<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<p>In the morning they went home with others of the party by train. They could not
wait for Charlie and his automobile, because Monday was the opening night of
the Opera, and no one could miss that. Here Society would appear in its most
gorgeous raiment, and, there would be a show of jewellery such as could be seen
nowhere else in the world.</p>
<p>General Prentice and his wife had opened their town-house, and had invited them
to dinner and to share their box; and so at about half-past nine o’clock
Montague found himself seated in a great balcony of the shape of a horseshoe,
with several hundred of the richest people in the city. There was another tier
of boxes above, and three galleries above that, and a thousand or more people
seated and standing below him. Upon the big stage there was an elaborate and
showy play, the words of which were sung to the accompaniment of an orchestra.</p>
<p>Now Montague had never heard an opera, and he was fond of music. The second act
had just begun when he came in, and all through it he sat quite spellbound,
listening to the most ravishing strains that ever he had heard in his life. He
scarcely noticed that Mrs. Prentice was spending her time studying the
occupants of the other boxes through a jewelled lorgnette, or that Oliver was
chattering to her daughter.</p>
<p>But after the act was over, Oliver got him alone outside the box, and
whispered, “For God’s sake, Allan, don’t make a fool of
yourself.”</p>
<p>“Why, what’s the matter?” asked the other.</p>
<p>“What will people think,” exclaimed Oliver, “seeing you
sitting there like a man in a dope dream?”</p>
<p>“Why,” laughed the other, “they’ll think I’m
listening to the music.”</p>
<p>To which Oliver responded, “People don’t come to the Opera to
listen to the music.”</p>
<p>This sounded like a joke, but it was not. To Society the Opera was a great
state function, an exhibition of far more exclusiveness and magnificence than
the Horse Show; and Society certainly had the right to say, for it owned the
opera-house and ran it. The real music-lovers who came, either stood up in the
back, or sat in the fifth gallery, close to the ceiling, where the air was foul
and hot. How much Society cared about the play was sufficiently indicated by
the fact that all of the operas were sung in foreign languages, and sung so
carelessly that the few who understood the languages could make but little of
the words. Once there was a world-poet who devoted his life to trying to make
the Opera an art; and in the battle with Society he all but starved to death.
Now, after half a century, his genius had triumphed, and Society consented to
sit for hours in darkness and listen to the domestic disputes of German gods
and goddesses. But what Society really cared for was a play with beautiful
costumes and scenery and dancing, and pretty songs to which one could listen
while one talked; the story must be elemental and passionate, so that one could
understand it in pantomime—say the tragic love of a beautiful and
noble-minded courtesan for a gallant young man of fashion.</p>
<p>Nearly every one who came to the Opera had a glass, by means of which he could
bring each gorgeously-clad society dame close to him, and study her at leisure.
There were said to be two hundred million dollars’ worth of diamonds in
New York, and those that were not in the stores were very apt to be at this
show; for here was where they could accomplish the purpose for which they
existed—here was where all the world came to stare at them. There were
nine prominent Society women, who among them displayed five million
dollars’ worth of jewels. You would see stomachers which looked like a
piece of a coat of mail, and were made wholly of blazing diamonds. You would
see emeralds and rubies and diamonds and pearls made in tiaras—that is to
say, imitation crowns and coronets—and exhibited with a stout and solemn
dowager for a pediment. One of the Wallings had set this fashion, and now every
one of importance wore them. One lady to whom Montague was introduced made a
speciality of pearls—two black pearl ear-rings at forty thousand dollars,
a string at three hundred thousand, a brooch of pink pearls at fifty thousand,
and two necklaces at a quarter of a million each!</p>
<p>This incessant repetition of the prices of things came to seem very sordid; but
Montague found that there was no getting away from it. The people in Society
who paid these prices affected to be above all such considerations, to be
interested only in the beauty and artistic excellence of the things themselves;
but one found that they always talked about the prices which other people had
paid, and that somehow other people always knew what they had paid. They took
care also to see that the public and the newspapers knew what they had paid,
and knew everything else that they were doing. At this Opera, for instance,
there was a diagram of the boxes printed upon the programme, and a list of all
the box-holders, so that anyone could tell who was who. You might see these
great dames in their gorgeous robes coming from their carriages, with crowds
staring at them and detectives hovering about. And the bosom of each would be
throbbing with a wild and wonderful vision of the moment when she would enter
her box, and the music would be forgotten, and all eyes would be turned upon
her; and she would lay aside her wraps, and flash upon the staring throngs, a
vision of dazzling splendour.</p>
<p>Some of these jewels were family treasures, well known to New York for
generations; and in such cases it was becoming the fashion to leave the real
jewels in the safe-deposit vault, and to wear imitation stones exactly like
them. From homes where the jewels were kept, detectives were never absent, and
in many cases there were detectives watching the detectives; and yet every once
in a while the newspapers would be full of a sensational story of a robbery.
