The Grey Wig: Stories and Novelettes

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The Grey Wig: Stories and Novelettes Page 36

by Израэль Зангвилл


  The bass chorister was a very amusing man. His voice was sepulchral but his conversation skittish. Eileen's repartees smote him to almost the only serious respect of his life, and one day he said: "Why, there's a future in you. Why don't you go on the stage?"

  "What nonsense!" But the blood was secretly stirred in her veins. She saw herself walking along the Black Hole with the programme-girl, but her point of view had been modified since she had received a similar suggestion with a shudder. If she could play Rosalind to a great London audience, the staring men-folk would matter little.

  "Why not?" went on the bass tempter. "A humour like yours with such a voice and such a face!"

  "The stage is full of better voices and better faces."

  "No, indeed. Why, there isn't a girl at the Half-and-Half-" He stopped and almost blushed.

  She smiled. "Oh, I don't mind your going to such places. What is the Half-and-Half, a place where they drink beer?"

  "Oh, it's just our slang name for a little music-hall that's just between the East End and the West End, with a corresponding programme."

  "Our slang name?"

  "Well-" he paused. "If you'll keep it very dark-but of course you will-I appear there myself."

  "You! What do you do?"

  "I sing patriotic songs and drinking-songs-"

  "Aren't they the same thing in England?"

  "Don't say that on the stage or they'll throw pewter pots. They're very patriotic."

  "That's just what I said. What's your name-I suppose you change it?"

  "Yes-as I hope you will yours-some day."

  "I shan't take yours."

  "Nobody arxed you, miss," he said. "And, besides, mine is copyright-Jolly Jack Jenkins. I make a fiver a week by it."

  "A fiver!" The bass chorister suddenly took on an air of Arabian nights. At this rate she could buy back the family castle. Her struggling brothers-how they would bless their magician sister-Mick should have a London practice, Miles a partnership in an engineering firm.

  "You come with me and see Fossy," continued Jolly Jack Jenkins.

  Eileen declined with thanks. It took a week of Sundays to argue away her objections-religious, moral, and social. To play Rosalind to fashionable London was one thing: to appear at a variety theatre or low-class music-hall, which nobody in her world or Mrs. Lee Carter's had ever heard of, was another pair of shoes. Yet strange to say, it was the last consideration that decided her to try. Even if admitted to the boards, she could make her failure in secure obscurity. It would simply be another girlish escapade, and she was ripe for mischief after her long sobriety.

  "But even your Mr. Fossy mustn't know my real name or address," she stipulated.

  "Who shall I say you are?"

  "Nelly O'Neill."

  "Ripping. Flows from the tongue like music."

  "Then it's rippling you mean."

  "What a tongue! Wait till Fossy sees you."

  "Will he ask me to stick it out?"

  "Oh, Lord, I wish I had your repartee. But I'm thinking-Nelly O'Neill-doesn't it give you away a bit?"

  "Keeps me a bit, too. I shouldn't like to lose myself altogether-gain reputation for another woman."

  Fossy proved to be a gentleman named Josephs, who in a tiny triangular room near the stage of the Half-and-Half listened critically to her comic singing, shook his head and said he would let her know. Eileen left the room with leaden heart and feet.

  "Wait for me a moment, please," Jolly Jack Jenkins called after her, and she hung about timidly, jostled by dirty attendants and painted performers. She was reading a warning to artistes that any improper songs or lines would lead to their instant dismissal, and regretting more than ever her incompetence for this innocent profession, when she heard the bass chorister's big breathing behind her.

  "Bravo! You knocked him all of a heap."

  "Rubbish! Don't try to cheer me."

  "You!" Jolly Jack Jenkins opened his eyes. "You taken in by Fossy! He'll suggest your doing a trial turn next Saturday night when the public are least critical, you'll make a furore, and he'll offer you two guineas a week."

  "A pleasing picture, but quite visionary. Why, he didn't even ask for an address to write to!"

  "Oh, I dare say he thought care of me would find you. No, don't glower at me-I don't mean anything wrong."

