Getting into the hack and settling into
the sole remaining vacant space Mesrour
had left in loading the vehicle
with the emir’s gifts, Mr. Middleton
was so preoccupied by a gloomy dejection as
he reflected that a most agreeable, not to say
inspiring and educating, intimacy was at last
ended, that he reached his lodgings and had
begun to unload his new possessions, before he
thought of the odalisque. There lay the coffee
sack lengthwise on the front seat and partially
reclining against the side of the carriage. He
was greatly surprised at the size of the unknown
creature and began to surmise that it
was an anthropoid ape, though before his speculations
had ranged from parrots through dogs
to domesticated leopards. Leaving the coffee
sack until the last, he gingerly seized the slack
of the top of the bag and proceeded to pull it
upon his shoulders, taking care to avoid holding
the creature where it could kick or struggle
effectually, for despite all the emir had told
him of the gentleness of the odalisque, he was
resolved to take no chances. Whatever the
creature was, she had slid down, forming a
limp lump at the end of the bag, when he
charily deposited it on the floor and turned to
consult his dictionary before untying it. He
was going to know what the creature was
before he dealt with her further, a creature so
large as that.
Odalisque. A slave or concubine in a Mohammedan
harem!!
A woman!!!
Mr. Middleton tore at the string by which
the bag was tied, full of the keenest self-reproach.
The uncomfortable position during
the long ride, the worse position in which she
now lay. The knots refused to budge and
snatching a knife, with a mighty slashing, he
ripped the bag all away and disclosed the
slender form of a woman crouched, huddled,
collapsed, face downward, head upon her
knees. Turning her over and supporting her
against his breast in a sitting posture, Mr.
Middleton looked upon the most loveliness,
unhappiness, and helplessness he had ever
beheld.
For a moment his heart almost stopped as he
looked into the still face, but he saw the bosom
faintly flutter, slow tears oozed out from under
the long lashes of the closed lids, and the
cupid’s bow mouth gave little twitches of misery
and hopelessness. With what exquisite
emotions was he filled as he looked down upon
the head pillowed upon his breast, with what
sentiments of anger, with what noble chivalry!
A Moslem woman. A Moslem woman, who
even in the best estate of her sex as free and a
wife, goes to her grave like a dog, with no
hope of a life beyond, unless her husband amid
the joys of Paradise should turn his thoughts
back to earth and wish for her there among his
houris. But this poor sweet flower had not
even this faint expectation, for she was no wife
nor could be, slave of a Mohammedan harem.
No rights in this world nor the next. Not even
the attenuated rights which law and custom
gave the free woman. No sustaining dream of
a divine recompense for the unmerited unhappiness
of this existence. A slave, a harem
slave, wanted only when she smiled, was gay,
and beautiful; who must weep alone and in
silence, in silence, with never a sympathetic
shoulder to weep upon after they sold her from
her mother’s side. Tied in a bag, going she
knew not whither, thrown in a carriage like so
much carrion, in these indignities she only
wept in silence, for her lord, the man, must not
be discomposed. Like the timorous, helpless
wild things of the woods whose joys and sorrows
must ever be voiceless lest the bloody
tyrants of their domain come, who even in the
crunch of death hold silence in their weak
struggles, this poor young thing bore her sufferings
mutely, for her lord, the man, must not be
discomposed, choking her very breath lest a
sob escape. Mr. Middleton, in a certain illuminating
instinct which belongs to women but
only occasionally comes to some men, saw all
this in a flash without any pondering and turning
over and reflecting and comparing, and he
said to himself under his breath, not eloquently,
but well, as there came home to him
the heinousness of that abhorrant social system
dependent upon the religious system of the
Prophet of Mecca, “Damn the emir and Mohammed
and the whole damned Mohammedan
business, kit and boodle!”
In this imprecation there was a piece of
grave injustice which Mr. Middleton would not
have allowed himself in calmer mood, for the
emir was about to become a member of one of
the largest and most fashionable Presbyterian
congregations in the city and ought not to have
been included in an anathema of Moslemry and
condemned for anything he upheld while in the
benighted condition of Mohammedanism.