Then the unfortunates who chanced to be suspected would be seized by the police
and subjected to what was jocularly termed the “third degree,” and
consisted of tortures as elaborate and cruel as any which the Spanish
Inquisition had invented. The advertising value of this kind of thing was found
to be so great that famous actresses also had costly jewels, and now and then
would have them stolen.</p>
<p class="p2">
That night, when they had got home, Montague had a talk with his cousin about
Charlie Carter. He discovered a peculiar situation. It seemed that Alice
already knew that Charlie had been “bad.” He was sick and
miserable; and her beauty and innocence had touched him and made him ashamed of
himself, and he had hinted darkly at dreadful evils. Thus carefully veiled, and
tinged with mystery and romance, Montague could understand how Charlie made an
interesting and appealing figure. “He says I’m different from any
girl he ever met,” said Alice—a remark of such striking originality
that her cousin could not keep back his smile.</p>
<p>Alice was not the least bit in love with him, and had no idea of being; and she
said that she would accept no invitations, and never go alone with him; but she
did not see how she could avoid him when she met him at other people’s
houses. And to this Montague had to assent.</p>
<p class="p2">
General Prentice had inquired kindly as to what Montague had seen in New York,
and how he was getting along. He added that he had talked about him to Judge
Ellis, and that when he was ready to get to work, the Judge would perhaps have
some suggestions to make to him. He approved, however, of Montague’s plan
of getting his bearings first; and said that he would introduce him and put him
up at a couple of the leading clubs.</p>
<p>All this remained in Montague’s mind; but there was no use trying to
think of it at the moment. Thanksgiving was at hand, and in countless country
mansions there would be gaieties under way. Bertie Stuyvesant had planned an
excursion to his Adirondack camp, and had invited a score or so of young
people, including the Montagues. This would be a new feature of the
city’s life, worth knowing about.</p>
<p>Their expedition began with a theatre-party. Bertie had engaged four boxes, and
they met there, an hour or so after the performance had begun. This made no
difference, however, for the play was like the opera-a number of songs and
dances strung together, and with only plot enough to provide occasion for
elaborate scenery and costumes. From the play they were carried to the Grand
Central Station, and a little before midnight Bertie’s private train set
out on its journey.</p>
<p>This train was a completely equipped hotel. There was a baggage compartment and
a dining-car and kitchen; and a drawing-room and library-car; and a
bedroom-car—not with berths, such as the ordinary sleeping-car provides,
but with comfortable bedrooms, furnished in white mahogany, and provided with
running water and electric light. All these cars were built of steel, and
automatically ventilated: and they were furnished in the luxurious fashion of
everything with which Bertie Stuyvesant had anything to do. In the library-car
there were velvet carpets upon the floor, and furniture of South American
mahogany, and paintings upon the walls over which great artists had laboured
for years.</p>
<p>Bertie’s chef and servants were on board, and a supper was ready in the
dining-car, which they ate while watching the Hudson by moonlight. And the next
morning they reached their destination, a little station in the mountain
wilderness. The train lay upon a switch, and so they had breakfast at their
leisure, and then, bundled in furs, came out into the crisp pine-laden air of
the woods. There was snow upon the ground, and eight big sleighs waiting; and
for nearly three hours they drove in the frosty sunlight, through most
beautiful mountain scenery. A good part of the drive was in Bertie’s
“preserve,” and the road was private, as big signs notified one
every hundred yards or so.</p>
<p>So at last they reached a lake, winding like a snake among towering hills, and
with a huge baronial castle standing out upon the rocky shore. This imitation
fortress was the “camp.”</p>
<p>Bertie’s father had built it, and visited it only half a dozen times in
his life. Bertie himself had only been here twice, he said. The deer were so
plentiful that in the winter they died in scores. Nevertheless there were
thirty game-keepers to guard the ten thousand acres of forest, and prevent
anyone’s hunting in it. There were many such “preserves” in
this Adirondack wilderness, so Montague was told; one man had a whole mountain
fenced about with heavy iron railing, and had moose and elk and even wild boar
inside. And as for the “camps,” there were so many that a new style
of architecture had been developed here—to say nothing of those which
followed old styles, like this imported Rhine castle. One of Bertie’s
crowd had a big Swiss chalet; and one of the Wallings had a Japanese palace to
which he came every August—a house which had been built from plans drawn
