[Illustration: "Margaret">[

THE

EAGLE'S SHADOW

By

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Illustrated by Will Grafé

Decorated by Bianthe Ostortag

1904

Published, October, 1904

To

Martha Louise Branch

In trust that the enterprise may be judged
less by the merits of its factor than
by those of its patron

CONTENTS

CHAPTER

[I.]

[II.]

[III.]

[IV.]

[V.]

[VI.]

[VII.]

[VIII.]

[IX.]

[X.]

[XI.]

[XII.]

[XIII.]

[XIV.]

[XV.]

[XVI.]

[XVII.]

[XVIII.]

[XIX.]

[XX.]

[XXI.]

[XXII.]

[XXIII.]

[XXIV.]

[XXV.]

[XXVI.]

[XXVII.]

[XXVIII.]

[XXIX.]

[XXX.]

[XXXI.]

[XXXII.]

[XXXIII.]

THE CHARACTERS

Colonel Thomas Hugonin, formerly in the service of Her Majesty the

Empress of India, Margaret Hugonin's father.

Frederick R. Woods, the founder of Selwoode, Margaret's uncle by

marriage.

Billy Woods, his nephew, Margaret's quondam fiancé.

Hugh Van Orden, a rather young young man, Margaret's adorer.

Martin Jeal, M.D., of Fairhaven, Margaret's family physician.

Cock-Eye Flinks, a gentleman of leisure, Margaret's chance

acquaintance.

Petheridge Jukesbury, president of the Society for the Suppression of

Nicotine and the Nude, Margaret's almoner in furthering the cause of

education and temperance.

Felix Kennaston, a minor poet, Margaret's almoner in furthering the

cause of literature and art.

Sarah Ellen Haggage, Madame President of the Ladies' League for the

Edification of the Impecunious, Margaret's almoner in furthering the

cause of charity and philanthropy. Kathleen Eppes Saumarez, a lecturer

before women's clubs, Margaret's almoner in furthering the cause of

theosophy, nature study, and rational dress.

Adèle Haggage, Mrs. Haggage's daughter, Margaret's rival with Hugh Van

Orden.

And Margaret Hugonin.

The other participants in the story are Wilkins, Célestine, The Spring

Moon and The Eagle.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

"Margaret"

"'Altogether,' says Colonel Hugonin, 'they strike me as being the

most ungodly menagerie ever gotten together under one roof since Noah

landed on Ararat'"

"Then, for no apparent reason, Margaret flushed, and Billy ... thought

it vastly becoming"

"Billy Woods"

"Billy unfolded it slowly, with a puzzled look growing in his

countenance"

"'My lady,' he asked, very softly, 'haven't you any good news for me

on this wonderful morning?'"

"Miss Hugonin pouted. 'You needn't, be such a grandfather,' she

suggested helpfully."

"Regarded them with alert eyes"

THE EAGLE'S SHADOW

[I]

This is the story of Margaret Hugonin and of the Eagle. And with your

permission, we will for the present defer all consideration of the

bird, and devote our unqualified attention to Margaret.

I have always esteemed Margaret the obvious, sensible, most

appropriate name that can be bestowed upon a girl-child, for it is a

name that fits a woman--any woman--as neatly as her proper size in

gloves.

Yes, the first point I wish to make is that a woman-child, once

baptised Margaret, is thereby insured of a suitable name. Be she grave

or gay in after-life, wanton or pious or sullen, comely or otherwise,

there will be no possible chance of incongruity; whether she develop a

taste for winter-gardens or the higher mathematics, whether she take

to golf or clinging organdies, the event is provided for. One has only

to consider for a moment, and if among a choice of Madge, Marjorie,

Meta, Maggie, Margherita, Peggy, and Gretchen, and countless

others--if among all these he cannot find a name that suits her to a

T--why, then, the case is indeed desperate and he may permissibly

fall back upon Madam or--if the cat jump propitiously, and at his own

peril--on Darling or Sweetheart.

The second proof that this name must be the best of all possible names

is that Margaret Hugonin bore it. And so the murder is out. You may

suspect what you choose. I warn you in advance that I have no part

whatever in her story; and if my admiration for her given name appear

somewhat excessive, I can only protest that in this dissentient world

every one has a right to his own taste. I knew Margaret. I admired

her. And if in some unguarded moment I may have carried my admiration

to the point of indiscretion, her husband most assuredly knows all

about it, by this, and he and I are still the best of friends. So you

perceive that if I ever did so far forget myself it could scarcely

have amounted to a hanging matter.

