Other Things Being Equal
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Emma Wolf >> Other Things Being Equal
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15 This Etext was prepared by Dr. Barbara Cantalupo E-mail: bac7@psu.edu
Other Things Being Equal
by Emma Wolf
Chapter I
A humming-bird dipped through the air and lit upon the palm-tree just below
the open window; the long drowsy call of a crowing cock came from afar off;
the sun spun down in the subdued splendor of a hazy veil. It was a
dustless, hence an anomalous, summer's afternoon in San Francisco.
Ruth Levice sat near the window, lazily rocking, her long lithe arms
clasped about her knees, her face a dream of the day. The seasons single
out their favorite moods: a violet of spring-time woos one, a dusky June
rose another; to-day the soft, languorous air had, unconsciously to her,
charmed the girl's waking dream.
So removed was she in spirit from her surroundings that she heard with an
obvious start a knock at the door. The knock was immediately followed by a
smiling, plump young woman, sparkling of eye, rosy of cheek, and glistening
with jewels and silk.
"Here you are, Ruth," she exclaimed, kissing her heartily; whereupon she
sank into a chair, and threw back her bonnet-strings with an air of relief.
"I came up here at once when the maid said your mother was out. Where is
she?"
"Out calling. You look heated, Jennie; let me fan you."
"Thanks. How refreshing! Sandal-wood, is it not? Where is your father?"
"He is writing in the library. Do you wish to see him?"
"Oh, no, no! I must see you alone. I am so glad Aunt Esther is out. Why
aren't you with her, Ruth? You should not let your mother go off alone."
The young girl laughed in merry surprise.
"Why, Jennie, you forgot that Mamma has been used all her life to going out
without me; it is only within the last few months that I have been her
companion."
"I know," replied her visitor, leaning back with a grim expression of
disapproval, "and I think it the queerest arrangement I ever heard of. The
idea of a father having the sole care of a daughter up to her twenty-first
birthday, and then delivering her, like a piece of joint property, over to
her mother! Oh, I know that according to their lights it did not seem
absurd, but the very idea of it is contrary to nature. Of course we all
know that your father was peculiarly fitted to undertake your training, and
in this way your mother could more easily indulge her love of society; but
as it is, no wonder she is as jealous of your success in her realm as your
father was in his; no wonder she overdoes things to make up for lost time.
How do you like it, Ruth?"
"What?" softly inquired her cousin, slowly waving the dainty fan, while a
smile lighted up the gravity of her face at this onslaught.
"Going out continually night after night."
"Mamma likes it."
"Cela va sans dire. But, Ruth, --stop fanning a minute, please, --I want
to know, candidly and seriously, would you mind giving it up?"
"Candidly and seriously, I would do so to-day forever."
"Ye-es; your father's daughter," said Mrs. Lewis, speaking more slowly, her
bright eyes noting the perfect repose of the young girl's person; "and yet
you are having some quiet little conquests, --the golden apples of your
mother's Utopia. But to come to the point, do you realize that your mother
is very ill?"
"Ill--my mother?" The sudden look of consternation that scattered the soft
tranquillity of her face must have fully repaid Mrs. Lewis if she was
aiming at a sensation.
"There, sit down. Don't be alarmed; you know she is out and apparently
well."
"What do you mean?"
I mean that Aunt Esther is nervous and hysterical. The other day at our
house she had such an attack of hysteria that I was obliged to call in a
neighboring doctor. She begged us not to mention it to either of you, and
then insisted on attending a meeting of some sort. However, I thought it
over and decided to let you know, as I consider it serious. I was afraid
to alarm Uncle, so I thought of telling you."
"Thank you, Jennie; I shall speak to Father about it." The young girl's
tone was quite unagitated; but two pink spots on her usually colorless
cheeks betrayed her emotion.
"That is right, dear. I hope you will forgive me if I seem meddlesome, but
Jo and I have noticed it for some time; and your father, by allowing this
continual gayety, seems to have overlooked what we find so sadly apparent.
Of course you have an engagement for to-night?"
"Yes; we are going to a reception at the Merrills'."
"Merrill? Christians?" was the sharp reply.
"The name speaks for itself."
"What does possess your parents to mix so much with Christians?"
"Fellow-feeling, I suppose. We all dance and talk alike; and as we do not
hold services at receptions, wherein lies the difference?"
"There is a difference; and the Christians know it as well as we Jewish
people. Not only do they know it, but they show it in countless ways; and
the difference, they think, is all to their credit. For my part, I always
feel as if they looked down on us, and I should like to prove to them how
we differ on that point. I have enough courage to let them know I consider
myself as good as the best of them."