in Japan, and by labourers imported especially from Japan. It was full of
Japanese ware—furniture, tapestry, and mosaics; and the guides remembered
with wonder the strange silent, brown-skinned little men who had laboured for
days at carving a bit of wood, and had built a tiny pagoda-like tea-house with
more bits of wood in it than a man could count in a week.</p>
<p>They had a luncheon of fresh venison and partridges and trout, and in the
afternoon a hunt. The more active set out to track the deer in the snow; but
most prepared to watch the lake-shore, while the game-keepers turned loose the
dogs back in the hills. This “hounding” was against the law, but
Bertie was his own law here—and at the worst there could simply be a
small fine, imposed upon some of the keepers. They drove eight or ten deer to
water; and as they fired as many as twenty shots at one deer, they had quite a
lively time. Then at dusk they came back, in a fine glow of excitement, and
spent the evening before the blazing logs, telling over their adventures.</p>
<p>The party spent two days and a half here, and on the last evening, which was
Thanksgiving, they had a wild turkey which Bertie had shot the week before in
Virginia, and were entertained by a minstrel show which had been brought up
from New York the night before. The next afternoon they drove back to the
train.</p>
<p class="p2">
In the morning, when they reached the city, Alice found a note from Mrs. Winnie
Duval, begging her and Montague to come to lunch and attend a private lecture
by the Swami Babubanana, who would tell them all about the previous states of
their souls. They went—though not without a protest from old Mrs.
Montague, who declared it was “worse than Bob Ingersoll.”</p>
<p>And then, in the evening, came Mrs. de Graffenried’s opening
entertainment, which was one of the great events of the social year. In the
general rush of things Montague had not had a chance properly to realize it;
but Reggie Mann and Mrs. de Graffenried had been working over it for weeks.
When the Montagues arrived, they found the Riverside mansion—which was
decorated in imitation of an Arabian palace—turned into a jungle of
tropical plants.</p>
<p>They had come early at Reggie’s request, and he introduced them to Mrs.
de Graffenried, a tall and angular lady with a leathern complexion painfully
painted; Mrs. de Graffenried was about fifty years of age, but like all the
women of Society she was made up for thirty. Just at present there were beads
of perspiration upon her forehead; something had gone wrong at the last moment,
and so Reggie would have no time to show them the favours, as he had intended.</p>
<p>About a hundred and fifty guests were invited to this entertainment. A supper
was served at little tables in the great ball-room, and afterward the guests
wandered about the house while the tables were whisked out of the way and the
room turned into a play-house. A company from one of the Broadway theatres
would be bundled into cabs at the end of the performance, and by midnight they
would be ready to repeat the performance at Mrs. de Graffenried’s.
Montague chanced to be near when this company arrived, and he observed that the
guests had crowded up too close, and not left room enough for the actors. So
the manager had placed them in a little ante-room, and when Mrs. de Graffenried
observed this, she rushed at the man, and swore at him like a dragoon, and
ordered the bewildered performers out into the main room.</p>
<p>But this was peering behind the scenes, and he was supposed to be watching the
play. The entertainment was another “musical comedy” like the one
he had seen a few nights before. On that occasion, however, Bertie
Stuyvesant’s sister had talked to him the whole time, while now he was
let alone, and had a chance to watch the performance.</p>
<p>This was a very popular play; it had had a long run, and the papers told how
its author had an income of a couple of hundred thousand dollars a year. And
here was an audience of the most rich and influential people in the city; and
they laughed and clapped, and made it clear that they were enjoying themselves
heartily. And what sort of a play was it?</p>
<p>It was called “The Kaliph of Kamskatka.” It had no shred of a plot;
the Kaliph had seventeen wives, and there was an American drummer who wanted to
sell him another—but then you did not need to remember this, for nothing
came of it. There was nothing in the play which could be called a
character—there was nothing which could be connected with any real
emotion ever felt by human beings. Nor could one say that there was any
incident—at least nothing happened because of anything else. Each event
was a separate thing, like the spasmodic jerking in the face of an idiot. Of
this sort of “action” there was any quantity—at an
instant’s notice every one on the stage would fall simultaneously into
this condition of idiotic jerking. There was rushing about, shouting, laughing,
exclaiming; the stage was in a continual uproar of excitement, which was
without any reason or meaning. So it was impossible to think of the actors in
their parts; one kept thinking of them as human beings—thinking of the