I am doubly sure that Margaret Hugonin was beautiful, for the reason

that I have never found a woman under forty-five who shared my

opinion. If you clap a Testament into my hand, I cannot affirm that

women are eager to recognise beauty in one another; at the utmost they

concede that this or that particular feature is well enough. But when

a woman is clean-eyed and straight-limbed, and has a cheery heart,

she really cannot help being beautiful; and when Nature accords her

a sufficiency of dimples and an infectious laugh, I protest she is

well-nigh irresistible. And all these Margaret Hugonin had.

And surely that is enough.

I shall not endeavour, then, to picture her features to you in any

nicely picked words. Her chief charm was that she was Margaret.

And besides that, mere carnal vanities are trivial things; a gray

eye or so is not in the least to the purpose. Yet since it is the

immemorial custom of writer-folk to inventory such possessions of

their heroines, here you have a catalogue of her personal attractions.

Launce's method will serve our turn.

Imprimis, there was not very much of her--five feet three, at the

most; and hers was the well-groomed modern type that implies a

grandfather or two and is in every respect the antithesis of that

hulking Venus of the Louvre whom people pretend to admire. Item, she

had blue eyes; and when she talked with you, her head drooped forward

a little. The frank, intent gaze of these eyes was very flattering

and, in its ultimate effect, perilous, since it led you fatuously to

believe that she had forgotten there were any other trousered beings

extant. Later on you found this a decided error. Item, she had a quite

incredible amount of yellow hair, that was not in the least like gold

or copper or bronze--I scorn the hackneyed similes of metallurgical

poets--but a straightforward yellow, darkening at the roots; and she

wore it low down on her neck in great coils that were held in place

by a multitude of little golden hair-pins and divers corpulent

tortoise-shell ones. Item, her nose was a tiny miracle of perfection;

and this was noteworthy, for you will observe that Nature, who is an

adept at eyes and hair and mouths, very rarely achieves a creditable

nose. Item, she had a mouth; and if you are a Gradgrindian with a

taste for hairsplitting, I cannot swear that it was a particularly

small mouth. The lips were rather full than otherwise; one saw in them

potentialities of heroic passion, and tenderness, and generosity, and,

if you will, temper. No, her mouth was not in the least like the pink

shoe-button of romance and sugared portraiture; it was manifestly

designed less for simpering out of a gilt frame or the dribbling of

stock phrases over three hundred pages than for gibes and laughter

and cheery gossip and honest, unromantic eating, as well as another

purpose, which, as a highly dangerous topic, I decline even to

mention.

There you have the best description of Margaret Hugonin that I am

capable of giving you. No one realises its glaring inadequacy more

acutely than I.

Furthermore, I stipulate that if in the progress of our comedy she

appear to act with an utter lack of reason or even common-sense--as

every woman worth the winning must do once or twice in a

lifetime--that I be permitted to record the fact, to set it down in

all its ugliness, nay, even to exaggerate it a little--all to the end

that I may eventually exasperate you and goad you into crying out,

"Come, come, you are not treating the girl with common justice!"

For, if such a thing were possible, I should desire you to rival even

me in a liking for Margaret Hugonin. And speaking for myself, I can

assure you that I have come long ago to regard her faults with the

same leniency that I accord my own.

[II]

We begin on a fine May morning in Colonel Hugonin's rooms at Selwoode,

which is, as you may or may not know, the Hugonins' country-place.

And there we discover the Colonel dawdling over his breakfast, in an

intermediate stage of that careful toilet which enables him later in

the day to pass casual inspection as turning forty-nine.

At present the old gentleman is discussing the members of his

daughter's house-party. We will omit, by your leave, a number of

picturesque descriptive passages--for the Colonel is, on occasion, a

man of unfettered speech--and come hastily to the conclusion, to the

summing-up of the whole matter.

"Altogether," says Colonel Hugonin, "they strike me as being the most

ungodly menagerie ever gotten together under one roof since Noah

landed on Ararat."

Now, I am sorry that veracity compels me to present the Colonel

in this particular state of mind, for ordinarily he was as

pleasant-spoken a gentleman as you will be apt to meet on the

longest summer day.

[Illustration: "'Altogether,' says Colonel Hugonin, 'they strike me as

being the most ungodly menagerie ever gotten together under one roof

since Noah landed on Ararat.'">[

You must make allowances for the fact that, on this especial morning,

he was still suffering from a recent twinge of the gout, and that his

toast was somewhat dryer than he liked it; and, most potent of all,

that the foreign mail, just in, had caused him to rebel anew against

the proprieties and his daughter's inclinations, which chained him to

Selwoode, in the height of the full London season, to preside over a

house-party every member of which he cordially disliked. Therefore,

the Colonel having glanced through the well-known names of those at

Lady Pevensey's last cotillion, groaned and glared at his daughter,

who sat opposite him, and reviled his daughter's friends with point

and fluency, and characterised them as above, for the reason that he

was hungered at heart for the shady side of Pall Mall, and that their

presence at Selwoode prevented his attaining this Elysium. For, I am

sorry to say that the Colonel loathed all things American, saving his

daughter, whom he worshipped.