"Is that why you wear diamonds and silk on the street, Jennie?" asked Ruth,
her serious tones implying no impudence, but carrying a refined reproach.
"Hardly. I wear them because I have them and like them. I see no harm in
wearing what is becoming."
"But don't you think they look aggressive on the street? They attract
attention; and one hates to be conspicuous. I think they are only in place
at a gathering of friends of one's own social standing, where they do not
proclaim one's moneyed value."
"Perhaps," replied Mrs. Lewis, her rosy face a little rosier than before.
"I suppose you mean to say it is vulgar; well, maybe so. But I scarcely
think a little outward show of riches should make others feel they are
better because they do not care to make a display. Besides, to be less
personal, I don't think any Christian would care to put himself out to meet
a Jew of any description."
"Don't you think it would depend a great deal both on Jew and Christian? I
always have been led to believe that every broad-minded man of whatever
sect will recognize and honor the same quality in any other man. And why
should I not move on an equality with my Christian friends? We have had
the same schooling, speak the same language, read the same books, are
surrounded by the same elements of home refinement. Probably if they had
not been congenial, my father would long ago have ceased to associate with
them. I think the secret of it all is in the fact that it never occurred
to us that the most fastidious could think we were anything but the most
fastidious; and so we always met any one we desired to meet on a level
footing. I have a great many pleasant friends in the court of your
Philistines."
"Possibly. But not having been brought up by your father, I think
differently, and perhaps am different. Their ways are not my ways; and
what good can you expect from such association?"
"Why, pleasant companionship. What wouldst thou more?"
"I? Not even that. But tell me, can't you dissuade Aunt Esther from going
to-night? Tell your father, and let him judge if you had better not."
"I really think Mamma would not care to go, for she said as much to Father;
but, averse as he generally is to going out, he insists on our going
to-night, and, what is more, intends to accompany us, although Louis is
going also. But if you think Mamma is seriously run down, I shall tell him
immediately, and--"
A blithe voice at the door interrupted her, calling:
"Open the door, Ruth; my hands are full."
She rose hastily, and with a signal of silence to her loquacious cousin,
opened the door for her mother.
"Ah, Jennie, how are your, dear? But let us inspect this box which Nora
has just handed me, before we consider you;" and Mrs. Levice softly
deposited a huge box upon Ruth's lace-enveloped bed.
She was still bonneted and gloved, and with a slight flush in her clear
olive cheek she looked like anything but a subject for fears. From the
crown of her dainty bonnet to the point of her boot she was the picture of
exquisite refinement; tall, beautifully formed, carrying her head like a
queen, gowned in perfect, quiet elegance, she appeared more like Ruth's
older sister than her mother.
"Ruth's gown for this evening," she announced, deftly unfolding the
wrappings.
"Yellow!" exclaimed Mrs. Lewis, in surprise.
"Corn-color," corrected Mrs. Levice, playfully; "how do you think it will
suit my girlie?" She continued, shaking out the clinging silken crepe.
"Charmingly; but I thought Ruth objected to anything but white."
"So she does; she thinks white keeps her unnoticed among the rest. This
time, however, my will overrode hers. Eh, Daughter?"
The girl made a low courtesy.
"I am only lady-in-waiting to your Majesty, O Queen," she laughed. She had
hardly glanced at the gown, being engaged in a silent scrutiny of her
mother's face.
"And how is my prime minister this afternoon?" Mrs. Levice was drawing off
her gloves, and Ruth's look of pained discovery passed unnoticed.
"I have not been down since luncheon," she replied.
"What! Then go down at once and bring him up. I must see that he gets out
of his studiousness and is clothed in festive mind for this evening. Come
to my sitting-room, Jennie, and we can have a comfortable chat."
Left to herself, Ruth hesitated before going to her father with her
ill-boding tidings. None knew better than she of the great, silent love
that bound her parents. As a quiet, observant child, she had often
questioned wherein could be any sympathy between her father, almost old,
studious, and reserved, and her beautiful, worldly young mother. But as
she matured, she became conscious that because of this apparent disparity
it would have been still stranger had Mrs. Levice not loved him with a
feeling verging nearer humble adoration than any lower passion. It seemed
almost a mockery for her to have to tell him he had been negligent, --not
only a mockery, but a cruelty. However, it had to be done, and she was the
only one to do it. Having come to this conclusion, she ran quickly
downstairs, and softly, without knocking, opened the library door.