awful tragedy of full-grown men and women being compelled by the pressure of
hunger to dress up and paint themselves, and then come out in public and dance,
stamp, leap about, wring their hands, make faces, and otherwise be
“lively.”</p>
<p>The costumes were of two sorts: one fantastic, supposed to represent the East,
and the other a kind of <i>reductio ad absurdum</i> of fashionable garb. The
leading man wore a “natty” outing-suit, and strutted with a little
cane; his stock-in-trade was a jaunty air, a kind of perpetual flourish, and a
wink that suggested the cunning of a satyr. The leading lady changed her
costume several times in each act; but it invariably contained the elements of
bare arms and bosom and back, and a skirt which did not reach her knees, and
bright-coloured silk stockings, and slippers with heels two inches high. Upon
the least provocation she would execute a little pirouette, which would reveal
the rest of her legs, surrounded by a mass of lace ruffles. It is the nature of
the human mind to seek the end of things; if this woman had worn a suit of
tights and nothing else, she would have been as uninteresting as an underwear
advertisement in a magazine; but this incessant not-quite-revealing of herself
exerted a subtle fascination. At frequent intervals the orchestra would start
up a jerky little tune, and the two “stars” would begin to sing in
nasal voices some words expressive of passion; then the man would take the
woman about the waist and dance and swing her about and bend her backward and
gaze into her eyes—actions all vaguely suggestive of the relationship of
sex. At the end of the verse a chorus would come gliding on, clad in any sort
of costume which admitted of colour and the display of legs; the painted women
of this chorus were never still for an instant—if they were not actually
dancing, they were wriggling their legs, and jerking their bodies from side to
side, and nodding their heads, and in all other possible ways being
“lively.”</p>
<p>But it was not the physical indecency of this show that struck Montague so much
as its intellectual content. The dialogue of the piece was what is called
“smart”; that is, it was full of a kind of innuendo which implied a
secret understanding of evil between the actor and his audience—a sort of
countersign which passed between them. After all, it would have been an error
to say that there were no ideas in the play—there was one idea upon which
all the interest of it was based; and Montague strove to analyze this idea and
formulate it to himself. There are certain life principles—one might call
them moral axioms—which are the result of the experience of countless
ages of the human race, and upon the adherence to which the continuance of the
race depends. And here was an audience by whom all these principles
were—not questioned, nor yet disputed, nor yet denied—but to whom
the denial was the axiom, something which it would be too banal to state
flatly, but which it was elegant and witty to take for granted. In this
audience there were elderly people, and married men and women, and young men
and maidens; and a perfect gale of laughter swept through it at a story of a
married woman whose lover had left her when he got married:—</p>
<p>“She must have been heartbroken,” said the leading lady.</p>
<p>“She was desperate,” said the leading man, with a grin.</p>
<p>“What did she do?” asked the lady “Go and shoot
herself?”</p>
<p>“Worse than that,” said the man. “She, went back to her
husband and had a baby!”</p>
<p class="p2">
But to complete your understanding of the significance of this play, you must
bring yourself to realize that it was not merely a play, but a <i>kind</i> of a
play; it had a name—a “musical comedy”—the meaning of
which every one understood. Hundreds of such plays were written and produced,
and “dramatic critics” went to see them and gravely discussed them,
and many thousands of people made their livings by travelling over the country
and playing them; stately theatres were built for them, and hundreds of
thousands of people paid their money every night to see them. And all this no
joke and no nightmare—but a thing that really existed. Men and women were
doing these things—actual flesh-and-blood human beings.</p>
<p>Montague wondered, in an awestricken sort of way, what kind of human being it
could be who had flourished the cane and made the grimaces in that play. Later
on, when he came to know the “Tenderloin,” he met this same actor,
and he found that he had begun life as a little Irish “mick” who
lived in a tenement, and whose mother stood at the head of the stairway and
defended him with a rolling-pin against a policeman who was chasing him. He had
discovered that he could make a living by his comical antics; but when he came
home and told his mother that he had been offered twenty dollars a week by a
show manager, she gave him a licking for lying to her. Now he was making three
thousand dollars a week—more than the President of the United States and
his Cabinet; but he was not happy, as he confided to Montague, because he did
