"What's the matter, Joe?" she asked, with a
tenderness the power of
which to
thrill him she knew full well.
"Oh, nothing," he said. "I was only thinking--and wishing."
"Wishing?--what?" Her voice was seduction itself, and her eyes
would have melted stronger than he, though they failed in calling
his up to them.
Then,
deliberately, his eyes lifted to hers. "I was wishing you
could see me fight just once."
She made a
gesture of
disgust, and his face fell. It came to her
sharply that the rival had
thrust between and was
bearing him away.
"I--I'd like to," she said
hastily with an effort, striving after
that
sympathy which weakens the strongest men and draws their heads
to women's breasts.
"Will you?"
Again his eyes lifted and looked into hers. He meant it--she knew
that. It seemed a
challenge to the
greatness of her love.
"It would be the proudest moment of my life," he said simply.
It may have been the apprehensiveness of love, the wish to meet his
need for her
sympathy, and the desire to see the Game face to face
for
wisdom's sake,--and it may have been the clarion call of
adventure ringing through the narrow confines of uneventful
existence; for a great
daringthrilled through her, and she said,
just as simply, "I will."
"I didn't think you would, or I wouldn't have asked," he confessed,
as they walked out to the sidewalk.
"But can't it be done?" she asked
anxiously, before her resolution
could cool.
"Oh, I can fix that; but I didn't think you would."
"I didn't think you would," he
repeated, still amazed, as he helped
her upon the electric car and felt in his pocket for the fare.
CHAPTER II
Genevieve and Joe were
working-class aristocrats. In an
environmentmade up largely of sordidness and wretchedness they had kept
themselves unsullied and
wholesome. Theirs was a self-respect, a
regard for the niceties and clean things of life, which had held
them aloof from their kind. Friends did not come to them easily;
nor had either ever possessed a really
intimate friend, a heart-
companion with whom to chum and have things in common. The social
instinct was strong in them, yet they had remained
lonely because
they could not satisfy that
instinct and at that same time satisfy
their desire for cleanness and decency.
If ever a girl of the
working class had led the sheltered life, it
was Genevieve. In the midst of roughness and
brutality, she had
shunned all that was rough and
brutal. She saw but what she chose
to see, and she chose always to see the best, avoiding coarseness
and uncouthness without effort, as a matter of
instinct. To begin
with, she had been
peculiarly unexposed. An only child, with an
invalid mother upon whom she attended, she had not joined in the
street games and frolics of the children of the neighbourhood. Her
father, a mild-tempered, narrow-chested, anaemic little clerk,
domestic because of his
inherent disability to mix with men, had
done his full share toward giving the home an
atmosphere of
sweetness and
tenderness.
An
orphan at twelve, Genevieve had gone straight from her father's
funeral to live with the Silversteins in their rooms above the candy
store; and here, sheltered by kindly aliens, she earned her keep and
clothes by
waiting on the shop. Being Gentile, she was especially
necessary to the Silversteins, who would not run the business
themselves when the day of their Sabbath came round.
And here, in the uneventful little shop, six maturing years had
slipped by. Her acquaintances were few. She had elected to have no
girl chum for the reason that no
satisfactory girl had appeared.
Nor did she choose to walk with the young fellows of the
neighbourhood, as was the custom of girls from their fifteenth year.
"That stuck-up doll-face," was the way the girls of the
neighbourhood described her; and though she earned their
enmity by
her beauty and aloofness, she none the less commanded their respect.
"Peaches and cream," she was called by the young men--though softly
and
amongst themselves, for they were afraid of arousing the ire of
the other girls, while they stood in awe of Genevieve, in a dimly
religious way, as a something
mysteriously beautiful and
unapproachable.
For she was indeed beautiful. Springing from a long line of
American
descent, she was one of those wonderful
working-class
blooms which
occasionally appear, defying all
precedent of forebears
and
environment,
apparently without cause or
explanation. She was a
beauty in color, the blood spraying her white skin so deliciously as
to earn for her the apt
description, "peaches and cream." She was a
beauty in the regularity of her features; and, if for no other
reason, she was a beauty in the mere
delicacy of the lines on which
she was moulded. Quiet, low-voiced,
stately, and
dignified, she
somehow had the knack of dress, and but befitted her beauty and
dignity with anything she put on. Withal, she was sheerly feminine,
tender and soft and clinging, with the smouldering
passion of the
mate and the motherliness of the woman. But this side of her nature
had lain dormant through the years,
waiting for the mate to appear.
Then Joe came into Silverstein's shop one hot Saturday afternoon to
cool himself with ice-cream soda. She had not noticed his en
trance,
being busy with one other
customer, an
urchin of six or seven who
gravely analyzed his desires before the show-case
wherein truly
generous and marvellous candy creations
reposed under a cardboard
announcement, "Five for Five Cents."
She had heard, "Ice-cream soda, please," and had herself asked,
"What flavor?" without
seeing his face. For that matter, it was not
a custom of hers to notice young men. There was something about
them she did not understand. The way they looked at her made her
uncomfortable, she knew not why; while there was an uncouthness and
roughness about them that did not please her. As yet, her
imagination had been
untouched by man. The young fellows she had
seen had held no lure for her, had been without meaning to her. In
short, had she been asked to give one reason for the
existence of
men on the earth, she would have been nonplussed for a reply.
As she emptied the
measure of ice-cream into the glass, her casual
glance rested on Joe's face, and she
experienced on the
instant a
pleasant feeling of
satisfaction. The next
instant his eyes were
upon her face, her eyes had dropped, and she was turning away toward
the soda
fountain. But at the
fountain, filling the glass, she was
impelled to look at him again--but for no more than an
instant, for
this time she found his eyes already upon her,
waiting to meet hers,
while on his face was a
frankness of interest that caused her
quickly to look away.
That such pleasingness would
reside for her in any man astonished
her. "What a pretty boy," she thought to herself,
innocently and
instinctively
trying to ward off the power to hold and draw her that
lay behind the mere prettiness. "Besides, he isn't pretty," she
thought, as she placed the glass before him, received the silver
dime in
payment, and for the third time looked into his eyes. Her
vocabulary was
limited, and she knew little of the worth of words;
but the strong masculinity of his boy's face told her that the term
was inappropriate.
"He must be handsome, then," was her next thought, as she again
dropped her eyes before his. But all
good-looking men were called
handsome, and that term, too, displeased her. But
whatever it was,
he was good to see, and she was irritably aware of a desire to look
at him again and again.
As for Joe, he had never seen anything like this girl across the
counter. While he was wiser in natural
philosophy than she, and
could have given immediately the reason for woman's
existence on the
earth,
nevertheless woman had no part in his cosmos. His
imagination was as
untouched by woman as the girl's was by man. But
his
imagination was touched now, and the woman was Genevieve. He
had never dreamed a girl could be so beautiful, and he could not
keep his eyes from her face. Yet every time he looked at her, and
her eyes met his, he felt
painfulembarrassment, and would have
looked away had not her eyes dropped so quickly.