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Titan, The
chapter XXVIII - The Exposure of Stephanie
Theodore Dreiser
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       _ At the same time the thought of readjusting her relations so that
       they would avoid disloyalty to Cowperwood was never further from
       Stephanie's mind. Let no one quarrel with Stephanie Platow. She
       was an unstable chemical compound, artistic to her finger-tips,
       not understood or properly guarded by her family. Her interest
       in Cowperwood, his force and ability, was intense. So was her
       interest in Forbes Gurney--the atmosphere of poetry that enveloped
       him. She studied him curiously on the various occasions when they
       met, and, finding him bashful and recessive, set out to lure him.
       She felt that he was lonely and depressed and poor, and her womanly
       capacity for sympathy naturally bade her be tender.
       Her end was easily achieved. One night, when they were all out in
       Bliss Bridge's single-sticker--a fast-sailing saucer--Stephanie
       and Forbes Gurney sat forward of the mast looking at the silver
       moon track which was directly ahead. The rest were in the cockpit
       "cutting up"--laughing and singing. It was very plain to all
       that Stephanie was becoming interested in Forbes Gurney; and since
       he was charming and she wilful, nothing was done to interfere with
       them, except to throw an occasional jest their way. Gurney, new
       to love and romance, scarcely knew how to take his good fortune,
       how to begin. He told Stephanie of his home life in the wheat-fields
       of the Northwest, how his family had moved from Ohio when he was
       three, and how difficult were the labors he had always undergone.
       He had stopped in his plowing many a day to stand under a tree
       and write a poem--such as it was--or to watch the birds or to wish
       he could go to college or to Chicago. She looked at him with
       dreamy eyes, her dark skin turned a copper bronze in the moonlight,
       her black hair irradiated with a strange, luminous grayish blue.
       Forbes Gurney, alive to beauty in all its forms, ventured finally
       to touch her hand--she of Knowles, Cross, and Cowperwood--and she
       thrilled from head to toe. This boy was so sweet. His curly brown
       hair gave him a kind of Greek innocence and aspect. She did not
       move, but waited, hoping he would do more.
       "I wish I might talk to you as I feel," he finally said, hoarsely,
       a catch in his throat.
       She laid one hand on his.
       "You dear!" she said.
       He realized now that he might. A great ecstasy fell upon him.
       He smoothed her hand, then slipped his arm about her waist, then
       ventured to kiss the dark cheek turned dreamily from him. Artfully
       her head sunk to his shoulder, and he murmured wild nothings--how
       divine she was, how artistic, how wonderful! With her view of
       things, it could only end one way. She manoeuvered him into calling
       on her at her home, into studying her books and plays on the
       top-floor sitting-room, into hearing her sing. Once fully in his
       arms, the rest was easy by suggestion. He learned she was no longer
       innocent, and then-- In the mean time Cowperwood mingled his
       speculations concerning large power-houses, immense reciprocating
       engines, the problem of a wage scale for his now two thousand
       employees, some of whom were threatening to strike, the problem
       of securing, bonding, and equipping the La Salle Street tunnel and
       a down-town loop in La Salle, Munroe, Dearborn, and Randolph
       streets, with mental inquiries and pictures as to what possibly
       Stephanie Platow might be doing. He could only make appointments
       with her from time to time. He did not fail to note that, after
       he began to make use of information she let drop as to her whereabouts
       from day to day and her free companionship, he heard less of Gardner
       Knowles, Lane Cross, and Forbes Gurney, and more of Georgia
       Timberlake and Ethel Tuckerman. Why this sudden reticence? On one
       occasion she did say of Forbes Gurney "that he was having such a
       hard time, and that his clothes weren't as nice as they should be,
       poor dear!" Stephanie herself, owing to gifts made to her by
       Cowperwood, was resplendent these days. She took just enough to
       complete her wardrobe according to her taste.
