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Titan, The
chapter XLII - F. A. Cowperwood, Guardian
Theodore Dreiser
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       _ It was some time after this first encounter before Cowperwood saw
       Berenice again, and then only for a few days in that region of the
       Pocono Mountains where Mrs. Carter had her summer home. It was
       an idyllic spot on a mountainside, some three miles from Stroudsburg,
       among a peculiar juxtaposition of hills which, from the comfortable
       recesses of a front veranda, had the appearance, as Mrs. Carter
       was fond of explaining, of elephants and camels parading in the
       distance. The humps of the hills--some of them as high as eighteen
       hundred feet--rose stately and green. Below, quite visible for a
       mile or more, moved the dusty, white road descending to Stroudsburg.
       Out of her Louisville earnings Mrs. Carter had managed to employ,
       for the several summer seasons she had been here, a gardener, who
       kept the sloping front lawn in seasonable flowers. There was a
       trig two-wheeled trap with a smart horse and harness, and both
       Rolfe and Berenice were possessed of the latest novelty of the
       day--low-wheeled bicycles, which had just then superseded the old,
       high-wheel variety. For Berenice, also, was a music-rack full of
       classic music and song collections, a piano, a shelf of favorite
       books, painting-materials, various athletic implements, and several
       types of Greek dancing-tunics which she had designed herself,
       including sandals and fillet for her hair. She was an idle,
       reflective, erotic person dreaming strange dreams of a near and
       yet far-off social supremacy, at other times busying herself with
       such social opportunities as came to her. A more safely calculating
       and yet wilful girl than Berenice Fleming would have been hard to
       find. By some trick of mental adjustment she had gained a clear
       prevision of how necessary it was to select the right socially,
       and to conceal her true motives and feelings; and yet she was by
       no means a snob, mentally, nor utterly calculating. Certain things
       in her own and in her mother's life troubled her--quarrels in her
       early days, from her seventh to her eleventh year, between her
       mother and her stepfather, Mr. Carter; the latter's drunkenness
       verging upon delirium tremens at times; movings from one place to
       another--all sorts of sordid and depressing happenings. Berenice
       had been an impressionable child. Some things had gripped her
       memory mightily--once, for instance, when she had seen her stepfather,
       in the presence of her governess, kick a table over, and, seizing
       the toppling lamp with demoniac skill, hurl it through a window.
       She, herself, had been tossed by him in one of these tantrums,
       when, in answer to the cries of terror of those about her, he had
       shouted: "Let her fall! It won't hurt the little devil to break a
       few bones." This was her keenest memory of her stepfather, and it
       rather softened her judgment of her mother, made her sympathetic
       with her when she was inclined to be critical. Of her own father
       she only knew that he had divorced her mother--why, she could not
       say. She liked her mother on many counts, though she could not
       feel that she actually loved her--Mrs. Carter was too fatuous at
       times, and at other times too restrained. This house at Pocono,
       or Forest Edge, as Mrs. Carter had named it, was conducted after
       a peculiar fashion. From June to October only it was open, Mrs.
       Carter, in the past, having returned to Louisville at that time,
       while Berenice and Rolfe went back to their respective schools.
       Rolfe was a cheerful, pleasant-mannered youth, well bred, genial,
       and courteous, but not very brilliant intellectually. Cowperwood's
       judgment of him the first time he saw him was that under ordinary
       circumstances he would make a good confidential clerk, possibly
       in a bank. Berenice, on the other hand, the child of the first
       husband, was a creature of an exotic mind and an opalescent heart.
       After his first contact with her in the reception-room of the
       Brewster School Cowperwood was deeply conscious of the import of
       this budding character. He was by now so familiar with types
       and kinds of women that an exceptional type--quite like an exceptional
       horse to a judge of horse-flesh--stood out in his mind with singular
       vividness. Quite as in some great racing-stable an ambitious
       horseman might imagine that he detected in some likely filly the
       signs and lineaments of the future winner of a Derby, so in
       Berenice Fleming, in the quiet precincts of the Brewster School,
       Cowperwood previsioned the central figure of a Newport lawn fete
       or a London drawing-room. Why? She had the air, the grace, the
       lineage, the blood--that was why; and on that score she appealed
       to him intensely, quite as no other woman before had ever done.
       It was on the lawn of Forest Edge that Cowperwood now saw Berenice.