  "I hope you didn't let him misunderstand-"

  "You asked me not to let him know too much. Fossy has to do so much with queer folk-"

  "Yes, I saw he had to warn them against improper songs."

  Jolly Jack Jenkins exploded in a guffaw.

  "I'm sorry I came," said Eileen, in vague distress.

  "Fossy isn't," he retorted. "He was clean bowled over. In that Irish fox-hunting song all the gallery will be shouting 'Tally-ho!' Where did you pick it up?"

  "I didn't pick it up, I made it up for the occasion."

  "By Jove! I have to pay a guinea to a bloodsucking composer when I want a song. Oh, Fossy's spotted a winner this time."

  "Why is he called Fossy?"

  "I don't know. Nobody knows. I found the name, I pass it on."

  "Perhaps it's a corruption of Foxy."

  "There! I never thought of that! You are a-!"

  The jolly chorister's mouth remained open. But the prophecy that had already issued from it came true in every detail.

  XIII.

  Despite her private stage-fright, Nelly O'Neill, the new serio-comic, made a big hit. Her innocent roguery was captivating; her virginal freshness floated over the footlights, like a spring breeze through the smoky Hall.

  "Well, you are an all-round success," cried Jolly Jack Jenkins, pumping her hand off at the wings, amid a thunder of applause, encores, and whistles.

  "You mean a Half-and-Half!" laughed Nelly through Eileen's tears. She had given herself to the audience, but how it had given itself in return, flashing back to her in electric waves its monstrous vitality, its apparently single life.

  The Half-and-Half was one of those early Victorian halls of the people, with fixed stars and only a few meteors. The popular favourites changed their songs and their clothes at periodic intervals, but they would have lost favour if they had not remained the same throughout everything. A chairman with a hammer announced the turns, and condescendingly took champagne with anybody who paid for it. Eileen soon became an indispensable part of this smoky world. She signed an agreement at three guineas a week for three years, to perform only at the Half-and-Half. Fossy saw far. Eileen did not. She jumped for joy when she got beyond eyeshot. She felt herself jumping out of the governess-life. Second thoughts and soberer footsteps brought doubt. She had intended telling Mrs. Lee Carter as soon as the trial-performance was over, but now she hesitated and was lost. Half the charm lay in the secret adventure, the dare-devilry. Besides, as a governess she had a comfortable home and a respectable status, and she had already seen and divined enough of the world behind the footlights to shrink from being absorbed into it. What fun in the double life! She had never found a single life worth living. She would belong to two worlds-be literally Half-and-Half. Nelly O'Neill must only be born at twilight. But she felt she could not be out uniformly every evening without some explanation.

  "Mrs. Lee Carter," she said, "I have to tell you of a peculiar chance of augmenting my income that has come to me."

  Mrs. Lee Carter, wearing plumes and train for a court reception, paled. "You are not going to leave me!"

  The naive exclamation strengthened Eileen's hand.

  "I don't quite see how to do otherwise," she said boldly.

  "Oh, dear, I wish I could afford more. I know you're worth it."

  Eileen thought, "If you'd only give your guests good claret instead of bad champagne!" But she said, "You are very kind-you have always been most considerate."

  The plumes wagged.

  "I try to please all parties."

  Nelly O'Neill thought, "And to give too many." Eileen said, "Yes, you've given me my evenings to myself as it is, and
considering the new work is only in the evenings, I did think of running the two, but I'm afraid-"

  "If we lightened your work a little-" interrupted Mrs. Lee Carter, eagerly.

  "I shouldn't so much ask that as to have perfect freedom like a young man-a latch-key even." Never had Eileen looked more demure and Puritan.

  "Oh, I hope you won't be working too late-"

  "The people who go there are engaged in the daytime. I'd better be frank with you; it's an extremely unfashionable place towards the East End, and I quite understand you may not like me to take it. At the same time I shall never meet anybody who knows me. In fact, it's a dancing and singing place."