       "Why not send him to me?" Cowperwood asked. "I might find something
       to do for him." He would have been perfectly willing to put him
       in some position where he could keep track of his time. However,
       Mr. Gurney never sought him for a position, and Stephanie ceased
       to speak of his poverty. A gift of two hundred dollars, which
       Cowperwood made her in June, was followed by an accidental meeting
       with her and Gurney in Washington Street. Mr. Gurney, pale and
       pleasant, was very well dressed indeed. He wore a pin which
       Cowperwood knew had once belonged to Stephanie. She was in no way
       confused. Finally Stephanie let it out that Lane Cross, who had
       gone to New Hampshire for the summer, had left his studio in her
       charge. Cowperwood decided to have this studio watched.
       There was in Cowperwood's employ at this time a young newspaper
       man, an ambitious spark aged twenty-six, by the name of Francis
       Kennedy. He had written a very intelligent article for the Sunday
       Inquirer, describing Cowperwood and his plans, and pointing out
       what a remarkable man he was. This pleased Cowperwood. When
       Kennedy called one day, announcing smartly that he was anxious to
       get out of reportorial work, and inquiring whether be couldn't find
       something to do in the street-railway world, Cowperwood saw in
       him a possibly useful tool.
       "I'll try you out as secretary for a while," he said, pleasantly.
       "There are a few special things I want done. If you succeed in
       those, I may find something else for you later."
       Kennedy had been working for him only a little while when he said
       to him one day: "Francis, did you ever hear of a young man by the
       name of Forbes Gurney in the newspaper world?"
       They were in Cowperwood's private office.
       "No, sir," replied Francis, briskly.
       "You have heard of an organization called the Garrick Players,
       haven't you?"
       "Yes, sir."
       "Well, Francis, do you suppose you could undertake a little piece
       of detective work for me, and handle it intelligently and quietly?"
       "I think so," said Francis, who was the pink of perfection this
       morning in a brown suit, garnet tie, and sard sleeve-links. His
       shoes were immaculately polished, and his young, healthy face
       glistened.
       "I'll tell you what I want you to do. There is a young actress,
       or amateur actress, by the name of Stephanie Platow, who frequents
       the studio of an artist named Cross in the New Arts Building. She
       may even occupy it in his absence--I don't know. I want you to
       find out for me what the relations of Mr. Gurney and this woman
       are. I have certain business reasons for wanting to know."
       Young Kennedy was all attention.
       "You couldn't tell me where I could find out anything about this
       Mr. Gurney to begin with, could you?" he asked.
       "I think he is a friend of a critic here by the name of Gardner
       Knowles. You might ask him. I need not say that you must never
       mention me.
       "Oh, I understand that thoroughly, Mr. Cowperwood." Young Kennedy
       departed, meditating. How was he to do this? With true journalistic
       skill he first sought other newspaper men, from whom he learned--a
       bit from one and a scrap from another--of the character of the
       Garrick Players, and of the women who belonged to it. He pretended
       to be writing a one-act play, which he hoped to have produced.
       He then visited Lane Cross's studio, posing as a newspaper
       interviewer. Mr. Cross was out of town, so the elevator man said.
       His studio was closed.
       Mr. Kennedy meditated on this fact for a moment.
       "Does any one use his studio during the summer months?" he asked.
       "I believe there is a young woman who comes here--yes."
       "You don't happen to know who it is?"
       "Yes, I do. Her name is Platow. What do you want to know for?"
       "Looky here," exclaimed Kennedy, surveying the rather shabby
       attendant with a cordial and persuasive eye, "do you want to make
       some money--five or ten dollars, and without any trouble to
       you?"
       The elevator man, whose wages were exactly eight dollars a week,
       pricked up his ears.
       "I want to know who comes here with this Miss Platow, when they
       come--all about it. I'll make it fifteen dollars if I find out
       what I want, and I'll give you five right now."
       The elevator factotum had just sixty-five cents in his pocket at
       the time. He looked at Kennedy with some uncertainty and much
       desire.
       "Well, what can I do?" he repeated. "I'm not here after six. The
       janitor runs this elevator from six to twelve."
       "There isn't a room vacant anywhere near this one, is there?"