not know how to read, and this was a cause of perpetual humiliation. The secret
desire of this little actor’s heart was to play Shakespeare; he had
“Hamlet” read to him, and pondered how to act it—all the time
that he was flourishing his little cane and making his grimaces! He had chanced
to be on the stage when a fire had broken out, and five or six hundred victims
of greed were roasted to death. The actor had pleaded with the people to keep
their seats, but all in vain; and all his life thereafter he went about with
this vision of horror in his mind, and haunted by the passionate conviction
that he had failed because of his lack of education—that if only he had
been a man of culture, he would have been able to think of something to say to
hold those terror-stricken people!</p>
<p class="p2">
At three o’clock in the morning the performance came to an end, and then
there were more refreshments; and Mrs. Vivie Patton came and sat by him, and
they had a nice comfortable gossip. When Mrs. Vivie once got started at talking
about people, her tongue ran on like a windmill.</p>
<p>There was Reggie Mann, meandering about and simpering at people. Reggie was in
his glory at Mrs. de Graffenried’s affairs. Reggie had arranged all
this—he did the designing and the ordering, and contracted for the shows
with the agents. You could bet that he had got his commission on them,
too—though sometimes Mrs. de Graffenried got the shows to come for
nothing, because of the advertising her name would bring. Commissions were
Reggie’s speciality—he had begun life as an auto agent. Montague
didn’t know what that was? An auto agent was a man who was for ever
begging his friends to use a certain kind of car, so that he might make a
living; and Reggie had made about thirty thousand a year in that way. He had
come from Boston, where his reputation had been made by the fact that early one
morning, as they were driving home from a celebration, he had dared a young
society matron to take off her shoes and stockings, and get out and wade in the
public fountain; and she had done it, and he had followed her. On the strength
of the eclat of this he had been taken up by Mrs. Devon; and one day Mrs. Devon
had worn a white gown, and asked him what he thought of it. “It needs but
one thing to make it perfect,” said Reggie, and taking a red rose, he
pinned it upon her corsage. The effect was magical; every one exclaimed with
delight, and so Reggie’s reputation as an authority upon dress was made
for ever. Now he was Mrs. de Graffenried’s right-hand man, and they made
up their pranks together. Once they had walked down the street in Newport with
a big rag doll between them. And Reggie had given a dinner at which the guest
of honour had been a monkey—surely Montague had heard of that, for it had
been the sensation of the season. It was really the funniest thing imaginable;
the monkey wore a suit of broad-cloth with collar and cuffs, and he shook hands
with all the guests, and behaved himself exactly like a gentleman—except
that he did not get drunk.</p>
<p>And then Mrs. Vivie pointed out the great Mrs. Ridgley-Clieveden, who was
sitting with one of her favourites, a grave, black-bearded gentleman who had
leaped into fame by inheriting fifty million dollars. “Mrs. R.-C.”
had taken him up, and ordered his engagement book for him, and he was solemnly
playing the part of a social light. He had purchased an old New York mansion,
upon the decoration of which three million dollars had been spent; and when he
came down to business from Tuxedo, his private train waited all day for him
with steam up. Mrs. Vivie told an amusing tale of a woman who had announced her
engagement to him, and borrowed large sums of money upon the strength of it,
before his denial came out. That had been a source of great delight to Mrs. de
Graffenried, who was furiously jealous of “Mrs. R. C.”</p>
<p>From the anecdotes that people told, Montague judged that Mrs. de Graffenried
must be one of those new leaders of Society, who, as Mrs. Alden said, were
inclined to the bizarre and fantastic. Mrs. de Graffenried spent half a million
dollars every season to hold the position of leader of the Newport set, and you
could always count upon her for new and striking ideas. Once she had given away
as cotillion favours tiny globes with goldfish in them; again she had given a
dance at which everybody got themselves up as different vegetables. She was
fond of going about at Newport and inviting people haphazard to
lunch—thirty or forty at a time—and then surprising them with a
splendid banquet. Again she would give a big formal dinner, and perplex people
by offering them something which they really cared to eat. “You
see,” explained Mrs. Vivie, “at these dinners we generally get
thick green turtle soup, and omelettes with some sort of Florida water poured
over them, and mushrooms cooked under glass, and real hand-made desserts; but
Mrs. de Graffenried dares to have baked ham and sweet potatoes, or even real
roast beef. You saw to-night that she had green corn; she must have arranged
for that months ahead—we can never get it from Porto Rico until January.