  "Oh!" said Mrs. Lee Carter, blankly. "I didn't know you could teach dancing, too."

  "You never asked me.... Of course, if you prefer it, I could come here as a day governess and leave after tea.... You see it's a longish journey home: I'm bound to be late...."

  "What's the difference? Come and go as you please.... Of course, you won't mind using the back door when there's a party ... the servants...."

  For the deception Eileen at first salved her conscience Irish-wise by sending every farthing to her mother under the deceiving pretext of rich private pupils. She would not even deduct for cabs. Sometimes she could not get an omnibus, but she almost preferred to walk till she was footsore, for both riding and walking were forms of penance. The stuffy omnibus interior after the smoky Hall was nauseating, and in those days no lady thought of climbing the steep ladder to the slanting roof. But it sometimes happened that a crawling cabman coming westward would invite her to a free ride, and Eileen would accept gratefully, and, moreover, gain from conversations with her drivers new material for her songs.

  This period of her life was almost as amusing as she had anticipated; her only depressions came from the children of the footlights, and the necessity of adjusting herself superficially to her environment, under pain of unpopularity. Her isolation and the privacy of her home-life already made sufficiently for that. And to be disliked even by those she disliked Eileen disliked. Her nature needed to wallow in warm admiration. She got plenty.

  When, fifteen months later, she agreed to pay Fossy a hundred pounds for modifying her contract so as to enable her to appear at other Halls, she said with a smile, "You deserve it. You are the only man at the Half-and-Half who hasn't made love to me."

  Fossy grinned. "If I had known that, I should have demanded a larger compensation."

  Even the bass chorister had not been able to resist proposing, though his grief at being refused was short-lived, for he died soon after by a fall from one of those giant wheels that were the saurians of the modern cycle. Eileen shed many a tear over Jolly Jack Jenkins.

  With the growth of her popularity before and behind the footlights came heavier calls upon her geniality, and, like a hostess who tries to pay off her debts in one social lump sum, Eileen got "a Sunday out," and Nelly gave a lunch at a riverside hotel to a motley company of popular favourites. It was expensive; for the profession, even in those days, expected champagne. It was appallingly protracted; for the party, having no work to do that evening, showed no disposition to break up, and brandies-and-sodas succeeded one another in an aroma of masculine cigars and feminine cigarettes. It was noisy and hilarious, and gradually it became rowdy. The Singing Sisters sang, but not in duet. The Lion Comique, whose loyal melodies were on every barrel-organ, argued Republicanism and flourished that day's copy of Reynolds's Newspaper, The Beauteous Bessie Bilhook-"the Queen of Serio-Comics" was scandalously autobiographic, and the old plantation songster-looking unreal with his washed face-was with difficulty dissuaded from displaying his ability to dance on the table without smashing anything. The climax was reserved for the demure one-legged gymnast, who suddenly produced a pistol and discharged it in the air. When the panic subsided, he explained to the landlord and the company that he was "paying his shot."

  "That's a hint for me to discharge the bill," said Nelly, adroitly, and, thanking everybody effusively for the happiness afforded her, she hurried home to Oxbridge Terrace, to wash it all away in nursery tea. The young Lee Carters made a restful spectacle with their shining innocent faces, and she almost wished they would never grow up.

  As her success grew, offers from the pantomimes and even the legitimate stage began to reach her. But now she would not make the step. At the Halls she was her own mistress, able to arrange at her own convenience with orchestras. Even Rosalind would have meant long rehearsals and a complex interference with her governess-life.

  At the theatres, too, to judge by all she heard, a sordid side of the profession was accentuated. The players played for their own hands, and even the greatest did not disdain to "queer" the effects of their subordinates, whenever such effects did not heighten their own. Hamlet had been known to be jealous of the ghost, and the success of his sepulchral bass. It was in fact a world of jostling jealousies, as hidden from the public as the prompter. In the Halls she was her own company and her own playwright and her own composer. She had her elbows free.