       Kennedy asked, speculatively.
       The factotum thought. "Yes, there is. One just across the hall."
       "What time does she come here as a rule?"
       "I don't know anything about nights. In the day she sometimes
       comes mornings, sometimes in the afternoon."
       "Anybody with her?"
       "Sometimes a man, sometimes a girl or two. I haven't really paid
       much attention to her, to tell you the truth."
       Kennedy walked away whistling.
       From this day on Mr. Kennedy became a watcher over this very
       unconventional atmosphere. He was in and out, principally observing
       the comings and goings of Mr. Gurney. He found what he naturally
       suspected, that Mr. Gurney and Stephanie spent hours here at
       peculiar times--after a company of friends had jollified, for
       instance, and all had left, including Gurney, when the latter would
       quietly return, with Stephanie sometimes, if she had left with the
       others, alone if she had remained behind. The visits were of
       varying duration, and Kennedy, to be absolutely accurate, kept
       days, dates, the duration of the hours, which he left noted in a
       sealed envelope for Cowperwood in the morning. Cowperwood was
       enraged, but so great was his interest in Stephanie that he was
       not prepared to act. He wanted to see to what extent her duplicity
       would go.
       The novelty of this atmosphere and its effect on him was astonishing.
       Although his mind was vigorously employed during the day,
       nevertheless his thoughts kept returning constantly. Where was
       she? What was she doing? The bland way in which she could lie
       reminded him of himself. To think that she should prefer any one
       else to him, especially at this time when he was shining as a great
       constructive factor in the city, was too much. It smacked of age,
       his ultimate displacement by youth. It cut and hurt.
       One morning, after a peculiarly exasperating night of thought
       concerning her, he said to young Kennedy: "I have a suggestion for
       you. I wish you would get this elevator man you are working with
       down there to get you a duplicate key to this studio, and see if
       there is a bolt on the inside. Let me know when you do. Bring
       me the key. The next time she is there of an evening with Mr.
       Gurney step out and telephone me."
       The climax came one night several weeks after this discouraging
       investigation began. There was a heavy yellow moon in the sky,
       and a warm, sweet summer wind was blowing. Stephanie had called
       on Cowperwood at his office about four to say that instead of
       staying down-town with him, as they had casually planned, she was
       going to her home on the West Side to attend a garden-party of
       some kind at Georgia Timberlake's. Cowperwood looked at her
       with--for him--a morbid eye. He was all cheer, geniality, pleasant
       badinage; but he was thinking all the while what a shameless enigma
       she was, how well she played her part, what a fool she must take
       him to be. He gave her youth, her passion, her attractiveness,
       her natural promiscuity of soul due credit; but he could not forgive
       her for not loving him perfectly, as had so many others. She had
       on a summery black-and-white frock and a fetching brown Leghorn
       hat, which, with a rich-red poppy ornamenting a flare over her
       left ear and a peculiar ruching of white-and-black silk about the
       crown, made her seem strangely young, debonair, a study in Hebraic
       and American origins.
       "Going to have a nice time, are you?" he asked, genially, politically,
       eying her in his enigmatic and inscrutable way. "Going to shine
       among that charming company you keep! I suppose all the standbys
       will be there--Bliss Bridge, Mr. Knowles, Mr. Cross--dancing
       attendance on you?"
       He failed to mention Mr. Gurney.
       Stephanie nodded cheerfully. She seemed in an innocent outing mood.
       Cowperwood smiled, thinking how one of these days--very shortly,
       perhaps--he was certain to take a signal revenge. He would catch
       her in a lie, in a compromising position somewhere--in this studio,
       perhaps--and dismiss her with contempt. In an elder day, if they
       had lived in Turkey, he would have had her strangled, sewn in a
       sack, and thrown into the Bosporus. As it was, he could only
       dismiss her. He smiled and smiled, smoothing her hand. "Have a
       good time," he called, as she left. Later, at his own home--it
       was nearly midnight--Mr. Kennedy called him up.
       "Mr. Cowperwood?"
       "Yes."
