. It was a foolproof part and any girl he
gave it to was made right then and there . . . He’s been awfully thoughtful.
He’s done everything for me.’
Basil’s ears were sharpened by the intensity of his emotion; now
he could hear Ted Fay’s voice too:
‘And you say you love me.’
‘But don’t you see I promised to marry him more than a year ago.’
‘Tell him the truth — that you love me. Ask him to let you off.’
‘This isn’t musical comedy, Ted.’
‘That was a mean one,’ he said bitterly.
‘I’m sorry, dear, Ted darling, but you’re driving me crazy going
on this way. You’re making it so hard for me.’
‘I’m going to leave New Haven, anyhow.’
‘No, you’re not. You’re going to stay and play baseball this
spring. Why, you’re an ideal to all those boys! Why, if you — ’
He laughed shortly. ‘You’re a fine one to talk about ideals.’
‘Why not? I’m living up to my responsibility to Beltzman; you’ve
got to make up your mind just like I have — that we can’t have each other.’
‘Jerry! Think what you’re doing! All my life, whenever I hear that
waltz — ’
Basil got to his feet and hurried down the corridor, through the
lobby and out of the hotel. He was in a state of wild emotional confusion. He
did not understand all he had heard, but from his clandestine glimpse into the
privacy of these two, with all the world that his short experience could
conceive of at their feet, he had gathered that life for everybody was a
struggle, sometimes magnificent from a distance, but always difficult and
surprisingly simple and a little sad.
They would go on. Ted Fay would go back to Yale, put her picture
in his bureau drawer and knock out home runs with the bases full this spring —
at 8.30 the curtain would go up and She would miss something warm and young out
of her life, something she had had this afternoon.
It was dark outside and Broadway was a blazing forest fire as
Basil walked slowly along towards the point of brightest light. He looked up at
the great intersecting planes of radiance with a vague sense of approval and
possession. He would see it a lot now, lay his restless heart upon this greater
restlessness of a nation — he would come whenever he could get off from school.
But that was all changed — he was going to Europe. Suddenly Basil
realized that he wasn’t going to Europe. He could not forgo the moulding of his
own destiny just to alleviate a few months of pain. The conquest of the
successive worlds of school, college and New York — why, that was his true
dream that he had carried from boyhood into adolescence, and because of the
jeers of a few boys he had been about to abandon it and run ignominiously up a
back alley! He shivered violently, like a dog coming out of the water, and
simultaneously he was reminded of Mr Rooney.
A few minutes later he walked into the bar, past the quizzical
eyes of the bartender and up to the table where Mr Rooney still sat asleep.
Basil shook him gently, then firmly. Mr Rooney stirred and perceived Basil.
‘G’wise to yourself,’ he muttered drowsily. ‘G’wise to yourself
an’ let me alone.’
‘I am wise to myself,’ said Basil. ‘Honest, I am wise to myself,
Mr Rooney. You got to come with me into the washroom and get cleaned up, and
then you can sleep on the train again, Mr Rooney. Come on, Mr Rooney, please —
’
V
It was a long hard time. Basil got on bounds again in December and
wasn’t free again until March. An indulgent mother had given him no habits of
work and this was almost beyond the power of anything but life itself to
remedy, but he made numberless new starts and failed and tried again.
He made friends with a new boy named Maplewood after Christmas,
but they had a silly quarrel; and through the winter term, when a boys’ school
is shut in with itself and only partly assuaged from its natural savagery by
indoor sports, Basil was snubbed and slighted a good deal for his real and
imaginary sins, and he was much alone. But on the other hand, there was Ted
Fay, and Rose of the Night on the phonograph — ‘All my life whenever I hear
that waltz’ — and the remembered lights of New York, and the thought of what he
was going to do in football next autumn and the glamorous image of Yale and the
hope of spring in the air.
Fat Gaspar and a few others were nice to him now. Once when he and
Fat walked home together by accident from down-town they had a long talk about
actresses — a talk that Basil was wise enough not to presume upon afterwards.
The smaller boys suddenly decided that they approved of him, and a master who
had hitherto disliked him put his hand on his shoulder walking to a class one
day. They would all forget eventually — maybe during the summer. There would be
new fresh boys in September; he would have a clean start next year.
One afternoon in February, playing basketball, a great thing
happened. He and Brick Wales were at forward on the second team and in the fury
of the scrimmage the gymnasium echoed with sharp slapping contacts and shrill
cries.
‘Here yar!’
‘Bill! Bill!’
Basil had dribbled the ball down the court and Brick Wales, free,
was crying for it.
‘Here yar! Lee! Hey! Lee-y!’
Lee-y!
Basil flushed and made a poor pass. He had been called by a
nickname. It was a poor makeshift, but it was something more than the stark
bareness of his surname or a term of derision. Brick Wales went on playing, unconscious
that he had done anything in particular or that he had contributed to the
events by which another boy was saved from the army of the bitter, the selfish,
the neurasthenic and the unhappy. It isn’t given to us to know those rare
moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A
moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world. They will
not be cured by our most efficacious drugs or slain with our sharpest swords.
Lee-y! it could scarcely be pronounced. But Basil took it to bed
with him that night, and thinking of it, holding it to him happily to the last,
fell easily to sleep.