She, however, did contrive to see nothing--at least, the other three were convinced that she had not seen. When they were back in their rooms, Rod--whether through pretense or through sidetracked amorousness or from simple intoxication--became more demonstrative than he had been for a long time.
"No, there"s n.o.body like you," he declared. "Even if I wandered I"d always come back to you."
"Really?" said Susan with careless irony. "That"s good. No, I can unhook my blouse."
"I do believe you"re growing cold."
"I don"t feel like being messed with tonight."
"Oh, very well," said he sulkily. Then, forgetting his ill humor after a few minutes of watching her graceful movements and gestures as she took off her dress and made her beautiful hair ready for the night, he burst out in a very different tone: "You don"t know how glad I am that you"re dependent on me again. You"ll not be difficult any more."
A moment"s silence, then Susan, with a queer little laugh, "Men don"t in the least mind--do they?"
"Mind what?"
"Being loved for money." There was a world of sarcasm in her accent on that word loved.
"Oh, nonsense. You don"t understand yourself," declared he with large confidence. "Women never grow up. They"re like babies--and babies, you know, love the person that feeds them."
"And dogs--and cats--and birds--and all the lower orders."
She took a book and sat in a wrapper under the light.
"Come to bed--please, dear," pleaded he.
"No, I"ll read a while."
And she held the book before her until he was asleep. Then she sat a long time, her elbows on her knees, her chin supported by her hands, her gaze fixed upon his face--the face of the man who was her master now. She must please him, must accept what treatment he saw fit to give, must rein in her ambitions to suit the uncertain gait and staying power of his ability to achieve. She could not leave him; he could leave her when he might feel so inclined. Her master--capricious, tyrannical, a drunkard. Her sole reliance--and the first condition of his protection was that she should not try to do for herself. A dependent, condemned to become even more dependent.
CHAPTER XVII
SHE now spent a large part of every day in wandering, like a derelict, drifting aimlessly this way or that, up into the Park or along Fifth Avenue. She gazed intently into shop windows, apparently inspecting carefully all the articles on display; but she pa.s.sed on, unconscious of having seen anything. If she sat at home with a book she rarely turned a page, though her gaze was fastened upon the print as if she were absorbingly interested.
What was she feeling? The coa.r.s.e contacts of street life and tenement life--the choice between monstrous defilements from human beings and monstrous defilements from filth and vermin.
What was she seeing? The old women of the slums--the forlorn, aloof figures of shattered health and looks--creeping along the gutters, dancing in the barrel houses, sleeping on the floor in some vile hole in the wall--sleeping the sleep from which one awakes bitten by mice and bugs, and swarming with lice.
She had entire confidence in Brent"s judgment. Brent must have discovered that she was without talent for the stage--for if he had thought she had the least talent, would he not in his kindness have arranged or offered some sort of place in some theater or other? Since she had no stage talent--then--what should she do? What _could_ she do? And so her mind wandered as aimlessly as her wandering steps. And never before had the sweet melancholy of her eyes been so moving.
But, though she did not realize it, there was a highly significant difference between this mood of profound discouragement and all the other similar moods that had accompanied and accelerated her downward plunges. Every time theretofore, she had been cowed by the crushing mandate of destiny--had made no struggle against it beyond the futile threshings about of aimless youth. This time she lost neither strength nor courage. She was no longer a child; she was no longer mere human flotsam and jetsam. She did not know which way to turn; but she did know, with all the certainty of a dauntless will, that she would turn some way--and that it would not be a way leading back to the marshes and caves of the underworld. She wandered--she wandered aimlessly; but not for an instant did she cease to keep watch for the right direction--the direction that would be the best available in the circ.u.mstances. She did not know or greatly care which way it led, so long as it did not lead back whence she had come.