Mr. Middleton continuing to gaze, as who
could not, upon that beautiful unhappy face,
suddenly he imprinted upon the quivering lips
a kiss in which was the tender sympathy of a
mother, the heartening encouragement of a
friend, and the ardent passion of a lover. The
odalisque opened her lovely hazel eyes and
seeing corroboration of all the touch of the
kiss had told her, as she looked into eyes
that brimmed with tears like hers, upon lips
that quivered like hers, she let loose the flood
gates of her woes in a torrent of sobs and tears,
and throwing herself upon his shoulders, poured
out her long pent sorrows in a good cry.
It was only a summer shower and the sun
soon shone. She did not weep long. Too
filled with wonder and surpassing delight was
this daughter of the Orient in her first experience
with the chivalry of the Occident. She
must needs look again at this man whose eyes
had welled full in compassion for her. She
would court again his light and soothing
caresses, his gentle ministrations, so different
from the brutal pawing of the male animals of
her own race, the moiety with souls. Ah, how
poignantly sweet, how amazing, that which to
her American sisters was the usual, the commonplace,
the everyday!
She raised her head. Her tears no longer
flowed, but her lips still quivered, in a pleading
little smile; and her bosom still fluttered, in a
shy and doubting joy, and in her mind floated
a half-formed prayer that the genii whose craft
had woven this rapturous dream, would not too
soon dispel it.
Mr. Middleton gazed at her. He had never
seen a face like that, so perfectly oval; never
such vermillion as showed under the dusk of
her cheeks and stained the lips, narrow, but
full. What wondrous eyes were those, so
large and lustrous, illumining features whose
basal lines of classic regularity were softly
tempered into a fluent contour. A circlet of
gold coins bound her brow, shining in bright
relief against the luxuriant masses of chestnut
hair. A delicate and slender figure had she,
yet well cushioned with flesh and no bones
stood out in her bare neck.
Moved not by his own discomfort on the
hard floor, but by the possible discomfort of
the odalisque, Mr. Middleton at length raised
her and conducted her to a red plush sofa
obtained by the landlady for soap wrappers and
a sum of money, which having turned green in
places and therefore become no longer suitable
for a station in the parlor, had been placed in
this room a few days before. Upon this imposing
article of furniture the two sat down, and
though at first Mr. Middleton did no more than
place his arm gently and reassuringly about the
girl’s waist and hold her hand lightly, in the
natural evolution, progression, and sequence
of events, following the rules of contiguity and
approach—rhetorical rules, but not so here—before
long the cheek of the fair Arab lay
against that of the son of Wisconsin and her
arm was about his neck and every little while
she uttered a little sigh of complete, of unalloyed
content. What had been yesterday,
what might be to-morrow, she was now happy.
As for Mr. Middleton, what a stream of delicious
thoughts, delicious for the most part
because of their unselfishness and warm generosity,
flowed through his head. What a joy it
would be to make happy the path of this girl
who had been so unhappy, to lay devotion at
the feet of her who had never dreamed there
was such a thing in the world, to bind himself
the slave of her who had been a slave.
Then, too, he luxuriated in the simple, elementary
joy of possession and the less elementary
joy of possession of new things, whether
new hats, new clothes, new books, new horses,
new houses, or new girls, and which is the
cause why so many of us have new girls and
new beaux. And when he looked ahead and
saw only one logical termination of the episode,
he swelled with a pride that was honest
and unselfish, as he thought how all would look
and admire as he passed with this lovely
woman, his wife.
He could have sat thus the whole night
through, but the girl must be tired, worn by
the sufferings of this day and many before.
He motioned toward the bed and indicated by
pantomime that she should go to it. She
would have descended to her knees and with
her damask lips brushed the dust from his
shoes, if she had thought he wished it, but she
knew not what he meant by his gesturing and
sat bewildered in eager and anxious willingness.
So arranging the bed for her occupancy,
he took her in his arms and bore her to it and
dropped her in. The riotous blushes chased
each other across her cheeks as she lay there
with eyes closed, so sweet, so helpless, so
alone.
