Classic Audiobook Collection - Quicksand by Nella Larsen ~ Full Audiobook [drama]
Episode Date: June 23, 2023Quicksand by Nella Larsen audiobook. Genre: drama In 1920s America and Europe, Helga Crane moves through elegant parlors, classrooms, and crowded streets with a restless sense that she never quite be...longs. The daughter of a Black father and a white mother, Helga is sharp-eyed, proud, and hungry for a life that feels truthful - yet every community she enters demands she trim herself to fit. When she leaves a restrictive Southern school, her search for independence carries her north to Harlem's glittering social world, then onward to spaces where race, class, faith, and desire tighten into new kinds of rules. Helga's intelligence and beauty open doors, but they also invite scrutiny, projection, and loneliness, forcing her to confront how quickly admiration can turn into control. As she reaches for love, security, and self-definition, she must decide what she is willing to sacrifice - and what she cannot. Taut, psychologically incisive, and quietly devastating, Quicksand traces one woman's struggle against the shifting expectations placed on her body, her ambitions, and her identity, capturing the seductive promises and hidden costs of belonging. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:22:03) Chapter 02 (00:34:48) Chapter 03 (00:48:57) Chapter 04 (00:59:34) Chapter 05 (01:07:55) Chapter 06 (01:21:27) Chapter 07 (01:34:00) Chapter 08 (01:43:15) Chapter 09 (01:56:59) Chapter 10 (02:06:51) Chapter 11 (02:18:21) Chapter 12 (02:28:01) Chapter 13 (02:42:10) Chapter 14 (03:01:45) Chapter 15 (03:23:47) Chapter 16 (03:32:33) Chapter 17 (03:39:52) Chapter 18 (03:55:07) Chapter 19 (04:03:26) Chapter 20 (04:16:20) Chapter 21 (04:23:05) Chapter 22 (04:33:55) Chapter 23 (04:43:02) Chapter 24 (04:57:13) Chapter 25 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Quick Sand by Nella Larson
My old man died in a fine big house.
My ma died in a shack.
I wonder where I'm going to die, being neither white nor black.
Lankston Hughes
Chapter 1
Helga Crane sat alone in her room, which at that hour, eight in the evening, was in soft gloom.
Only a single reading lamp, dimmed by a great black and red shade, made a poor,
of light on the blue Chinese carpet, on the bright covers of the books which she had taken
down from their long shelves, on the white pages of the opened one selected, on the shining
brass bowl crowded with many colored nasturtiums beside her on the low table, and on
the oriental silk which covered the stool at her slim feet.
It was a comfortable room, furnished with rare and intensely personal taste, flooded with
southern sun in the day, but shadowy just then with the
the drawn curtains and single-shaded light. Large, too. So large that the spot where Helga sat
was a small oasis in a desert of darkness, and eerily quiet. But that was what she liked
after her taxing day's work, after the hard classes, in which she gave willingly and unsparingly
of herself with no apparent return. She loved this tranquility, this quiet, following the fret and
strain of the long hours spent among fellow members of a carelessly unkind and gossiping faculty,
following the strenuous rigidity of conduct required in this huge educational community,
of which she was an insignificant part. This was her rest, this intentional isolation for a short
while in the evening, this little time in her own attractive room with her own books.
To the wrapping of other teachers, bearing fresh scandals, or seeking information,
or more concrete favours, or merely talk, at that hour Helga Crane never opened her door.
An observer would have thought her well-fitted to that framing of light and shade.
A slight girl of twenty-two years, with narrow, sloping shoulders and delicate, but well-turned arms and legs,
she had, nonetheless, an air of radiant, careless health.
In vivid green and gold negligee and glistening brocaded mules, deep sunk in the big,
high-backed chair, against whose dark tapestry her sharply cut face, with skin like yellow satin,
was distinctly outlined. She was, to use a hackneyed word, attractive.
Black, very broad brows over soft yet penetrating dark eyes, and a pretty mouth,
whose sensitive and sensuous lips had a slight questioning petulence, and a touch of
tiny dissatisfied droop, were the features on which the observer's attention would fasten.
Though her nose was good, her ears delicately chiselled, and her curly blue-black hair plentiful
and always straying in a little wayward delightful way. Just then it was tumbled,
falling unrestrained about her face and onto her shoulders. Helga Crane tried not to think of
her work and the school as she sat there. Ever since her arrival in Naxos, she had striven
to keep these ends of the days from the intrusion of irritating thoughts and worries. Usually she
was successful, but not this evening. Of the books which she had taken from their places,
she had decided on Marmaduke Pickthal's Saeed the fisherman. She wanted forgetfulness, complete
mental relaxation, rest from thought of any kind. For the day had been more than usually
crowded with distasteful encounters and stupid perversities. The sly
Sultry hot southern spring had left her strangely tired, and a little unnerved.
And, annoying beyond all other happenings, had been that affair of the noon period, now again
thrusting itself on her already irritated mind.
She had counted on a few spare minutes in which to indulge in the sweet pleasure of a bath
and a fresh, cool change of clothing.
And instead, her luncheon time had been shortened, as had that of everyone else, and immediately
after the hurried gulping down of a heavy-hot meal, the hundred hundred hundred and
of students and teachers had been herded into the sun-baked chapel to listen to the banal,
the patronizing, and even the insulting remarks of one of the renowned white preachers of the
state.
Helga shuddered a little as she recalled some of the statements made by that holy white
man of God to the black folk sitting so respectfully before him.
This was, he had told them, with obvious sectional pride, the finest school for Negroes
anywhere in the country, north or south. In fact, it was better even than a great many schools
for white children. And he had dared any northerner to come south, and after looking upon
this great institution, to say that the southerner mistreated the negro. And he had said
that if all negroes would only take a leaf out of the book of Naxos, and conduct themselves
in the manner of the Naxos products, there would be no race problem, because Naxos
negroes knew what was expected of them. They had good sense, and they had good taste.
They knew enough to stay in their places, and that, said the preacher, showed good taste.
He spoke of his great admiration for the Negro race. No other race in so short a time had made
so much progress, but he had urgently besought them to know when and where to stop.
He hoped, he sincerely hoped, that they wouldn't become avaricious in grasping,
thinking only of adding to their earthly goods, for that would be a sin in the sight of Almighty God.
And then he had spoken of contentment, embellishing his words with scriptural quotations,
and pointing out to them that it was their duty to be satisfied in the estate to which they had been called,
hewers of wood and drawers of water. And then he had prayed.
Sitting there in her room long hours after, Helga again felt a surge of hot anger and seething resentment.
And again it subsided in amazement at the memory of the considerable applause
which had greeted the speaker just before he had asked his God's blessing upon them.
The South.
Naxos.
Negro education.
Suddenly she hated them all.
Strange, too, for this was the thing which she had ardently desired to share in,
to be a part of this monument to one man's genius and vision.
She pinned a scrap of paper about the bulb under the lamp's shade,
for having discarded her book in the certainty that in such moods even Syed and his audacious
villainy could not charm her, she wanted an even more soothing darkness. She wished it were vacation,
so that she might get away for a time. No, forever, she said aloud. The minutes gathered
into hours, but still she sat motionless, a disdainful smile or an angry frown passing now and then
across her face. Somewhere in the room a little clock ticked time away. Somewhere outside a
Whippoorwill wailed. Evening died. A sweet smell of early southern flowers rushed in on a
newly risen breeze which suddenly parted the thin silk curtains at the opened windows. A slender,
frail glass vase fell from the sill. With a tingling crash, but Helga Crane did not shift her
position, and the night grew cooler and older. At last she stirred uncertainly, but with an
overpowering desire for action of some sort. A second she hesitated.
then rose abruptly and pressed the electric switch with determined firmness, flooding suddenly
the shadowy room with a white glare of light.
Next she made a quick nervous tour to the end of the long room, paused a moment before the
old bow-legged secretary that held with almost articulate protest her school-teacher parapher
paraphernalia of drab books and papers.
Frantically Helga Crane clutched at the lot, and then flung them violently, scornfully
toward the waste-basket.
It received a part.
allowing the rest to spill untidily over the floor.
The girl smiled ironically,
seeing in the mess a simile of her own earnest endeavor
to inculcate knowledge into her indifferent classes.
Yes, it was like that.
A few of the ideas which she tried to put into the minds,
behind which those baffling ebony, bronze and gold faces
reached their destination.
The others were left scattered about.
And, like the gay, indifferent waist-basket,
It wasn't their fault.
No, it wasn't the fault of those minds' back of the diverse-colored faces.
It was rather the fault of the method, the general idea behind the system.
Like her own hurried shot at the basket, the aim was bad, the material drab and badly prepared
for its purpose.
This great community, she thought, was no longer a school.
It had grown into a machine.
It was now a show-place in the black belt,
exemplification of the white man's magnanimity, refutation of the black man's inefficiency.
Life had died out of it. It was, Helga decided, now only a big knife with cruelly sharp edges
ruthlessly cutting all to a pattern, the white man's pattern. Teachers as well as students were
subjected to the pairing process, for it tolerated no innovations, no individualisms,
ideas it rejected, and looked with open,
hostility, on one and all who had the temerity to offer a suggestion, or ever so mildly
express a disapproval.
Enthusiasm, spontaneity, if not actually suppressed, were at least openly regretted as
unladylike or ungentlemanly qualities.
The place was smug and fat with self-satisfaction.
A peculiar characteristic trait—cold—slow accumulated unreason in which all values were distorted
or else ceased to exist, had with surprising ferociousness shaken the bulwarks of that self-restraint,
which was also curiously a part of her nature. And now that it had waned as quickly as it had risen,
she smiled again. And this time the smile held a faint amusement, which wiped away the little
hardness which had congealed her lovely face. Nevertheless, she was soothed by the impetuous
discharge of violence, and a sigh of relief came from her. She said a last,
quietly, dispassionately.
Well, I'm through with that.
And shutting off the hard, bright blaze of the overhead lights,
went back to her chair and settled down with an odd gesture of sudden soft collapse,
like a person who had been for months fighting the devil,
and then unexpectedly had turned round and agreed to do his bidding.
Helga Crane had taught Anaxos for almost two years,
at first with the keen joy and zest of those immature people
who have dreamed dreams of doing good to their fellow men.
But gradually this zest was blotted out, giving place to a deep hatred for the trivial
hypocrisies and careless cruelties, which were, unintentionally perhaps, a part of the Naxos policy
of uplift.
Yet she had continued to try not only to teach, but to befriend those happy singing children,
whose charm and distinctiveness the school was so surely ready to destroy.
Instinctively Helga was aware that their smiling submissiveness covered many poignant heartaches,
and perhaps much secret contempt for their instructors.
But she was powerless.
In Naxos, between teacher and student, between condescending authority and smouldering resentment,
the gulf was too great, and too few had tried to cross it.
It couldn't be spanned by one sympathetic teacher.
It was useless to offer her atom of friendship, which under the existing
conditions was neither wanted nor understood. Nor was the general atmosphere of Naxos, its
air of self-rightness and intolerant dislike of difference, the best of mediums for a pretty,
solitary girl with no family connections. Helga's essentially likable and charming personality
was smudged out. She had felt this for a long time. Now she faced with determination that
other truth which she had refused to formulate in her thoughts, the fact that she was utterly unfitted for
teaching, even for mere existence in Naxos. She was a failure here. She had, she conceded
now, being silly, obstinate to persist for so long, a failure. Therefore no need, no use to stay
longer. Suddenly she longed for immediate departure. How good she thought, to go now, tonight!
And frowned to remember how impossible that would be. The dignitaries, she said, are not
in their offices, and there'll be yards and yards of red tape to unwind—gantic, impressive
spools of it.
And there was James Vale to be told, and much needed money to be got.
James, she decided, had better be told at once.
She looked at the clock racing indifferently on.
No, too late.
It would have to be to-morrow.
She hated to admit that money was the most serious difficulty.
Knowing full well that it was important, she nevertheless rebelled.
at the unalterable truth that it could influence her actions, block her desires, a sordid
necessity to be grappled with. With Helga it was almost a superstition that to concede to money
its importance magnified its power. Still, in spite of her reluctance and distaste, her financial
situation would have to be faced, and plans made, if she were to get away from Naxos
with anything like the haste which she now so ardently desired. Most of her earnings had gone
into clothes, into books, into the furnishings of the room which held her. All her life Helga Crane
had loved and longed for nice things. Indeed it was this craving, this urge for beauty which
had helped to bring her into disfavor in Naxos, pride and vanity, her detractors called it.
The sum owing to her by the school would just a little more than buy her ticket back to Chicago.
It was too near the end of the school term to hope to get to teaching work anywhere.
If she couldn't find something else, she would have to ask Uncle Peter for alone.
Uncle Peter was, she knew, the one relative who thought kindly, or even calmly, of her.
Her stepfather, her step-brothers and sisters, and the numerous cousins, aunts, and other
uncles could not even be remotely considered.
She laughed a little, scornfully, reflecting that the antagonism was mutual, or perhaps just
a trifle keener on her side than on theirs.
They feared and hated her.
She pitied and despised them.
Uncle Peter was different.
In his contemptuous way he was fond of her.
Her beautiful, unhappy mother had been his favourite sister.
Even so, Helga Crane knew that he would be more likely to help her, because her need would
strengthen his oft-repeated conviction that because of her negro blood she would never amount
to anything than from motives of affection or loving memory.
This knowledge in its present aspect of truth irritated her to an astonishing degree.
She regarded Uncle Peter almost vindictively, although he had always been extraordinarily generous
with her and she fully intended to ask his assistance.
A beggar, she thought ruefully, cannot expect to choose.
Returning to James Vale, her thoughts took on the frigidity of complete determination.
Her resolution to end her stay in Naxos would, of course, in
inevitably end her engagement to James. She had been engaged to him since her first semester
there, when both had been new workers, and both were lonely. Together they had discussed their
work and problems and adjustment, and had drifted into a closer relationship. Bitterly, she
reflected that James had speedily, and with entire ease, fitted into his niche. He was now
completely naturalized, as they used laughingly to call it. Helga, on the other hand, had never
quite achieved the unmistakable Naxos mold would never achieve it, in spite of much trying.
She could neither conform nor be happy in her unconformity. This she saw clearly now, and with cold
anger at all the past futile effort. What a waste! How pathetically she had struggled in those
first months, and with what small success! A lack somewhere!
Always, she had considered it a lack of understanding on the part of the community, but in her present
new revolt she realized that the fault had been partly hers—a lack of acquiescence.
She hadn't really wanted to be made over.
This thought bred a sense of shame, a feeling of ironical disillusion.
Evidently there were parts of her she couldn't be proud of.
The revealing picture of her past striving was too humiliating.
It was as if she had deliberately planned to steal an ugly thing, for which she had had no desire,
and had been found out.
Ironically she visualised the discomfort of James Vale, how her maladjustment had bothered him.
She had a faint notion that it was behind his ready assent to her suggestion about a longer
engagement than originally they had planned.
He was liked and approved of in Naxos, and loathed the idea that the girl he was to marry
couldn't manage to win liking and approval also. Instinctively Helga had known that secretly
he had placed the blame upon her. How right he had been! Certainly his attitude had gradually
changed, though he still gave her his attentions. Naxos pleased him, and he had become content
with life as it was lived there. No longer lonely, he was now one of the community, and so beyond
the need or the desire to discuss its affairs and its failings with an outsider. She was, she
knew, in a queer, indefinite way, a disturbing factor. She knew, too, that a something held
him, a something against which he was powerless. The idea that she was in but one nameless way
necessary to him filled her with a sensation amounting almost to shame. And yet his mute helplessness
against that ancient appeal by which she held him, pleased her, and fed her vanity, gave
her a feeling of power. And at the same time she shrank away from it.
subtly aware of possibilities she herself couldn't predict.
Helga's own feelings defeated inquiry, but honestly confronted all pretence brushed aside,
the dominant one, she suspected, was relief.
At least she felt no regret that to-morrow would mark the end of any claim she had upon
him.
The surety that the meeting would be a clash annoyed her, for she had no talent for quarrelling.
When possible she preferred to flee.
That was all.
the family of james vale in near by atlanta would be glad they had never liked the engagement had never liked helga crane her own lack of family disconcerted them no family that was the crux of the whole matter
For Helga it accounted for everything.
Her failure here in Naxos, her former loneliness in Nashville.
It even accounted for her engagement to James.
Negro society, she had learned, was as complicated and as rigid in its ramifications
as the highest strata of white society.
If you couldn't prove your ancestry and connections, you were tolerated, but you didn't
belong.
You could be queer or even attractive, or bad or brilliant, or even love,
beauty in such nonsense if you were a Rankin or a Leslie or a Scoville, in other words, if you had
a family. But if you were just plain Helga Crane, of whom nobody had ever heard, it was presumptuous
of you to be anything but inconspicuous and conformable. To relinquish James Vale would most
certainly be social suicide, for the veils were people of consequence. The fact that they were
a first family had been one of James's attractions for the obscure health.
She had wanted social background, but she had not imagined that it could be so stuffy.
She made a quick movement of impatience, and stood up.
As she did so, the room whirled about her in an impish, hateful way.
Familiar object seemed suddenly unhappily distant.
Faintness closed about her like a vice.
She swayed, her small, slender hands gripping the chair-arms for support.
In a moment the faintness receded, leaving in its wake a sharp
resentment at the trick which her strained nerves had played upon her, and after a moment's
rest she hurriedly got into bed, leaving her room disorderly for the first time.
Books and papers scattered about the floor, fragile stockings and underthings, and the
startling green and gold negligee dripping about on chairs and stool, met the encounter
of the amazed eyes of the girl who came in the morning to awaken Helga Crane.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2 of QuickSand
This Livervox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clette.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 2
She woke in the morning unrefreshed, and with that feeling of half-terrified apprehension
peculiar to Christmas and birthday mornings.
A long moment she lay puzzling under the sun, streaming in a golden flow through the yellow
curtains. Then her mind returned to the night before. She had decided to leave Naxos. That was it.
Sharply she began to probe her decision. Reviewing the situation carefully, frankly, she felt no
wish to change her resolution, except that it would be inconvenient. Much as she wanted to shake the dust
of the place from her feet forever, she realized that there would be difficulties. Red tape, James
veil, money, other work. Regretfully she was forced to acknowledge that it would be vastly
better to wait until June the close of the school year. Not so long, really, half of March,
April, May, some of June. Surely she could endure for that much longer conditions which she had
borne for nearly two years. By an effort of will, her will, it could be done. But this reflection,
sensible, expedient, though it was, did not reconcile her. To remain seemed too hard. Could
she do it? Was it possible in the present rebellious state of her feelings? The uneasy sense
of being engaged with some formidable antagonist, nameless and ununderstood, startled her.
It wasn't, she was suddenly aware, merely the school and its ways and its decorous stupid people
that oppressed her. There was something else, some other, more ruthless force. A quality within
herself which was frustrating her, had always frustrated her, kept her from getting the things
she had wanted, still wanted. But just what did she want? Barring a desire for material
security, gracious ways of living, a profusion of lovely clothes, and a goodly share of envious admiration,
Helga Crane didn't know, couldn't tell. But there was, she knew, something else.
Happiness, she supposed, whatever that might be. What exactly she wondered was happiness?
Very positively she wanted it. Yet her conception of it had no tangibility. She couldn't define it,
isolated and contemplated as she could some other abstract things, hatred, for instance,
or kindness.
The strident ringing of a bell somewhere in the building brought back the fierce resentment
of the night.
It crystallized her wavering determination.
From long habit her biscuit-colored feet had slipped mechanically out from under the covers
at the bell's first unkind jangle.
Leisurely she drew them back, and her cold anger vanished as she decided that, now,
it didn't at all matter if she failed to appear at the monotonous, distasteful breakfast
which was provided for her by the school as part of her wages.
In the corridor beyond her door was a medley of noises,
incident to the rising and preparing for the day,
at the same hour of many schoolgirls.
Foolish giggling, indistinguishable snatches of merry conversation,
distant gurgle of running water, patter of slippered feet,
low-pitched singing, good-natured admonitions to hurry,
slamming of doors, clatter of various unnameable articles,
and suddenly, calamitous silence.
Helga ducked her head under the covers in the vain attempt to shut out what she knew would
fill the pregnant silence, the sharp, sarcastic voice of the dormitory matron.
It came.
Well, even if every last one of you did come from homes where you weren't taught any manners,
you might at least try to pretend that you're capable of learning some here, now that you
have the opportunity.
Who slammed the shower-bath's door?
silence. Well, you needn't trouble to answer. It's rude as all of you know. But it's just as well
because none of you can tell the truth. Now hurry up. Don't let me hear of a single one of you being
late for breakfast. If I do, there'll be extra work for everybody on Saturday. And please, at least,
try to act like ladies and not like savages from the backwoods. On her side of the door,
Helga was wondering if it had ever occurred to the lean and desiccated Miss McGooden that most of her
charges had actually come from the backwoods, quite recently, too. Miss McGudden, humorless, prim,
ugly, with a face like dried leather, prided herself on being a lady from one of the best families,
an uncle had been a congressman in the period of the reconstruction. She was, therefore,
Helga Crane reflected, perhaps unable to perceive that the inducement to act like a lady,
her own acrimonious example, was slight, if not altogether, negative. And thinking on Miss
McGooden's ladiness, Helga grinned a little as she remembered that one's expressed reason
for never having married or intending to marry. There were, so she had been given to understand,
things in the matrimonial state that were of necessity entirely too repulsive for a lady of delicate
and sensitive nature to submit to.