In all her excursions she had--not consciously but by instinct--kept away from her old beat. Indeed, except in the company of Spenser or Sperry she had never ventured into the neighborhood of Long Acre. But one day she was deflected by chance at the Forty-second Street corner of Fifth Avenue and drifted westward, pausing at each book stall to stare at the t.i.tles of the bargain offerings in literature. As she stood at one of these stalls near Sixth Avenue, she became conscious that two men were pressing against her, one on either side.
She moved back and started on her way. One of the men was standing before her. She lifted her eyes, was looking into the cruel smiling eyes of a man with a big black mustache and the jaws of a prizefighter. His smile broadened.
"I thought it was you, Queenie," said he. "Delighted to see you."
She recognized him as a fly cop who had been one of Freddie Palmer"s handy men. She fell back a step and the other man--she knew him instantly as also a policeman--lined up beside him of the black mustache. Both men were laughing.
"We"ve been on the lookout for you a long time, Queenie," said the other. "There"s a friend of yours that wants to see you mighty bad."
Susan glanced from one to the other, her face pale but calm, in contrast to her heart where was all the fear and horror of the police which long and savage experience had bred. She turned away without speaking and started toward Sixth Avenue.
"Now, what d"ye think of that?" said Black Mustache to his "side kick." "I thought she was too much of a lady to cut an old friend. Guess we"d better run her in, Pete."
"That"s right," a.s.sented Pete. "Then we can keep her safe till F. P. can get the hooks on her."
Black Mustache laughed, laid his hand on her arm. "You"ll come along quietly," said he. "You don"t want to make a scene. You always was a perfect lady."
She drew her arm away. "I am a married woman--living with my husband."
Black Mustache laughed. "Think of that, Pete! And she soliciting us. That"ll be good news for your loving husband.
Come along, Queenie. Your record"s against you. Everybody"ll know you"ve dropped back to your old ways."
"I am going to my husband," said she quietly. "You had better not annoy me."
Pete looked uneasy, but Black Mustache"s sinister face became more resolute. "If you wanted to live respectable, why did you solicit us two? Come along--or do you want me and Pete to take you by the arms?"
"Very well," said she. "I"ll go." She knew the police, knew that Palmer"s lieutenant would act as he said--and she also knew what her "record" would do toward carrying through the plot.
She walked in the direction of the station house, the two plain clothes men dropping a few feet behind and rejoining her only when they reached the steps between the two green lamps.
In this way they avoided collecting a crowd at their heels.
As she advanced to the desk, the sergeant yawning over the blotter glanced up.
"Bless my soul!" cried he, all interest at once. "If it ain"t F. P."s Queenie!"
"And up to her old tricks, sergeant," said Black Mustache.
"She solicited me and Pete."
Susan was looking the sergeant straight in the eyes. "I am a married woman," said she. "I live with my husband. I was looking at some books in Forty-second Street when these two came up and arrested me."
The sergeant quailed, glanced at Pete who was guiltily hanging his head--glanced at Black Mustache. There he got the support he was seeking. "What"s your husband"s name?" demanded Black Mustache roughly. "What"s your address?"
And Rod"s play coming on the next night but one! She shrank, collected herself. "I am not going to drag him into this, if I can help it," said she. "I give you a chance to keep yourselves out of trouble." She was gazing calmly at the sergeant again. "You know these men are not telling the truth. You know they"ve brought me here because of Freddie Palmer. My husband knows all about my past. He will stand by me. But I wish to spare him."
The sergeant"s uncertain manner alarmed Black Mustache.
"She"s putting up a good, bluff" scoffed he. "The truth is she ain"t got no husband. She"d not have solicited us if she was living decent."
"You hear what the officer says," said the sergeant, taking the tone of great kindness. "You"ll have to give your name and address--and I"ll leave it to the judge to decide between you and the officers." He took up his pen. "What"s your name?"
Susan, weak and trembling, was clutching the iron rail before the desk--the rail worn smooth by the nervous hands of ten thousand of the social system"s sick or crippled victims.
"Come--what"s your name?" jeered Black Mustache.
Susan did not answer.
"Put her down Queenie Brown," cried he, triumphantly.