For a little season he stood there gazing,
gloating, enravished, like to hug himself in the
keen titillation of his ecstasy and this was not
all because this lovely being was his, but
because he was hers.
Glancing about the room preliminarily to
leaving, and wondering what further was to be
done for the girl’s comfort and peace of mind,
he bethought him of an ancient tale he had
once read. In this narration, fate having
made it unavoidable that a noble lord should
pass the night in a castle tower with a fair
dame of high degree and there being but one
bed in the apartment, he had placed a naked
sword in the middle of the bed between them
and so they passed the night, guarded and
menaced by the falchion, for the nonce become
the symbol of bright honor and cold virtue.
Mr. Middleton had often wondered why the
knight did not sleep on the floor, or outside
the door, as he himself now intended doing.
But it occurred to him that some such symbol
might reassure the Arab damosel and having
no sword, he drew one of the large pistols the
emir had given him and approached the bed
to lay it there.
The girl’s eyes had now opened and Mr.
Middleton started as he beheld her face. Once
more the hunted, helpless look it had worn
when first he had looked on it. But more.
Such an utter fear and sickening unto death.
But not fear, terror for herself. Fear for the
death of an ideal, a fear caused by her misinterpretation
of his intent with the pistol. It
had not been real, it had not been real. He
was as other men, the men of her world and all
the world was alike and life not worth living.
With a finesse he had not suspected he possessed,
he laid the pistol on a pile of legal
papers on a table at the bed’s head, a pile
whose sheets a suddenly entering breeze was
whirling about the room. How obvious it was
he had brought the pistol for a paper weight.
Once more the girl was smiling as he drew the
clothes over her, all dressed as she was, and
kissing shut her drowsy eyes, he left her in her
virginal couch.
On the mat before the door in the hallway
without, he disposed himself as comfortably as
he could. With due regard for the romantic
proprieties, he tried to keep within the bounds
of the mat. But it was too short, his curled
up position too uncomfortable, and so he overflowed
it and could scarcely be said to be sleeping
on the mat. It was too late to arouse the
landlady and although he was there by choice,
it could not have been otherwise.
After snatches of broken sleep, after dreams
waking and dreams sleeping, which were all
alike and of one thing and indistinguishable,
he was at length fully awake at a little before
six and aware of an odor of tobacco smoke.
Applying his nose to the crack of the door, he
finally became convinced that it came from his
room. Wondering what it could possibly
mean, and accordingly opening the door, opening
it so slowly and gradually that the odalisque
could have ample time to seek the cover
of the bed clothes, he stepped in.
There sat the odalisque on the edge of the
bed, fully dressed, puffing away at his big
meerschaum, blowing clouds that filled the
room. On the table lay an empty cigarette
box that had been full the night before. This
had not belonged to Mr. Middleton, who was
not a cigarette smoker and despised the practice,
but had been forgotten by Chauncy
Stackelberg on a recent visit. The fingers of
her right hand were stained yellow, not by the
cigarettes of that one box, but the unnumbered
cigarettes of years. Mr. Middleton had not
noticed these fingers the night before, but had
been absorbed by her face, and this as beautiful,
as piquant, as bewitching as before, looked
up at him, the lips puckered, waiting, longing.
He stood there, stock-still, stern, troubled,
dismayed.
She moved over, where she sat on the edge
of the bed, with mute invitation, and Mr. Middleton
continuing to stand and stare, she moved
again and yet again, until she was against the
headboard. And still he did not sit beside
her, thinking all the time of the young lady of
Englewood whose pure Puritan lips never had
been and never could be defiled by cigarettes
and tobacco. The young lady of Englewood,
the young lady of Englewood, what a jewel of
women was she and what a fool he had been
and how unkind and inconsiderate! Recalled
by a little snuffle from the odalisque, he saw
the puckered lips were relaxing sorrowfully
and fearing the girl would cry, he hastily sat
down beside her and put his right arm about
her. But he did not take the shapely hand
that now laid down the meerschaum, and
though her head fell on his shoulder and her
breath came and went with his, he did not kiss
her, for that breath was laden with tobacco.