Soon the forcibly shut off noises began to be heard again,
as the evidently vanishing image of Miss McGudden
evaporated from the short memories of the ladies in making.
Preparations for the intake of the day's quota of learning went on again,
almost naturally.
So much for that, said Helga, getting herself out of bed.
She walked to the window and stood looking down into the great quadrangle below,
at the multitude of students streaming from the sixth,
six big dormitories, which, two each, flanked three of its sides, and assembling into neat
phalanxes preparatory to marching in military order to the sorry breakfast in Jones Hall on
the fourth side.
Here and there a male member of the faculty, important and resplendent in the regalia of an army
officer, would pause in his prancing or strutting, to jerk a negligent or offending student
into the proper attitude or place.
The masked phalanxes increased in size and
number, blotting out pavements, bare earth, and grass.
And about it all was a depressing silence, a sullenness almost, until with a horrible abruptness
the waiting band blared into the star-spangled banner.
The goose-step began, left, right, left, right, forward, march.
The automaton's moved, the squares disintegrated into fours, into twos, disappeared into
the gaping doors of Jones Hall. After the last pair of marchers had entered, the huge doors
were closed. A few unlucky late-comers, apparently already discouraged, tugged half-heartedly
at the knobs, and finding, as they had evidently expected, that they were indeed barred out,
turned resignedly away. Halga Crane turned away from the window, a shadow dimming the pale amber
loveliness of her face. Seven o'clock it was now. At twelve, and a-crayne, and a-clock it was now. At twelve,
those children who by some accident had been a little minute or too late would have their
first meal after five hours of work and so-called education. Discipline it was called.
There came a light knocking on her door.
Come in, invited Helga unenthusiastically. The door opened to admit Margaret Creighton,
another teacher in the English department, and to Helga the most congenial member of the
whole Naxos faculty. Margaret, she felt, appreciates.
her. Seeing Helga still in night-robe, seated on the bedside in a mass of cushions,
idly dangling a mule across bare toes, like one with all the time in the world before her,
she exclaimed in dismay, "'Helga Crane! Do you know what time it is? Why, it's long after half-past
seven. The students—' "'Yes, I know,' said Helga defiantly. "'The students are coming out from
breakfast. We'll let them. I, for one, wish that there was some way that they could forever stay
from the poisonous stuff thrown at them, literally thrown at them, Margaret Creighton, for food.
Poor things!"
Margaret laughed.
"'That's just ridiculous sentiment, Helga, and you know it.
But you haven't had any breakfast yourself.
Jim Vail asked if you were sick.
Of course nobody knew.
You never tell anybody anything about yourself.
I said I'd look in on you.'
"'Thanks awfully,' Helga responded indifferently.
She was watching the sunlight dissolve from thick orange into pills.
yellow. Slowly it crept across the room, wiping out in its path the morning shadows. She
wasn't interested in what the other was saying.
"'If you don't hurry you'll be late to your first class. Can I help you?'
Margaret offered uncertainly. She was a little afraid of Helga. Nearly everyone was.
"'No. Thanks all the same.'
Then quickly in another warmer tone.
"'I do mean it. Thanks a thousand times, Margaret. I'm really all the same. I'm really
awfully grateful, but—you see, it's like this. I'm not going to be late to my class.
I'm not going to be there at all. The visiting girl standing in relief like old walnut against
the buff-colored wall darted a quick glance at Helga. Plainly she was curious, but she only
said formally, "'Oh, then you are sick?' For something there was about Helga which discouraged
questionings. No, Helga wasn't sick. Not physically.
She was merely disgusted, fed up with Naxos, if that could be called sickness.
The truth was that she had made up her mind to leave, that very day.
She could no longer abide being connected with a place of shame, lies, hypocrisy, cruelty,
servility, and snobbishness.
It ought, she concluded, to be shut down by law.
But Helga, you can't go now, not in the middle of the term.
The kindly Margaret was distressed.
But I can, and I am, today.
They'll never let you, prophesied Margaret.
They can't stop me.
Trains leave here for civilization every day.
All that's needed is money, Helga pointed out.
Yes, of course, everybody knows that.
What I mean is that you'll only hurt yourself in your profession.
They won't give you a reference if you jump up and leave like this now,
At this time of the year, you'll be put on the blacklist.
And you'll find it hard to get another teaching job.
Naxos has enormous influence in the South.
Better wait till school closes.
Heaven forbid, answered Helga fervently,
that I should ever again want work anywhere in the South.
I hate it.
And fell silent, wondering for the hundredth time just what form of vanity it was
that had induced an intelligent girl like Margaret Creighton
to turn what was probably nice, live,
wrinkly hair, perfectly suited to her smooth, dark skin and agreeable round features, into
a dead, straight, greasy, ugly mass. Looking up from her watch, Margaret said,
"'Well, I've really got to run or I'll be late myself. And since I'm staying—'
Better think it over, Helga. There's no place like Naxos, you know—Pretty good salaries, decent
rooms, plenty of men and all that. Tata!' The door slid, too, behind her.
But in another moment it opened.
She was back.
I do wish you'd stay.
It's nice having you here, Helga.
We all think so.
Even the dead ones.
We need a few decorations to brighten our sad lives.
And again she was gone.
Helga was unmoved.
She was no longer concerned with what anyone in Naxos might think of her,
for she was now in love with the piquancy of leaving.
Automatically her fingers adjusted the Chinese-looking pillows
on the low couch that served for her bed. Her mind was busy with plans for departure, packing,
money, trains, and—could she get a berth?
End of Chapter 2. Chapter 3 of QuickSand. This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet. Quicksand by Nella Larson. Chapter 3. On one side of the long, white-hot
sand road that split the flat green, there was a little shade, for it was bordered with trees.
Helga Crane walked there so that the sun could not so easily get at her. As she went slowly across
the empty campus, she was conscious of a vague tenderness for the scene spread out before her.
It was so incredibly lovely, so appealing, and so facile. The trees in their spring beauty
sent through her restive mind a sharp thrill of pleasure, seductive,
charming and beckoning as cities were, they had not this easy, unhuman loveliness. The trees,
she thought, on city avenues and boulevards, in city parks and gardens, were tamed, held prisoners
in a surrounding maze of human beings. Here they were free. It was human beings who were prisoners.
It was too bad, in the midst of all this radiant life. They weren't, she knew, even conscious
of its presence. Perhaps there was too much of it.
of it, and therefore it was less than nothing.
In response to her insistent demand she had been told that Dr. Anderson could give her
twenty minutes at eleven o'clock.
Well, she supposed that she could say all that she had to say in twenty minutes, though
she resented being limited.
Twenty minutes.
In Naxos she was as unimportant as that.
He was a new man, this principle, for whom Helga remembered feeling unaccountably sorry,
when last September he had been appointed to Naxos.
as its head. For some reason she had liked him, although she had seen little of him. He was so
frequently away on publicity and money-raising tours, and as yet he had made but few and slight changes
in the running of the school. Now she was a little irritated at finding herself wondering just how
she was going to tell him of her decision. What did it matter to him? Why should she mind if it did?
But there returned to her that indistinct sense of sympathy for the remote silent man with the tired gray eyes, and she wondered again by what fluke of fate such a man, apparently a humane and understanding person, had chanced into the command of this cruel educational machine.
Suddenly her own resolve loomed as an almost direct unkindness.
This increased her annoyance and discomfort.
A sense of defeat of being cheated of justification closed down on her.
Absurd.
She arrived at the administration building in a mild rage, as unreasonable as it was futile.
But once inside, she had a sudden attack of nerves at the prospect of traversing that
great outer room which was the workplace of some twenty-odd people.
This was a disease from which Helga had suffered at intervals all her life, and it was a point
of honor almost with her never to give way to it.
So instead of turning away, as she felt inclined, she walked on, outwardly in her.
different. Halfway down the long aisle which divided the room, the principal's secretary,
a huge black man, surged toward her.
Good morning, Miss Crane. Dr. Anderson will see you in a few moments. Sit down right here.
She felt the inquiry in the shuttered eyes. For some reason this dissipated her self-consciousness
and restored her poise. Thanking him, she seated herself, really careless now of the
glances of the stenographers, bookkeepers and clerks. Their curiosity and slightly veiled
hostility no longer touched her. Her coming departure had released her from the need for conciliation
which had irked her for so long. It was pleasant to Helga Crane to be able to sit calmly
looking out of the window onto the smooth lawn, where a few leaves quite prematurely fallen
dotted the grass, for once uncaring whether the frock which she wore roused disapproval
or envy. Turning from the window, her gaze wandered contemptuously over the dull attire of the
women workers. Drabb colors mostly. Navy blue, black, brown, unrelieved, save for a scrap of
white or tan about the hands and necks. Fragments of a speech made by the Dean of Women floated
through her thoughts. Bright colors are vulgar. Black, gray, brown, and navy blue are the most
becoming colors for colored people. Dark, complexed people shouldn't wear yellow or green or red.
The dean was a woman from one of the first families, a great race woman. She, Helga Crane,
a despised mulatto, but something intuitive, some unanalyzed driving spirit of loyalty to the
inherent racial need for gorgeousness, told her that bright colors were fitting, and that
dark-complexioned people should wear yellow, green, and red. Black, brown, and gray were ruinous
to them, actually destroyed the luminous tones lurking in their dusky skins. One of the loveliest
sights Helga had ever seen had been a sooty black girl decked out in a flaming orange
dress, which a horrified matron had next day consigned to the dyer.
Why, she wondered, didn't someone write, a plea for color?
These people yapped loudly of race, of race consciousness, of race pride, and yet suppressed
its most delightful manifestations, love of color, joy of rhythmic motion, naive, spontaneous
laughter. Harmony, radiance, and simplicity, all the essentials of spiritual beauty in the race they
had marked for destruction. She came back to her own problems. Clothes had been one of her
difficulties in Naxos. Helga Crane loved clothes, elaborate ones. Nevertheless, she had tried
not to offend, but with small success, for although she had affected the deceptively simple
variety, the hawk eyes of Dean and Matrons had detected the subtle difference from their own
irreproachably conventional garments. Two, they felt that the colors were queer, dark purples,
royal blues, rich greens, deep reds, in soft, luxurious woolens, or heavy clinging silks.
And the trimmings, when Helga used them at all, seemed to them odd. Old laces, strange
embroideries, dim brocades. Her faultless,
Slim shoes made them uncomfortable, and her small, plain hats seemed to them positively
indecent.
Helga smiled inwardly at the thought that wherever there was an evening affair for the faculty,
the dear ladies probably held their breaths until she had made her appearance.
There existed in constant fear that she might turn out in an evening dress.
The proper evening wear in Naxos was afternoon attire, and one could, if one wished,
garnish the hair with flowers.
quick, muted footfalls sounded.
The secretary had returned.
Dr. Anderson will see you now, Miss Crane.
She rose, followed, and was ushered into the guarded sanctum, without having decided
just what she was to say.
For a moment she felt behind her the open doorway, and then the gentle impact of its closing.
Before her at a great desk her eyes picked out the figure of a man, at first blurred slightly
in outline in that dimmer light.
at his, Miss Crane? Her lips formed for speech, but no sound came. She was aware of inward
confusion. For her the situation seemed charged unaccountably, with strangeness and something
very like hysteria. An almost overpowering desire to laugh seized her. Then, miraculously,
a complete ease, such as she had never known in Naxos, possessed her. She smiled, nodded and
answered his questioning salutation, and with a gracious,
Thank you, dropped into the chair which he indicated.
She looked at him frankly now, this man still young, thirty-five, perhaps,
and found it easy to go on in the vein of a simple statement.
Dr. Anderson, I'm sorry to have to confess that I've failed in my job here.
I've made up my mind to leave.
Today.
A short, almost imperceptible silence, then a deep voice of peculiarly pleasing resonance,
asking gently,
"'You don't like Naxos, Miss Crane?'
She evaded.
"'Naxos, the place.
Yes, I like it.
Who wouldn't like it?
It's so beautiful.
But I—well, I don't seem to fit here.'
The man smiled just a little.
"'The school?
You don't like the school?'
The words burst from her.
"'No, I don't like it.
I hate it.'
"'Why?'
The question.
was detached, too detached.
In the girl blazed a desire to wound. There he sat, staring dreamily out of the window,
blatantly unconcerned with her or her answer. Well, she'd tell him. She pronounced each word
with deliberate slowness. Well, for one thing, I hate hypocrisy. I hate cruelty to students,
and to teachers who can't fight back. I hate backbiting and sneaking and peckynging and peckers.
jealousy. Naxos? It's hardly a place at all. It's more like some loathsome venomous
disease. Ugh! Everybody's spending his time in a malicious hunting for the weaknesses of others,
spying, grudging, scratching. I see. And you don't think it might help to cure us,
to have someone who doesn't approve of these things stay with us? Even just one person, Miss Crane?
She wondered if this last was irony.
She suspected it was humor, and so ignored the half-pleading note in his voice.
No, I don't.
It doesn't do the disease any good, only irritates it, and it makes me unhappy, dissatisfied.
It isn't pleasant to be always made to appear in the wrong, even when I know I'm right.
His gaze was on her now searching.
Queer, she thought, how some brown people have gray eyes, gives them a sense.
strange, unexpected appearance, a little frightening. The man said kindly,
Ah, you're unhappy, and for the reasons you've stated. Yes, partly. Then, too, the people here
don't like me. They don't think I'm in the spirit of the work, and I'm not, not if it
means suppression of individuality and beauty. And does it? Well, it seems to work out that way.
"'How old are you, Miss Crane?'
She resented this, but she told him, speaking with what curtness she could command only the bare figure.
Twenty-three.
Twenty-three. I see.
Someday you'll learn that lies, injustice, and hypocrisy are a part of every ordinary community.
Most people achieve a sort of protective immunity, a kind of callousness toward them.
If they didn't, they couldn't endure.
I think there's less of these evils here than in most places, but because we're trying
to do such a big thing, to aim so high, the ugly things show more. They irk some of us more.
Service is like clean white linen. Even the tiniest speck shows. He went on, explaining,
amplifying, pleading. Helga Crane was silent, feeling a mystifying yearning which
sang and throbbed in her. She felt again that urge.
for service, not now for her people, but for this man who was talking so earnestly of his
work, his plans, his hopes. An insistent need to be a part of them sprang in her.
With compunction tweaking at her heart for even having entertained the notion of deserting
him, she resolved not only to remain until June, but to return next year. She was
shamed, yet stirred. It was not sacrifice she felt now, but actual desire to stay, and to come
back next year.
He came at last to the end of the long speech, only part of which she had heard.
You see, you understand, he urged.
Yes, oh yes, I do.
What we need is more people like you, people with a sense of values and proportion,
an appreciation of the rarer things of life.
You have something to give which we badly need here in Naxos.
You mustn't desert us, Miss Crane.
She nodded, silent.
He had won her.
She knew that she would stay.
It's an elusive something, he went on.
Perhaps I can best explain it by the use of that trite phrase,
You're a lady.
You have dignity and breeding.
At these words turmoil rose again in Helga Crane.
The intricate pattern of the rug which she had been studying escaped her,
the shamed feeling which had been her penance evaporated,
only a lacerated pride remained.
She took firm hold of the chair-arms to still the trembling of her fingers.
If you're speaking of family, Dr. Anderson, why I haven't any, I was born in a Chicago slum.
The man shows his words, carefully, he thought.
That doesn't at all matter, Miss Crane.
Financial, economic circumstances can't destroy tendencies inherited from good stock.
You yourself prove that.
Concerned with her own angry thoughts which scurried here and there like
trapped rats, Helga missed the import of his words. Her own words, her answer, fell like drops
of hail. The joke is on you, Dr. Anderson. My father was a gambler who deserted my mother,
a white immigrant. It is even uncertain that they were married. As I said at first I don't
belong here. I shall be leaving at once, this afternoon. Good morning.
End of Chapter 3. Chapter 4 of QuickSand. This Lumbervox recording
is in the public domain. Recording by Elizabeth Clette.
Quicksand by Nella Larson. Chapter 4
Long, soft white clouds. Clouds like shreds of incredibly fine cotton
streaked the blue of the early evening sky. Over the flying landscape hung a very faint mist,
disturbed now and then by a languid breeze. But no coolness invaded the heat of the train
rushing north. The open windows of the stuffy day-coach, where Helga Crane sat with others of her
race, seemed only to intensify her discomfort. Her head ached with a steady pounding pain.
This added to her wounds of the spirit, made traveling something little short of a medieval
torture. Desperately she was trying to write the confusion in her mind. The temper of the
morning's interview rose before her like an ugly mutilated creature, crawling horribly
over the flying landscape of her thoughts.
It was no use.
The ugly thing pressed down on her, held her.
Leaning back she tried to doze as others were doing.
The futility of her effort exasperated her.
Just what had happened to her there in that cool, dim room
under the quizzical gaze of those piercing gray eyes.
Whatever it was had been so powerful, so compelling,
that but for a few chance words, she would still be in Naxon.
and why had she permitted herself to be jolted into a rage so fierce so illogical so disastrous that now after it was spent she sat despondent sunk in shameful contrition
as she reviewed the manner of her departure from his presence it seemed increasingly rude she didn't she told herself after all like this dr anderson he was too controlled too sure of himself and others she detested cool perfectly controlled people
Well, it didn't matter. He didn't matter. But she could not put him from her mind. She set it down to annoyance because of the cold discurtesy of her abrupt action. She disliked rudeness in anyone. She had outraged her own pride, and she had terribly wronged her mother by her insidious implication. Why? Her thoughts lingered with her mother, long dead. A fair Scandinavian girl in love with life.
with love, with passion, dreaming and risking all in one blind surrender. A cruel sacrifice.
In forgetting all but love, she had forgotten, or had perhaps never known, that some things
the world never forgives. But as Helga knew, she had remembered, or had learned in suffering
and longing all the rest of her life. Her daughter hoped she had been happy, happy beyond
most human creatures, in the little time it had lasted, the little
time before that gay, suave, scoundrel, Helga's father, had left her. But Helga Crane
doubted it. How could she have been? A girl gently bred, fresh from an older, more polished
civilization, flung into poverty, sordidness, and dissipation. She visualised her now,
sad, cold, and, yes, remote. The tragic cruelties of the years had left her a little
pathetic, a little hard, and a little unapproachable.
that second marriage to a man of her own race but not of her own kind so passionately so instinctively resented by helga even at the trivial age of six she now understood as a grievous necessity
even foolish despised women must have food and clothing even unloved little negro girls must be somehow provided for memory flown back to those years following the marriage dealt her torturing stabs before her rose the pictures of her mother's
careful management to avoid those ugly, scarifying quarrels, which even at this far-off
time caused an uncontrollable shudder, her own childish self-effacement, the savage unkindness
of her step-brothers and sisters, and the jealous, malicious hatred of her mother's husband.
Summers, winters, years, passing in one long, changeless stretch of aching misery of soul.
Her mother's death when Helga was fifteen. Her rescue by Uncle Peter, who had sent her to school,
school, a school for Negroes, where for the first time she could breathe freely, where she
discovered that because one was dark, one was not necessarily loathsome, and could therefore
consider oneself without repulsion.
Six years.
She had been happy there, as happy as a child unused to happiness dared be.
There had been always a feeling of strangeness, of outsideness, and one of holding her breath
for fear that it wouldn't last.
It hadn't.
it had dwindled gradually into a eclipse of painful isolation as she grew older she became gradually aware of a difference between herself and the girls about her they had mothers fathers brothers and sisters of whom they spoke frequently and who sometimes visited them
They went home for the vacations which Helga spent in the city where the school was located.
They visited each other and knew many of the same people.
Discontent for which there was no remedy crept upon her,
and she was glad almost when these most peaceful years which she had yet known came to their end.
She had been happier, but still horribly lonely.
She had looked forward with pleasant expectancy to working in Naxos when the chance came.
And now this.
What was it that stood in her way?
helga crane couldn't explain it put a name to it she had tried in the early afternoon in her gentle but staccato talk with james vale even to herself her explanation had sounded inane and insufficient no wonder james had been impatient and unbelieving
during their brief and unsatisfactory conversation she had had an odd feeling that he felt somehow cheated and more than once she had been aware of a suggestion of suspicion in his attitude a feeling that he was being duped
that he suspected her of some hidden purpose which he was attempting to discover well that was over she would never be married to james vale now it flashed upon her that even had she remained in naxos she would never have been married to him she couldn't have married him
gradually too there stolen to her thoughts of him a curious sensation of repugnance for which she was at a loss to account it was new something unfelt before
certainly she had never loved him overwhelmingly not for example as her mother must have loved her father but she had liked him and she had expected to love him after their marriage people generally did love then she imagined
no she had not loved james but she had wanted to acute nausea rose in her as she recalled the slight quivering of his lips sometimes when her hands had unexpectedly touched his
the throbbing vein in his forehead on a gay day when they had wandered off alone across the low hills and she had allowed him frequent kisses under the shelter of some low-hanging willows now she shivered a little even in the hot train as if she had suddenly come out from a warm scented place into cool clear air
She must have been mad, she thought, but she couldn't tell why she thought so.
This, too, bothered her.
Laughing conversation buzzed about her.
Across the aisle a bronze baby with bright, staring eyes, began a fretful whining,
which its young mother assayed to silence by a low, droning croon.
In the seat just beyond, a black and tan young pair were absorbed in the eating of a cold-fried chicken,
audibly crunching the ends of the crisp browned bones.
