Nothing on Earth & Nothing in Heaven

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Nothing on Earth & Nothing in Heaven Page 18

by Susan Fanetti


  How had Lady Martha Collington filled out her census form? How had she described Mrs. Sylvia Everham? Nora could guess.

  Her aunt wasn’t a rebel at all. Or an ally, really. Not for the suffragettes, and not for her.

  TWELVE

  After five years, San Francisco had substantially risen from the ashes of the 1906 quake and again bustled like the big city it was. The rubble was gone, new buildings were up, commerce buzzed. In fact, more than simply recovering from the cataclysm, the city had leapt forward. Cable cars were being replaced by streetcars. Motorcars and trucks outnumbered carriages. Tourists and visitors ignorant of the recent history might not even realize that most of the city had been erased on that April day in 1906.

  But its residents, the people who’d lived through the horror and the long, dark aftermath, they could see the quake everywhere they looked: Streets that bent differently than they had before. Important buildings replaced. Empty spaces where people had lived and worked. A sheen of bright newness in every direction.

  The grandiose palaces that had stood on Nob Hill and loomed over the city, built by the “Big Four” industrialists—Leland Stanford, Mark Hopkins, Charles Crocker, and Collis P. Huntington—had all been swiped from their perch in the great shake. The earth had no more esteem for them than for the lowliest tenement dweller, and had devoured it all just the same.

  The Big Four wasn’t the Big Five because Henry Frazier ran his empire with a different attitude. From the time of William’s grandfather, the family’s business principles had been for fair wages and strong representation for their workers, thus the family’s net worth had not been quite as high as the ‘robber barons’ perched on their thrones above the city, and the Fraziers were thought of, on Nob Hill, like an inconvenient relation. The redheaded bastard of the wealthy class.

  Raised in the Frazier family ethos, and in the cradle of their substantial wealth, William had always marveled at the idea that all they had—the mansion in Presidio Heights, the ranch in Marin, the ease and comfort within all those walls, not to mention the thriving business itself—might be seen by anyone as not enough.

  When he was a boy, his father had taken him for walks through the city, and he’d always stopped and pointed his walking stick at the fairy-tale opulence of Mark Hopkins’ enormous Nob Hill house. Look there, he’d said, and remember. The only thing that thrives in a house like that is isolation. The men who live on that hill don’t remember what it’s like down here on the ground. They’ve forgotten how they gained all they have, and who helped them climb. They go whole days, and weeks, without seeing their families. They forget everything but their own ambition. The need to have more is their only companion, their only comfort, their only purpose. They no longer chase progress, only profit. We have all we could ever want and more. We didn’t achieve it on our own. So why take more when we stand on the shoulders of other men who’ve worked hard for us?

  When Nob Hill had been erased, it had been difficult not to think of it as a cosmic rebuke to the greed that had built those ridiculous wedding cake houses.

  The Frazier house, in hardly humble Presidio Heights, had been badly damaged in the quake, too, but it hadn’t been destroyed. They’d spent two years living entirely on the ranch while the building had been repaired, refitted, and restored. Christopher Tate had done his convalescing on the ranch, and he and William had become great friends there.

  That friendship was over now, of course. Five months had passed since William had taken a stateroom on the Mauritania and sailed away from England and from Nora. He’d had no word from any Tate, but he hadn’t expected one. Beyond the quick note he’d scrawled to Nora and shoved under her door while Chris’s back had been turned, he hadn’t attempted to correspond, either.

  He had no idea if she’d found his note, and he had no idea whether it would be better if she hadn’t or if she had. Would her hurt be less if she could think him a rake and turn her feelings against him? Or would knowing his love for her was sincere give her comfort? From the moment he’d pushed the paper under her door, he’d had doubts about the act.

  He regretted nearly everything about that time in Dover. If only he’d been stronger and left her room when he should have. If only he hadn’t gone to her room at all. If only he hadn’t lingered so long while he was there. There were so many other possible alternate outcomes to that night, any one of which might have kept him in England, his friendship with Chris and his suit of Nora both intact.

  But she’d been so determined, and so demanding. So very beautiful and arousing, full of fire and fury.

  And now he was here, alone, and she was there, possibly married already, or about to be.

  “Here you are, glowering at my roses again.”

  William turned and smiled at the woman he loved more than anyone in the world, save one. “Hello, Mom.”

  She turned up her cheek, and he kissed it. “You’re thinking about her again, aren’t you? You always come out and stare daggers at my roses when you want to feel melancholy about your young lady. I’m worried you’ll make them wilt.”

  “Actually, I was looking up at Nob Hill, thinking about the Hopkins mansion.”

  “Ugh. One of the only good things to come out of that terrible day was the end of that monstrosity. Honestly. Why not simply hang a sign, one of the flashing ones they have at the waterfront, that says ‘I WIN!’”