Nor did his fingers stray through those masses
of silken hair, for he was sure they were full of
the fumes of tobacco. There with his arm
about the soft, uncorsetted form of that
glorious beauty, her own white forearm smooth
and cool about his neck, he was thinking of the
young lady of Englewood.
Poor odalisque! Why cannot he speak to
you and tell you? You would wash away those
yellow stains with your own blood, if you
thought he wished it. Forego tobacco? Why,
you would cease to inhale the breath of life
itself, for his sake.
Out of the grave came all the dead Puritan
ancestors of Mr. Middleton, a long procession
back to Massachusetts Bay. The elders of
Salem who had ordained that a man should not
smoke within five miles of a house, the lawgivers
who had prescribed the small number,
brief length, and sad color of ribbons a woman
might wear and who forbade a man to kiss his
wife on Sunday, all these righteous and uncomfortable
folk stirred in Mr. Middleton’s
blood and obsessed him.
Fatima, Nouronhor, or whatever your name
might be, my fair Moslem, why did fate throw
you in with a Puritan? Yet I wot that had it
been one from a strain of later importation
from Europe, you had not been so safe there
last night. The Puritans may be disagreeable,
but they are safe, safe.
Part of this Mr. Middleton was saying over
and over to himself—the latter part. The
Puritans are safe. The young lady of Englewood
was safe. She was good, she was beautiful,
too, in her calm, sweet, Puritan way. He
must see her at once, he would go—— A sigh,
not altogether of content, absolute and complete,
recalled to him the woman pressed
against his side. She must be taken care of,
disposed of. Asylum? No. Factory? No,
no. Theater, museum? No, no, no. He
would find some man to marry her. There
must be someone, lots of men, in fact, who
would marry a girl so lovely, who needn’t find
out she smoked until after marriage, or who
would not care anyway. All this might take
time. He would be as expeditious as possible,
however. He called Mrs. Leschinger,
the landlady, and entrusting the girl to her
care, departed to visit a matrimonial agency he
knew of.
He looked over the list of eligibles. He
read their misspelled, crabbedly written letters.
There was not one in the lot to whom a man
of conscience could entrust the Moslem flower,
even if she did smoke.
“There is apparently not one man of education
or refinement in the whole lot,” exclaimed
Mr. Middleton.
“That’s about right,” said the president of
the agency. “Between you and I, there ain’t
many people of refinement who would go at
marrying in that way. You don’t know what
a lot of jays and rubes I have to deal with.
Often I threaten to retire. But occasionally a
real gentleman or lady does register in our
agency. Object, fun or matrimony. Now I
have one client that is all right, all right except
in one particular. He is a man of thirty-five
or six, fine looking, has a nice house and five
thousand dollars a year clear and sure. But
he’s stone deaf. He wants a young and handsome
girl. Now I could get him fifty dozen
homely young women, or pretty ones that
weren’t chickens any longer, real pretty and
refined, but you see a real handsome young
girl sort of figures her chances of marrying are
good, that she may catch a man who can hear
worth as much as this Crayburn, which ain’t a
whole lot, or that if she does marry a poor
young chap, he’ll have as much as Crayburn
does when he is as old as Crayburn. Now I’m
so sure you’ll only have your trouble for your
pains, that I won’t charge you anything for his
address and a letter of introduction. I don’t
believe you have got a girl who will suit, for if
you have, she won’t take Crayburn. Here’s
his picture.”
Mr. Middleton looked upon the photograph
of a man who seemed to be possessed of some
of the best qualities of manhood. It was true
that there was a slight suspicion of weakness in
the face, but above all it was kindly and sympathetic.
“A good looking man,” said Mr. Middleton.
“Smart man, too,” said the matrimonial
agent. “He graduated from the university in
Evanston and was a lawyer and a good one,
until a friend fired off one of those big duck
guns in his ear for a joke.”
Taking the odalisque with him in a cab, Mr.
Middleton was off for the residence of Mr.
Crayburn.
“Will she have me?” asked Mr. Crayburn,
when he had read Mr. Middleton’s hastily
penciled account of the main facts of his connection
with the fair Moslem, wherein for
brevity’s sake he had omitted any mention of
the fifteen hundred dollars the emir had given
him for assuming charge of her.