A little distance away a tired labourer slept noisily.
Near him two children dropped the peelings of oranges and bananas
on the already soiled floor.
The smell of stale food and ancient tobacco
irritated Helga like a physical pain.
A man, a white man, strode through the packed car and spat twice,
once in the exact centre of the dingy door-panel,
and once into the receptacle which held
the drinking water. Instantly Helga became aware of stinging thirst. Her eyes sought the small
watch at her wrist. Ten hours to Chicago. Would she be lucky enough to prevail upon the conductor
to let her occupy a berth, or would she have to remain here all night, without sleep, without food,
without drink, and with that disgusting door-panel, to which her purposely averted eyes
were constantly involuntarily straying? Her first effort was unsuccessful. An ill-nought.
natured, no, you know you can't, was the answer to her inquiry. But farther on along the road
there was a change of men. Her rebuff had made her reluctant to try again, but the entry of a
farmer carrying a basket containing live chickens which he deposited on the seat, the only
vacant one, beside her, strengthened her weakened courage. Timidly she approached the new
conductor, an elderly gray-mustached man of pleasant appearance, who subjected her to a keen,
a praising look, and then promised to see what could be done. She thanked him gratefully
and went back to her shared seat to wait anxiously. After half an hour he returned, saying he could
fix her up, there was a section she could have, adding, it'll cost you ten dollars. She
murmured, all right, thank you. It was twice the price, and she needed every penny, but
she knew she was fortunate to get it even at that, and so was very thankful.
as she followed his tall loping figure out of that car and through seemingly endless others and at last into one where she could rest a little she undressed and lay down her thoughts still busy with the morning's encounter
why hadn't she grasped his meaning why if she had said so much hadn't she said more about herself and her mother he would she was sure have understood even sympathized why had she lost her temper and given way to angry half-truths
angry half truths angry half end of chapter four chapter five of quicksand this librivox recording is in the public domain recording by elizabeth clet quicksand by nella larsson chapter five
gray chicago seethed surged and scurried about her helga shivered a little drawing her light coat closer she had forgotten how cold march could be under the pale skies of the sky's
eyes of the north. But she liked it, this blustering wind. She would even have welcomed snow,
for it would more clearly have marked the contrast between this freedom and the cage which
Naxos had been to her. Not but what it was marked plainly enough by the noise, the dash,
the crowds. Helga Crane, who had been born in this dirty, mad, hurrying city, had no home here.
She had not even any friends here. It would have to be, she decided, the young women's
Christian Association. Oh, dear, the uplift. Poor, poor, colored people. Well, no use
stewing about it. I'll get a taxi to take me out, bag and baggage, then I'll have a hot
bath and a really good meal, peep into the shops, mustn't buy anything, and then for Uncle
Peter. Guess I won't phone. More effective if I surprise him. It was late, very late,
almost evening, when finally Helga turned her steps northward in the direction of Uncle Peter's
home. She had put it off as long as she could, for she detested her errand. The fact that that one
day had shown her its acute necessity did not decrease her distaste. As she approached the north
side the distaste grew. Arrived at last at the familiar door of the old stone house,
her confidence in Uncle Peter's welcome deserted her. She gave the bell a timid push, and then
decided to turn away, to go back to her room and phone, or better yet, to write. But before
she could retreat, the door was opened by a strange red-faced maid, dressed primly in black
and white. This increased Helga's mistrust. Where, she wondered, was the ancient Rose, who had,
ever since she could remember, served her uncle. The hostile, well, of this new servant
forcibly recalled the reason for her presence there. She said firmly,
"'Mr. Nilsson, please.'
"'Mr. Nilsons not in,' was the pert retort.
"'Will you see Mrs. Nilsson?'
Helga was startled.
"'Mrs. Nilsen?
"'I beg your pardon.
Did you say Mrs. Nilsen?'
"'I did,' answered the maid shortly, beginning to close the door.
"'What is it, Ida?'
A woman's soft voice sounded from within.
"'Someone for Mr. Nilsen, ma'am.'
The girl looked embarrassed.
In Helga's face the blood rose in a deep red stain.
She explained.
Helga Crane, his niece.
She says she's his niece, ma'am.
Well, half her come in.
There was no escape.
She stood in the large reception hall and was annoyed to find herself actually trembling.
A woman, tall, exquisitely gowned, with shining gray hair piled high,
came forward, murmuring in a puzzled voice.
His niece, did you say?
Yes, Helga Crane. My mother was his sister, Karen Nilsson. I've been away. I didn't know Uncle Peter had married.
Sensitive to atmosphere Helga had felt at once the latent antagonism in the woman's manner.
Oh, yes. I remember about you now. I'd forgotten for a moment.
Well, he isn't exactly your uncle, is he? Your mother wasn't married, was she? I mean to your father.
I—I don't know—stammered the same.
the girl, feeling pushed down to the uttermost depths of ignominy.
Of course she wasn't. The clear, low voice held a positive note.
Mr. Nelson has been very kind to you, supported you, sent you to school, but you
mustn't expect anything else, and you mustn't come here anymore. It—well, frankly,
it isn't convenient. I'm sure an intelligent girl like yourself can understand that.
Of course, Helga agreed, coldly, freezingly, but her lips quivered.
She wanted to get away as quickly as possible.
She reached the door.
There was a second of complete silence.
Then Mrs. Nilsen's voice a little agitated.
And please remember that my husband is not your uncle.
No, indeed.
Why that?
That would make me your aunt!
He's not!
But at last the knob had turned in Helga's fumbling hand.
She gave a little unlawful.
unpremeditated laugh and slipped out. When she was in the street, she ran. Her only impulse was to get
as far away from her uncle's house, and this woman, his wife, who so plainly wished to disassociate
herself from the outrage of her very existence. She was torn with mad fright, an emotion against which
she knew but two weapons, to kick and scream, or to flee. The day had lengthened. It was evening
and much colder, but how Gagrein was unconscious of any change, so shaken she was and burning.
The wind cut her like a knife, but she did not feel it. She ceased her frantic running,
aware at last of the curious glances of passers-by. At one spot for a moment less frequented
than others, she stopped to give heed to her disordered appearance. Here a man, well-groomed and
pleasant-spoken, accosted her. On such occasion she was wont to reply scathingly,
but to-night his pale Caucasian face struck her breaking faculties as too droll.
Laughing harshly, she threw at him the words,
You're not my uncle.
He retired in haste, probably thinking her drunk, or possibly a little mad.
Night fell, while Helga Crane in the rushing swiftness of a roaring elevated train
sat numb.
It was as if all the bogeys and goblins that had beset her unloved,
unloving and unhappy childhood, had come to life with tenfold power to hurt and frighten.
For the wound was deeper in that her long freedom from their presence had rendered her the
more vulnerable.
Worst of all was the fact that under the stinging hurt she understood and sympathized with
Mrs. Nilsen's point of view, as always she had been able to understand her mother's, her
stepfathers, and his children's points of view.
She saw herself for an obscene sore in all their lives, and all of their lives, and all of
costs to be hidden. She understood, even while she resented. It would have been easier if she
had not. Later in the bare silence of her tiny room she remembered the unaccomplished object
of her visit. Money. Characteristically, while admitting its necessity and even its undeniable
desirability, she dismissed its importance. Its elusive quality she had as yet never known. She
would find work of some kind. Perhaps the library.
idea clung. Yes, certainly the library. She knew books and loved them. She stood intently
looking down into the glimmering street far below, swarming with people, merging into
little eddies and disengaging themselves to pursue their own individual ways. A few minutes
later she stood in the doorway, drawn by an uncontrollable desire to mingle with the crowd.
The purple sky showed tremulous clouds piled up, drifting here and there with a sort of endless
lack of purpose. Very like the myriad human beings pressing hurriedly on. Looking at these,
Helga caught herself wondering who they were, what they did, and of what they thought.
What was passing behind those dark molds of flesh? Did they really think at all?
Yet as she stepped out into the moving, multicolored crowd, there came to her a queer feeling of
enthusiasm, as if she were tasting some agreeable exotic food, sweetbreads, smothered with truffles,
and mushrooms, perhaps. And oddly enough, she felt, too, that she had come home. She, Helga Crane,
who had no home. End of Chapter 5. Chapter 6 of QuickSand. This Librevox recording is in the public
domain. Recording by Elizabeth Clet. Quicksand by Nella Larson. Chapter 6.
Helga woke to the sound of rain. The day was led in gray.
and misty black and dullish white. She was not surprised, the night had promised it. She made a little
frown, remembering that it was to-day she was to search for work. She dressed herself carefully
in the plainest garments she possessed, a suit of fine blue twill faultlessly tailored, from whose
left pocket peeped a gay handkerchief, an unadorned, heavy silk blouse, a smart, small,
fawn-colored hat, and slim brown oxfords, and chose a brown umbrella.
In a nearby street she sought out an appealing little restaurant, which she had noted in her last night's ramble through the neighborhood, for the thick cups and the queer dark silver of the young women's Christian association distressed her.
After a slight breakfast she made her way to the library, that ugly grey building, where was housed much knowledge and a little wisdom, on interminable shelves.
The friendly person at the desk in the hall bestowed on her a kindly smile when Helga stated her business and asked,
for directions.
The corridor to your left, then the second door to your right, she was told.
Outside the indicated door for half a second she hesitated, then braced herself and went in.
In less than a quarter of an hour she came out in surprised disappointment.
Library training, civil service, library school, classification, cataloging, training
class, examination, probation period flitted through her mind.
How erudite they must be?
She remarked sarcastically to herself, and ignored the smiling curiosity of the desk-person as she went through the hall to the street.
For a long moment she stood on the high stone steps above the avenue, then shrugged her shoulders and stepped down.
It was a disappointment, but of course there were other things.
She would find something else.
But what?
Teaching, even substitute teaching, was hopeless now in March.
She had no business.
training, and the shops didn't employ colored clerks or salespeople, not even the smaller ones.
She couldn't sew. She couldn't cook. Well, she could do housework or wait on tables,
for a short time at least, until she got a little money together. With this thought she remembered
that the Young Women's Christian Association maintained an employment agency. Of course, the very
thing, she exclaimed aloud. I'll go straight back.
But though the day was still drear, rain had ceased to fall, and Helga, instead of returning, spent
hours in aimless strolling about the hustling streets of the Loop District.
When at last she did retrace her steps, the business day had ended, and the employment
office was closed.
This frightened her a little.
This and the fact that she had spent money, too much money, for a book and a tapestry purse,
things which she wanted but did not need and certainly could not afford.
regretful and dismayed she resolved to go without her dinner as a self-inflicted penance, as
well as an economy, and she would be at the employment office the first thing to-morrow morning.
But it was not until three days more had passed that Helga Crane sought the association
or any other employment office.
And then it was sheer necessity that drove her there, for her money had dwindled to a ridiculous
sum.
She had put off the hated moment, had assured herself that she was tired, needed a bit of vacation,
was due one it had been pleasant the leisure the walks the lake the shops and streets with their gay colors their movement after the great quiet of naxos now she was panicky
In the office a few nondescript women sat scattered about on the long rows of chairs.
Some were plainly uninterested.
Others wore an air of acute expectancy which disturbed Helga.
Behind a desk two alert young women, both wearing a superior air, were busy writing upon and filing countless white cards.
Now and then one stopped to answer the telephone.
YWCA employment?
Yes.
Spell it, please.
Sleep in or out?
thirty dollars thank you i'll send one right over or i'm awfully sorry we haven't anybody right now but i'll send you the first one that comes in
their manners were obtrusively business-like but they ignored the already embarrassed helga diffidently she approached the desk the darker of the two looked up and turned on a little smile yes she inquired i wonder if you can help me i want work helga stated simply
"'Maybe. What kind? Have you references?' Helga explained. She was a teacher,
a graduate of Devon, had been teaching in Naxos. The girl was not interested.
"'Our kind of work wouldn't do for you,' she kept repeating at the end of each of Helga's statements,
domestic mostly. When Helga said that she was willing to accept work of any kind,
a slight, almost imperceptible change crept into her manner, and her perfunctory smile disappeared.
She repeated her question about the reference. On learning that Helga had none, she said sharply,
finally. I'm sorry, but we never send out help without references. With a feeling that she had
been slapped, Helga Crane hurried out. After some lunch she sought out an employment agency on State Street.
An hour passed in patient sitting. Then came her turn to be interviewed. She said simply that she
wanted work, work of any kind. A competent young woman whose eyes still.
stared frog-like from great tortoise-shell-rimmed glasses, regarded her with an appraising look,
and asked for her history, past and present, not forgetting the references.
Helga told her that she was a graduate of Devon, had taught in Naxos, but even before she
arrived at the explanation of the lack of references, the other's interest in her had faded.
"'I'm sorry, but we have nothing that you would be interested in,' she said, and motioned to
the next seeker, who immediately came forward, proffering several much-worn papers.
references thought helga resentfully bitterly as she went out the door into the crowded garish street in search of another agency where her visit was equally vain
days of this sort of thing weeks of it and of the futile scanning and answering of newspaper advertisements she traversed acres of streets but it seemed that in that whole energetic place nobody wanted her services at least not the kind that she offered a few men
both white and black offered her money, but the price of the money was too dear.
Helga Crane did not feel inclined to pay it.
She began to feel terrified and lost, and she was a little hungry, too, for her small money
was dwindling and she felt the need to economize somehow. Food was the easiest.
In the midst of her search for work, she felt horribly lonely, too. This sense of loneliness
increased, it grew to appalling proportions, encompassing her, shutting her off,
from all of life around her. Devastated she was, and always on the verge of weeping.
It made her feel small and insignificant that in all the climbing, massed city, no one cared
one whit about her. Helga Crane was not religious. She took nothing on trust. Nevertheless,
on Sunday she attended the very fashionable, very high services in the Negro Episcopal Church
on Michigan Avenue. She hoped that some good Christian would speak to her, invite her to return,
or inquire kindly if she was a stranger in the city. None did, and she became bitter,
distrusting religion more than ever. She was herself unconscious of that faint hint of offishness
which hung about her and repelled advances, an arrogance that stirred in people a peculiar irritation.
They noticed her, admired her clothes, but that was all, for the self-sufficient, uninterested manner
adopted instinctively as a protective measure for her acute sensitiveness in her child days
still clung to her.
An agitated feeling of disaster closed in on her, tightened.
Then one afternoon, coming in from the discouraging round of agencies and the vain
answering of newspaper wants to the stark neatness of her room, she found between door and
sill a small folded note.
Spreading it open, she read.
Miss Crane, please come into the employment office as soon as you return.
Ida Ross.
Helga spent some time in the contemplation of her.
this note. She was afraid to hope. Its possibilities made her feel a little hysterical.
Finally, after removing the dirt of the dusty streets, she went down, down to that room
where she had first felt the smallness of her commercial value. Subsequent failures had
augmented her feeling of incompetence, but she resented the fact that these clerks were
evidently aware of her unsuccess. It required all the pride and indifferent otter she could
summon to support her in their presence. Her additional arrogance passed unneeded.
noticed by those for whom it was assumed. They were interested only in the business for which
they had summoned her—that of procuring a traveling companion for a lecturing female
on her way to a convention. She wants—Miss Ross told Helga—someone intelligent—someone who
can help her get her speeches in order on the train. We thought of you right away.
Of course it isn't permanent. She'll pay your expenses, and there'll be twenty-five dollars
besides. She leaves to-morrow. Here's her address. You're to go to see her at five o'clock.
It's after four now.
I'll phone that you're on your way."
The presumptuousness of their certainty that she would snatch at the opportunity galled, Helga.
She became aware of a desire to be disagreeable.
The inclination to fling the address of the lecturing female in their face stirred in her,
but she remembered the lone five-dollar bill in the rare old tapestry purse swinging from her arm.
She couldn't afford anger.
So she thanked them very politely, and set out for the home of Mrs. Hayes' roar on Grand
Boulevard, knowing full of her.
well that she intended to take the job, if the lecturing one would take her. Twenty-five dollars
was not to be looked at with nose and air when one was the owner of but five. And meals—meals
for four days at least. Mrs. Hayes' roar proved to be a plump, lemon-colored woman with
badly straightened hair and dirty fingernails. Her direct penetrating gaze was somewhat formidable.
Notebook in hand, she gave Helga the impression of having risen early for consultation with other
harassed authorities on the race problem, and having been in conference on the subject all day.
Evidently she had had little time or thought for the careful donning of the five years
behind the mode garments which covered her, and which even in their youth could hardly have fitted
or suited her. She had a tart personality, and prying. She approved of Helga, after asking
her endless questions about her education and her opinions on the race problem, none of which
she was permitted to answer, for Mrs. Hayes' roar either went on to the next.
or answered the question herself by remarking,
"'Not that it matters, if you can only do what I want done,
and the girls of the Y said that you could.
I'm on the board of managers, and I know they wouldn't send me anybody who wasn't all right.'
After this had been repeated twice in a booming oratorical voice,
Helga felt that the association secretaries had taken an awful chance in sending a person
about whom they knew as little as they did about her.
"'Yes, I'm sure you'll do.
I don't really need ideas.
I've plenty of my own.
It's just a matter of getting someone to do.'
to help me get my speeches in order, correct, and condense them, you know.
I leave at eleven in the morning.
Can you be ready by then?"
That's good.
Better be here at nine.
Now don't disappoint me.
I'm depending on you."
As she stepped into the street and made her way skillfully through the impassioned human traffic,
Helga reviewed the plan which she had formed, while in the lecturing one's presence,
to remain in New York.
There would be twenty-five dollars, and perhaps the amount of her return ticket.
for a start. Surely she could get work there. Everybody did. Anyway, she would have a reference.
With her decision she felt reborn. She began happily to paint the future in vivid colors. The
world had changed to silver, and life ceased to be a struggle and became a gay adventure.
Even the advertisements in the shop windows seemed to shine with radiance. Curious about Mrs. Hayes
roar, on her return to the why she went into the employment office, ostensibly to thank
the girls and to report that the important woman would take her.
Was there, she inquired, anything that she needed to know?
Mrs. Hay's roar had appeared to put such faith in their recommendation of her that she felt
almost obliged to give satisfaction.
And she added, I didn't get much chance to ask questions.
She seemed so, uh, busy.
Both the girls laughed.
Helga laughed with them, surprised that she hadn't perceived before how really likable they
were.
We'll be through here in ten minutes. If you're not busy, come in and have your supper with us and we'll tell you about her, promised Miss Ross.
End of Chapter 6. Chapter 7 of QuickSand. This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clette. Quicksand by Nella Larson. Chapter 7.
Having finally turned her attention to Helga Crane, Fortune now seemed determined to smote.
to make amends for her shameful neglect. One had, Helga decided, only to touch the right button,
to press the right spring, in order to attract the jade's notice. For Helga that spring had
been Mrs. Hay's roar. Ever afterwards on recalling that day on which, with well-nigh empty purse
and apprehensive heart, she had made her way from the young women's Christian association to the
Grand Boulevard home of Mrs. Hayes-Rour, always she wondered at her own lack of astuteness,
in not seeing in the woman someone who, by a few words, was to have a part in the shaping of her life.
The husband of Mrs. Hayes-Rour had at one time been a dark thread in a soiled fabric of Chicago's Southside politics,
who departing this life hurriedly and unexpectedly, and a little mysteriously,
and somewhat before the whole of his suddenly acquired wealth had had time to vanish,
had left his widow comfortably established with money and some of that prestige,
which in Negro circles had been his. All this Helga had learned from the secretaries at the
Y, and from numerous remarks dropped by Mrs. Hayes-Rour herself, she was able to fill in the details
more or less adequately. On the train that carried them to New York, Helga had made short work
of correcting and condensing the speeches which Mrs. Hayes-Rour as a prominent racewoman, and an authority
on the problem was to deliver before several meetings of the annual convention of the Negro
Women's League of Clubs, convening the next week in New York. These speeches proved to be merely
patchworks of others' speeches and opinions. Helga had heard other lecturers say the same things
in Devon, and again in Naxos. Ideas, phrases, and even whole sentences and paragraphs were
lifted bodily from previous orations and published works of Wendell Phillips, Frederick Douglass,
Booker T. Washington, and other doctors of the race's ills. For variety,
Mrs. Hayes-Rour had seasoned hers with a peppery dash of Du Bois and a few vinegory statements of her own.
Aside from these, it was, Helga reflected, the same old thing.
But Mrs. Hayes-Rour was to her, after the first short, awkward period. Interesting.
Her dark eyes, bright and investigating, had, Helga noted, a humorous gleam,
and something in the way she held her untidy head gave the impression of a cat watching its prey,
so that when she struck, if she so decided, the blow would be unerringly effective.
Helga, looking up from a last reading of the speeches, was aware that she was being studied.
Her employer sat leaning back, the tips of her fingers pressed together, her head a bit on one side,
her small inquisitive eyes boring into the girl before her.
And as the train hurled itself frantically towards smoke-infested Newark, she decided to strike.
"'Now tell me,' she commanded.
How is it that a nice girl like you can rush off on a wild goose-chase like this at a moment's notice?
I should think your people'd object, or make inquiries or something."
At that command, Helga Crane could not help sliding down her eyes to hide the anger that had risen in them.
Was she to be forever explaining her people, or lack of them?
But she said, courteously enough, even managing a hard little smile,
"'Well, you see, Mrs. Hayes-Rore, I haven't any people. There's only me, so I can do as I please.'
