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Authors: Phillip Margulies

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“Not anymore.”

“And fire insurance and bank accounts, and God knows what—stocks and bonds, and houses. You’re headed to a hotel in Sacramento. You’re rich! Richer than ever. You’ve always treated yourself grand, and you’ve always been sharp with a dollar, except for that one time with Cora. And you’re respectable. They wouldn’t let you near that hill, even with all your money, if they knew who you used to be, and I’ll tell them if you don’t treat me right.”

We sat staring at each other. Finally, I asked, “You know what I was just about to do, Betsy?” That was her real name. I never heard anyone grant her the dignity of “Elizabeth”; it was always “Betsy” before it was “Antoinette.” “I was about to give you the address of my son, Frank, who
lives in a splendid mansion behind an iron gate, you know, just outside San Jose. He would set your silence at a higher price than I would, because he has business interests you could damage. I was going to give you his address, and telephone him about you and let you bring him your story.”

She waited for me to go on. When I didn’t, she inquired irritably, with an undertone of disquiet, “What do you mean? You were going to, but you changed your mind?”

“That’s right, because I’m sentimental about you, Betsy, and he’s such a ruthless man. No, it’s all right, you needn’t be frightened.”

She put a hard look on her face. “You can’t frighten me.”

“Are you sure you’re not frightened?” My tone was kindly, as though I had her best interests at heart. “You look a bit frightened.” I put my hand over hers. She flinched and tried to jerk the hand away. I held it. Neither of us was strong.

Mrs. Flynn, who had been watching from a distance of four or five yards, began to approach us. I waved her back.

“Let go of me.”

“Betsy, calm yourself.” I shifted my grip to her wrist. “I don’t want to see you hurt just because the fire unsettled you and made you say things you don’t mean. You’re no blackmailer. You don’t have the nerve. Your pulse is fast. I bet it’s faster now than it was during the earthquake. This is scarier. That was running away from danger. This is heading
into
danger. Can you do something so new, at your age? I don’t think so. It’s too late. Right?” Seconds passed. “To delay your answer so long is as much as to agree, Betsy.”

I released her hand, and she stood up.

“Where are you going, Betsy?” I asked. “Don’t run away. It’s too late to run.”

“Stop it,” she said. “You can’t bluff me.”

“Betsy, Betsy, Betsy. Who’s bluffing?”

She sat down again and began to weep, a poor weak old woman. I was glad. I didn’t want to hurt her.

Since then, I have kept track of Betsy, not that I am afraid she may reveal my secret—she won’t—but simply so that I may have the benefit of her memory when I want it. I have decided to write a true, full account of my life, which I’ve spent nearly half a century concealing.

Why do it? Why now? As I said at the beginning, the earthquake and fire contributed to my decision, with Harriet and “Antoinette” each doing her part to remind me that I have a lot of explaining to do. There are many crimes on my head, some known to history, others that will be revealed only with the publication of this book. I mean it to be a complete confession, which means, naturally, one with excuses, without which no confession is complete. I invite your judgment, reader.

I write these words sitting in a rattan chair on the balcony of the Belle Vista Hotel in Sacramento. I used to have a parlor house only a few blocks from here, with a winding staircase and a grand piano. How refreshing it feels to write that. The Belle Vista is a mediocre hotel. Its location, once semi-rural, is now a busy commercial district. Over the pedestrians’ heads, only a few yards from where I sit, the electric wires of the streetcars crackle with alarming white and blue sparks. But I have always found crowds soothing, I am immune to noise, and my money gets me special treatment here. Janet, becoming less a lady’s maid and more of a private nurse as time passes, has a room adjoining mine. Flo is in the kitchen to direct the preparation of my favorite dishes. I have moved in my furniture—choice pieces I was able to salvage—and my keepsakes, and a firm new bed from a downtown department store. Mrs. Flynn has her own room on my floor and runs errands and keeps me company. I enjoy the conversation of the drummers of sundry goods that patronize this class of hotel. Drummers will talk to anyone, and, whatever they may say to each other later, they never look skeptical when you tell them that once you were a great beauty and really (you lean forward, your reedy voice drops), really rather fast—no, it’s true!

The San Francisco where I’ve lived so long, the golden city in which I delighted and suffered, that made me rich, adored and pampered me, and finally took it in its head to demand that in the name of decency I leave it forever so that it could become respectable, is gone utterly, never to return. A new one will be built, but who knows what my condition will be by then? I’m not likely to resume the life I had before the fire, nor do I wish to. My thoughts keep turning, half against my will, to that other, long-buried life, to the New York City of my childhood, to the pious black-clad merchants who patrolled the First Ward docks distributing tracts with titles like
Happy Poverty
and
Deleterious Consequences of Idleness
and Dissipation
to men who could barely read; to the mother we all knew would die, the father whose name I could not for many years speak; the farm and village where I found an implacable enemy and a lover whom I lost and regained; and the parlor house where my illusions were stripped away—but not quite all of them, even then.