She entered so quietly that Mr. Levice, reading by the window, did not
glance from his book. She stood a moment regarding the small
thoughtful-faced, white-haired man.
If one were to judge but by results, Jules Levice would be accounted a
fortunate man. Nearing the allotted threescore and ten, blessed with a
loving, beloved wife and this one idolized ewe-lamb, surrounded by luxury,
in good health, honored, and honorable, --trouble and travail seemed to
have passed him by. But this scene of human happiness was the result of
intelligent and unremitting effort. A high state of earthly beatitude has
seldom been attained without great labor of mind or body by ourselves or
those akin to us. Jules Levice had been thrown on the world when a boy of
twelve. He resolved to become happy. Many of us do likewise; but we
overlook the fact that we are provided with feet, not wings, and cannot fly
to the goal. His dream of happiness was ambitious; it soared beyond
contentment. Not being a lily of the field, he knew that he must toil; any
honest work was acceptable to him. He was possessed of a fine mind; he
cultivated it. He had a keen observation; he became a student of his
fellow-men; and being strong and untiring, he became rich. This was but
the nucleus of his ambitions, and it came to him late in life, but not too
late for him to build round it his happy home, and to surround himself with
the luxuries of leisure for attaining the pinnacle of wide information that
he had always craved. His was merely the prosperity of an intellectual,
self-made man whose time for rest had come.
Ruth seated herself on a low stool that she drew up before him, and laid
her hand upon his.
"You, darling?" He spoke in a full, musical voice with a marked French
accent.
"Can you spare me a few minutes, Father?"
"I am all ears;" he shut the book, and his hand closed about hers.
"Jennie was here just now."
"And did not come in to see me?"
"She had something to tell me."
"A secret?"
"Yes; something I must repeat to you."
"Yes?"
"Father--Jennie thinks--she has reason to know that--dear, do you think
Mother is perfectly well?"
"No, my child; I know she is not."
This quiet assurance was staggering.
"And you allow her to go on in this way without calling in a physician?" A
wave of indignant color suffused her cheeks.
"Yes."
"But--but--why?" She became a little confused under his calm gaze, feeling
on the instant that she had implied an accusation unjustly.
"Because, Ruth, I have become convinced of it only within the past week.
Your mother knows it herself, and is trying to hide it from me."
"Did she admit it?"
"I have not spoken of it to her; she is very excitable, and as she wishes
to conceal it, I do not care to annoy her by telling her of my discovery."
"But isn't it wrong--unwise--to allow her to dissipate so much?"
"I have managed within the past week to keep you as quiet as possible."
"But to-night--forgive me, Father--you insist on our going to this
reception."
"Yes, my sweet confessor; but I have a good reason, --one not to be spoken
of."
"'Those who trust us educate us,'" she pleaded in wistful earnestness.
"Then your education is complete. Well, I knew your mother would resist
seeing any physician, for fear of his measures going contrary to her
desires; so I have planned for her to meet to-night a certain doctor whom I
would trust professionally with my wife's life, and on whom I can rely for
the necessary tact to hide the professional object of their meeting. What
do you think of my way, dear?"
For answer she stooped and kissed his hand.
"May I know his name?" she asked after a pause.
"His name is Kemp, --Dr. Herbert Kemp."
"Why, he lives a few blocks from here; I have seen his sign. Is he an old
physician?"
"I should judge him to be between thirty-five and forty. Not old
certainly, but one with the highest reputation for skill. Personally he is
a man of great dignity, inspiring confidence in every one."
"Where did you meet him?"
"In the hospitals," said her father quickly. "But I will introduce him to
you to-night. Don't lose your head when you talk to him."
"Why should I?"
"Because he is a magnificent fellow; and I wish my daughter to hold her own
before a man whom I admire so heartily."
"Why, this is the first time you have ever given me worldly advice," she
laughed.
"Only a friendly hint," he answered, rising and putting his book in its
place with the precision of a spinster.
Chapter II
"This is what I call a worldly paradise!" A girl with a face like dear Lady
Disdain's sank into a divan placed near the conservatory; her voice chimed
in prettily with the music of a spraying fountain and the soft strains of
remote stringed instruments.
"Is it a frivolous conceit?" she continued, laughing up to the man who
stood beside her; "or do the soft light of many candles, faint music,
radiant women, and courtly men, satisfy your predilections also that such a
place is as near heaven as this wicked world approaches?"
