Lawless (19 page)

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Authors: John Jakes

BOOK: Lawless
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Matt saw Dolly was uncomfortable as they left the restaurant and put Whistler and Jo into a hack. He finally got Dolly to admit she was suffering from cramps undoubtedly caused by the pregnancy. He spent his last few shillings on a second hack to carry them back to the hotel. He helped her undress, put her to bed, kissed her forehead and laughingly dismissed her worried statements that she’d ruined the most important night of their lives.

He sat beside her in the twilight until she fell asleep. Then he went downstairs, overwhelmed again by the mental malaise that seemed to be his lot these days.

He found Strelnik seated in the hotel’s tiny lobby. The Russian had his hands pressed against his knees and his eyes focused on a blank wall opposite his chair. Matt punched his shoulder.

“Come on, my friend. Even if the bride’s sound asleep, we should have some kind of celebration. Let’s go around to the Hart and Crown. I’ll stand you to a—” Belatedly, he realized why Strelnik’s cheeks glistened. “Sime, what happened?”

Slowly, Strelnik wiped his eyes. He drew a wrinkled telegraph blank from out of the pocket of his threadbare jacket. “This arrived while you were upstairs.”

Matt unfolded the sheet. The collection of unrelated English words made no sense. “What does it say?”

“It says”—Strelnik’s voice was feeble, dry sounding—“it says Yuri was executed the same day I went into hiding in Paris. The same day! And it’s taken all this time for the crime to be discovered!”

Gently, Matt gripped his friend’s arm and lifted him out of the chair. “I’m sorry. Come out into the air. I’d say we both need a glass of beer.”

“Several of them.” He snatched the message out of Matt’s hand, flung it away. Then he repeated in a fierce whisper, “Several!”

v

As such things sometimes have a way of doing, the future of the Strelnik family worked itself out after Matt and his friend got drunk.

Their drunkenness manifested itself in different ways. Matt grew pensive, then downright melancholy, as if he were the one mourning the loss of a brother. The little Russian grew progressively more angry.

“Bastards. Prussian
bastards.
They’re out to swallow the whole world. Room to live—that’s all they talk about! I hope Louis-Napoléon crucifies them. I doubt he will, though. That damned Moltke’s too good a general. Well, what’s left for me in Europe?” A callous shrug. “Nothing.”

Matt wiped foam from his upper lip, blinked twice, said in a sarcastic voice, “Why don’t you emigrate to America? Hell, it’s no worse than Europe now.”

“Listen, I’ve thought about it. Consh—uh—constantly sometimes. I don’t see the United States with the same cynical eye you do, Matthew.”

“I try not to look in that direction at all.”

It was a miserable joke. As miserable as everything in his life lately. Christ, look at him! Spending his wedding night in a London grog shop. On second thought, why shouldn’t he drink till he keeled over? He had nothing better to do. Much to Matt’s disgust, Strelnik seemed to be growing excited.

“I’d like to go to America. I think Leah would too.”

“I gave you credit for more—wait a second. Miss? Refills here.”

The serving girl shrieked as he flung his empty glass. She just managed to catch it before it hit the floor. Two dart players gave him sour looks. The owner scowled.

“Matthew, you’re drunk,” Strelnik whispered. “Drunk and disorderly.”

“So what? So are you. To repeat—I gave you credit for more intelligence.”

“Come on! At least America isn’t run by a gang of bloodthirsty imperialists, the way Prussia is. At least she hasn’t got a goddamned skirt-chasing Emperor, like France. In America the workingman gets a fair shake occasionally.”

Matt snorted. “Not according to my brother. Oh, but don’t let me shatter your illusions. William Marcy Tweed and his gang will take care of that when you arrive.”

“Tweed? Who’s he?”

“Oh, just the fellow who sets the standard for public and private morality, that’s all. I only know what Gideon tells me about him, but I’ll be damned if that isn’t enough. Bill Tweed is the political boss of New York City. The Tiger of Tammany—America’s greatest spoilsman. You’ll find out!”

Strelnik refused to be daunted by the sarcasm. “My family and I must do something soon. We’re living on your dole, and that’s not right. If I could just find a job, I could earn passage money within a year or two.”

Matt sighed. “Hell, I’ll loan you passage money when my father sends the advance on my allowance”—that would probably be cheaper than maintaining the Strelniks for an indefinite period—“
If
you’re really serious.”

“Yes, Matthew, I think I am.”