       "You know the studio in the New Arts Building?"
       "Yes."
       "It is occupied now."
       Cowperwood called a servant to bring him his runabout. He had had
       a down-town locksmith make a round keystem with a bored clutch at
       the end of it--a hollow which would fit over the end of such a key
       as he had to the studio and turn it easily from the outside. He
       felt in his pocket for it, jumped in his runabout, and hurried
       away. When he reached the New Arts Building he found Kennedy in
       the hall and dismissed him. "Thanks," he observed, brusquely.
       "I will take care of this."
       He hurried up the stairs, avoiding the elevator, to the vacant
       room opposite, and thence reconnoitered the studio door. It was
       as Kennedy had reported. Stephanie was there, and with Gurney.
       The pale poet had been brought there to furnish her an evening of
       delight. Because of the stillness of the building at this hour
       he could hear their muffled voices speaking alternately, and once
       Stephanie singing the refrain of a song. He was angry and yet
       grateful that she had, in her genial way, taken the trouble to
       call and assure him that she was going to a summer lawn-party and
       dance. He smiled grimly, sarcastically, as he thought of her
       surprise. Softly he extracted the clutch-key and inserted it,
       covering the end of the key on the inside and turning it. It gave
       solidly without sound. He next tried the knob and turned it,
       feeling the door spring slightly as he did so. Then inaudibly,
       because of a gurgled laugh with which he was thoroughly familiar,
       he opened it and stepped in.
       At his rough, firm cough they sprang up--Gurney to a hiding position
       behind a curtain, Stephanie to one of concealment behind draperies
       on the couch. She could not speak, and could scarcely believe
       that her eyes did not deceive her. Gurney, masculine and defiant,
       but by no means well composed, demanded: "Who are you? What do you
       want here?" Cowperwood replied very simply and smilingly: "Not
       very much. Perhaps Miss Platow there will tell you." He nodded
       in her direction.
       Stephanie, fixed by his cold, examining eye, shrank nervously,
       ignoring Gurney entirely. The latter perceived on the instant that
       he had a previous liaison to deal with--an angry and outraged
       lover--and he was not prepared to act either wisely or well.
       "Mr. Gurney," said Cowperwood, complacently, after staring at
       Stephanie grimly and scorching her with his scorn, "I have no
       concern with you, and do not propose to do anything to disturb you
       or Miss Platow after a very few moments. I am not here without
       reason. This young woman has been steadily deceiving me. She has
       lied to me frequently, and pretended an innocence which I did not
       believe. To-night she told me she was to be at a lawn-party on
       the West Side. She has been my mistress for months. I have given
       her money, jewelry, whatever she wanted. Those jade ear-rings,
       by the way, are one of my gifts." He nodded cheerfully in Stephanie's
       direction. "I have come here simply to prove to her that she
       cannot lie to me any more. Heretofore, every time I have accused
       her of things like this she has cried and lied. I do not know how
       much you know of her, or how fond you are of her. I merely wish
       her, not you, to know"--and he turned and stared at Stephanie--"that
       the day of her lying to me is over.
       During this very peculiar harangue Stephanie, who, nervous, fearful,
       fixed, and yet beautiful, remained curled up in the corner of the
       suggestive oriental divan, had been gazing at Cowperwood in a way
       which plainly attested, trifle as she might with others, that she
       was nevertheless fond of him--intensely so. His strong, solid
       figure, confronting her so ruthlessly, gripped her imagination, of
       which she had a world. She had managed to conceal her body in part,
       but her brown arms and shoulders, her bosom, trim knees, and feet
       were exposed in part. Her black hair and naive face were now heavy,
       distressed, sad. She was frightened really, for Cowperwood at
       bottom had always overawed her--a strange, terrible, fascinating
       man. Now she sat and looked, seeking still to lure him by the
       pathetic cast of her face and soul, while Cowperwood, scornful of
       her, and almost openly contemptuous of her lover, and his possible
       opposition, merely stood smiling before them. It came over her
       very swiftly now just what it was she was losing--a grim, wonderful
       man. Beside him Gurney, the pale poet, was rather thin--a mere
       breath of romance. She wanted to say something, to make a plea;
       but it was so plain Cowperwood would have none of it, and, besides,
       here was Gurney. Her throat clogged, her eyes filled, even here,
       and a mystical bog-fire state of emotion succeeded the primary one
       of opposition. Cowperwood knew the look well. It gave him the
       only sense of triumph he had.