"You forget; paradise was occupied by but two. To my notion, nothing can
be farther removed from Elysium than a modern drawing-room full of guests."
"And leaving out the guests?"
"They say imagination can make a paradise of a desert, given the necessary
contingencies."
"A solitude of two who love? Dr. Kemp, methinks you are a romantic."
"You supplied the romance, Miss Gwynne. My knowledge is of the hard,
matter-of-fact sort."
"Such as bones, I suppose. Still you seem to be interested in the
soft-looking piece of humanity over by that cabinet."
"Yes; his expression is reminiscent of a boy's definition of a vacuum, --a
large space with nothing in it. Who is he?"
"And I thought you not unknown! He is the husband of a brilliant woman,
Mrs. Ames, who has written a novel."
"Clever?"
"Decidedly so; it stands the test of being intoxicating and leaving a bad
taste in the mouth, --like dry champagne."
"Which is not made for women."
"You mean school-girls. There she is, --that wisp of a creature listening
so eagerly to that elegant youth of the terrier breed. No wonder he
interests her; he is as full of information in piquant personal history as
a family lawyer, and his knowledge is as much public property as a social
city directory."
"You have studied him to advantage. Are you sure you have not stolen a
leaf from him?"
"Dr. Kemp!" she exclaimed in pouting reproach, "do I appear as promiscuous
as that? You may call me a 'blue book,' but spare my snobbery the
opprobrious epithet of 'directory.' There goes the fascinating young Mrs.
Shurly with Purcell Burroughs in her toils. Did you catch the fine oratory
of the glance she threw us? It said, 'Dorothy Gwynne, how dare you
appropriate Dr. Kemp for ten long minutes? Hand him over; pass him around.
I want him; you are only boring him, though you seem to be amusing
yourself."
Kemp's grave lips twitched at the corners; he was without doubt amused.
"Aren't you improvising?" he asked. A man need only offer an occasional
bumper of a remark to keep the conversation from flagging, when his
companion is a woman.
"No; you evidently do not know what a feminine sneer is in words. Ah, here
comes the Queen of Sheba." She broke off with a pleased smile as Ruth
Levice approached on the arm of her cousin, Louis Arnold.
Singly, each would have attracted attention anywhere; together they were
doubly striking-looking. Arnold, tall and slight, carrying his head high,
fair of complexion as a peachy-cheeked girl, was a peculiarly
distinguished-looking man. The delicate pince-nez he wore emphasized
slightly the elusive air of supercilious courtliness he always conveyed.
Now, as he spoke to Ruth, who, although a tall girl, was some inches
shorter than he, he maintained a strict perpendicular from the crown of his
head to his heels, only looking down with his eyes. Short women resented
this trick of his, protesting that it made them stand on tiptoe to speak to
him.
There was something almost Oriental about Ruth, with her creamy, colorless
face, like a magnolia blossom; her dusky hair was loosely rolled from her
forehead and temples; her eyes were soft and brown beneath delicately
pencilled brows, and matched the pure oval of her face. But the languorous
air of Southern skies was wholly wanting in the sweet sympathy of her
glance, and in a certain alertness about the poise of her head.
Arnold stopped perforce at Miss Gwynne's slight signal.
"Where are you hastening?" she asked as they turned to greet her. "One
would think you saw your Nemesis before you, so oblivious were you to the
beauties scattered about." She looked up pertly at Arnold, after giving
one comprehensive glance over Ruth's toilet.
"We both wished to see the orchids of which one hears," he answered, with
pronounced French accent and idiom; adding, with a slight smile, "I did not
overlook you, but you were so busily contemplating other ground that it
would have been cruelty to disturb you." He spoke the language slowly, as
a stranger upon foreign ground.
"Oh, yes; I forgot. Dr. Kemp, are you acquainted with the Queen of Sheba
and her doughty knight Louis, surnamed Arnold?" She paused a moment as the
parties acknowledged the curious introduction, and then broke in rather
breathlessly: "There, Doctor, I shall leave you with royalty; do not let
your republican ignorance forget her proper title. Mr. Arnold, Mrs.
Merrill is beckoning to us; will you come?" and with a naive, superbly
impish look at Ruth, she drew Arnold away before he could murmur an excuse.
At the impertinent words the soft, rich blood suffused Ruth's face.
"Will you sit here awhile and wait for Mr. Arnold, or shall we go and see
the orchids?" The pleasant, deep voice broke in upon her confusion and
calmed her self-consciousness. She raised her eyes to the dark, clever
face above her; it was a strong, rather than a handsome face. From the
broad sweep of the forehead above the steady scrutiny of the gray eyes, to
the grave lip and firm chin under the dark, pointed beard, strength and
gentleness spoke in every line. His personality bore the stamp of a letter
of credit.