"'Ha!' said Mrs. Hayes-Rour.
"'Terific,' thought Helga Crane, the power of that sound from the lips of this woman.
"'How?' she wondered, had she succeeded investing it with so much incredulity.
"'If you didn't have people, you wouldn't be living. Everybody has people, Miss Crane. Everybody.'
"'I haven't.'
Mrs. Hayes roar.
Mrs. Hayes roar screwed up her eyes.
Well, that's mighty mysterious, and I detest mysteries.
She shrugged, and into those eyes there now came with alarming quickness and accusing
criticism.
It isn't, Helgas said defensively, a mystery.
It's a fact, and a mighty and pleasant one.
Inconvenient, too.
And she laughed a little, not wishing to cry.
Her tormentor, in sudden embarrassment, turned her sharp eyes to the window. She seemed intent on the miles of red clay sliding past. After a moment, however, she asked gently,
"'You wouldn't like to tell me about it, would you? It seems to bother you. And I'm interested in girls.'
Annoyed, but still hanging, for the sake of the twenty-five dollars to herself control, Helga gave her head a little toss, and flung out her hands in a helpless, beaten way. Then she shrugged.
What did it matter?
Oh, well, if you really want to know, I assure you it's nothing interesting, or nasty, she added maliciously,
it's just plain horrid, for me.
And she began mockingly to relate her story.
But as she went on, again she had that sore sensation of revolt, and again the torment
which she had gone through loomed before her as something brutal and undeserved.
passionately, tearfully, incoherently, the final words tumbled from her quivering, petulant lips.
The older woman still looked out of the window, apparently so interested in the outer aspect
of the drab sections of the Jersey manufacturing city through which they were passing,
that the better to see, she had now so turned her head that only an ear and a small portion of
cheek were visible. During the little pause that followed Helga's recital, the faces of the two
women, which had been bare, seemed to harden. It was almost as if they had slipped on masks.
The girl wished to hide her turbulent feeling, and to appear indifferent to Mrs. Hayes-Rour's
opinion of her story. The woman felt that the story, dealing as it did with race intermingling
and possibly adultery, was beyond definite discussion. For among black people, as among white people,
it is tacitly understood that these things are not mentioned, and therefore they do not
exist. Sliding adroitly out from under the precarious subject to a safer, more decent one,
Mrs. Hayes-Rour asked Helga what she was thinking of doing when she got back to Chicago.
Had she anything in mind? Helga, it appeared, hadn't. The truth was she had been thinking
of staying in New York. Maybe she could find something there. Everybody seemed to. At least she
could make the attempt. Mrs. Hayes-Ror sighed for no obvious reason.
"'Hum, maybe I can help you. I know people in New York. Do you?'
"'No.'
New York's a lonesomest place in the world if you don't know anybody.'
"'It couldn't possibly be worse than Chicago,' said Helga savagely, giving the table support
a violent kick. They were running into the shadow of the tunnel. Mrs. Hayes' roar murmured
thoughtfully, "'You'd better come up town and stay with me for a few days. I may need you.
Something may turn up.
It was one of those vicious mornings, windy and bright.
There seemed to Helga as they emerged from the depths of the vast station
to be a whirling malice in the sharp air of this shining city.
Mrs. Hayes roars words about its terrible loneliness shot through her mind.
She felt its aggressive unfriendliness.
Even the great buildings, the flying cabs,
and the swirling crowds seemed manifestations.
of purposed malevolence. And for that first short minute, she was awed and frightened and inclined
to turn back to that other city, which, though not kind, was yet not strange. This New York seemed
somehow more appalling, more scornful, in some inexplicable way even more terrible and uncaring than
Chicago—threatening almost—ugly. Yes, perhaps she'd better turn back. The feeling passed,
escaped in the surprise of what Mrs. Hay's roar was saying.
Her oratorical voice boomed above the city's roar.
"'I suppose I ought really to have phoned Anne from the station.
About you, I mean.'
"'Well, it doesn't matter. She's got plenty of room.
Lives alone in a big house, which is something Negroes in New York don't do.
They fill them up with lodgers, usually.
But Anne's funny.
Nice, though.
You'll like her, and it will be good for you to know her if you're going to stay in New York.
She's a widow, my husband's sister's son's wife, the war, you know.
Oh, protested Helga Crane with a feeling of acute misgiving.
But won't she be annoyed and inconvenienced by having me brought in on her like this?
I suppose we were going to the Y, or a hotel or something like that.
Audn't we really to stop and phone?
The woman at her side in the swaying cab smiled, a peculiar, invisible, self-reliant smile,
but gave Helga Crane's suggestion no other attention.
plainly she was a person accustomed to having things her way.
She merely went on talking of other plans.
I think maybe I can get you some work, with a new Negro insurance company.
They're after me to put quite a tidy sum into it.
Well, I'll just tell them that they may as well take you with the money.
And she laughed.
Thanks awfully, Helga said.
But will they like it?
I mean being made to take me because of the money.
They're not being made.
Indeed, contradicted Mrs. Hayes-Rour.
I intended to let them have the money anyway, and I'll tell Mr. Darling so.
After he takes you.
They ought to be glad to get you.
Colored organizations always need more brains as well as more money.
Don't worry?
And don't thank me again.
You haven't got the job yet, you know.
There was a little silence, during which Helga gave herself up to the distraction of watching
the strange city and the strange crowds, trying hard to put out of her mind the
vision of an easier future which her companion's words had conjured up, for as had been pointed
out, it was as yet only a possibility. Turning out of the park into the broad thoroughfare
of Lennox Avenue, Mrs. Hayes-Rour said in a too carefully casual manner, and, by the way, I
wouldn't mention that my people are white if I were you. Coloured people won't understand it,
and after all it's your own business. When you've lived as long as I have, you'll know that
what others don't know can't hurt you.
I'll just tell Anne that you're a friend of mine whose mother's dead.
That'll place you well enough, and it's all true.
I never tell lies.
She can fill in the gaps to suit herself, and anyone else curious enough to ask.
Thanks, Helga said again.
And so great was her gratitude that she reached out and took her new friend's slightly soiled hand in one of her own fastidious ones,
and retained it until their cab turned into a pleasant, tree-lined street,
and came to a halt before one of the dignified houses in the center of the block.
Here they got out.
In after years Helga Crane had only to close her eyes,
to see herself standing apprehensively in the small, cream-coloured hall,
the floor of which was covered with deep silver-hued carpet,
to see Mrs. Hayes wore pecking the cheek of the tall, slim creature
beautifully dressed in a cool, green-tailored frock.
To hear herself being introduced to,
My niece, Miss Grey, as,
Miss Crane, a little friend of mine whose mothers died,
and I think perhaps a while in New York will be good for her.
To feel her hand grasped in quick sympathy,
and to hear Anne Gray's pleasant voice,
with its faint note of wistfulness, saying,
I'm so sorry, and I'm glad Aunt Jeanette brought you here.
Did you have a good trip?
I'm sure you must be worn out.
I'll have Lily take you right up.
And to feel like a criminal.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of Quick-Sate.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 8
A year thick with various adventures had sped by since that spring day on which Helga Crane
had set out away from Chicago's indifferent unkindness for New York in the company of Mrs. Hayes-Rour.
New York she had found not so unkind, not so unfriendly,
not so indifferent. There she had been happy, and secured work, had made acquaintances and
another friend. Again she had had that strange, transforming experience, this time not so fleetingly,
that magic sense of having come home. Harlem. Teeming black Harlem had welcomed her, and lulled her
into something that was, she was certain, peace and contentment. The request and recommendation of Mrs.
Roar had been sufficient for her to obtain work with the insurance company in which that
energetic woman was interested. And through Anne, it had been possible for her to meet and
to know people with tastes and ideas similar to her own. Their sophisticated cynical talk,
their elaborate parties, the unobtrusive correctness of their clothes and homes, all appealed
to her craving for smartness, for enjoyment. Soon she was able to reflect with a flicker of amusement
on that constant feeling of humiliation and inferiority which had encompassed her in Naxos.
Her New York friends looked with contempt and scorn on Naxos and all its works. This gave Helga
a pleasant sense of avengement. Any shreds of self-consciousness or apprehension which at first
she may have felt vanished quickly, escaped in the keenness of her joy at seeming at last to belong
somewhere. For she considered that she had, as she put it, found herself.
Between Anne Gray and Helga Crane there had sprung one of those immediate and peculiarly sympathetic
friendships.
Uneasy at first.
Helga had been relieved, that Anne had never returned to the uncomfortable subject of her mother's
death, so intentionally mentioned on their first meeting by Mrs. Hay's roar, beyond a tremulous
brief,
"'You won't talk to me about it, will you?
I can't bear the thought of death.
Nobody ever talks to me about it.
My husband, you know."
This Helga discovered to be true.
Later, when she knew Anne better, she suspected that it was a bit of a pose assumed for the purpose
of doing away with the necessity of speaking regretfully of a husband who had been perhaps
not too greatly loved.
After the first pleasant weeks, feeling that her obligation to Anne was already too great,
Helga began to look about for a permanent place to live.
It was, she found, difficult.
She eschewed the why as to bear, impersonal and restrictive, nor did furnished rooms or the idea
of a solitary or shared apartment appeal to her.
So she rejoiced when one day Anne, looking up from her book, said lightly, Helga, since
you're going to be in New York, why don't you stay here with me?
I don't usually take people.
It's too disrupting.
Still it is sort of pleasant having somebody in the house, and I don't seem to mind you.
don't bore me or bother me. If you'd like to stay, think it over."
Helga didn't, of course, require to think it over, because lodgment in Anne's home was in
complete accord with what she designated as her aesthetic sense. Even Helga Crane approved of Anne's
house, and the furnishings which so admirably graced the big, cream-colored rooms. Beds with
long, tapering posts to which tremendous age lent dignity and interest, bonneted old high-boys,
tables that might be Duncan Fife, rare spindle-legged chairs, and others whose ladder backs gracefully
climbed the delicate wall panels. These historic things mingled harmoniously and comfortably
with brass-bound Chinese tea-sets, luxurious deep chairs and Davenports, tiny tables of gay
color, a lacquered jade-green settee with gleaming black satin cushions, lustrous eastern
rugs, ancient copper, Japanese prints, some fine etchings, a profusion of precious bric-a-brac,
and endless shelves filled with books.
Anne Grey herself was, as Helga expressed it, almost too good to be true.
Thirty may be, brownly beautiful.
She had the face of a golden Madonna, grave and calm and sweet, with shining black hair
and eyes.
She carried herself as queens are reputed to bear themselves, and probably do not.
Her manners were as agreeably gentle as her own soft name.
She possessed an impeccably fastidious taste in clothes, knowing what suited her and wearing it with an air of unconscious assurance.
The unusual thing, a native New Yorker, she was also a person of distinction, financially independent, well-connected and much sought after.
And she was interesting, an odd confusion of wit and intense earnestness, a vivid and remarkable person.
Yes, undoubtedly Anne was almost too good to be true. She was almost perfect.
Thus established, secure, comfortable. Helga soon became thoroughly absorbed in the distracting
interests of life in New York. Her secretarial work with the Negro insurance company filled her
day. Books, the theatre, parties, used up the nights. Gradually, in the charm of this new
and delightful pattern of her life, she lost that tantalizing oppression of loneliness and isolation,
which always it seemed had been a part of her existence but while the continuously gorgeous panorama of harlem fascinated her thrilled her the sober mad rush of white new york failed entirely to stir her
like thousands of other harlem dwellers she patronized its shops its theatres its art galleries and its restaurants and read its papers without considering herself a part of the monster and she was satisfied unenvious
For her this Harlem was enough.
Of that white world, so distant, so near, she asked only indifference.
No, not at all did she crave, from those pale and powerful people, awareness.
Sinister folk, she considered them, who had stolen her birthright.
Their past contribution to her life, which had been but shame and grief,
she had hidden away from brown folk in a locked closet.
Never, she told herself, to be reopened.
Some day she intended to marry one of those alluring brown or yellow men who danced attendance on her.
Already financially successful, any one of them could give to her the things which she had now come to desire—a home like Anne's, cars of expensive makes such as lined the avenue, clothes and furs from bendels and revillon freres, servants and leisure.
Always her forehead wrinkled and distaste, whenever involuntarily, which was somehow frequently,
her mind turned on the speculative grey eyes and visionary uplifting plans of Dr. Anderson.
That other, James Vale, had slipped absolutely from her consciousness.
Of him she never thought.
Helga Crane meant now to have a home, and perhaps laughing, appealing, dark-eyed children in Harlem.
Her existence was bounded by Central Park, Fifth Avenue, St. Nicholas.
Park and 145th Street. Not at all a narrow life, as Negroes live it, as Helga Crane knew it.
Everything was there—vice and goodness, sadness and gaiety, ignorance and wisdom, ugliness and beauty,
poverty and riches. And it seemed to her that somehow of goodness, gaiety, wisdom, and beauty,
always there was a little more than of vice, sadness, ignorance, and ugliness. It was only riches
that did not quite transcend poverty.
But, said Helga Crane,
what of that?
Money isn't everything.
It isn't even the half of everything.
And here we have so much else,
and by ourselves.
It's only outside of Harlem,
among those others,
that money really counts for everything.
In the actuality of the pleasant,
and the delightful vision of an agreeable future,
she was contented and happy.
She did not analyze this contentment,
this happiness, but vaguely without putting it into words, or even so tangible a thing as a thought,
she knew it sprang from a sense of freedom, a release from the feeling of smallness which had
hedged her in, first during her sorry, unchildlike childhood among hostile white folk in Chicago,
and later during her uncomfortable sojourn among snobbish black folk in Naxos.
End of Chapter 8. Chapter 9 of QuickSand
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
QuickSand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 9
But it didn't last this happiness of Helga Cranes.
Little by little the signs of spring appeared,
but strangely the enchantment of the season,
so enthusiastically, so lavishly greeted by the gay dwellers of Harlem,
filled her only with restlessness.
Somewhere within her.
her in a deep recess, crouched discontent. She began to lose confidence in the fullness of her life.
The glow began to fade from her conception of it. As the days multiplied, her need of something,
something vaguely familiar, but which she could not put a name to and hold for definite
examination, became almost intolerable. She went through moments of overwhelming anguish.
She felt shut in, trapped.
Perhaps I'm tired, need a tonic or something, she reflected.
So she consulted a physician, who, after a long, solemn examination, said that there was
nothing wrong, nothing at all.
A change of scene, perhaps for a week or so, or a few days away from work, would put her
straight most likely.
Helga tried this, tried them both, but it was no good.
All interest had gone out of living.
Nothing seemed any good.
She became a little frightened, and then shocked to discover that, for some unknown reason,
it was of herself she was afraid.
Spring grew into summer, languidly at first, then flauntingly.
Without awareness on her part, Helga Crane began to draw away from those contacts which had
so delighted her.
More and more she made lonely excursions to places outside of Harlem.
A sensation of estrangement and isolation encompassed her.
As the days became hotter and the streets more swarming, a kind of repulsion came upon her.
She recoiled an aversion from the sight of the grinning faces and from the sound of the easy
laughter of all these people who strolled, aimlessly now, it seemed, up and down the avenues.
Not only did the crowds of nameless folk on the street annoy her, she began also actually
to dislike her friends.
Even the gentle Anne distressed her.
Perhaps because Anne was obsessed by the race problem and fed her obsession.
She frequented all the meetings of protest, subscribed to all the complaining magazines,
and read all the lurid newspapers spewed out by the negro yellow press.
She talked, wept, and ground her teeth dramatically about the wrongs and shames of her race.
At time she lashed her fury to surprising heights for one by nature so placid and gentle.
And though she would not, even to herself, have admitted it, she reveled in this orgy of protest.
Social equality, equal opportunity for all, were her slogans, often and emphatically repeated.
Anne preached these things, and honestly thought that she believed them, but she considered
it an affront to the race, and to all the very colored peoples that made Lennox and Seventh
Avenues the rich spectacles which they were, for any negro to receive on terms of a race
of equality, any white person.
To me, asserted Anne Gray, the most wretched negro prostitute that walks one hundred and
fifth street is more than any president of these United States, not accepting Abraham Lincoln.
But she turned up her finely carved nose at their lusty churches, their picturesque parades,
their naive clowning on the streets. She would not have desired or even been willing to live
in any section outside the black belt, and she would have refused scornfully, had they
been tendered, any invitation from white folk. She hated white people with a deep and
burning hatred, with the kind of hatred which, finding itself held in sufficiently numerous
groups, was capable some day, on some great provocation, of bursting into dangerously malignant
flames. But she aped their clothes, their manners, and their gracious ways of living, while proclaiming
Loudly the undiluted good of all things Negro, she yet disliked the songs, the dances,
and the softly blurred speech of the race.
Toward these things she showed only a disdainful contempt, tinged sometimes with a faint amusement.
Like the despised people of the white race, she preferred Pavlova to Florence Mills,
John McCormick to Taylor Gordon, Walter Hampton to Paul Robeson.
theoretically, however, she stood for the immediate advancement of all things negroid, and was
in revolt against social inequality. Helga had been entertained by this racial ardor in one so
little affected by racial prejudice as Anne, and by her inconsistencies. But suddenly these
things irked her, with a great irksomeness, and she wanted to be free of this constant prattling
of the incongruities, the injustices, the stupidities, the viciousness of white people.
It stirred memories, probed hidden wounds, whose poignant ache bred in her surprising oppression
and corroded the fabric of her quietism.
Sometimes it took all her self-controlled to keep from tossing sarcastically at Anne
Ibsen's remark about there being assuredly something very wrong with the drains, but after
all there were other parts of the edifice.
It was at this point of restiveness that Helga met again, Dr. Anderson.
She was gone, unwillingly, to a meeting, a health meeting.
held in a large church, as were most of Harlem's uplift activities, as a substitute for her
employer, Mr. Darling. Making her tardy arrival during a tedious discourse by a pompous, saffron-hued
physician, she was led by the irritated usher, whom she had roused from a nap in which she had been
pleasantly freed from the intricacies of Negro health statistics, to a very front seat.
Complete silence ensued while she subsided into her chair. The offended doctor looked at
ceiling, at the floor, and accusingly at Helga, and finally continued his lengthy discourse.
When at last he had ended, and Helga had dared to remove her eyes from his sweating
face and look about, she saw with a sudden thrill that Robert Anderson was among her nearest
neighbors. A peculiar, not wholly disagreeable, quiver ran down her spine. She felt an odd little
faintness. The blood rushed to her face. She tried to jeer at herself for being so moved by the
encounter. He, meanwhile, she observed, watched her gravely, and having caught her attention,
he smiled a little, and nodded. When all who so desired had spouted to their heart's
content, if to little purpose, and the meeting was finally over, Anderson detached himself
from the circle of admiring friends and acquaintances that had gathered around him,
and caught up with Helga halfway down the long aisle leading out to fresher air.
I wondered if you were really going to cut me. I see you were.
He began, with that half-quysical smile which she remembered so well.
She laughed.
Oh, I didn't think you'd remember me.
Then she added, pleasantly, I mean.
The man laughed, too, but they couldn't talk yet.
People kept breaking in on them.
At last, however, they were at the door,
and then he suggested that they share a taxi, for the sake of a little breeze.
Helga assented.
Constraint fell upon them when they emerged into the hot street,
made seemingly hotter by a low-hanging golden moon
and the hundreds of blazing electric lights.
For a moment before hailing a taxi,
they stood together looking at the slow-moving mass
of perspiring human beings.
Neither spoke, but Helga was conscious of the man's steady gaze.
The prominent grey eyes were fixed upon her,
studying her, appraising her.
Many times, since turning her back on Naxos, she had in fancy rehearsed this scene,
this re-encounter. Now she found that rehearsal helped not at all. It was so absolutely different
from anything that she had imagined. In the open taxi they talked of impersonal things,
books, places, the fascination of New York, of Harlem. But underneath the exchange of small talk
lay another conversation of which Helga Crane was sharply aware. She was aware, too, of a
strange, ill-defined emotion, a vague yearning rising within her, and she experienced a sensation
of consternation and keen regret, when with a lurching jerk the cab pulled up before the house
in 139th Street. So soon, she thought. But she held out her hand calmly, coolly. Courteally,
she asked him to call some time. It is, she said, a pleasure to renew our acquaintance.
Was it, she was wondering, merely in a quaint.
He responded seriously that he too thought it a pleasure, and added,
You haven't changed. You are still seeking for something, I think.
At his speech there dropped from her that vague feeling of yearning, that longing for sympathy
and understanding which his presence evoked. She felt a sharp stinging sensation, and a
recurrence of that anger and defiant desire to hurt which had so seared her on that past
morning in Naxos. She searched for a biting remark, but finding none venomous enough,
she merely laughed a little rude and scornful laugh, and throwing up her small head,
bade him an impatient good-night, and ran quickly up the steps.
Afterwards she lay for long hours without undressing, thinking angry, self-accusing thoughts,
recalling and reconstructing that other explosive contact. That memory filled her with a sort of aching
delirium. A thousand indefinite longings beset her. Eagerly she desired to see him again to
write herself in his thoughts. Far into the night she lay planning speeches for their next meeting,
so that it was long before drowsiness advanced upon her. When he did call, Sunday, three days later,
she put him off on Anne, and went out, pleading in engagement, which until then she had not meant
to keep. Until the very moment of his entrance, she had had no intention of her. She had had no intention
of running away, but something, some imp of contumacy, drove her from his presence, though she
longed to stay. Again abruptly had come the uncontrollable wish to wound. Later, with a sense
of helplessness and inevitability, she realized that the weapon which she had chosen had been a boomerang,
for she herself had felt the keen disappointment of the denial. Better to have stayed and hurled
polite sarcasms at him. She might then at least have had the joy of seeing him winth.