And you see this little dish of wild strawberries—they were probably
transplanted and raised in a hothouse, and every single one wrapped separately
before they were shipped.”</p>
<p>All these labours had made Mrs. de Graffenried a tremendous power in the social
world. She had a savage tongue, said Mrs. Vivie, and every one lived in terror
of her; but once in a while she met her match. Once she had invited a comic
opera star to sing for her guests, and all the men had crowded round this
actress, and Mrs. de Graffenried had flown into a passion and tried to drive
them away; and the actress, lolling back in her chair, and gazing up idly at
Mrs. de Graffenried, had drawled, “<i>Ten years older than
God!</i>” Poor Mrs. de Graffenried would carry that saying with her until
she died.</p>
<p>Something reminiscent of this came under Montague’s notice that same
evening. At about four o’clock Mrs. Vivie wished to go home, and asked
him to find her escort, the Count St. Elmo de Champignon—the man, by the
way, for whom her husband was gunning. Montague roamed all about the house, and
finally went downstairs, where a room had been set apart for the theatrical
company to partake of refreshments. Mrs. de Graffenried’s secretary was
on guard at the door; but some of the boys had got into the room, and were
drinking champagne and “making dates” with the chorus-girls. And
here was Mrs. de Graffenried herself, pushing them bodily out of the room, a
score and more of them—and among them Mrs. Vivie’s Count!</p>
<p class="p2">
Montague delivered his message, and then went upstairs to wait until his own
party should be ready to leave. In the smoking-room were a number of men, also
waiting; and among them he noticed Major Venable, in conversation with a man
whom he did not know. “Come over here,” the Major called; and
Montague obeyed, at the same time noticing the stranger.</p>
<p>He was a tall, loose-jointed, powerfully built man, a small head and a very
striking face: a grim mouth with drooping corners tightly set, and a hawk-like
nose, and deep-set, peering eyes. “Have you met Mr. Hegan?” said
the Major. “Hegan, this is Mr. Allan Montague.” Jim Hegan! Montague
repressed a stare and took the chair which they offered him. “Have a
cigar,” said Hegan, holding out his case.</p>
<p>“Mr. Montague has just come to New York,” said the Major. “He
is a Southerner, too.”</p>
<p>“Indeed?” said Hegan, and inquired what State he came from.
Montague replied, and added, “I had the pleasure of meeting your daughter
last week, at the Horse Show.”</p>
<p>That served to start a conversation; for Hegan came from Texas, and when he
found that Montague knew about horses—real horses—he warmed to him.
Then the Major’s party called him away, and the other two were left to
carry on the conversation.</p>
<p>It was very easy to chat with Hegan; and yet underneath, in the other’s
mind, there lurked a vague feeling of trepidation, as he realized that he was
chatting with a hundred millions of dollars. Montague was new enough at the
game to imagine that there ought to be something strange, some atmosphere of
awe and mystery, about a man who was master of a dozen railroads and of the
politics of half a dozen States. He was simple and very kindly in his manner, a
plain man, interested in plain things. There was about him, as he talked, a
trace of timidity, almost of apology, which Montague noticed and wondered at.
It was only later, when he had time to think about it, that he realized that
Hegan had begun as a farmer’s boy in Texas, a “poor white”;
and could it be that after all these years an instinct remained in him, so that
whenever he met a gentleman of the old South he stood by with a little
deference, seeming to beg pardon for his hundred millions of dollars?</p>
<p>And yet there was the power of the man. Even chatting about horses, you felt
it; you felt that there was a part of him which did not chat, but which sat
behind and watched. And strangest of all, Montague found himself fancying that
behind the face that smiled was another face, that did not smile, but that was
grim and set. It was a strange face, with its broad, sweeping eyebrows and its
drooping mouth; it haunted Montague and made him feel ill at ease.</p>
<p>There came Laura Hegan, who greeted them in her stately way; and Mrs. Hegan,
bustling and vivacious, costumed <i>en grande dame</i>. “Come and see me
some time,” said the man. “You won’t be apt to meet me
otherwise, for I don’t go about much.” And so they took their
departure; and Montague sat alone and smoked and thought. The face still stayed
with him; and now suddenly, in a burst of light, it came to him what it was:
the face of a bird of prey—of the great wild, lonely eagle! You have seen
it, perhaps, in a menagerie; sitting high up, submitting patiently, biding its
time. But all the while the soul of the eagle is far away, ranging the wide
spaces, ready for the lightning swoop, and the clutch with the cruel talons!</p>
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