"Thank you," said she; "I think I shall sit here. My cousin will probably
be back soon."
The doctor seated himself beside her. Miss Gwynne's appellation was not
inaptly chosen, still he would have preferred to know her more conventional
title.
"This is a peaceful little corner," he said. "Do you notice how removed it
seems from the rest of the room?"
"Yes," she answered, meeting and disconcerting his pleasantly questioning
look with one of swift resolve. "Dr. Kemp, I wish to tell you that my
father has confided to me your joint secret."
"Your father?" he looked bewildered; his knowledge of the Queen of Sheba's
progenitors was vague.
"My father, yes," she repeated, smiling at his perplexity. "Our name is
not very common; I am Jules Levice's daughter."
He was about to exclaim "NO!" The kinship seemed ridiculous in the face of
this lovely girl and the remembered picture of the little plain-faced Jew.
What he did say was, --
"Mr. Levice is an esteemed friend of mine. He is present, is he not?"
"Yes. Have you met my mother yet?"
The mother would probably unravel the mysterious origin of this beautiful
face and this strange, sweet voice, whose subdued tones held an uncommon
charm.
"No; but your father is diplomat enough to manage that before the evening
is over. So you know our little scheme. Pardon the 'shop' which I have of
a necessity brought with me this evening, but have you seen any signs of
illness in your mother?"
"No; I have been very blind and selfish," she replied, somewhat bitterly,
"for every one but me seems to have seen that something was wrong. She has
been very anxious to give me pleasure, and I fear has been burning the
candle at both ends for my light. I wish I had known--probably it lay just
within my hand to prevent this, instead of leading her on by my often
expressed delight. What I wish to ask you is that if you find anything
serious, you will tell me, and allay my father's fears as much as possible.
Please do this for me. My father is not young; and I, I think, am
trustworthy."
She had spoken rapidly, but with convincing sincerity, looking her
companion full in the face.
The doctor quietly scrutinized the earnest young face before he answered.
Then he slightly bowed in acquiescence.
"That is a pact," he said lightly; "but in all probability your father's
fears are exaggerated."
"'Where love is great, the smallest doubts are fears,'" she quoted, softly
flushing. The doctor had a singular impersonal habit of keeping his eyes
intently bent upon the person with whom he conversed, that made his
companion feel that they two were exclusively alone, --a sensation that was
slightly bewildering upon first acquaintance. By and by one understood
that it was merely his air of interest that evoked the feeling, and so
gradually got used to it as to one of his features.
"That is so," he replied cheerily; "and--I see some one is about to play.
Mrs. Merrill told me we should have some music."
"It is Louis, I think; I know his touch."
"Your cousin? He plays?"
Ruth looked at him in questioning wonder. Truth to say, the doctor could
not but betray his surprise at the idea of the cold-looking Arnold in the
light of a musician; his doubts took instant flight after the opening
chords. Rubenstein's Melody in F, played by a master-hand, is one long
sound of divine ecstasy thrilling the listener to exquisite rapture.
Played by Louis Arnold, what the composer had conceived in his soul was
magnificently interpreted. As he finished, there was not a murmur; and the
next minute he had dashed into a quaint tarantelle that instantly dispelled
the former spell of grandeur.
"An artist," said some one standing near.
"Something more," murmured Kemp, rising as he saw Ruth do so. He was about
to offer her his arm when Mrs. Merrill, a gently-faced woman, stepped up to
them, and laying her hand upon Ruth's shoulder, said rather hurriedly, --
"I am sorry to trouble you, Doctor, but Mrs. Levice--do not be alarmed,
Ruth dear--has become somewhat hysterical, and we cannot calm her; will you
come this way, please, and no one need know she is in the study."
"My family is making itself prominent to-night," said Ruth, with a little
catch in her voice, as they turned with Mrs. Merrill through the
conservatory and so across the hall.
"I shall be here, Doctor, if you wish anything," said Mrs. Merrill,
standing without as he and Ruth entered and immediately shut the door after
them.
"Stay there," he said with quiet authority to Ruth, and she stood quite
still where he left her. Mrs. Levice was seated in a large easy-chair with
her back to the door; her husband had drawn her head to his bosom. There
was no one else in the room, and for a second not a sound, till Mrs. Levice
began to sob in a frightened manner.
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