“Of course,” wrote Mr. Middleton.
“I never saw a more beautiful woman,” exclaimed
Mr. Crayburn. “By the way, have
you noticed any predilections, habits, wants,
it would be well for me to know about?”
“She smokes,” wrote Mr. Middleton, not
knowing why he wrote it, and wishing like the
devil that he hadn’t the moment he had.
“All Oriental women smoke. I will ask her
not to as soon as she learns English.”
Mr. Middleton was amazed to think that
such a simple solution had not occurred to
him. But he was glad it was so, for he had
not been unscathed by Cupid’s darts there last
night and he might not now be about to visit
the young lady of Englewood.
“Your fee,” said Mr. Crayburn.
Mr. Middleton had not thought of this. He
looked about at the handsomely furnished
room. He thought of the five thousand dollars
a year and the very much smaller income
he could offer the young lady of Englewood.
He thought of these things and other things.
He thought of the young lady of Englewood;
of the odalisque, toward whom he occupied
the position of what is known in law as next
friend. She sat behind him, out of his sight, but
he saw her, saw her as he saw her for the first
time, when, ripping the bag away, she lay there
in her piteous, appealing helplessness.
“There is no fee. The maiden even has a
dowry of fifteen hundred dollars. Please
invest it in her name. Oh, sir, treat her
kindly.”
“Treat her kindly!” exclaimed the deaf man
with emotion. “He would be a hound who
could ill treat one so helpless and friendless, a
stranger in a strange land, whose very beauty
would be her undoing, were she without a protector.”
Much relieved, Mr. Middleton prepared to
depart and the odalisque saw she was not to be
included in his departure. She noted the
luxurious appointments of the house, so different
from the threadbare and seedy furnishings
of Mr. Middleton’s one lone room, but rather
a thousand times would she have been there.
A tumult of yearning and love filled her heart,
but beyond the slow tears in her eyes and the
trembling lips, no one could have guessed it.
Once more she was a Moslem slave, sold by
the man whom last night she had thought——She
bowed to kismet and strangled her feelings
as she had so many times before. And
so after a shake of the hand, Mr. Middleton
left her, left her to learn as the idol of Mr.
Crayburn’s life, with every whim gratified, that
the first American she had known was but one
of millions.
Away toward Englewood hastened Mr. Middleton,
reasoning with himself in a somewhat
casuistical manner. His conscience smote him
as he thought of the previous night. But
what else could anybody have done? Deprived
of the power of communicating by the means
of words, he had by caresses assuaged her
grief and stilled her fears and now it was too
plain he had made her love him and he had
left her in desolation. But heigho! what was
the use of repining over spilled milk and nicotined
fingers that another man and good would
care for, and he himself had not been unscathed
by Cupid’s darts there the night
before.
The young lady of Englewood was just putting
on her hat to go out and was standing
before the mirror in the hallway. Mr. Middleton
had never called at that hour of the
day. For months he had not called at all and
she never expected that he would again. So
without any apprehension at all, she was wearing
one of the green silk shirt waists she had
made from the Turkish trousers he had given
her, and had just got her hat placed to suit
her, when there he was!
She turned, blushing furiously. Whether it
was the confusion caused her by being discovered
in this shirt waist, or the joy of seeing
him again and the complete surrender, she
made in this joy, so delectable and unexpected
and which was not unmixed with a little fear
that if he went away this time, he would never
come back again, never! whether it was these
things or what not, she made no struggle at all
as Mr. Middleton threw his arms about her,
threw them about her as if she were to rescue
him from some fate, and though he said nothing
intelligible for some time, but kissed her
lips, cheeks, and nose, which latter she had
been at pains to powder against the hot sun
then prevailing, she made no resistance at all
and breathed an audible “yes,” when he
uttered a few incoherent remarks which might
be interpreted as a proposal of marriage.
Here let us leave him, for all else would be
anti-climax to this supreme moment of his
life. Here let us leave him where I wish every
deserving bachelor may some day be: in the
arms of an honest and loving woman who is
his affianced wife.