  William laughed and swept his arm around his mother’s slim waist. Tall but fine-boned, her hair yet the rich auburn of her youth, and her hazel eyes sparkling, Angelica Linville Frazier was still, in her mid-fifties, considered one of the great beauties of San Francisco society. Her politics weren’t popular among the movers and shakers, but the whole family was on the wrong side of that equation. They had enough wealth and power to overcome those social disadvantages—and thus, to exploit them. People seemed to roll all their complaints about the family into a sigh of ‘those damned Fraziers’ and accept the inconvenient relatives at the table, because Scot-Western was important in business, and because Mrs. Henry Frazier was beautiful and witty and an excellent adornment to any social function.

  “Could you not simply go back to England and face down her family? Make the grand gesture? Chris is a good man, and a good friend to you. Enough time has passed that he can’t still be so angry.”

  His mother knew the whole story; racked with howling guilt and disappointment, William had told her almost as soon as he’d stepped off the train. His feelings hadn’t abated much, so he had no reason to believe Chris’s had. “I beat a man into the hospital, Mom. I don’t know what the statute of limitations is on that in England, but until it lapses, if I go back for her, Chris turns that charge loose on me. And does worse to her.” That was the most important problem—what would happen to Nora. The likely worst thing that would happen to him, should he be tried for the crime he’d been charged with, was deportation, maybe a spell in a cell while they worked out the paperwork. Nora, on the other hand, would be ruined.

  His mother plucked a rose past its bloom and held it in the palm of her hand. “Why do Frazier men have to solve everything with their fists?”

  “They were beating a woman, Mom. A sister in the cause.” He picked up the rose from her hand. Its white petals had curled and browned at the edges, and he pulled a few easily away from the bud. “They wore white roses on their coats. Paper, or fabric. Like brooches.”

  “Really? You hadn’t said that before. The Kensington Roses—I know of them, but I don’t think that name is known in England. The clippings I’ve read, they’re called simply The Roses. Our group is in correspondence with them.”

  “I only just remembered. Nora knew them, I think. Or of them, maybe.”

  “Could you get word to her that way? Through a Rose?”

  Plucking away the soft petals, William considered that new option. But he saw the trouble with it right away, and shook his head. “I don’t know if, or how well, she knows any of them, but I do know she wouldn’t want
to put them at risk to help her. Besides, she’s adamant that she won’t sneak. She doesn’t want to ‘steal her own future,’ is how she put it.”

  His mother took the remnants of the bud from him and dropped it into the gardening basket on her arm. “I would like to meet this brave young lady someday.” Clipping a healthy bud, one just opening into its flower, from the same white rose bush, she handed it to him. “Love will out, William, my dear. Love will out. We will find the way. In the meantime, quit intimidating my roses and go inside. Your father is looking for you. Make sure he doesn’t try to steal you away. This afternoon, I need your ear to practice my talk, and we have the benefit to prepare for.”

  William sighed. Since he was no longer interested in the companionship of women not named Nora Tate, his mother had enlisted him as the escort for the disadvantaged women of the San Francisco social class—and in Sacramento as well. He’d spent the past four months taking the arm of every rotund, snaggle-toothed, or unfortunately-voiced young lady of means in Northern California, at balls and galas, benefits and dinners. Tonight was the final benefit gala for the new San Francisco Symphony, which planned to present its first performance later in the year. His mother had been one of the leaders in bringing a symphony orchestra to San Francisco and thus one of the organizers of several galas and dinners to fund the enterprise.

  “Who is it tonight?”

  “Dottie Langstrom.”

  Whose father owned the textile company that was providing the upholstery and drapery fabric to the Symphony at cost. He actually liked Dottie, who had a quick mind and a droll sense of humor. And she was quite pretty. If she hadn’t been about a hundred pounds heavier than most of the other young women her age, she’d have been the toast of San Francisco. “That’s the fourth time with Dottie. People are going to talk. She’s likely to be confused herself.”

  “Since when do we care about talk? Dottie is a smart, capable young woman who understands the circumstances perfectly well. And your performance with any of the young ladies I’ve asked you to escort has been distracted at best, so I seriously doubt they’re confused regarding your interest in them.” With an impish quirk of a grin, his mother plucked the rosebud from his hand and slid it into his lapel. “If you weren’t such a dashing devil, I don’t think they’d put up with you. But you are pretty on a lady’s arm.” She patted his chest. “Go see the dashing devil who looks so pretty on my arm.”

  “You’re incorrigible,” William chuckled and kissed her cheek.

  “Exactly. I cannot be ‘corriged.’ No woman should.”

  God, he wanted to bring Nora here, where she could open her wings. The cause was hopeless, but William couldn’t set the want of it aside. All these months later, he thought of her, worried about her, wanted her, no less. Loved her no less.

  Leaving his magnificent, incorrigible mother to tend to her roses, William returned to the house to find his dashing father.

  William’s father looked over his spectacles when he knocked on the ajar door of his study. “You wanted to see me?”

  “Come in, son.” His father set aside the papers he’d been studying. “I want you to meet with Kent tomorrow evening.”

  Midway through the act of sitting in one of the leather chairs before his father’s stately mahogany desk, William froze in surprise, then sat. “But Mom’s talk is tomorrow evening.” His mother was speaking in Sacramento, before the Capital Women’s Club, a social group composed of the wives of state politicians and other government officials. The vote for statewide women’s suffrage was on the ballot for the upcoming special election in October, and it had a good but not great chance of success. The suffragists in California planned to push day and night for the next six months to make it happen.