In this spirit she made her way to the corner and turned into Seventh Avenue. The warmth of
the sun, though gentle on that afternoon, had nevertheless kissed the street into marvelous
light and color. Now and then, greeting an acquaintance or stopping to chat with a friend,
Helga was all the time seeing its soft shining brightness on the buildings along its sides
or on the gleaming bronze, gold, and copper faces of its promenaders. And another vision, too,
came haunting Helga Crane. Level gray eyes sat in a brown face which stared out at her,
coolly, quizzically, disturbingly, and she was not happy. The tea to which she had so suddenly
made up her mind to go, she found boring beyond endurance, insipid drinks, dull conversation,
stupid men. The aimless talk glanced from John Wellinger's lawsuit for discrimination because
of race against a downtown restaurant, and the advantages of living in Europe, especially in
France, to the significance of any of the Garvey movement.
Then it sped to a favorite Negro dancer who had just then secured a foothold on the stage
of a current white musical comedy, to other shows, to a new book touching on Negroes,
thence to costumes for a coming masquerade dance, to a new jazz song, to Yvette Dawson's engagement
to a Boston lawyer who had seen her one night at a party and proposed to her the next day at
noon. Then back again to racial discrimination.
Why, Helga wondered, with unreasoning exasperation, didn't they find something else to talk
of? Why must the race problem always creep in? She refused to go on to another gathering.
It would, she thought, be simply the same old thing. On her arrival home she was more
disappointed than she cared to admit to find the house in darkness, and even Anne gone off
somewhere. She would have liked that night to have talked with Anne, get her opinion of Dr.
Anderson. Anne, it was, who the next day told her that he had given up his work in Naxos,
or rather that Naxos had given him up. He had been too liberal, too lenient, for education
as it was inflicted in Naxos. Now he was permanently in New York, employed as welfare worker
by some big manufacturing concern which gave employment to hundreds of Negro men.
uplift, sniffed Helga contemptuously, and fled before the onslaught of Anne's haranguegues on the needs and ills of the race.
End of Chapter 9
Chapter 10 of QuickSand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clette.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 10
With the waning summer the acute sensitiveness of Helga Crane's fringe's friefts
frayed nerves grew keener. There were days when the mere sight of the serene tan and brown faces
about her stung her like a personal insult. The carefree quality of their laughter roused in her
the desire to scream at them. Fools! Fools! Stupid fools! This passionate and unreasoning protest
gained in intensity, swallowing up all else like some dense fog. Life became for her only a
hateful place where one lived in intimacy with people one would not have chosen had one been given
choice. It was, too, an excruciating agony. She was continually out of temper. Anne, thank the
gods, was away, but her nearing return filled Helga with dismay. Arriving at work one sultry day,
hot and dispirited, she found waiting a letter, a letter from Uncle Peter. It had originally
been sent to Naxos, and from there it had made the journey back to Chicago to the Young
Women's Christian Association, and then to Mrs. Hay's roar. That busy woman had at last
found time between conventions and lectures to readdress it, and had sent it on to New York.
Four months at least it had been on its travels. Helga felt no curiosity as to its contents,
only annoyance at the long delay, as she ripped open the thin edge of the envelope, and for a space
sat staring at the peculiar foreign script of her uncle.
7.15 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois.
Dear Helga,
It is now over a year since you made your unfortunate call here.
It was unfortunate for us all.
You, Mrs. Nilsson, and myself.
But of course you couldn't know.
I blame myself.
I should have written you of my marriage.
I have looked for a letter or some word from you.
Evidently, with your usual penetration, you understood thoroughly that I must terminate my outward
relation with you.
You were always a keen one.
Of course, I am sorry, but it can't be helped.
My wife must be considered, and she feels very strongly about this.
You know, of course, that I wish you the best of luck.
But take an old man's advice, and don't do as your mother did.
Why don't you run over and visit your aunt Katrina?
She always wanted you.
Maria Kirkplod's number two will find her.
I enclose what I intended to leave you at my death.
It is better and more convenient that you get it now.
I wish it were more, but even this little may come in handy for a rainy day.
Best wishes for your luck.
Peter Nilsson
Beside the brief, friendly, but nonetheless final letter, there was a check for $5,000.
dollars. Helga Crane's first feeling was one of unreality. This changed almost immediately into
one of relief, of liberation. It was stronger than the mere security from present financial
worry which the check promised. Money as money was still not very important to Helga. But later,
while on an errand in the big general office of the society, her puzzled bewilderment fled.
Here the inscrutability of the dozen or more brown faces, all cast from the
the same indefinite mould, and so like her own, seemed pressing forward against her.
Abruptly it flashed upon her that the harrowing irritation of the past weeks was a smouldering
hatred.
Then she was overcome by another, so actual, so sharp, so horribly painful, that
for ever afterward she preferred to forget it.
It was as if she were shut up, boxed up, with hundreds of her race, closed up with that
something in the racial character which had always been to her inexplicable alien.
Why, she demanded in fierce rebellion, should she be yoked to these despised black folk?
Back in the privacy of her own cubicle, self-loathing came upon her.
They're my own people, my own people, she kept repeating over and over to herself.
It was no good. The feeling would not be routed.
I can't go on like this," she said to herself.
"'I simply can't.'
There were footsteps.
Panic seized her.
She'd have to get out.
She terribly needed to.
Snatching hat and purse, she hurried to the narrow door, saying in a forced, steady voice as
it opened to reveal her employer.
"'Mr. Darling, I'm sorry, but I've got to go out.
Please, may I be excused?'
At his courteous.
"'Certainly, certainly, and don't hurry.
It's much too hot.'
Helga Crane had the grace to feel ashamed, but there was no softening of her determination.
The necessity for being alone was too urgent. She hated him and all the others too much.
Outside rain had begun to fall. She walked bareheaded, bitter with self-reproach.
But she rejoiced, too. She didn't, in spite of her racial markings,
belonged to these dark, segregated people. She was different. She felt it. It wasn't merely
a matter of color. It was something broader, deeper, that made folk kin. And now she was free. She
would take Uncle Peter's money and advice and revisit her aunt in Copenhagen. Fleeting, pleasant
memories of her childhood visit there flew through her excited mind. She had been only eight, yet
she had enjoyed the interest and the admiration which her unfamiliar color and dark curly hair,
strange to those pink, white and gold people, had evoked. Quite clearly now she recall,
that her aunt Katrina had begged for her to be allowed to remain. Why she wondered hadn't
her mother consented? To Helga it seemed that it would have been the solution to all their
problems, her mothers, her stepfathers, her own. At home in the cool dimness of the big chintz-hung
living-room, clad only in a fluttering thing of green chiffon, she gave herself up to daydreams
of a happy future in Copenhagen, where there were no negroes, no problems, no prejudice,
she remembered with perturbation that this was the day of Anne's return from her vacation at the
seashore. Worse! There was a dinner party in her honor that very night. Helga sighed. She'd
have to go. She couldn't possibly get out of a dinner party for Anne, even though she felt
that such an event on a hot night was little short of an outrage. Nothing but a sense of obligation
to Anne kept her from pleading a splitting headache as an excuse for remaining quietly at home.
Her mind trailed off to the highly important matter of clothes.
What should she wear?
White?
No, everybody would because it was hot.
Green?
She shook her head.
Anne would be sure to.
The blue thing?
Reluctantly she decided against it.
She loved it, but she had worn it too often.
There was that cobwebby black net touched with orange,
which she had bought last spring in a fit of extravagance and never worn,
because on getting at home, both she and Anne had considered it
to decolete and to utre."
Anne's words,
"'There's not enough of it, and what there is gives you the air of something about to fly,'
came back to her, and she smiled as she decided that she would certainly wear the black net.
For her it would be a symbol.
She was about to fly.
She busied herself with some absurdly expensive roses which she had ordered sent in, spending
an interminable time in their arrangement.
At last she was satisfied with their appropriateness in some blue china.
Chinese jars of great age. Anne did have such lovely things, she thought, as she began conscientiously
to prepare for her return, although there was really little to do. Lily seemed to have done
everything. But Helga dusted the tops of the books, placed the magazines in ordered carelessness,
redressed Anne's bed in fresh-smelling sheets of cool linen, and laid out her best pale yellow
pajamas of Crape de Sheen. Finally she set out two tall green glasses and made a pitcher of lemonade,
leaving only the ginger-rail and claret to be added on anne's arrival she was a little conscience-stricken so she wanted to be particularly nice to anne who had been so kind to her when she first came to new york a forlorn friendless creature
yes she was grateful to anne but just the same she meant to go at once her preparations over she went back to the carved chair from which the thought of anne's home-coming had drawn her characteristically she writhed up her
at the idea of telling Anne of her impending departure, and shirked the problem of evolving a plausible
and inoffensive excuse for its suddenness.
That, she decided lazily, we'll have to look out for itself.
I can't be bothered just now.
It's too hot.
She began to make plans and to dream delightful dreams of change, of life somewhere else.
Some place where at last she would be permanently satisfied.
Her anticipatory thoughts waltzed and eddied about to the sweet,
silent music of change. With rapture almost, she let herself drop into the blissful sensation
of visualizing herself in different strange places, among approving and admiring people,
where she would be appreciated and understood.
End of Chapter 10. Chapter 11 of Quicksand. This Liprovoc's recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet. Quicksand by Nella Larson. Chapter 11.
It was night. The dinner party was over, but no one wanted to go home. Half-past eleven was, it seemed, much too early to tumble into bed on a Saturday night. It was a sulky, humid night, a thick, furry night, through which the electric torches shone like silver fuzz, an atrocious night for cabareting, Helga insisted, but the others wanted to go, so she went with them, though half unwillingly.
After much consultation and chatter, they decided upon a place and climbed into two patiently
waiting taxis, rattling things which jerked, wriggled, and groaned, and threatened every
minute to collide with others of their kind, or with inattentive pedestrians.
Soon they pulled up before a tawdry doorway in a narrow cross-town street and stepped out.
The night was far from quiet, the streets far from empty.
Flanging trolley bells, quarrelling cats, cackling phonographs, raucous laughter, complaining
motorhorns, low singing, mingled in the familiar medley that is Harlem.
Black figures, white figures, little forms, big forms, small groups, large groups, sauntered
or hurried by.
It was gay, grotesque, and a little weird.
Halga Crane felt singularly apart from it all.
Entering the waiting doorway, they descended through a furtive
narrow passage into a vast subterranean room. Helga smiled, thinking that this was one of those
places characterized by the righteous as a hell. A glare of light struck her eyes. A blare of
jazz split her ears. For a moment everything seemed to be spinning round. Even she felt that she
was circling aimlessly, as she followed with the others the black giant who led them to a small
table, where, when they were seated, their knees and elbows touched. Helga one to
at the waiter, indefinitely carved out of ebony, did not smile as he wrote their order.
Four bottles of white rock, four bottles of ginger ale.
Ba!
Anne giggled.
The others smiled and openly exchanged knowing glances, and under the tables
flat glass bottles were extracted from the women's evening scarfs, and small silver flasks
drawn from the men's hip pockets.
In a little moment she grew accustomed to the smoke and din.
They danced, ambling lazily to a cruxily to a cruxiously.
truning melody, or violently twisting their bodies like whirling leaves, to a sudden streaming
rhythm, or shaking themselves ecstatically to a thumping of unseen tom-toms. For the while Helga was
oblivious of the reek of flesh, smoke and alcohol, oblivious of the oblivion of other gyrating
pairs, oblivious of the color, the noise, and the grand distorted childishness of it all. She
was drugged, lifted, sustained by the extraordinary music, blown out, and the
ripped out, beaten out, by the joyous, wild, murky orchestra. The essence of life seemed
bodily motion. And when suddenly the music died, she dragged herself back to the present with a conscious
effort, and a shameful certainty that not only had she been in the jungle, but that she had
enjoyed it, began to taunt her. She hardened her determination to get away. She wasn't, she told
herself, a jungle creature. She cloaked herself in a faint disgust.
as she watched the entertainers throw themselves about to the bursts of a syncopated jangle,
and when the time came again for the patrons to dance, she declined.
Her rejected partner excused himself and sought an acquaintance a few tables removed.
Helga sat looking curiously about her as the buzz of conversation ceased,
strangled by the savage strains of music, and the crowd became a swirling mass.
For the hundredth time she marvelled at the gradations within this oppressed race of hers.
A dozen shade slid by.
There was sooty black, shiny black, tope, mahogany, bronze, copper, gold, orange, yellow, peach, ivory, pinky white, pastry white.
There was yellow hair, brown hair, black hair, straight hair, straightened hair, curly hair, crinkly hair, woolly hair.
She saw black eyes and white faces, brown eyes and yellow faces, gray eyes and brown faces, gray eyes and brown faces.
faces, blue eyes and tan faces. Africa, Europe, perhaps with a pinch of Asia, in a fantastic
motley of ugliness and beauty, semi-baric, sophisticated, exotic were here. But she was blind
to its charm, purposely aloof and a little contemptuous, and soon her interest in the moving
mosaic waned. She had discovered Dr. Anderson sitting at a table on the far side of the room,
the girl in shivering apricot frock. Seriously, he returned her tiny bow. She met his eyes,
gravely smiling, then blushed furiously and averted her own. But they went back immediately to
the girl beside him, who sat indifferently sipping a colorless liquid from a high glass, or puffering
a precariously hanging cigarette. Across dozens of tables littered with corks, with ashes,
with shriveled sandwiches, through slits in the swaying mob, Helga Crane studied her.
She was pale with a peculiar, almost death-like pallor.
The brilliantly red, softly curving mouth was somehow sorrowful.
Her pitch-black eyes, a little aslant, were veiled by long, drooping lashes,
and surmounted by broad brows, which seemed like black smears.
The short, dark hair was brushed severely back from the wide forehead.
The extreme decolete of her simple apricot dress
showed a skin of unusual color, a delicate, creamy hue, with golden.
tones. Almost like an alabaster, thought Helga. Bang! Again the music died. The moving mass broke,
separated. The others returned. Anne had rage in her eyes. Her voice trembled as she took Helga aside
to whisper, "'There's your Dr. Anderson over there, with Audrey Denny.'
"'Yes, I saw him. She's lovely. Who is she?' "'She's Audrey Denny,' as I said, and she lives
downtown, West 22nd Street, hasn't much use for Harlem anymore. It's a wonder she hasn't
some white man hanging about, the disgusting creature. I wonder how she inveigled Anderson.
But that's Audrey. If there is any desirable man about, trust her to attach him. She ought to
be ostracized."
"'Why?' asked Helga curiously, noting at the same time that three of the men in their own party
had deserted and were now congregated about the offending Miss Denny."
"'Because she goes about with white people,' came Anne's indignant answer,
"'and they know she's coloured.'
"'I'm afraid I don't quite see, Anne. Would it be all right if they didn't know she was
colored?'
"'Now don't be nasty, Helga. You know very well what I mean.'
Anne's voice was shaking. Helga didn't see, and she was greatly interested, but she decided
to let it go. She didn't want to quarrel with Anne, not now when she had that guilty feeling
about leaving her, but Anne was off on her favourite subject, race, and it seemed, too, that
Audrey Denny was to her particularly obnoxious. Why, she gives parties for white and coloured
people together, and she goes to white people's parties. It's worse than disgusting, it's positively
obscene. Oh, come, Anne, you haven't been to any of the parties. I know. So how can you be so
positive about the matter?"
"'No, but I've heard about them. I know people who've been.'
"'Friends of yours, Anne?'
Anne admitted that they were, some of them.
"'Well, then, they can't be so bad. I mean, if your friends sometimes go, can they?
Just what goes on that's so terrible?'
"'Why, they drink, for one thing, quantities, they say.'
"'So do we at the parties here in Harlem,' Helga responded.
An idiotic impulse seized her to leave the place.
Anne's presence then forever. But of course she couldn't. It would be foolish and so ugly.
And the white men dance with the colored women. Now you know Helga Crane that can mean only one
thing. Anne's voice was trembling with cold hatred. As she ended she made a little clicking
noise with her tongue, indicating an abhorrence too great for words. Don't the colored men dance
with the white women, or do they sit about impolitely while the other men dance with their women?'
inquired Helga very softly, and with a slowness approaching almost to insolence. Anne's insinuations
were too revolting. She had a slightly sickish feeling, and a flash of anger touched her. She
mastered it and ignored Anne's inadequate answer. "'It's the principle of the thing that I object
to. You can't get round the fact that her behavior is outrageous, treacherous, in fact. That's
what's the matter with the negro race. They won't stick together. She certainly ought to be
ostracized. I've nothing but contempt for her, as is every other self-respecting negro."
The other women and the lone man left to them, Helga's own escort, all seemingly agreed
with Anne. At any rate they didn't protest. Helga gave it up. She felt that it would be
useless to tell them that what she felt for the beautiful, calm, cool girl who had the assurance,
courage, so placidly to ignore racial barriers and give her attention to people, was not
contempt, but envious admiration. So she remained silent, watching the girl. At the next
first sound of music, Dr. Anderson rose. Languidly the girl followed his movement, a faint
smile parting her sorrowful lips at some remark he made. Her long, slender body swayed with
an eager pulsing motion. She danced with grace and abandon.
gravely, yet with obvious pleasure. Her legs, her hips, her back, all swaying gently, swung by
that wild music from the heart of the jungle. Helga turned her glance to Dr. Anderson.
Her disinterested curiosity passed. While she still felt for the girl envious admiration,
that feeling was now augmented by another, a more primitive emotion. She forgot the garish,
crowded room. She forgot her friends. She saw only two figures, closely clinging. She felt her
heart throbbing. She felt the room receding. She went out the door. She climbed endless
stairs. At last, panting, confused, but thankful to have escaped, she found herself again
out in the dark night alone, a small, crumpled thing in a fragile, flying black and gold dress.
A taxi drifted toward her, stopped. She stepped into it.
feeling cold, unhappy, misunderstood, and forlorn.
End of Chapter 11
Chapter 12 of QuickSand
This Liprovoc's recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clutt
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 12
Helga Crane felt no regret as the cliff-like towers faded.
The sight thrilled her as beauty,
grander of any kind always did, but that was all. The liner drew out from churning slate-colored waters of the
river into the open sea. The small seething ripples on the water's surface became little waves.
It was evening. In the western sky was a pink and maw of light, which faded gradually into a soft
gray-blue obscurity. Leaning against the railing, Helga stared into the approaching night,
glad to be at last alone, free of that great superfluity of human beings, yellow, brown, and black,
which, as the torrid summer burnt to its clothes, had so oppressed her. No, she hadn't belonged
there. Of her attempt to emerge from that inherent aloneness which was part of her very being,
only dullness had come. Dullness and a great aversion.
Almost at once it was time for dinner.
Somewhere a bell sounded.
She turned and with buoyant steps went down.
Already she had begun to feel happier.
Just for a moment outside the dining salon, she hesitated, assailed with a tiny uneasiness
which passed as quickly as it had come.
She entered softly, unobtrusively, and after all she had had her little fear for nothing.
The purser, a man grown old in the service of the Scandinavian American line, remembered her
as a little dark girl who had crossed with her mother years ago, and so she must sit at his
table.
Helga liked that.
It put her at her ease, and made her feel important.
Everyone was kind in the delightful days which followed, and her first shyness under the
politely curious glances of turquoise eyes of her fellow-travelers soon slid from her.
The old, forgotten Danish of her childhood began to come, awkwardly at first from her lips under
their agreeable tutelage. Evidently they were interested, curious, and perhaps a little amused
about this negro girl on her way to Denmark alone. Helga was a good sailor, and mostly the
weather was lovely with the serene calm of the lingering September summer, under whose sky
the sea was smooth, like a length of watered silk, unruffled by the stir of any wind.
But even the two rough days found her on deck, reveling like a released bird in her returned
feeling of happiness and freedom, that blessed sense of belonging to herself alone, and not
to a race.
Again she had put the past behind her, with an ease which astonished even herself.
Only the figure of Dr. Anderson obtruded itself with surprising vividness to irk her,
because she could get no meaning from that keen sensation of covetous exasperation,
that had so surprisingly risen within her on the night of the cabaret party.
This question, Hauke-Krain recognized as not entirely new.
It was but a revival of the puzzlement experienced when she had fled so abruptly from Naxos,
more than a year before.
With the recollection of that previous flight and subsequent half-questioning,
a dim, disturbing notion came to her.
She wasn't. She couldn't be in love with the man.
It was a thought too humiliating.
and so quickly dismissed. Nonsense. Shear nonsense. When one is in love, one strives to please.
Never, she decided, had she made an effort to be pleasing to Dr. Anderson. On the contrary,
she had always tried deliberately to irritate him. She was, she told herself, a sentimental fool.
Nevertheless, the thought of love stayed with her, not prominent, definite, but shadowy,
incoherent. And in a remote corner of her consciousness lurked the memory of Dr. Anderson's
serious smile and gravely musical voice. On the last morning Helga rose at dawn, a dawn outside
old Copenhagen. She lay lazily in her long chair watching the feeble sun creeping over the ship's
great green funnels with sickly light, watching the purply gray sky change to opal, to gold,
to pale blue. A few other passengers, also early risen, excited by the prospect of renewing old
attachments, of glad homecomings after long years, paced nervously back and forth. Now, at the last
moment, they were impatient, but apprehensive fear too had its place in their rushing emotions.