“Then I’ll give you a letter to my brother in New York. He’s starting that labor paper I mentioned. Maybe he needs some part-time help. At least it’s someone to go see when the ship docks.”

Strelnik studied Matt a moment, smiled a sad smile and shook his head. “You know, Matthew, for a man who presents a cynical face to the world, you are really quite softhearted.”

“Is that a fact! And here I thought I was a ninny scratching my head in the midst of the cleansing revolutionary fires, or some such shit.”

“Well, yes, there’s that. But you are very generous.”

“And you are very sozzled. Finish your beer and we’ll go tell Leah you’ve lost your mind.”

He raised the heavy glass which the serving girl had refilled. “To your new homeland. May it give you more than it’s ever given me—which is exactly nothing.”

vi

In the second week of August, Dolly and Matt accompanied the Strelniks to the train that would carry them to Southampton. The emigrants had purchased space in steerage aboard a vessel sailing directly to New York.

There was a tearful farewell between the two women, fervent handshakes and hugs between the men. Strelnik had carefully packed a letter Matthew had written to Gideon.

“We’ll see you in America on your first visit!” Leah exclaimed as the conductor shouted for them to get aboard. ‘

Matt laughed. “I’m afraid you’ll be waiting a long time. I don’t expect to go back there till I’m buried—if then.”

The Strelniks clambered into their compartment. Leah held Anton up to the open window, grasped his arm and waved it. The little boy soon got the idea, waving with great enthusiasm as the train began to move.

The moment it had chugged out of sight, Dolly slipped her arm in Matt’s. She had tears in her eyes. “Oh, Matt, did you see their faces? They all looked like children about to be visited by St. Nicholas!”

“I suppose you call that innocence, eh?”

“Or hope.”

“Whatever it is, they’ll soon lose it over there.”

“I wonder. I think they see a great many good things about your country. Genuinely good things you choose to ignore.”

“Yes, I’m sure Sime’s excited about the so-called freedom of expression he’ll find in America. Just wait till he stands up on a crate on some street corner and starts spouting off about dismantling the fortunes of the capitalist warlords. Wait till he says those fortunes should be redistributed to the working class. He’ll find himself exercising his freedom of expression in the lockup, maybe for the rest of his life.”

Dolly sighed. “I believe that’s one of the qualities I hate most about painters. They’re so disagreeably cynical sometimes.”

Irked, he started to retort. Before he could, she held up a glove. “Darling, forgive me. I shouldn’t have started on that subject.”

He was astounded. It wasn’t like her to surrender.

She drew a deep breath. When his anger abated a little, he noticed the drawn quality of her face. Pregnant women were supposed to look nauseatingly healthy; weren’t they? She looked as if worry were wearing her away.

“We have other, more personal things to discuss,” she said.

He managed a chuckle. “We do?”

“Yes. Will you take me for a walk along the Embankment?”

“Good God, Doll, it was raining when we came into the station.”

“I’d just like to be in the fresh air when we talk.”

“Talk about what?”

Looking straight ahead, she said, “About us. Now that the Strelniks have gone, I can do what I’ve been planning to do for some days now.”

He didn’t understand the sad, tender expression on her tired face. Touching him, she added very softly, “I’m going to leave you, Matt.”

Chapter XIII
On the Chelsea Embankment
i

T
HEY LEANED AGAINST
the stone railing above the Thames. Patches of blue showed in the west—clearing weather—but light rain still dappled the river. There was steady barge traffic. The boats of the watermen scooted back and forth carrying passengers between the public stairs at the bridges. South of the river in Lambeth and Southwark further east, rows of factory smokestacks and great construction cranes jutted into the sky. Vehicular traffic clattered in the road behind them. They neither heard nor saw anything but each other.

“It’s goddamned insanity!” Matt cried.

“My dear, that’s the fourth or fifth time you’ve used the same word. But it isn’t insanity. The marriage was a mistake.”

Dolly seemed very tense, as if keeping her emotions under control only by the greatest effort. Raindrops showed as black dots on her dark green dress, and sparkled in the yellow curls over her ears. Despite the full cut of her skirt, her pregnancy was beginning to show.

“I must be the one to call a halt because you won’t,” she continued. “Your conscience won’t let you. But you haven’t done any work since we arrived in London. You haven’t even gone to inspect the crates old Onion sent to Jim Whistler’s. I know the cause—one silly, mistaken idea that affects you even though it shouldn’t. Well, I learned long ago that you weren’t perfect, or even sensible all the time. God knows I’m not either—”

“You’ve lost me. What’s my mistaken idea?”