And, I think, no one who could have seen her preparing his second cup

of tea would have disputed that in making this exception he acted with

a show of reason. For Margaret Hugonin--but, as you know, she is

our heroine, and, as I fear you have already learned, words are very

paltry makeshifts when it comes to describing her. Let us simply say,

then, that Margaret, his daughter, began to make him a cup of tea, and

add that she laughed.

Not unkindly; no, for at bottom she adored her father--a comely

Englishman of some sixty-odd, who had run through his wife's fortune

and his own, in the most gallant fashion--and she accorded his

opinions a conscientious, but at times, a sorely taxed, tolerance.

That very month she had reached twenty-three, the age of omniscience,

when the fallacies and general obtuseness of older people become

dishearteningly apparent.

"It's nonsense," pursued the old gentleman, "utter, bedlamite

nonsense, filling Selwoode up with writing people! Never heard of such

a thing. Gad, I do remember, as a young man, meeting Thackeray at a

garden-party at Orleans House--gentlemanly fellow with a broken nose--

and Browning went about a bit, too, now I think of it. People had 'em

one at a time to lend flavour to a dinner--like an olive; we didn't

dine on olives, though. You have 'em for breakfast, luncheon, dinner,

and everything! I'm sick of olives, I tell you, Margaret!" Margaret

pouted.

"They ain't even good olives. I looked into one of that fellow

Charteris's books the other day--that chap you had here last week.

It was bally rot--proverbs standing on their heads and grinning

like dwarfs in a condemned street-fair! Who wants to be told that

impropriety is the spice of life and that a roving eye gathers

remorse?

You

may call that sort of thing cleverness, if you like; I

call it damn' foolishness." And the emphasis with which he said this

left no doubt that the Colonel spoke his honest opinion.

"Attractive," said his daughter patiently, "Mr. Charteris is very,

very clever. Mr. Kennaston says literature suffered a considerable

loss when he began to write for the magazines."

And now that Margaret has spoken, permit me to call your attention to

her voice. Mellow and suave and of astonishing volume was Margaret's

voice; it came not from the back of her throat, as most of our women's

voices do, but from her chest; and I protest it had the timbre of a

violin. Men, hearing her voice for the first time, were wont to stare

at her a little and afterward to close their hands slowly, for always

its modulations had the tonic sadness of distant music, and it

thrilled you to much the same magnanimity and yearning, cloudily

conceived; and yet you could not but smile in spite of yourself at the

quaint emphasis fluttering through her speech and pouncing for the

most part on the unlikeliest word in the whole sentence.

But I fancy the Colonel must have been tone-deaf. "Don't you make

phrases for me!" he snorted; "you keep 'em for your menagerie Think!

By gad, the world never thinks. I believe the world deliberately

reads the six bestselling books in order to incapacitate itself for

thinking." Then, his wrath gathering emphasis as he went on: "The

longer I live the plainer I see Shakespeare was right--what

fools these mortals be, and all that. There's that Haggage

woman--speech-making through the country like a hiatused politician.

It may be philanthropic, but it ain't ladylike--no, begad! What has

she got to do with Juvenile Courts and child-labour in the South, I'd

like to know? Why ain't she at home attending to that crippled boy

of hers--poor little beggar!--instead of flaunting through America

meddling with other folk's children?"

Miss Hugonin put another lump of sugar into his cup and deigned no

reply.

"By gad," cried the Colonel fervently, "if you're so anxious to spend

that money of yours in charity, why don't you found a Day Nursery for

the Children of Philanthropists--a place where advanced men and women

can leave their offspring in capable hands when they're busied with

Mothers' Meetings and Educational Conferences? It would do a thousand

times more good, I can tell you, than that fresh kindergarten scheme

of yours for teaching the children of the labouring classes to make a

new sort of mud-pie."

"You don't understand these things, attractive," Margaret gently

pointed out. "You aren't in harmony with the trend of modern thought."

"No, thank God!" said the Colonel, heartily.

Ensued a silence during which he chipped at his egg-shell in an

absent-minded fashion.

"That fellow Kennaston said anything to you yet?" he presently

queried.

"I--I don't understand," she protested--oh, perfectly unconvincingly.

The tea-making, too, engrossed her at this point to an utterly

improbable extent.