Impatient Helga Crane was not. But she was apprehensive.
Gradually, as the ship drew into the lazier waters of the dock, she became prey to sinister fears
and memories. A deep pang of misgiving nauseated her at the thought of her aunt's husband,
acquired since Helga's childhood visit. Painfully, vividly, she remembered the frightened anger
of Uncle Peter's new wife, and looking back at her precipitate departure from America,
she was amazed at her own stupidity. She had not even considered the remote possibility that her
aunt's husband might be like Mrs. Nilsson. For the first time in nine days, she wished herself
back in New York, in America. The little gulf of water between the ship and the wharf lessened.
The engines had long ago ceased their whirring, and now the buzz of conversation, too, died down.
There was a sort of silence. Soon the welcoming crowd on the wharf stood under the shadow
of the great sea-monster, their faces turned up to the anxious ones of the passengers, who hung
over the railing. Hats were taken off. Handkerchiefs were shaken out and frantically
waved. Chatter. Defening shouts. A little quiet weeping. Sailors and laborers were yelling
and rushing about. Cables were thrown. The gangplank was laid. Silent, unmoving. Helga Crane
stood looking intently down into the gesticulating crowd. Was anyone waving to her? She
couldn't tell. She didn't in the least remember her aunt.
as a hazy pretty lady. She smiled a little at the thought that her aunt or anyone waiting
there in the crowd below would have no difficulty in singling her out. But—had she been
meant? When she descended the gang-plank she was still uncertain, and was trying to decide
on a plan of procedure in the event that she had not—a telegram before she went through
the customs? Telephone? A taxi? But again she had all her fears and questionings for nothing. A
A smart woman in olive green came toward her at once. And even in the fervent gladness of her
relief, Helga took in the carelessly trailing purple scarf and correct black hat that
completed the perfection of her aunt's costume, and had time to feel herself a little shabbily
dressed. For it was her aunt. Helga saw that at once. The resemblance to her own mother
was unmistakable. There was the same long nose, the same beaming blue eyes, the same straying
pale brown hair so like sparkling beer. And the tall man with a fierce moustache who followed,
carrying hat and stick, must be Herdahl, Aunt Katrina's husband. How gracious he was in his welcome,
and how anxious to air his faulty English, now that her aunt had finished kissing her,
and exclaimed in Danish, "'Little Helga! Little Helga! Goodness, but how you have grown!'
Laughter from all three.
Welcome to Denmark, to Copenhagen, to our home," said the new uncle in queer, proud,
oratorical English, and to Helga's smiling, grateful, thank you.
He returned, Your trunks?
Your checks?
Also in English, and then lapsed into Danish.
Where in the world are the fishers?
We must hurry the customs.
Almost immediately they were joined by a breathless couple, a young, grey-haired man, and
a fair, tiny, doll-like woman. It developed that they had lived in England for some years,
and so spoke English, real English, well. They were both breathless, all apologies and explanations.
"'So early!' sputtered the man, Hare Fisher.
"'We inquired last night, and they said nine. It was only by accident that we called
again this morning to be sure. Well, you can imagine the rush we were in when they said
eight. And, of course, we had trouble in finding a cab. One always does if one is late.
All this in Danish. Then to Helga in English.
You see, I was especially asked to come, because Frudal didn't know if you remembered your
Danish, and your uncle's English. Well—more laughter.
At last the customs, having been hurried and a cab secured, they were off, with much chatter
through the toy-like streets, weaving perilously in and out among
the swarms of bicycles. It had begun, a new life for Helga Crane.
End of Chapter 12. Chapter 13 of Quicksand. This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet. Quicksand by Nella Larson. Chapter 13
She liked it, this new life, for a time it blotted from her mind all else. She
took to luxury as the proverbial duck to water, and she took to admiration and attention
even more eagerly. It was pleasant to wake on that first afternoon, after the insisted upon
nap, with that sensation of lavish contentment and well-being, enjoyed only by impecunious
ciburites waking in the houses of the rich. But there was something more than mere contentment
and well-being. To Helga Crane it was the realization of a dream that she had dreamed,
persistently, ever since she was old enough to remember such vague things as day-dreams and longings.
Always she had wanted—not money, but the things which money could give—leasure, attention,
beautiful surroundings—things, things, things.
So it was more than pleasant, it was important—this awakening in the great high room which held
the great high bed on which she lay—small but exalted.
It was important because to Helga Crane it was the day, so she decided, to which all the sad,
forlorn past had led, and from which the whole future was to depend.
This then was where she belonged. This was her proper setting.
She felt consoled at last for the spiritual wounds of the past.
A discreet knocking on the tall paneled door sounded.
In response to Helga's, come in, a respectfully rosy-faced maid,
entered, and Helga lay for a long minute watching her adjust the shutters. She was conscious,
too, of the girl's sly curious glances at her, although her general attitude was quite
correct, willing, and disinterested. In New York, America, Helga would have resented this sly
watching. Now, here, she was only amused. Marie, she reflected, had probably never seen a
negro outside the pictured pages of her geography book. Another knocking.
Aunt Katrina entered, smiling at Helga's quick, lithe spring from the bed.
They were going out to tea, she informed Helga.
What, the girl inquired, did one wear to tea in Copenhagen,
meanwhile glancing at her aunt's dark purple dress
and bringing forth a severely plain blue crape frock.
But no, it seemed that that wouldn't at all do.
Too sober, pronounced Frudal.
Haven't you something lively, something bright?
And noting Helga's puzzled glance at her own subdued costume, she explained laughingly,
"'Oh, I'm an old married lady, and a Dane.
But you, you're young, and you're a foreigner, and different.
You must have bright things to set off the colour of your lovely brown skin, striking things,
exotic things.
You must make an impression.'
"'I've only these,' said Helga Crane, timidly displaying her wardrobe,
on couch and chairs.
Of course I intend to buy here.
I didn't want to bring over too much that might be useless.
And you were quite right, too.
Hmm, let's see.
That black there, the one with the Cerise and purple trimmings.
Where that?
Helga was shocked.
But for tea, aunt, isn't it too gay?
To Utre?
Oh, dear, no.
Not at all, not for you.
Just right.
Then, after a little pause, she added,
"'And we're having people into dinner tonight, quite a lot.
Perhaps we'd better decide on our frocks now.'
For she was, in spite of all her gentle kindness, a woman who left nothing to chance.
In her own mind she had determined the role that Helga was to play
in advancing the social fortunes of the dolls of Copenhagen, and she meant to begin at once.
At last, after much trying on and scrutinizing, it was decided that Marie should cut a
favorite emerald-green velvet dress a little lower in the back, and add some gold and mauve flowers.
To liven it up a bit, as Frudal put it.
Now that, she said, pointing to the Chinese red dressing-gown in which Helga had wrapped herself
when at last the fitting was over, suits you.
Tomorrow will shop.
Maybe we can get something that color.
That black and orange thing there is good, too, but too high.
What a prim American maiden you are, Helga, to hide such a fine back and shoulders.
Your feet are nice, too, but you ought to have higher heels, and buckles.
Left alone Helga began to wonder.
She was dubious, too, and not a little resentful.
Certainly she loved color with a passion that perhaps only Negroes and gypsies know.
But she had a deep faith in the perfection of her own taste, and no mind to be bedecked in flaunting, flashy things.
Still, she had to admit that Frudal was right about the dressing-gown.
It did suit her.
Perhaps an evening dress.
And she knew that she had lovely shoulders, and her feet were nice.
When she was dressed in the shining black taffeta, with its bizarre trimmings of purple and serise,
Fru-Dahl approved her, and so did Hair doll.
Everything in her responded to his,
She's beautiful, beautiful!
Helga Crane knew she wasn't that,
but it pleased her that he could think so and say so.
Aunt Katrina smiled in her quiet, assured way,
taking to herself her husband's compliment to her niece.
But a little frown appeared over the fierce moustache,
as he said in his precise, faintly feminine voice.
She ought to have earrings,
long ones. Is it too late for Garborgs? We could call up."
And call up they did. And Garborg, the jeweller in Frederick's guard, waited for them.
Not only were earrings-bought, long ones, brightly enameled, but glittering shoe-buckles and
two great bracelets. Helga's sleeves being long, she escaped the bracelets for the moment.
They were wrapped to be worn that night. The earrings, however, and the buckles came into a medial
at use, and Helga felt like a veritable savage as they made their leisurely way across the pavement
from the shop to the waiting motor. This feeling was intensified by the many pedestrians who
stopped to stare at the queer, dark creature, strange to their city. Her cheeks reddened, but
both hair and Frudal seemed oblivious of the stairs, or the audible whispers in which Helga made
out the one frequently recurring word, sort, which she recognized as the Danish word for.
black. Her aunt Katrina merely remarked,
"'A high color becomes you, Helga, perhaps to-night a little rouge.'
To which her husband nodded in agreement and stroked his moustache meditatively.
Helga Crane said nothing.
They were pleased with the success she was at the tea, or rather the coffee, for no tea
was served, and later at dinner. Helga felt herself like nothing so much as some new and
strange species of pet dog being proudly exhibited. Everyone was very polite and very friendly,
but she felt the masked curiosity and interest, so discreetly hidden under the polite greetings.
The very atmosphere was tense with it. As if I had horns, or three legs, she thought.
She was really nervous and a little terrified, but managed to present an outward smiling
composure. This was assisted by the fact that it was taken for granted that she
knew nothing, or very little of the language. So she had only to bow and look pleasant.
Herr and Frudal did the talking, answered the questions. She came away from the coffee,
feeling that she had acquitted herself well in the first skirmish, and in spite of the mental
strain she had enjoyed her prominence.
If the afternoon had been a strain, the evening was something more. It was more exciting,
too.
Marie had indeed cut down the prized green velvet, until—andil the evening, and—andil the
until as halga put it it was practically nothing but a skirt she was thankful for the barbaric bracelets for the dangling earrings for the beads about her neck she was even thankful for the rouge on her burning cheeks and for the very powder on her back
no other woman in the stately pale-blue room was so greatly exposed but she liked the small murmur of wonder and admiration which rose when uncle pool brought her in she liked the compliments in the men's eyes
as they bent over her hand. She liked the subtle, half-understood flattery of her dinner-partners.
The women, too, were kind, feeling no need for jealousy. To them, this girl, this Helga Crane,
this mysterious niece of the dolls, was not to be reckoned seriously in their scheme of things.
True, she was attractive, unusual in an exotic, almost savage way, but she wasn't one of them.
She didn't at all count.
Near the end of the evening, as Helga sat effectively posed on a red satin sofa, the center
of an admiring group, replying to questions about America and her trip over in halting
inadequate Danish, there came a shifting of the curious interest away from herself. Following
the other's eyes, she saw that there had entered the room a tallish man with a flying
mane of reddish-blond hair. He was wearing a great black cape, which swung gracefully from his
huge shoulders, and in his long, nervous hand he held a wide, soft hat.
An artist, Helga decided at once, taking in the broad streaming tie.
But how affected, how theatrical!
With Frudal he came forward and was presented.
Herr Olsen, Herr Axel Olson.
To Helga Crane, that meant nothing.
The man, however, interested her.
For an imperceptible second he bent over her hand.
After that, he looked intently at her for what seemed to her an incredibly rude length of
time from under his heavy drooping lids. At last, removing his stare of startled satisfaction,
he wagged his Leonine head approvingly.
"'Yes, you're right. She's amazing. Marvellous,' he muttered.
Everyone else in the room was deliberately not staring.
About Helga there sputtered a little staccato murmur of manufactured conversation.
Meanwhile, she could think of no proper word of greeting to the outrageous man before her.
She wanted very badly to laugh.
But the man was as unaware of her omission as of her desire.
His words flowed on and on, rising and rising.
She tried to follow, but his rapid Danish alluded her.
She caught only words, phrases here and there.
Superb eyes.
Color.
Neck column.
Yellow.
Hair.
Alive.
Wonderful!"
His speech was for Frudal.
For a bit longer he lingered before the silent girl, whose smile had become a fixed, aching
mask, still gazing appraisingly, but saying no word to her, and then moved away with
Frudal, talking rapidly and excitedly to her and her husband, who joined them for a moment
at the far side of the room.
Then he was gone as suddenly as he had come.
Who is he?
Helga put the question timidly to a hovering young army officer, a very smart captain just
back from Sweden.
Plainly he was surprised.
"'Her Olson!
Herr Axel Olson, the painter!
Portraits, you know!'
"'Oh,' said Helga, still mystified.
"'I guess he's going to paint you.
You're lucky.
He's queer.
Won't do everybody.'
"'Oh, no.
I mean I'm sure you're mistaken.
He didn't ask, didn't say anything about it.'
The young man laughed.
laughed.
"'Ha! That's good. He'll arrange that with Herr Dahl. He evidently came just to see you,
and it was plain that he was pleased.'
He smiled approvingly.
"'Oh,' said Helga again.
"'Then at last,' she laughed.
It was too funny. The great man hadn't addressed a word to her.
Here she was, a curiosity, a stunt, at which people came and gazed.
And was she to be treated like a secluded young miss, a Danish frockoning?
not to be consulted personally even on matters affecting her personally. She, Helga Crane,
who almost all her life had looked after herself, was she now to be looked after by Aunt
Katrina and her husband? It didn't seem real. It was late, very late, when finally she climbed
into the great bed after having received an auntly kiss. She lay long awake reviewing the
events of the crowded day. She was happy again. Happiness covered her like the lovely quilts
under which she rested. She was mystified, too. Her aunt's words came back to her. You are young,
and a foreigner, and—and—and different. Just what did that mean, she wondered? Did it mean that the
difference was to be stressed, accented? Helga wasn't so sure that she liked that. Hitherto all her
efforts had been toward similarity to those about her. How odd, she thought sleepily, and how
different from America.
End of Chapter 13
Chapter 14 of Quicksand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clett.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 14
The young officer had been right in his surmise.
Axel Olson was going to paint Helga Crane.
Not only was he going to paint her, but he was to accompany her
and her aunt on their shopping expedition.
Aunt Katrina was frankly elated.
Uncle Poole was also visibly pleased.
Evidently they were not above cowtowing to a lion.
Helga's own feelings were mixed.
She was amused, grateful, and vexed.
It had all been decided and arranged without her,
and also she was a little afraid of Olson.
His stupendous arrogance awed her.
The day was an exciting, not easily to be forgotten one.
Definitely, too, it conveyed to Helga her exact status in her new environment, a decoration,
a curio, a peacock. Their progress through the shops was an event, an event for Copenhagen
as well as for Helga Crane. Her dark, alien appearance was to most people and astonishment.
Some stared surreptitiously, some openly, and some stopped dead in front of her in order
more fully to profit by their stairs. Den Sort dropped freely.
audibly from many lips the time came when she grew used to the stairs of the population and the time came when the population of copenhagen grew used to her outlandish presence and ceased to stare
but at the end of that first day it was with thankfulness that she returned to the sheltering walls of the house on maria kirkeblades they were followed by numerous packages whose contents all had been selected or suggested by olson and paid for by aunt katrina
Helga had only to wear them. When they were opened and the things spread out upon the sedate furnishings of her chamber, they made a rather startling array. It was almost in a mood of rebellion that Helga faced the fantastic collection of garments incongruously laid out in the quaint, stiff, pale old room. There were boutique dresses in which mingled indigo, orange, green, vermilion, and black, dresses of velvet and chiffon and screaming colors, blood-red,
sulphur yellow sea-green and one black and white thing in striking combination there was a black manila shawl strewn with great scarlet and lemon flowers a leopard-skin coat a glittering opera cape
there were turban-like hats of metallic silks feathers and firs strange jewelry enameled or set with odd semi-precious stones a nauseous eastern perfume shoes with dangerously high heels
Gradually Helga's perturbation subsided in the unusual pleasure of having so many new and expensive clothes at one time.
She began to feel a little excited, incited.
Incited. That was it, the guiding principle of her life in Copenhagen.
She was incited to make an impression, a voluptuous impression.
She was incited to inflame attention and admiration.
She was dressed for it, subtly schooled for it.
After a little while she gave herself up wholly to the fascinating business of being seen,
gaped at, desired.
Against the solid background of Herdahl's wealth and generosity,
she submitted to her aunt's arrangement of her life to one end,
the amusing one of being noticed and flattered.
Intentionally she kept the slow, faltering Danish.
It was, she decided, more attractive than a near perfection.
She grew used to the extravagant things with which Aunt Katrina-cher,
to dress her. She managed, too, to retain that air of remoteness, which had been in America
so disastrous to her friendships. Here in Copenhagen it was merely a little mysterious, and added
another clinging wisp of charm. Helga Crane's new existence was intensely pleasant to her. It
gratified her augmented sense of self-importance, and it suited her. She had to admit that the
Danes had the right idea, to each his own milieu, enhance what was already in one's possession,
In America, Negroes sometimes talked loudly of this, but in their hearts they repudiated
it, in their lives, too.
They didn't want to be like themselves.
What they wanted, asked for, begged for, was to be like their white overlords.
They were ashamed to be negroes, but not ashamed to beg to be something else, something
inferior, not quite genuine.
Too bad."
Helga Crane didn't, however, think often of America, accepting
an unfavorable contrast to Denmark, for she had resolved never to return to the existence
of ignominy which the new world of opportunity and promised forced upon Negroes.
How stupid she had been ever to have thought that she could marry, and perhaps have children
in a land where every dark child was handicapped at the start by the shroud of colour!
She saw, suddenly, the giving birth to little helpless, unprotesting negro children as
a sin, an unforgivable outrage.
more black folk to suffer indignities, more dark bodies for mobs to lynch.
No, Helga Crane didn't think often of America.
It was too humiliating, too disturbing.
And she wanted to be left to the peace which had come to her.
Her mental difficulties and questionings had become simplified.
She now believed sincerely that there was a law of compensation, and that sometimes it worked.
For all those early desolate years she now felt reconfirmed.
compensed. She recalled a line that had impressed her in her lonely school days, the far-off
interest of tears. To her, Helga Crane, it had come at last, and she meant to cling to it.
So she turned her back on painful America, resolutely shutting out the griefs, the humiliations,
the frustrations, which she had endured there. Her mind was occupied with other and nearer things.
The charm of the old city itself, with its awed our country.
architectural mixture of medievalism and modernity, and the general air of well-being which
pervaded it, impressed her. Even in the so-called poor sections there was none of that untidiness
and squalor which she remembered as the accompaniment of poverty in Chicago, New York, and the
southern cities of America. Here the doorsteps were always white from constant scrubbings,
the women neat, and the children washed and provided with whole clothing. Here were no tatters
and rags, no beggars. But then, begging, she learned, was an offense punishable by law. Indeed,
it was unnecessary in a country where everyone considered it a duty somehow to support himself
and his family by honest work. Or, if misfortune and illness came upon one, everyone else,
including the state, felt bound to give assistance, a lift on the road to the regaining of
independence.
After the initial shyness and consternation at the sensation caused by her strange presence
had worn off, Helga spent long hours driving or walking about the city, at first in the
protecting company of Uncle Poole or Aunt Katrina or both, or sometimes Axel Olson.
But later, when she had become a little familiar with the city, and its inhabitants a little
used to her, and when she had learned to cross the streets in safety, dodging successfully
the innumerable bicycles like a true Copenhagener, she went often alone, loitering on the long
bridge which spanned the placid lakes, or watching the pageant of the blue-clad, sprucely-tailored
soldiers, in the daily parade at Amalienborg Palace, or in the historic vicinity of the long,
low-lying exchange.
A picturesque structure in picturesque surroundings, skirting as it did the great canal,
which was always alive with many small boats, flying broad white sails, and pressing close on the huge ruined pile of the palace of Christiansburg. There was also the Gamosrand, the congregating place of the vendors of fish, where daily was enacted a spirited and interesting scene between sellers and buyers, and where Helga's appearance always roused lively and audible but friendly interest, long after she became in other parts of the city in accepted curiosity.
here it was that one day an old countrywoman asked her to what manner of mankind she belonged and at helga's replying i'm a negro had become indignant retorting angrily that just because she was old and a countrywoman she could not be so easily fooled
for she knew as well as every one else that negroes were black and had woolly hair against all this walking the dolls had at first uttered mild protest but aunt dear i have to walk or i'll get fat
Helga asserted,
"'I've never, never in all my life eaten so much.'
For the accepted style of entertainment in Copenhagen seemed to be a round of dinner
parties, at which it was customary for the hostess to tax the full capacity, not only of
her dining-room, but of her guests as well. Helga enjoyed these dinner-parties, as they
were usually spirited affairs, the conversation brilliant and witty, often in several
languages, and always she came in for a goodly measure of flattering attention and admiration.
There were, too, the popular afternoon gatherings for the express purpose of drinking coffee
together, where between much talk, interesting talk, one sipped the strong and steaming beverage
from exquisite cups fashioned of royal Danish porcelain, and partook of an infinite variety of
rich cakes and smore-broad. This smore-broad, dainty sandwiches of an endless and tempting
array, was distinctly a Danish institution. Often Helga wondered just how many of these delicious
sandwiches she had consumed since setting foot on Denmark's soil. Always, wherever food was served,
appeared the inevitable smore abroad, in the home of the dolls, in every other home that she
visited, in hotels, in restaurants. At first she had missed a little dancing, for though
excellent dancers, the Danes seemed not to care a great deal for that pastime, which so delightfully
combines exercise and pleasure. But in the winter there was skating, solitary or in gay groups.