       "Stephanie," he remarked, "I have just one word to say to you now.
       We will not meet any more, of course. You are a good actress.
       Stick to your profession. You may shine in it if you do not merge
       it too completely with your loves. As for being a free lover, it
       isn't incompatible with what you are, perhaps, but it isn't socially
       advisable for you. Good night."
       He turned and walked quickly out.
       "Oh, Frank," called Stephanie, in a strange, magnetized, despairing
       way, even in the face of her astonished lover. Gurney stared with
       his mouth open.
       Cowperwood paid no heed. Out he went through the dark hall and
       down the stairs. For once the lure of a beautiful, enigmatic,
       immoral, and promiscuous woman--poison flower though she was--was
       haunting him. "D-- her!" he exclaimed. "D-- the little beast,
       anyhow! The ----! The ----!" He used terms so hard, so vile, so sad,
       all because he knew for once what it was to love and lose--to want
       ardently in his way and not to have--now or ever after. He was
       determined that his path and that of Stephanie Platow should never
       be allowed to cross again. _
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本书目录

Chapter I - The New City
chapter II - A Reconnoiter
chapter III - A Chicago Evening
chapter IV - Peter Laughlin & Co-
chapter V - Concerning A Wife And Family
chapter VI - The New Queen of the Home
chapter VII - Chicago Gas
chapter VIII - Now This is Fighting
chapter IX - In Search of Victory
chapter X - A Test
chapter XI - The Fruits of Daring
chapter XII - A New Retainer
chapter XIII - The Die is Cast
chapter XIV - Undercurrents
chapter XV - A New Affection
chapter XVI - A Fateful Interlude
chapter XVII - An Overture to Conflict
chapter XVIII - The Clash
chapter XIX - "Hell Hath No Fury--"
chapter XX - "Man and Superman"
chapter XXI - A Matter of Tunnels
chapter XXII - Street-railways at Last
chapter XXIII - The Power of the Press
chapter XXIV - The Coming of Stephanie Platow
chapter XXV - Airs from the Orient
chapter XXVI - Love and War
chapter XXVII - A Financier Bewitched
chapter XXVIII - The Exposure of Stephanie
chapter XXIX - A Family Quarrel
chapter XXX - Obstacles
chapter XXXI - Untoward Disclosures
chapter XXXII - A Supper Party
chapter XXXIII - Mr. Lynde to the Rescue
chapter XXXIV - Enter Hosmer
chapter XXXV - A Political Agreement
chapter XXXVI - An Election Draws Near
chapter XXXVII - Aileen's Revenge
chapter XXXVIII - An Hour of Defeat
chapter XXXIX - The New Administration
chapter XL - A Trip to Louisville
chapter XLI - The Daughter of Mrs Fleming Berenice
chapter XLII - F. A. Cowperwood, Guardian
chapter XLIII - The Planet Mars
chapter XLIV - A Franchise Obtained
chapter XLV - Changing Horizons
chapter XLVI - Depths and Heights
chapter XLVII - American Match
chapter XLVIII - Panicr
chapter XLIX - Mount Olympus
chapter L - A New York Mansion
chapter LI - The Revival of Hattie Starr
chapter LII - Behind the Arras
chapter LIII - A Declaration of Love
chapter LIV - Wanted--Fifty-year Franchises
chapter LV - Cowperwood and the Governor
chapter LVI - The Ordeal of Berenice
chapter LVII - Aileen's Last Card
chapter LVIII - A Marauder
chapter LIX - Capital and Public Rights
chapter LX - The Net
chapter LXI - The Cataclysm
chapter LXII - The Recompense