       The latter had had the gardener set up a tall pole, to which was
       attached a tennis-ball by a cord, and she and Rolfe were hard at
       work on a game of tether-ball. Cowperwood, after a telegram to
       Mrs. Carter, had been met at the station in Pocono by her and
       rapidly driven out to the house. The green hills pleased him, the
       up-winding, yellow road, the silver-gray cottage with the brown-shingle
       roof in the distance. It was three in the afternoon, and bright
       for a sinking sun.
       "There they are now," observed Mrs. Carter, cheerful and smiling,
       as they came out from under a low ledge that skirted the road a
       little way from the cottage. Berenice, executing a tripping,
       running step to one side, was striking the tethered ball with her
       racquet. "They are hard at it, as usual. Two such romps!"
       She surveyed them with pleased motherly interest, which Cowperwood
       considered did her much credit. He was thinking that it would be
       too bad if her hopes for her children should not be realized. Yet
       possibly they might not be. Life was very grim. How strange, he
       thought, was this type of woman--at once a sympathetic, affectionate
       mother and a panderer to the vices of men. How strange that she
       should have these children at all. Berenice had on a white skirt,
       white tennis-shoes, a pale-cream silk waist or blouse, which fitted
       her very loosely. Because of exercise her color was high--quite
       pink--and her dusty, reddish hair was blowy. Though they turned
       into the hedge gate and drove to the west entrance, which was at
       one side of the house, there was no cessation of the game, not
       even a glance from Berenice, so busy was she.
       He was merely her mother's friend to her. Cowperwood noted, with
       singular vividness of feeling, that the lines of her movements--the
       fleeting, momentary positions she assumed--were full of a wondrous
       natural charm. He wanted to say so to Mrs. Carter, but restrained
       himself.
       "It's a brisk game," he commented, with a pleased glance. "You
       play, do you?"
       "Oh, I did. I don't much any more. Sometimes I try a set with
       Rolfe or Bevy; but they both beat me so badly."
       "Bevy? Who is Bevy?"
       "Oh, that's short of Berenice. It's what Rolfe called her when
       he was a baby."
       "Bevy! I think that rather nice."
       "I always like it, too. Somehow it seems to suit her, and yet I
       don't know why."
       Before dinner Berenice made her appearance, freshened by a bath
       and clad in a light summer dress that appeared to Cowperwood to
       be all flounces, and the more graceful in its lines for the
       problematic absence of a corset. Her face and hands, however--a
       face thin, long, and sweetly hollow, and hands that were slim and
       sinewy--gripped and held his fancy. He was reminded in the least
       degree of Stephanie; but this girl's chin was firmer and more
       delicately, though more aggressively, rounded. Her eyes, too,
       were shrewder and less evasive, though subtle enough.
       "So I meet you again," he observed, with a somewhat aloof air, as
       she came out on the porch and sank listlessly into a wicker chair.
       "The last time I met you you were hard at work in New York."
       "Breaking the rules. No, I forget; that was my easiest work. Oh,
       Rolfe," she called over her shoulder, indifferently, "I see your
       pocket-knife out on the grass."
       Cowperwood, properly suppressed, waited a brief space. "Who won
       that exciting game?"
       "I did, of course. I always win at tether-ball."
       "Oh, do you?" commented Cowperwood.
       "I mean with brother, of course. He plays so poorly." She turned
       to the west--the house faced south--and studied the road which
       came up from Stroudsburg. "I do believe that's Harry Kemp," she
       added, quite to herself. "If so, he'll have my mail, if there is
       any."
       She got up again and disappeared into the house, coming out a few
       moments later to saunter down to the gate, which was over a hundred
       feet away. To Cowperwood she seemed to float, so hale and graceful
       was she. A smart youth in blue serge coat, white trousers, and
       white shoes drove by in a high-seated trap.
       "Two letters for you," he called, in a high, almost falsetto voice.
       "I thought you would have eight or nine. Blessed hot, isn't it?"
       He had a smart though somewhat effeminate manner, and Cowperwood
       at once wrote him down as an ass. Berenice took the mail with an
       engaging smile. She sauntered past him reading, without so much
       as a glance. Presently he heard her voice within.
       "Mother, the Haggertys have invited me for the last week in August.
       I have half a mind to cut Tuxedo and go. I like Bess Haggerty."
       "Well, you'll have to decide that, dearest. Are they going to be
       at Tarrytown or Loon Lake?"
       "Loon Lake, of course," came Berenice's voice.
       What a world of social doings she was involved in, thought Cowperwood.
       She had begun well. The Haggertys were rich coal-mine operators
       in Pennsylvania. Harris Haggerty, to whose family she was probably
       referring, was worth at least six or eight million. The social
       world they moved in was high.