Helga liked this sport, though she was not very good at it. There were, however, always plenty
of efficient and willing men to instruct and guide her, over the glittering ice. One could,
too, wear such attractive skating things. But mostly it was with Axel Olson that her thoughts
were occupied. Brilliant, bored, elegant, urbane, cynical, worldly. He was a type entirely
knew to Helga Crane, familiar only, and that but little, with the restricted society of American
Negroes. She was aware, too, that this amusing, if conceited man, was interested in her.
They were, because he was painting her, much together. Helga spent long mornings in the eccentric
studio opposite the Folks Museum, and Olson came often to the doll home, where, as Helga and
the man himself knew, he was something more than welcome. But in spite of his expressed interest,
even delight in her exotic appearance. In spite of his constant attendance upon her, he gave no sign
of the more personal kind of concern, which, encouraged by Aunt Katrina's mild insinuations
and Uncle Poole's subtle questionings, she had tried to secure. Was it, she wondered, race that
kept him silent, held him back? Helga Crane frowned on this thought, putting it furiously
from her, because it disturbed her sense of security and permanence in her new life,
pricked her self-assurance. Nevertheless, she was startled, when on a pleasant afternoon
while drinking coffee in the Hotel Vivalie, Aunt Katrina mentioned almost casually the
desirability of Helga's making a good marriage. Marriage, aunt, dear. Marriage, firmly repeated
her aunt, helping herself to another anchovy and olive sandwich. You are, she pointed out,
twenty-five. Oh, aunt, I couldn't. I mean there's nobody here for me.
to marry. In spite of herself and her desire not to be, Helga was shocked.
"'Nobody?'
"'There was,' through Dahl asserted, Captain Frederick Scargard,
"'and very handsome he was, too, and he would have money.
And there was Herr Hans Tietkin, not so handsome, of course, but clever and a good
businessman. He too would be rich, very rich some day. And there was Herr Karl Peterson,
who had a good berth with the Landman's Bank, and considerable shares in the process.
cuspous cement factory at Alborg. There was, too, Christian Lend, the young owner of the new Odin
theatre. Any of these Helga might marry, was Aunt Katrina's opinion. And, she added,
others. Or maybe Helga herself had some ideas? Helga had. She didn't, she responded,
believe in mixed marriages. Between races, you know. They brought only trouble to the children,
as she herself knew but too well from bitter experience.
Froudal thoughtfully lit a cigarette.
Eventually, after a satisfactory glow had manifested itself, she announced,
"'Because your mother was a fool.
Yes, she was.
If she'd come home after she married or after you were born, or even after your father—went
off like that—it would have been different—if even she'd left you when she was here.
But why in the world she should have married again, and a person like that I can't see?
She wanted to keep you.
She insisted on it, even over his protest, I think.
She loved you so much, she said.
And so she made you unhappy.
Mothers, I suppose, are like that.
Selfish.
And Karen was always stupid.
If you've got any brains at all, they came from your father.
Into this Helga would not enter.
Because of its obvious partial truths she felt the need for disguising caution.
With a detachment that amazed herself, she asked if Aunt Katrina
didn't think really that miscegenation was wrong, in fact as well as principle.
"'Don't,' was her aunt's reply.
"'Be a fool, too, Helga.
We don't think of those things here.
Not in connection with individuals, at least.'
And almost immediately, she inquired,
"'Did you give Herr Olson my message about dinner to-night?'
"'Yes, Aunt.'
Helga was cross and trying not to show it.
"'He's coming?'
"'Yes, aunt.'
With precise politeness.
"'What about him?'
"'I don't know. What about him?'
"'He likes you?'
"'I don't know. How can I tell that?'
Helga asked, with irritating reserve, her concentrated attention on the selection of a sandwich.
She had a feeling of nakedness, outrage.
Now Frudal was annoyed and showed it.
"'What nonsense! Of course you know any girl does!'
and her satin-covered foot tapped a little impatiently the old tiled floor really i don't know aunt helga responded in a strange voice a strange manner coldly formal levely courteous then suddenly contrite she added
honestly i don't i can't tell a thing about him and fell into a little silence not a thing she repeated but the phrase though audible was addressed to no one
to herself. She looked out into the amazing orderliness of the street. Instinctively she
wanted to combat this searching into the one thing which, here, surrounded by all other things
which for so long she had so positively wanted, made her a little afraid, started vague
premonitions. Frundall regarded her intently. It would be, she remarked with the return of her
outward casualness, by far the best of all possibilities, particularly desirable.
She touched Helga's hand with her fingers in a little affectionate gesture, very lightly.
Helga Crane didn't immediately reply.
There was, she knew, so much reason from one viewpoint in her aunt's statement.
She could only acknowledge it.
I know that, she told her finally.
Inwardly she was admiring the cool, easy way in which Aunt Katrina had brushed aside the momentary acid note of the conversation
and resumed her customary pitch.
It took, Helga thought, a great deal of security. Balance.
Yes, she was saying, while leisurely lighting another of those long, thin, brown cigarettes,
which Helga knew from distressing experience to be incredibly nasty tasting.
It would be the ideal thing for you, Helga.
She gazed penetratingly into the masked face of her niece, and nodded as though satisfied
with what she saw there.
And you, of course, realize that you are a very charming and beautiful girl.
girl. Intelligent, too. If you put your mind to it, there's no reason in the world why you
shouldn't—abruptly she stopped, leaving her implication at once suspended and clear. Behind her
there were footsteps. A small, gloved hand appeared on her shoulder. In the short moment before
turning to greet Frou Fisher, she said quietly, meaningly. Or else stop wasting your time, Helga?
Helga Crane said, "'Ah, Frou Fisher, it's good to see you.' She made.
it. Her whole body was tense with suppressed indignation, burning inside like the confined
fire of a hot furnace. She was so harassed that she smiled in self-protection, and suddenly
she was oddly cold. An intimation of things distant, but nonetheless disturbing, oppressed
her with a faintly sick feeling, like a heavy weight, a stone weight, just where she knew was her
stomach. Frew Fisher was late, as usual. She apologized profusely.
also, as usual. And yes, she would have some coffee, and some smore-broad, though she must say
that the coffee here at the Vivalry was atrocious, simply atrocious. I don't see how you stand it.
And the place was getting so common, always so many Bolsheviks and japs and things. And she
didn't—begging your pardon, Helga—like that hideous American music they were forever playing,
even if it was considered very smart.
"'Give me,' she said,
"'the good old-fashioned Danish melodies of Gada and Heza.'
"'Which reminds me, Herr Olson says that Nielsen's halios is being performed with great
success just now in England.
"'But I suppose you know all about it, Helga.
"'He's already told you. What?'
This last was accompanied with an arch and insinuating smile.
A shrug moved Helga Crane's shoulders.
Strange, she'd never noticed before what a positively disagreeable woman
through Fisher was.
Stupid, too.
End of Chapter 14.
Chapter 15 of QuickSand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Klett.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 15.
Well into Helga's second year in Denmark
came an indefinite discontent,
not clear, but vague,
like a storm gathering far on the horizon.
It was long before she would admit that she was less happy than she had been during her first year in Copenhagen,
but she knew that it was so.
And this subconscious knowledge added to her growing restlessness and little mental insecurity.
She desired ardently to combat this wearing down of her satisfaction with her life, with herself,
but she didn't know how.
Frankly, the question came to this.
What was the matter with her?
Was there without her knowing it some peculiar lack in her?
absurd but she began to have a feeling of discouragement and hopelessness why couldn't she be happy content somewhere other people managed somehow to be to put it plainly didn't she know how was she incapable of it
and then on a warm spring day came anne's letter telling of her coming marriage to anderson who retained still his shadowy place in helga crane's memory it added somehow to her discontent
and to her growing dissatisfaction with her peacock's life this too annoyed her what she asked herself was there about that man which had the power always to upset her she began to think back to her first encounter with him
perhaps if she hadn't come away she laughed derisively yes if i hadn't come away i'd be stuck in harlem working every day of my life chattering about the race problem
anne it seemed wanted her to come back for the wedding this helga had no intention of doing true she had liked and admired anne better than any one she had ever known but even for her she wouldn't cross the ocean
go back to america where they hated negroes to america where negroes were not people to america where negroes were allowed to be beggars only of life of happiness of security to america where everything had been taken for the people to america where negroes were allowed to be beggars only of life of happiness of security
to america where everything had been taken from those dark ones liberty respect even the labor of their hands to america where if one had negro blood one mustn't expect money education or sometimes even work whereby one might earn bread
perhaps she was wrong to bother about it now that she was so far away helga couldn't however help it never could she recall the shames and often the absolute horrors of the black man's existence in america without the quickening of her heart's beating and a sensation of disturbing nausea
It was too awful. The sense of dread of it was almost a tangible thing in her throat.
And certainly she wouldn't go back for any such idiotic reason as Anne's getting married to that
offensive Robert Anderson. Anne was really too amusing. Just why, she wondered, and how had it
come about that he was being married to Anne? And why did Anne, who had so much more than so many
others, more than enough, want Anderson, too? Why couldn't she—I think—I think.
she told herself.
I'd better stop.
It's none of my business.
I don't care in the least.
Besides, she added irrelevantly.
I hate such nonsensical soul-searching.
One night, not long after the arrival of Anne's letter with its curious news,
Helgo went with Olson and some other young folk to the great circus,
a vaudeville house, in search of amusement on a rare off-night.
After sitting through several numbers, they reluctantly arrived at the conclusion that the whole entertainment was dull,
unutterably dull and apparently without alleviation and so not to be born they were reaching for their raps when out upon the stage pranced two black men american negroes undoubtedly
for as they danced and cavorted they sang in the english of america an old ragtime song that helga remembered hearing as a child everybody gives me good advice at its conclusion the audience applauded with delight only helga crane was silent motionless
More songs, old, all of them old, but new and strange to that audience.
And how the singers danced, pounding their thighs, slapping their hands together,
twisting their legs, waving their abnormally long arms, throwing their bodies about with a loose ease,
and howled and shouted for more.
Helga Crane was not amused.
Instead she was filled with a fierce hatred for the cavorting negroes on the stage.
She felt shamed, betrayed, as if these pale pink and white people among whom she lived had suddenly
been invited to look upon something in her which she had hidden away and wanted to forget,
and she was shocked at the avidity at which Olson beside her drank it in.
But later, when she was alone, it became quite clear to her that all along they had divined its
presence, had known that in her was something, some characteristic, different from any that they
themselves possessed.
Else why had they decked her out as they had?
Why, subtly indicated that she was different?
And they hadn't despised it.
No, they had admired it, rated it as a precious thing, a thing to be enhanced, preserved.
Why?
She, Helga Crane, didn't admire it.
She suspected that no Negroes, no Americans, did.
Else why their constant slavish imitation of traits not their own,
why they're constant begging to be considered as exact copies of other people.
Even the enlightened, the intelligent ones, demanded nothing more.
They were all beggars, like the motley crowd in the old nursery rhyme.
Hark! Hark! The dogs do bark! The beggars are coming to town.
Some in rags, some in tags, and some in velvet gowns.
The incident left her profoundly disquieted.
Her old unhappy questioning mood came again upon her,
insidiously stealing away more of the contentment from her transformed existence but she returned again and again to the circus always alone gazing intently and solemnly at the gesticulating black figures an ironical and silently speculative spectator
for she knew that into her plan for her life had thrust itself a suspensive conflict in which refused doubts rebellion expediency and urgent longings
it was at this time that axel olson asked her to marry him and now helga crane was surprised it was a thing that at one time she had much wanted had tried to bring about and had at last relinquished as impossible of achievement
not so much because of its apparent hopelessness as because of a feeling intangible almost that excited and pleased as he was with her her origin a little repelled him
and that prompted by some impulse of racial antagonism he had retreated into the fastness of a protecting habit of self-ridicule a mortally personal pride and sensitiveness deterred helga from further efforts at incitation
true he had made one morning while holding his brush poised for a last a very last stroke on the portrait one admirably draped suggestion speaking seemingly to the pictured face
had he insinuated marriage or something less and easier or had he paid her only a rather florid compliment in somewhat dubious taste helga who had not at the time been quite sure had remained silent striving to appear unhearing
Later, having thought it over, she flayed herself for a fool. It wasn't she should have known in the manner of Axel Olson to pay florid compliments and questionable taste. And had it been marriage that he had meant, he would of course have done the proper thing. He wouldn't have stopped, or rather have begun, by making his wishes known to her where there was Uncle Poole to be formally consulted. She had been, she told herself, insulted, and a goodly measure of contempt and wariness was added to her interest in the man. She was
able, however, to feel a gratifying sense of elation in the remembrance that she had been silent,
ostensibly unaware of his utterance, and therefore, as far as he knew, not affronted.
This simplified things. It did away with the quandary in which the confession to the dolls
of such a happening would have involved her, for she couldn't be sure that they too might not
have put it down to the difference of her ancestry, and she could still go attended by him,
and envied by others, to openings in Congen's Nytorff, to showings
at the Royal Academy or Charlottenborg's Palace. He could still call for her and Aunt Katrina
of an afternoon, or go with her to Magazen du Nord to select a scarf or a length of silk, of which
Uncle Poole could say casually in the presence of interested acquaintances.
Hmm, pretty scarf, or frock. You're wearing, Helga. Is that the new one Olson helped
you with? Her outward manner toward him changed not at all, save that gradually she became
perhaps a little more detached and indifferent. But definitely Helga Crane had ceased, even remotely,
to consider him other than as someone amusing, desirable, and convenient to have about,
if one was careful. She intended, presently, to turn her attention to one of the others,
the decorative captain of the Hussars, perhaps. But in the ache of her growing nostalgia,
which try as she might she could not curb, she no longer thought with any seriousness on either
Olson or Captain Scargard. She must, she felt, see America again first, when she returned.
Therefore, where before she would have been pleased and proud at Olson's proposal,
she was now truly surprised. Strangely, she was aware also of a curious feeling of repugnance,
as her eyes slid over his face, as smiling, assured, with just the right note of fervor,
he made his declaration and request. She was astonished. Was it possible? Was it really
this man that she had thought even wished she could marry. He was, it was plain, certain of
being accepted, as he was always certain of acceptance, of adulation, in any and every place that
he deigned to honour with his presence. Well, Helga was thinking, that wasn't as much his fault as her
own, her aunts, every one's. He was spoiled, childish almost. To his words, once she had caught
their content and recovered from her surprise, Helga paid not much attention.
They would, she knew, be absolutely appropriate ones, and they didn't at all matter.
They meant nothing to her.
Now.
She was too amazed to discover suddenly how intensely she disliked him,
disliked the shape of his head, the mop of his hair, the line of his nose, the tones of his voice,
the nervous grace of his long fingers, disliked even the very look of his irreproachable clothes.
And for some inexplicable reason she was a little frightened and embarrassed,
so that when he had finished speaking, for a short space there was only stillness in the small room,
into which Aunt Katrina had tactfully had him shown. Even Thor, the enormous Persian,
curled on the window-ledge in the feeble late-afternoon sun, had rested for the moment from his
incessant purring under Helga's idly stroking fingers. Helga, her slight agitation vanished,
told him that she was surprised. His offer was, she said, unexpected, quite.
A little sardonically Olson interrupted her. He smiled, too.
But, of course, I expected surprise. It is, is it not the proper thing? And always you
are proper, frocken Helga, always. Helga, who had a stripped, naked feeling under his direct
glance, drew herself up stiffly. Her Olson needn't she told him be sarcastic. She was surprised.
He must understand that she was being quite sincere, quite truthful about that. Really,
she hadn't expected him to do her so great in honor. He made a little impatient gesture.
Why, then, had she refused, ignored his other earlier suggestion? At that Helga Crane took a deep,
indignant breath, and was again, this time for an almost imperceptible second, silent. She had
then been correct in her deduction. Her sensuous, petulant mouth hardened, that he should so frankly,
so insolently it seemed to her, admit his outrageous meaning was too much.
much." She said coldly, "'Because, Herr Olson, in my country, the men of my race, at least,
don't make such suggestions to decent girls, and thinking that you were a gentleman, introduced
to me by my aunt, I chose to think myself mistaken, to give you the benefit of the doubt.
Very commendable, my Helga, and wise. Now you have your reward. Now I offer you marriage.'
"'Thanks,' she answered.
Thanks awfully.
Yes, and he reached for her slim, cream hand, now lying quiet on Thor's broad orange and black back.
Helga let it lie in his large pink one, noting their contrast.
Yes, because I, poor artist that I am, cannot hold out against the deliberate lure of you.
You disturb me. The longing for you does harm to my work. You creep into my brain and madden me.
But he kissed the small ivory hand.
Quite decorously, Helga thought, for one so maddened that he was driven against his inclination
to offer her marriage.
But immediately, in extenuation, her mind leapt to the admirable casualness of Aunt
Katrina's expressed desire for this very thing, and recalled the unruffled calm of Uncle
Poole under any and all circumstances.
It was, as she had long ago decided, security, balance.
But—the
before her was saying,
For me it will be an experience.
It may be that with you, Helga, for wife,
I will become great, immortal.
Who knows?
I didn't want to love you, but I had to.
That is the truth.
I make of myself a present to you.
For love.
His voice held a theatrical note.
At the same time he moved forward, putting out his arms.
His hand touched air.
For Helga had moved back.
Instantly he dropped his arms and took a step away, repelled by something suddenly wild in her face and manner.
Sitting down he passed a hand over his face with a quick, graceful gesture.
Tamedness returned to Helga Crane. Her ironic gaze rested on the face of Axel Olson,
his Leonine head, his broad nose, broader than my own, his bushy eyebrows, surmounting thick,
drooping lids, which hid, she knew, sullen blue eyes. He stirred sharply,
shaking off his momentary disconcertion. In his assured despotic way he went on.
You know, Helga, you are a contradiction. You have been, I suspect, corrupted by the good
Frudal, which is perhaps as well. Who knows? You have the warm, impulsive nature of the women of
Africa. But, my lovely, you have, I fear, the soul of a prostitute. You sell yourself to the highest
bidder. I should, of course, be happy that it is I, and I am.
he stopped contemplating her lost apparently for the second in pleasant thoughts of the future to helga he seemed to be the most distant the most unreal figure in the world she suppressed a ridiculous impulse to laugh the effort sobered her
abruptly she was aware that in the end in some way she would pay for this hour a quick brief fear ran through her leaving in its wake a sense of impending calamity she wondered if for this she would pay all
that she'd had. And suddenly she didn't at all care. She said lightly but firmly,
"'But you see, Herr Olson, I'm not for sale, not to you, not to any white man. I don't
at all care to be owned, even by you.' The drooping lids lifted. The look in the blue eyes
was, Helga thought, like the surprised stare of a puzzled baby. He hadn't at all grasped her
meaning. She proceeded deliberately. I think you don't understand me. What I'm trying to say
is this. I don't want you. I wouldn't under any circumstances marry you. And since she was,
as she put it, being brutally frank, she added, now. He turned a little away from her, his face
white but composed, and looked down into the gathering shadows in the little park before the house.
At last he spoke in a queer frozen voice.
You refuse me?
Yes, Helga repeated with intentional carelessness.
I refuse you.
The man's full upper lip trembled.
He wiped his forehead where the gold hair was now lying flat and pale and lustreless.
His eyes still avoided the girl in the high-backed chair before him.
Helga felt a shiver of compunction.
For an instant she regretted that she had not been a little kinder.
But wasn't it, after all, the great-backed?
kindness to be cruel. But more gently, less indifferently, she said.
You see, I couldn't marry a white man. I simply couldn't. It isn't just you, not just
personal you understand. It's deeper, broader than that. It's racial. Someday maybe you'll
be glad. We can't tell, you know. If we were married you might come to be ashamed of me,
to hate me, to hate all dark people. My mother did that. I have offered you married
Helga Crane, and you answer me with some strange talk of race and shame? What nonsense is this?"
Helga let that pass because she couldn't, she felt, explain. It would be too difficult,
too mortifying. She had no words which could adequately and without laceration to her pride,
convey to him the pitfalls and to which very easily they might stamp.
"'I might,' she said, have considered it once, when I first came.
But you, hoping for a more informal arrangement, waited too long. You missed the moment. I had time
to think. Now I couldn't. Nothing is worth the risk. We might come to hate each other.
I've been through it or something like it. I know. I couldn't do it. And I'm glad.
Rising, she held out her hand, relieved that he was still silent.
Good afternoon, she said formally. It has been a great thing.
honor. A tragedy, he corrected, barely touching her hand with his moist fingertips.
Why, Helga countered, and for an instant felt as if something sinister and internecine
flew back and forth between them like poison.
I mean, he said, and quite solemnly, that though I don't entirely understand you, yet in a way
I do, too. And—he hesitated, went on.
I think that my first my first of my way I do, too. I think that my friend.
The picture of you is, after all, the true Helga Crane.
Therefore, a tragedy.
For someone?
For me?
Perhaps.
Oh, the picture!
Helga lifted her shoulders in a little impatient motion.
Ceremoniously Axel Olson bowed himself out, leaving her grateful for the urbanity which
permitted them to part without too much awkwardness.
No other man, she thought, of her acquaintance, could have managed it so well.
perhaps, Robert Anderson.
