2015년 5월 18일 월요일

The Heart Line 20

The Heart Line 20



"But without trumps." Clytie stifled a yawn.
 
"Meaning, I suppose, that I have no heart? Clubs may do. I rely upon
your atavism."
 
"I suppose you have as much heart as can be made out of brain."
 
"What if I say that I’m jealous? Will that prove that I have a heart?"
 
"Oh, you’re too conceited ever to be jealous."
 
"But I am! I’ll prove it. I happen to know that that palmist person,
Granthope, was here this afternoon and you spent half an hour with him.
How’s that?"
 
"How do you know?" She awoke to a greater interest.
 
"You don’t seem to realize that I make it my business to know all about
you. This came by accident, though. I was on the Hyde Street car and I
saw him get off and come in here. I waited at the end of the road till
he went back. Now, what if I should tell your father that you have been
entertaining a faking palmist here, on the sly?" He leaned back and
folded his hands.
 
Clytie rose swiftly and walked to the door without a look at him.
 
"Father," she called, "Mr. Cayley has something to say to you."
 
"Never mind," Cayley protested. "That was merely an experiment."
 
Mr. Payson, in overcoat and silk hat, thrust a mildly expectant head in
the room.
 
"It was only about the trade dollar business," said Cayley. "I’ll tell
you some other time."
 
Mr. Payson withdrew, scenting no mischief, and Clytie sat down without a
word.
 
"Thought you’d call my bluff, did you?" said Cayley, unruffled. "I like
spirit!"
 
"If you don’t look out you’ll succeed in boring me." Clytie’s manner
had shown an amused scorn rather than resentment. She was evidently not
afraid of him.
 
"You’re fighting too hard to be bored," he remarked coolly. He added,
"Then you are interested in him, are you?"
 
"I am." Clytie looked him frankly in the face.
 
"Why?" he asked.
 
"I’ve heard a lot about him and he appeals to my imagination. I
scarcely think I need to apologize for it. Have you any objection to my
knowing him?"
 
"I’d rather you wouldn’t get mixed up with him; since he’s been taken up
the women are simply crazy about him, as they always are about any
charlatan. They’re all running after him and calling on him and ringing
him up at all hours. Why, Cly, they actually lie in wait for him at his
place; trying to get a chance to talk to him alone. I don’t exactly see
you in that class, that’s all. You can scarcely blame me."
 
"Oh, I haven’t rung him up yet," said Clytie, "but there’s no knowing
what I may do, of course, with all my unexploded brain-cells."
 
"How did he happen to come here, then?"
 
"He came to see me, I suppose."
 
Cayley accepted the rebuff gracefully. "Well, in another month, when
some one else comes along, people will drop him with a thud. He’s a
nine days’ wonder now, but he’s too spectacular to last. This is a
great old town! We need another new fakir now that the old gentleman in
the Miller house has stopped his Occult Brotherhood in the drawing-room
and his antique furniture repository in the cellar. I haven’t heard of
anything so picturesque since that Orpheum chap caught the turnips on a
fork in his teeth, that were tossed from the roof of the Palace Hotel.
I suppose I’ll have a good scandal about Granthope, pretty soon, to add
to my collection."
 
Clytie accepted the diversion, evidently only too glad to change the
subject. "What collection?" she asked.
 
"My San Francisco Improbabilities. I’ve got a note-book full of
themthings no sane Easterner would believe possible, and no novelist
dare to use in fiction."
 
"Oh, yes, I remember your telling me. What are they? One was that
house made entirely of doors, wasn’t it?"
 
"Yes, the ’house of one hundred and eighty doors’ at the foot of Ninth
Street. Then, there is the hulk of the _Orizaba_ over by the Union Iron
Works, where ’Frank the Frenchman’ lives like a hermit, eats swill and
bathes in the sewage of the harbor. Then there’s ’Munson’s Mystery’ on
the North beachnobody has ever found out who Munson is. And Dailey,
the star eater of the Palace Hotelhe used to have four canvas-back
ducks cooked, selected one and used only the juice from the others; he
ordered soup at a dollar a plate; and he had a happy way of buying a
case of champagne with each meal, drinking only the top glass from each
bottle."
 
Clytie laughed now, for Cayley was in one of his most amusing and
enthusiastic moods. "Do you remember that tramp who lived all summer in
the Hensler vault in Calvary Cemetery?"
 