  Since his days of short pants, William had served as his mother’s audience for her speeches, whatever the cause she’d championed. As an adult, he’d served also as sounding board, critic, and cheerleader, as well as advertiser, usher, and occasional introducer at her events. The only times he’d missed any of her events, he’d been away on business.

  Henry Frazier, though sympathetic to his wife’s causes and supportive of her endeavors, admitted to some frustration with the complications they made in his business. Rare was the industrialist who sided with the liberals, and it made for uncomfortable business relationships. In point of fact, William’s father didn’t consider himself a liberal. He described himself as a Republican in the mold of Theodore Roosevelt—fully behind social progress and natural conservation, and with a keen sense of responsibility to his workers, but sure that his responsibility to his workers meant a responsibility to his company’s financial success. Scot-Western was still privately held—William’s father was deeply suspicious of the stock market—so he carried the responsibility for the business’s substantial reputation on his own shoulders.

  William Kent, the man he wanted William to meet, was their representative in Washington D.C. He was also their neighbor in Marin. Kent was new to the House, sworn in only six weeks earlier, but he’d campaigned on his reputation as a Progressive Republican, focused primarily on conserving the redwood forests of Northern California.

  He’d also suggested that it was time to build a bridge over the San Francisco Bay, connecting the city to the Marin Headlands. He’d gotten William’s father’s vote on the day he’d made his first remarks on that idea.

  “Kent’s in Sacramento for a leadership meeting, and he’s on a train back to Washington the next morning. Tomorrow night is the only time he’s available. I got you a dinner meeting with him at the Hotel Land. I want to feel him out about the bridge. If he’s committed enough, it might be our next thing.”

  His father seemed to have hit a kind of crisis in his life. At almost sixty years old, the head of a successful, influential company that had begun as a single railroad and had grown—and continued to grow—to include multiple lines all over the country, as well as a subsidiary company running half the ferries in the Bay and the streetcars in the city, he seemed stymied at the top. Unwilling to expand for expansion’s sake, as many of his compatriots were doing, he wanted the next New Thing. He’d wanted a global presence, but William had failed him in that regard. He’d been interested in the Channel tunnel idea, but William had failed him there, as well.

  Failures were fine; they were integral to success. But he needed the next thing to try for, and they hadn’t found it yet.

  “What do the engineers say?” William asked. The Bay was notoriously windy, and the currents and tides notoriously strong. The span between the city and the Headlands was more than a mile. In some ways, a thirty-mile tunnel under the English Channel was the easier task. “It would have to be a suspension bridge, but how high, to bear that kind of weight and stress?”

  “I talked with Norbert, but I’m not giving his team a project until I know that Kent means what he says. He’s a typical politician, slippery as hell.”

  “Even with him on board, it would take forever to break ground. Think of all the people we’d have to have moving this project, Dad—local, state, and federal legislatures. Millions of dollars raised. Years of research, development, and design. This is what I faced in England, and it was impossible.”

  “What you faced in England is that you aren’t English. Your tunnel will be built someday, but it was never going to be us who built it.”

  William’s jaw dropped in shock. “Then why did you let me chase it?”

  “Because it was the first time you showed real vision, William. I wanted you to chase your first big idea, to feel that rush of discovery, and the crush of failure, too.” He grinned. “Besides, your mother thought you’d met someone, and she wanted you to stay and press your suit. She hoped you’d bring a wife home with you. You know she wants grandchildren.”

  “How did she know I’d met someone?” Rather than think about the sour ache in his belly at the mention of what he’d almost had, William did a quick riffle through his memories to find something he might have
said in a letter home, but nothing sprang up.

  His father offered him no answer but an uninterested shrug. “My point is, failure is a chance to learn and do the next thing better. You know that. Do you think your grandfather decided to build a railroad and just started laying track straight up to his empire? Of course not. He failed, and failed, and failed again, and when he succeeded, he was old before he saw the full fruit of it. All massive projects take long years of failure and trial and disappointment. Even if Kent is firm in his intent now, he could bow to pressure, and we’d have to find another champion in Washington. Partners will fall by the wayside. Engineers will leave the project. Designs will be flawed, and we’ll have to start from scratch. That’s how all this works. You’ve been too coddled if you haven’t seen that by now, son. Things have been too easy at Scot-Western in the years you’ve been paying attention.”

  It was true that things had been easy in the decade that he’d been at his father’s side in the company. His father had focused on building more rail lines, making travel luxurious for high-end passengers, and expanding the company’s significance in their home city, with streetcars and ferries. Even the earthquake had been a boon for the company, with the transition to streetcars. William had concerned himself with outreach—liaising with the workers and with legislators, managing the company’s public relations, selling his father’s ideas.

  The last of his father’s ideas had been global expansion, but it was too soon for that step. Now, he’d turned and faced the other way—not outward, but inward. Not the world, but simply the Bay.

  “It has to be spectacular,” William mused. “Not just a bridge, but an attraction. Something people will travel to the city specifically to see. A bridge like no other. People all over the world will see it in photographs, or postcards, and know right away what and where it is.”

 

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