       They drove after dinner to The Saddler, at Saddler's Run, where a
       dance and "moonlight promenade" was to be given. On the way over,
       owing to the remoteness of Berenice, Cowperwood for the first time
       in his life felt himself to be getting old. In spite of the vigor
       of his mind and body, he realized constantly that he was over
       fifty-two, while she was only seventeen. Why should this lure of
       youth continue to possess him? She wore a white concoction of lace
       and silk which showed a pair of smooth young shoulders and a slender,
       queenly, inimitably modeled neck. He could tell by the sleek lines
       of her arms how strong she was.
       "It is perhaps too late," he said to himself, in comment. "I am
       getting old."
       The freshness of the hills in the pale night was sad.
       Saddler's, when they reached there after ten, was crowded with the
       youth and beauty of the vicinity. Mrs. Carter, who was prepossessing
       in a ball costume of silver and old rose, expected that Cowperwood
       would dance with her. And he did, but all the time his eyes were
       on Berenice, who was caught up by one youth and another of dapper
       mien during the progress of the evening and carried rhythmically
       by in the mazes of the waltz or schottische. There was a new dance
       in vogue that involved a gay, running step--kicking first one foot
       and then the other forward, turning and running backward and kicking
       again, and then swinging with a smart air, back to back, with one's
       partner. Berenice, in her lithe, rhythmic way, seemed to him the
       soul of spirited and gracious ease--unconscious of everybody and
       everything save the spirit of the dance itself as a medium of sweet
       emotion, of some far-off, dreamlike spirit of gaiety. He wondered.
       He was deeply impressed.
       "Berenice," observed Mrs. Carter, when in an intermission she came
       forward to where Cowperwood and she were sitting in the moonlight
       discussing New York and Kentucky social life, "haven't you saved
       one dance for Mr. Cowperwood?"
       Cowperwood, with a momentary feeling of resentment, protested that
       he did not care to dance any more. Mrs. Carter, he observed to
       himself, was a fool.
       "I believe," said her daughter, with a languid air, "that I am
       full up. I could break one engagement, though, somewhere."
       "Not for me, though, please," pleaded Cowperwood. "I don't care
       to dance any more, thank you."
       He almost hated her at the moment for a chilly cat. And yet he
       did not.
       "Why, Bevy, how you talk! I think you are acting very badly this
       evening."
       "Please, please," pleaded Cowperwood, quite sharply. "Not any
       more. I don't care to dance any more."
       Bevy looked at him oddly for a moment--a single thoughtful glance.
       "But I have a dance, though," she pleaded, softly. "I was just
       teasing. Won't you dance it with me?
       "I can't refuse, of course," replied Cowperwood, coldly.
       "It's the next one," she replied.
       They danced, but he scarcely softened to her at first, so angry
       was he. Somehow, because of all that had gone before, he felt
       stiff and ungainly. She had managed to break in upon his natural
       savoir faire--this chit of a girl. But as they went on through a
       second half the spirit of her dancing soul caught him, and he felt
       more at ease, quite rhythmic. She drew close and swept him into
       a strange unison with herself.
       "You dance beautifully," he said.
       "I love it," she replied. She was already of an agreeable height
       for him.
       It was soon over. "I wish you would take me where the ices are,"
       she said to Cowperwood.
       He led her, half amused, half disturbed at her attitude toward him.
       "You are having a pleasant time teasing me, aren't you?" he asked.
       "I am only tired," she replied. "The evening bores me. Really
       it does. I wish we were all home."
       "We can go when you say, no doubt."
       As they reached the ices, and she took one from his hand, she
       surveyed him with those cool, dull blue eyes of hers--eyes that
       had the flat quality of unglazed Dutch tiles.
       "I wish you would forgive me," she said. "I was rude. I couldn't
       help it. I am all out of sorts with myself."
       "I hadn't felt you were rude," he observed, lying grandly, his
       mood toward her changing entirely.
       "Oh yes I was, and I hope you will forgive me. I sincerely wish
       you would."
       "I do with all my heart--the little that there is to forgive."
       He waited to take her back, and yielded her to a youth who was
       waiting. He watched her trip away in a dance, and eventually led
       her mother to the trap. Berenice was not with them on the home
       drive; some one else was bringing her. Cowperwood wondered when
       she would come, and where was her room, and whether she was really
       sorry,and-- As he fell asleep Berenice Fleming and her slate-blue
       eyes were filling his mind completely. _
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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