  And even here Bessie Bilhook, whose vanity was a byword in Lower Bohemia, and who had arrogantly assumed the sovereignty of the Serio-Comics, refused to appear on the same programmes unless her name was printed twice as large as Nelly O'Neill's, and was further displayed on a board outside, alone in its nine-inch glory. Again, actresses were recognised by the newspapers; the Halls had as yet no status. Their performers were not so photographed; indeed, Eileen refused to sit. She desired this obscurer form of celebrity. If her fame should ever reach Mrs. Lee Carter, the game would be nearly up. Her poor mother might even suffer the shock of it; perhaps the professional future of her brothers would be injured. Her sedate life had grown as dear as her noisy life, she loved the transition to the innocent home circle.

  Yet in this very domesticity lay a danger. It provoked her to an ever broader humour on the stage. She let herself go, like a swimmer emboldened by a boat behind. Eileen O'Keeffe she felt would rescue Nelly O'Neill if licence carried her too near the falls. It was so irresistibly seductive, this swift response of the audience to the wink of suggestion. Like a vast lyre, the Hall vibrated to the faintest breath of roguishness. Almost in contemptuous mockery one was tempted to experiment....

  One day, in a sudden horror of herself, she pleaded illness and hurried back to her mother for a holiday.

  XIV.

  The straggling village looked much the same, the same pigs and turkeys rooted and strutted, the same stinging turf-smoke came from the doors and windows (save from one or two cabins unroofed by the Castle tyrant), the same weeds grew in the potato-patches, the same old men in patched brogues pulled their caubeens from their heads and their dudeens from their mouths, as she went past, half-consciously studying the humours for stage reproduction. It was hard for her to remember she wasn't "the Quality" in London, or that the Half-and-Half existed simultaneously with these beloved woods and waters. In only one particular was the village changed. Golf links had been discovered near it, a club-house had sprung up and the peasants found themselves enriched by the employment of their gossoons as caddies. The O'Keeffes were prospering equally-thanks to her subsidies-although she hadn't yet bought them back their castle. "All's for the best in the greenest of isles," she told herself, as she sat basking in family affection.

  And yet the wave of melancholia refused to ebb. Indeed, it swelled and grew blacker. The remedy seemed to intensify the disease; a holiday but gave her time to possess her soul, and brood upon its stains, her childhood's scene but enabled her to measure the realities of her achievement against the visions of girlhood. Life seemed too hopeless, too absurd. To amuse the gross adult, to instruct the innocent child-what did it all mean to her own life? She was tired of doing, she wanted to be something; something for herself. She was always observing, imitating, caricaturing, but what was she? A nothing, a phantasm, an emptiness.

  "Eileen avourneen," said her mother, suddenly. "I wish you were married."

&nbs
p; Eileen opened her eyes. "Dear heart, is this another offer from the castle?" And she laughed gently.

  Mrs. O'Keeffe's fingers played uneasily with her bosom's cross. "No, but I should feel happier about you. It-it settles people."

  "It certainly does," Eileen laughed, and her celebrated ditty, "The Marriage Settlement," flashed upon her. "Oh, dear," and her laugh changed to a sigh. "The marriages I see around me!"

  "What! Isn't Mrs. Lee Carter happy?"

  Eileen flushed. "I shouldn't like to be in her shoes," she said evasively.

  "Officers seem to make the best husbands," said Mrs. O'Keeffe.

  "Because they are so much away?" queried Eileen, with a vague memory of her Lieutenant Doherty.

  That night the melancholia was heavy as a nightmare, without the partial unconsciousness of sleep. This blackness must be "the horrors" she had heard women of her stage-world speak of. She wanted to spring out of bed, to run to her mother's room. But that would have meant hysteric confession, so she bit her lips and stuck her nails into the sheet. Perhaps suicide would be simplest. She was nothing; it would not even be blowing out a light. No, she was something, she was a retailer of gross humours, a vile sinner; it might be kindling more than a light, an eternal flame. "Child of Mary," indeed! She deserved to be strangled with her white ribbon. And she exaggerated everything with that morbid mendacity of the confessional.

 

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