"Yes, but that isn’t so impossible as Kruger’s castle out in the
sand-hills by Tenth Avenue. It’s a perfect jumble of job-lot buildings
from the Mid-winter Fair, like a nightmare palace. I went out there
once and saw old Mother Kruger, so tortured with rheumatism that she had
to crawl round on her hands and knees. She had only one tooth left. The
old man is one of the last of the wood-engravers and calls himself the
Emperor of the Nations. He has resurrected Hannibal and an army of two
hundred thousand men; also he revived Pompeii for three days. He wanted
to bring Mayor Sutro back to life for me, but I wouldn’t stand for it."
 
Cayley swept on with his anecdotes. "Who would believe the story of
’Big Bertha,’ who buncoed all the swellest Hebrews in town, and ended by
playing Mazeppa in tights at the Bella Union Theater? Who has written
the true story of Dennis Kearney, the hack-driver, who had his speeches
written for him by reporters, and went East with a big head,
unconsciously to plagiarize Wendell Phillips in Fanueil Hall? Or of
’Mammy’ Pleasant, the old negress who had such mysterious influence over
so many millionaireswho couldn’t be bribedwho died at last, with all
her secrets untold? There’s Romance in purple letters!
 
"What do you think of a first folio Shakespeare, the rent-roll of
Stratford parish, and a collection of Incunabula worth thirty thousand
dollars, kept in the deserted library on Montgomery Street in a case, by
Jove, without a lock! What’s the matter with Little Pete, the Chinaman,
jobbing all the race-tracks in California? Who’d believe that there are
streets here, within a mile of Lotta’s fountain, so steep that they
pasture cows on the grass?"
 
"Then there’s Emperor Norton, and the Vigilance Committee, and all the
secrets of the Chinatown slave trade," Clytie contributed, with aroused
interest.
 
"Oh, I’m not speaking of that sort of thing. That’s been done, and the
East and England think that Romance departed from here with the
red-shirted miner. Everybody knows about the Bret Harte type of
adventure. It’s the things that are going on now or have happened
within a few yearslike finding that Chinese woman’s skeleton upside
down, built into the wall of the house on the corner of Powell and
Sutter; like Bill Dockery, the food inspector, who terrorized the San
Bruno road, like a new Claude Duval, holding up the milkmen with a
revolver and a lactometer, and went here, there and everywhere, into
restaurants and hotels all over the peninsula, dumping watered milk into
the streets till San Francisco ran white with it."
 
"Then there’s Carminetti’s," Clytie recalled, now. "That’s modern
enough, and typical of San Francisco, isn’t it? I mean not so much
what’s done there, as the way they do it. I’ve always wanted to go down
there some Saturday night and see just what it’s like."
 
"I wouldn’t want you to be seen there, Cly, it wouldn’t do." Cayley
shook his head decidedly.
 
"Why wouldn’t it do?"
 
"It’s a little too lively a crowd. You’d be disgusted, if they happened
to hit things up a bit, as they often do."
 
"I don’t see why I shouldn’t be privileged to see what is going on.
It’s a part of my education, isn’t it? It’s all innocent enough, from
what you say; it’s at worst nothing but vulgar. I think I am proof
against that."
 
"People would get an altogether wrong opinion of you. They’d think you
were fast."
 
"I fast?" Clytie smiled. "I think I can risk that. I shouldn’t probably
want to go more than once, it’s true. You don’t know me, that’s all.
You don’t believe that I can go from one world of convention to another
and accept the new rules of life when it’s necessary. It’s just for
that reason that I _do_ wish to goas, when I went to London, I wanted
to see if I could accept all their slow, poky methods of business and
transportation and everything and find out the reason of it all for
myself, before I thought of criticizing it. I want to understand
Carminetti’s, if I can, and if you won’t take me, I’ll find some one who
will."
 
"Granthope, perhaps?" Cayley suggested with irony.
 
"I have no doubt he’d understand my motives better than you do!"
 
"Well, it might be an interesting experiment. Miss Payson at
Carminetti’sthere’s a San Francisco contrast for you!"
 
"You may add it to your list of Improbabilities. Study me, if you like,
and put me in your list. You may find that I have a surprise or two
left for you." She smiled to herself and threw back her head proudly.
 
"You do tempt me to try it," he said, coolly watching her. "You’d look
as inconsistent there as those old French family portraits in that
saloon out on the BeachLords of Les Baux, they were, I believe, administrators of the high justice, the middle and the low!

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