She reached up to touch his cheek. Her wry little smile vanished. “You persist in thinking everything’s ruined for you because you have a wife.”

“Dolly, that isn’t so!” he lied. “I married you because I love you.”

“And I love you. I’ll never love any man so much. But I do know the real reason you went through with the ceremony.”

Her tone was matter-of-fact. A passing waterman leaned on his paddle and waved. She lifted her glove but Matt didn’t respond. He stared at her, then blurted, “Why?”

“Because you thought I’d destroy the baby.”

He started to deny that, too, then closed his mouth and watched the falling rain and the smoke of the chimneys staining the southern sky like the harbinger of a mechanized, dehumanized world.

“Of course I thought about it,” she admitted. “I threatened you with it, and I can only beg you to forgive that. I was desperate. I could never have gone through with it.”

He turned to see whether she was telling the truth. Her eyes said yes. Her next words reinforced it.

“Not in a thousand years, Matt. But”—up came her chin; those lovely eyes had a bright glint now—“neither did I want our child to be born without a legal name.”

“Our son. It will be a boy.”

“You think that?”

Matt nodded. “I know it.”

“Somehow, so do I. That makes a legal name important. That’s why I can’t thank you enough for going through with it.”

Humiliated, he slapped his palms on the rough stone railing. His left hand still bore bruises. His face was scarlet as he breathed, “You make it sound like some almighty deed of altruism. I
love
you!”

“I know you do. But I also know how you feel about—domesticity. You’re convinced it has no part in a painter’s life. I think you’re in error, but I doubt I could ever change your mind, and I’m certain it would be disastrous to try. Yet feeling as you do, you still went through with it. You gave of yourself—the most you could give—and that says a good deal about you, love. I’ll be forever grateful. Moreover your chil—your son will be grateful. I’m going to have the baby at my new place of employment, you see.”

“Your new … ? You mean you’ve got a job someplace outside of London?”

She was amused. “A good distance outside. I’m leaving England.”

“To go where?”

She thought a moment, then chose her words with care. “The Empire is very large, you know. I’ve secured a position in a rather remote part of it. I’ve been looking quite hard since I made my decision. Just two days ago, I chanced across an employment bureau that works for the government. The bureau liked my experience teaching English in Paris, and we struck a bargain on the spot. The employment contract’s being drawn now. I discovered there’s a need for women with some knowledge of literature and grammar at military posts overseas. I’ll be teaching the children of officers at—one of those posts,” she said with a slight catch in her voice. Inadvertently, she’d almost revealed her destination.

He grabbed her arm with thoughtless roughness. “Listen, Dolly. You’ve got to tell me where you’re going!”

Without any reproof, she glanced down at his hand. Red-faced, he released her. She gave a small shake of her head.

“I don’t believe it would be advisable for you to know, Matt. Your conscience might push you into coming after me.” She brushed at her nose, tears in her eyes all at once. “Then”—she swallowed—“then think of all the fine paintings that might never be finished.”

“Do you want a formal divorce? I don’t know what’s involved, but—”

“I don’t want that unless you do,” she broke in.

“No!”

He studied her then, his spirits sinking steadily. He knew what a determined person she could be; underneath her softness was a layer of iron. He thought of a half dozen things to say, all of them inane. All he could do was mutter, “At least let me send you money.”

“Absolutely not. I’ll be well paid where I’m going. And I didn’t marry you because your grandfather owned a California gold mine and your father made you heir to one third of it! If I ever need a little for the baby, I’ll get in touch with you somehow. But I doubt that will be necessary.”

“I doubt it, too. You’re a bright woman—bright and capable and strong—”

“And plump,” she teased, laying a palm over her stomach. “I wouldn’t have spoken so soon, but I have a long journey, and I must travel before some doctor forbids it—or before there’s any danger to the baby. There’ll be no danger once I arrive. My destination’s quite civilized, I understand. With an excellent military hospital. I’ll be sailing in a week, after I’ve had a visit with my family in Liverpool. I don’t know what I’ll tell them. I suppose it’s best to say we’re obtaining a divorce. They’ll be unhappy, but much less so than if they thought I was bringing an illegitimate child into the world. Thanks to you he’ll be born a Kent.”

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