I think about these things, wishing I could send my thoughts back through the long line of my life like electricity through telegraph wire, all the way to my childhood self, to advise the little girl and the young woman. I lean forward in my chair. Do this, not that, trust this one, not that one, I want to tell her. My experiences have made me into a schemer; even in reminiscence I plot and contrive.

If it is a harbinger of mental decay that on some days it all seems realer to me than the Belle Vista Hotel, that is all the more reason to begin now, before the shadows gather. Every full-length history of the city contains some misshapen account of my story here, but they don’t know it from the inside, and they certainly don’t know the whole story. They don’t know what brought me here. I want that told, at least after I’m dead: and this won’t be published until then.

Those are my own selfish purposes for writing this book. Why anyone should read it is another matter—and here I have changed my mind. Over the years my hypocrisy has become so habitual that I was about to say something false: that, though my autobiography must touch on indecent matters, its effect would be moral. It would strip away the cheap glamour that flatters vice, and also the well-intended concealment that leaves frail young creatures unwarned and unprotected, etc. I don’t really think that way. That’s not the way I am made. To tell people how to behave in regard to any matter that does not immediately touch my interest is simply not in my nature. Whether some books corrupt people and others fortify them, I don’t know. Perhaps they do. It is a matter of indifference to me. I just want to tell what happened.

*
Frederick Funston, “How the Army Worked to Save San Francisco,”
Cosmopolitan
, July 1906, vol. 41, no. 3. —Ed.

I

THERE IS A STORY ABOUT A GIRL
who took the wrong path, and rues it all her life. She is too trusting. She is too passionate. The result: an error than can’t be corrected, a stain that can’t be washed out. Back on the old homestead where she grew up, no one is permitted to speak her name, and her picture is turned to the wall.

Gentlemen love this story, so when any girl in a house of mine lacked some version of it I would help her to make one up. I’d take her to a good restaurant at a quiet time of day, order something very expensive, and tell her, “You were an Ohio farm girl, and to help your folks out with the bank loan you went to work in a mill. The mill agent’s son noticed you. He was very handsome. That was your downfall.”

Or I’d begin, “You’re from a fine old Baltimore family. Your father was a good man, except he was a bit reckless: he gambled; he was killed in a duel.”

And so on. There was a time when I had three girls declaring in the face of overwhelming contrary evidence that they were the daughters of clergymen.

Why it was useful to say these things, I can only guess. God knows it wasn’t to evoke pity. We weren’t beggars, and the customers weren’t softhearted. The important thing was that it worked. We knew from experience that these men paid more for the attention of a girl wrapped in the fiction that she had not chosen this life—she was unlucky, meant for something better, but here to enjoy thanks to her misfortune.

Sometimes we lied even though the truth was perfect. The pretty creature would run a fingertip along the rim of her glass and tell me, “I
was
a farm girl, but in Indiana,” or “There
was
a boss’s son, and a child, it
did
die, I
did
try to kill myself.” I’d inquire, “Do you ever tell them that?” She’d answer, “No.” I’d say, “Of course not: it’s too personal. But since it resembles what they want to hear, tell them something else along those lines. That way everyone’s happy.”

The truth was withheld only because so much else had to be forfeited. My case was like that. I was the country girl. And before that, I was the rich girl.

TO BEGIN WITH THE FIRST STORY
, I was born in 1828, into a family of pious Yankee merchants. My grandfather, a silk importer, had come to New York from Massachusetts fifteen years earlier and had prospered. He owned what was for several years the tallest building in New York City. My father was his chief clerk. My mother was an invalid, and we prayed every day that she would live and knew that she would die.

Our home was in Bowling Green, a fashionable New York City neighborhood a little past its prime. Its fine three-story buildings, with their pitched roofs and neat rows of dormer windows and wrought-iron fences, were being refashioned to live second lives as boarding houses, or being torn down entirely and replaced with hotels. I think it is because I was born there that the world has always felt old to me. The United States was young. Newspapers constantly reminded us of that. But in Bowling Green things showed signs of long use. I remember when a flood on the second floor of our house damaged a wall of the sitting room on the floor below, revealing many old layers of wallpaper, in quaint patterns, and my father told me that they had been pasted to the walls by the people who had been here before us, and deeper layers had been put there by the people who were here still earlier. How remarkable: there had been other families, surrounded by fleurs-de-lis on yellow, before that by pussy-willow twigs on green, and so on, layer on layer, back and back. Digging in the courtyard, I would find children’s lost whip tops and penny dolls. Who were these children? Where were they now?

One still saw pigs in the streets, and when I look back now, their freedom to roam the nation’s leading commercial city seems like proof that the United States was only half civilized; but I didn’t think so, since I was a child, with no basis for comparison. So far as I knew, there had always been pigs on Broadway, along with carriages and omnibuses. It had all been there before me, in the era of fleurs-de-lis, in the era of pussy willows, forever. And if new houses were rising on new streets to the north, that, too, had been going on for ages, and no one knew how much longer it would be permitted to continue. The world would end soon, according to several upstate New York ministers.

BOOK: Belle Cora: A Novel
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