I'm glad, she declared to herself in another moment, that I refused him.
And, she added, honestly, I'm glad that I had the chance.
He took it awfully well, though, for a tragedy.
And she made a tiny frown.
The picture, she had never quite in spite of her deep interest in him and her desire for
his admiration and approval, forgiven Olson for that portrait.
It wasn't, she contended, herself at all.
but some disgusting sensual creature with her features. Hair and Froudal had not exactly
liked it either, although collectors, artists, and critics had been unanimous in their praise,
and it had been hung on the line at an annual exhibition, where it had attracted much flattering
attention and many tempting offers. Now Helga went in and stood for a long time before it,
with its creators parting words in mind. A tragedy. My picture is, after all, the true Helga Crane.
vehemently she shook her head it isn't it isn't at all she said aloud bosh pure artistic bosh and conceit nothing else any one with half an eye could see that it wasn't at all like her
marie she called to the maid passing in the hall do you think this is a good picture of me marie blushed hesitated of course frocken i know herr olson is a great artist but no i don't like that picture
It looks bad, wicked.
Begging your pardon, frocken.
Thanks, Marie.
I don't like it either.
Yes, anyone with half an eye could see that it wasn't she.
End of Chapter 15.
Chapter 16 of Quicksand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 16.
Glad, though the Dawes may have been that their niece had had the chance of refusing the hand of Axel Olson,
they were anything but glad that she had taken that chance. Very plainly they said so,
and quite firmly they pointed out to her the advisability of retrieving the opportunity,
if indeed such a thing were possible. But it wasn't, even had Helga been so inclined,
for they were to learn from the columns of Politicken, Axel Olson had gone off suddenly to some queer place in the Balkans,
To rest, the newspapers said.
To get frocken crane out of his mind, the gossips said.
Life in the doll-manage went on, smoothly as before, but not so pleasantly.
The combined disappointment and sense of guilt of the dolls and Helga colored everything.
Though she had resolved not to think that they felt that she had, as it were, let them down,
Helga knew that they did.
They had not so much expected as hoped that she would bring down Olson, and so
secure the link between the merely fashionable set to which they belonged and the artistic one after
which they hankered. It was of course true that there were others, plenty of them, but there was
only one Olson, and Helga, for some idiotic reason connected with race, had refused him. Certainly
there was no use in thinking even of the others. If she had refused him, she would refuse
any and all for the same reason. It was, it seemed, all embracing. It isn't. It isn't.
Uncle Poole had tried to point out to her.
As if there were hundreds of mulattoes here.
That, I can understand, might make it a little different.
But there's only you.
You're unique here, don't you see?
Besides, Olson has money and enviable position.
Nobody dared to say, or even to think anything odd or unkind of you or him.
Come now, Helga, it isn't this foolishness about race.
Not here in Denmark.
You've never spoken of it before.
It can't be just that.
You're too sensible.
It must be something else. I wish you'd try to explain. You don't perhaps like Goulson?'
Helga had been silent, thinking what a severe wrench to Herr Dahl's ideas of decency was this
conversation, for he had an almost fanatic regard for reticence and a peculiar shrinking from what he
looked upon as indecent exposure of the emotions.
"'Just what is it, Helga?' he asked again, because the pause had grown awkward for him.
I can't explain any better than I have, she had begun tremulously.
It's just something, something deep down inside of me, and had turned away to hide a face convulsed
by threatening tears.
But that, Uncle Poole had remarked with a reasonableness that was wasted on the miserable
girl before him, was nonsense, pure nonsense.
With a shaking sigh and a frantic dab at her eyes, in which had come a despairing look,
She had agreed that perhaps it was foolish, but she couldn't help it.
Can't you—won't you understand, Uncle Poole? she begged, with a pleading look at the kindly,
worldly man, who at that moment had been thinking that this strange exotic niece of his wife's
was indeed charming.
He didn't blame Olson for taking it rather hard.
The thought passed.
She was weeping, with no effort at restraint.
Charming, yes, but insufficiently civilized.
impulsive, imprudent, selfish. Try Helga to control yourself. He had urged gently. He detested
tears. If it distresses you so, we won't talk of it again. You, of course, must do as you yourself wish.
Both your aunt and I want only that you should be happy. He had wanted to make an end of this
fruitless, wet conversation. Helga had made another little dab at her face with the scrap of lace,
and raised shining eyes to his face.
She had said, with sincere regret,
"'You've been marvelous to me, you and Aunt Katrina.
Angelic, I don't want to seem ungrateful.
I'd do anything for you, anything in the world but this.'
Herrdal had shrugged.
A little sardonically he had smiled.
He had refrained from pointing out that this was the only thing she could do for them,
the only thing that they had asked of her.
He'd been too glad to be through with the uncomfortable discussion.
so life went on dinners coffees theatres pictures music clothes more dinners coffees theatres clothes music and that nagging aching for america increased
augmented by the uncomfortableness of aunt katrina's and uncle pool's disappointment with her that tormenting nostalgia grew to an unbearable weight as spring came on with many gracious tokens of following summer
she found her thoughts straying with increasing frequency to anne's letter and to harlem its dirty streets swollen now in the warmer weather with dark gay humanity until recently she had had no faintest wish ever to see america again
now she began to welcome the thought of a return only a visit of course just to see to prove to herself that there was nothing there for her to demonstrate the absurdity of even thinking that there could be and to relieve the slight tension here maybe when she came back
her definite decision to go was arrived at with almost bewildering suddenness it was after a concert at which de vajoc's new-world symphony had been wonderfully rendered those wailing undertones of swing
low, sweet chariot, were too poignantly familiar. They struck into her longing heart and cut
away her weakening defenses. She knew at least what it was that had lurked formless and undesignated
these many weeks in the back of her troubled mind. Incompleteness. I'm homesick. Not for America,
but for Negroes. That's the trouble. For the first time Helga Crane felt sympathy rather than contempt
and hatred for that father, who so often and so angrily she had blamed for his desertion
of her mother.
She understood now, his rejection, his repudiation of the formal calm her mother had represented.
She understood his yearning, his intolerable need for the inexhaustible humor and the incessant
hope of his own kind, his need for those things, not material, indigenous to all negro
environments. She understood and could sympathize with his facile surrender to the irresistible
ties of race, now that they dragged at her own heart. And as she attended parties, the theatre,
the opera, and mingled with people on the streets, meeting only pale, serious faces when she
longed for brown laughing ones, she was able to forgive him. Also, it was as if in this understanding
and forgiving she had come upon knowledge of almost sacred importance.
Without demur, opposition, or recrimination, Herr and Frue Dahl accepted Helga's decision
to go back to America. She had expected that they would be glad and relieved. It was agreeable
to discover that she had done them less than justice. They were, in spite of their extreme
worldliness, very fond of her, and would, as they declared, miss her greatly. And they did
want her to come back to them, as they repeatedly insisted. Secretly, they felt as she did,
that perhaps when she returned—
So it was agreed upon that it was only for a brief visit, for your friend's wedding, and that
she was to return in the early fall.
The last day came, the last good-bys were said.
Helga began to regret that she was leaving.
Why couldn't she have two lives, or why couldn't she be satisfied in one place?
Now that she was actually off she felt heavy at the heart.
Already she looked back with infinite regret at the two years in the country which had given
her so much, of pride, of health.
happiness, of wealth, and of beauty. Bells rang, the gangplank was hoisted, the dark
strip of water widened, the running figures of friends suddenly grown very dear, grew smaller,
blurred into a hole, and vanished. Tears rose in Helga Crane's eyes, fear in her heart.
Goodbye, Denmark. Good-bye, good-bye.
End of Chapter 16. Chapter 17 of Quick-Sand.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clette.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 17
A summer had ripened and fall begun.
Anne and Dr. Anderson had returned from their short Canadian wedding journey.
Helga Crane, still lingering in America, had tactfully removed herself from the house in 139th Street to a hotel.
It was, as she could point out to curious acquaintances,
much better for the newly married anderson's not to be bothered with a guest not even with such a close friend as she helga had been to anne actually though she herself had truly wanted to get out of the house when they came back she had been a little surprised and a great deal hurt that anne had consented so readily to her going
She might at least, thought Helga indignantly, have acted a little bit as if she had wanted her to stay, after writing for her to come, too.
Pleasantly unaware was Helga that Anne, more silently wise than herself, more determined, more selfish, and less inclined to leave anything to chance,
understood perfectly that in a large measure it was the voice of Robert Anderson's inexorable conscience that had been the chief factor in bringing about her second marriage,
his ascetic protest against the sensuous, the physical.
Anne had perceived that the decorous surface of her new husband's mind
regarded Helga Crane with that intellectual and aesthetic appreciation,
which attractive and intelligent women would always draw from him,
but that underneath that well-managed section,
in a more lawless place where she herself never hoped or desired to enter,
was another, a vagrant, primitive, groping toward something shocking and frightening
to the cold asceticism of his reason. Anne knew also that though she herself was lovely,
more beautiful than Helga, and interesting. With her he had not to struggle against that nameless
and to him shameful impulse, that sheer delight which ran through his nerves had mere proximity
to Helga. And Anne intended that her marriage should be a success. She intended that her husband
should be happy. She was sure that it could be managed by tact and a little cleverness on her own part,
She was truly fond of Helga, but seeing how she had grown more charming, more aware of her power,
Anne wasn't so sure that her sincere and urgent request to come over for her wedding hadn't been a mistake.
She was, however, certain of herself. She could look out for her husband.
She could carry out what she considered her obligation to him, keep him undisturbed, unhumiliated.
It was impossible that she could fail, unthinkable.
Helga, on her part, had been glad to get back to New York.
How glad, or why, she did not truly realize, and though she sincerely meant to keep her
promise to Aunt Katrina and Uncle Poole and return to Copenhagen, summer, September, October
slid by, and she made no move to go.
Her uttermost intention had been a six or eight weeks' visit, but the feverish rush of
New York, the comic tragedy of Harlem, still held her.
As time went on, she became a little bored, a little bit of a little bit of New York.
restless, but she stayed on. Something of that wild surge of gladness that had swept her on
the day, when with Anne and Anderson she had again found herself surrounded by hundreds,
thousands of dark-eyed brown folk remained with her. These were her people. Nothing,
she had come to understand now, could ever change that. Strange that she had never truly valued
this kinship until distance had shown her its worth. How absurd she had been to think that another country,
people could liberate her from the ties which bound her forever to these mysterious
these terrible these fascinating these lovable dark hordes ties that were of the
spirit ties not only superficially entangled with mere outline of features or
color of skin deeper much deeper than either of these thankful for the appeasement of that
loneliness which it again tormented her like a fury she gave herself up to the
miraculous joyousness of Harlem the eve
which its heedless abandon brought to her was a real, a very definite thing. She liked
the sharp contrast to her pretentious stately life in Copenhagen. It was as if she had passed
from the heavy solemnity of a church service to a gorgeous, carefree revel.
Not that she intended to remain. No. Helga Crane couldn't, she told herself and others,
live in America. In spite of its glamour, existence in America, even in Harlem, was for
negroes too cramped, too uncertain, too cruel, something ought to be endured for a lifetime if one
could escape, something demanding a courage greater than was in her. No, she couldn't stay.
Nor, she saw now, could she remain away. Leaving, she would have to come back.
This knowledge, this certainty of the division of her life into two parts and two lands,
into physical freedom in Europe and spiritual freedom in America, was unfortunate, inconvenient.
expensive. It was, too, as she was uncomfortably aware, even a trifle ridiculous, and
mentally she caricatured herself moving shuttle-like from continent to continent, from the
prejudiced restrictions of the new world to the easy formality of the old, from the pale calm
of Copenhagen to the colorful lure of Harlem. Nevertheless, she felt a slightly pitying superiority
over those negroes who were apparently so satisfied, and she had a fine contempt for the blatantly
patriotic black Americans. Always when she encountered one of those picturesque parades in the Harlem
streets, the stars and stripes streaming ironically, insolently at the head of the procession,
tempered for her a little, her amusement at the childish seriousness of the spectacle. It was too
pathetic. But when mental doors were deliberately shut on those skeletons that stalked lively
and in full health through the consciousness of every person of Negro ancestry in America,
conspicuous black, obvious brown, or indistinguishable white.
Life was intensely amusing, interesting, absorbing, and enjoyable, singularly lacking in that
tone of anxiety which the insecurities of existence seemed to ferment in other peoples.
Yet Talga herself had an acute feeling of insecurity, for which she could not account.
Sometimes it amounted to fright almost.
I must, she would say then, get back to Copenhagen.
But the resolution gave her not much pleasure.
And for this she now blamed Axel Olson.
It was, she insisted, he who had driven her back, made her unhappy in Denmark, though she
knew well that it wasn't.
Miss Givings too rose in her.
Why hadn't she married him?
Anne was married.
She would not say Anderson.
Why not she?
It would serve Anne right if she married a white man.
But she knew in her soul that she wouldn't.
Because I'm a fool.
said bitterly.
End of Chapter 17.
Chapter 18 of Quicksand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 18.
One November evening, impregnated still with the kindly warmth of the dead Indian summer,
Helga Crane was leisurely dressing in pleasant anticipation of the party
to which she had been asked for that night. It was always amusing at the taverners. Their house was
large and comfortable, the food and music always of the best, and the type of entertainment always
unexpected and brilliant. The drinks, too, were sure to be safe. And Helga, since her return was more
than ever popular at parties. Her courageous clothes attracted attention, and her deliberate lure,
as Olson had called it, held it. Her life in Copenhagen,
had taught her to expect and accept admiration as her due this attitude she found was as effective in new york as across the sea it was in fact even more so and it was more amusing too perhaps because it was somehow a bit more dangerous
in the midst of curious speculation as to the possible identity of the other guests with an indefinite sense of annoyance she wondered if anne would be there there was of late something about anne that was to helga distinctly disagreeable
a peculiar half-patronizing attitude mixed faintly with disgust helga couldn't define it couldn't account for it she had tried in the end she had decided to dismiss it to ignore it
i suppose she said aloud it's because she's married again as if anybody couldn't get married anybody that is if mere marriage is all one wants smoothing away the tiny frown from between the broad black brows she got herself into a little shining roland
rose-colored slip of a frock, knotted with a silver cord. The gratifying result soothed
her ruffled feelings. It didn't really matter this new manner of Anne's, nor did the fact
that Helga knew that Anne disapproved of her. Without words Anne had managed to make that evident.
In her opinion, Helga had lived too long among the enemy, the detestable pale faces. She understood
them too well, was too tolerant of their ignorant stupidities. If they had been Latins, Anne might
have conceivably forgiven the disloyalty. But Nordics! Linchers! It was too traitorous.
Helga smiled a little, understanding Anne's bitterness and hate, and a little of its cause.
It was of a peace with that of those she so virulently hated. Fear. And then she sighed a little,
for she regretted the waning of Anne's friendship. But in view of diverging courses of their
lives, she felt that even its complete extinction would leave her undevestated. Not that she wasn't
still grateful to Anne for many things. It was only that she had other things now. And there would,
forever, be Robert Anderson between them—a nuisance—shutting them off from their previous
confident companionship and understanding. And anyway, she said again aloud, he's nobody much
to have married. Anybody could have married him—anybody, if a person wanted only to be married.
If it had been somebody like Olson, that would be different, something to crow over, perhaps.
The party was even more interesting than Helga had expected.
Helen, Mrs. Tavener, had given vent to a malicious glee, and had invited representatives
of several opposing Harlem political and social factions, including the West Indian, and abandoned
them helplessly to each other.
Helga's observing eyes picked out several great and near-great, sulking or obviously trying hard
not to sulk in widely separated places in the big rooms. There were present also a few white
people, to the open disapproval or discomfort of Anne and several others. There, too, poised, serene,
certain, surrounded by masculine black and white, was Audrey Denny.
"'Do you know, Helen?' Helga confided. "'I've never met Miss Denny. I wish you'd introduce me.
Not this minute, later when you can manage it. Not so—uh, apparently by request.
Quest, you know."
Helen Tavenor laughed.
No, you wouldn't have met her living as you did with Anne Gray—anderson, I mean.
She's Anne's particular pet aversion.
The mere sight of Audrey is enough to send her into a frenzy for a week.
It's too bad, too, because Audrey's an awfully interesting person, and Anne said some pretty
awful things about her.
You'll like her, Helga."
Helga nodded.
Yes, I expect to.
And I know about Anne.
One night—
She stopped, for across the room she saw.
with a stab of surprise James Vale.
"'Where, Helen, did you get him?'
"'Oh, that! That's something the cat brought in. Don't ask which one. He came with somebody,
I don't remember who. I think he's shocked to death. Isn't he lovely? The dear baby! I was
going to introduce him to Audrey and tell her to do a good job of vamping on him as soon as I
could remember the darling's name, or when it got noisy enough so he wouldn't hear what I called him.
But you'll do just as well. Don't tell me you know.
him?" Helga made a little nod.
"'Well, and I suppose you met him at some shockingly wicked place in Europe.
That's always the way with those innocent-looking men.'
"'Not quite. I met him ages ago in Naxos. We were engaged to be married.
Nice, isn't he? His name's Vale. James Vale.'
"'Nice,' said Helen, throwing out her hands in a characteristic, dramatic gesture.
She had beautiful hands and arms.
Is exactly the word.
"'Mind if I run off? I've got somebody here who's going to sing. Not spirituals. And I haven't
the faintest notion where he's got to. The cellar I'll bet.' James Vale hadn't Helga decided,
changed at all. Someone claimed her for a dance, and it was some time before she caught his
eyes, half-questioning upon her. When she did, she smiled in a friendly way over her partner's
shoulder, and was rewarded by a dignified little bow. Inwardly she grinned, flattered. He hadn't
forgotten. He was still hurt. The dance over, she deserted her partner and deliberately made her way
across the room to James Vale. He was, for the moment, embarrassed and uncertain. Helga Crane, however,
took care of that, thinking, meanwhile, that Helen was right. Here he did seem frightfully young
and delightfully unsophisticated. He must be, though, every bit of thirty-two or more.
"'They say,' was her bantering greeting, "'that if one stands on the corner of one hundred and thirty-fifth
street in 7th Avenue long enough, one will eventually see all the people one has ever known
or met. It's pretty true, I guess. Not literally, of course. He was, she saw, getting himself
together. It's only another way of saying that everybody almost, sometime sooner or later,
comes to Harlem. Even you. He laughed. Yes, I guess that is true enough. I didn't come to stay,
though. And then he was grave, his earnest eyes searchingly upon her. Well, anyway, you're here. You're
here now, so let's find a quiet corner if that's possible where we can talk. I want to hear
all about you." For a moment he hung back, and a glint of mischief shone in Helga's eyes.
"'I see,' she said. "'You are just the same. However, you needn't be anxious. This isn't
Naxos, you know. Nobody's watching us, or if they are they don't care a bit what we do.'
At that he flushed a little, protested a little, and followed her. And when at last they had
found seats in another room, not so crowded, he said, I didn't expect to see you here.
I thought you were still abroad.
Oh, I've been back some time, ever since Dr. Anderson's marriage.
Anne, you know, is a great friend of mine.
I used to live with her.
I came for the wedding.
But, of course, I'm not staying.
I didn't think I'd be here this long.
You don't mean that you're going to live over there.
Do you really like it so much better?
Yes, and no, to both questions.
I was awfully glad to get back, but I wouldn't live here.
always. I couldn't. I don't think that any of us who've lived abroad for any length of time
would ever live here altogether again if they could help it.
Lots of them do, though, James Vale pointed out.
Oh, I don't mean tourists who rush over to Europe and rush all over the continent and rush
back to America thinking they know Europe. I mean people who've actually lived there,
actually lived among the people. I still maintain that they nearly all come back here eventually
to live. That's because they can't help it, Helga Crane said.
firmly. Money, you know. Perhaps, I'm not so sure. I was in the war. Of course that's not really
living over there, but I saw the country and the difference in treatment. But I can tell
you I was pretty darn glad to get back. All the fellows were." He shook his head solemnly.
I don't think anything. Money or lack of money keeps us here. If it was only that, if we
really wanted to leave, we'd go all right. No, it's something else, something deeper than that.
And just what do you think it is?
I'm afraid it's hard to explain, but I suppose it's just that we like to be together.
I simply can't imagine living forever away from colored people.
A suspicion of a frown drew Helga's brows.
She threw out rather tartly.
I'm a negro too, you know.
Well, Helga, you were always a little different, a little dissatisfied,
though I don't pretend to understand you at all.
I never did, he said, a little wistfully.
and helga who was beginning to feel that the conversation had taken an impersonal and disappointing tone was reassured and gave him her most sympathetic smile and said almost gently
and now let's talk about you you are still at naxos yes i'm still there i'm assistant principal now plainly it was a cause for enthusiastic congratulation but helga could only manage a tepid how nice
Naxos was to her too remote, too unimportant. She did not even hate it now.
How long she asked would James be in New York? He couldn't say. Business, important business
for the school, had brought him. It was, he said, another tone creeping into his voice,
another look stealing over his face. Offly good to see her. She was looking tremendously well.
He hoped he would have the opportunity of seeing her again. But of course he must come to see her,
any time she was always in or would be for him. And how did he like New York, Harlem?'
"'He didn't, it seemed, like it. It was nice to visit, but not to live in. Oh, there were
so many things he didn't like about it—the rush, the lack of home life, the crowd, the noisy
meaninglessness of it all. On Helga's face there had come that pityingly sneering look, peculiar
to imported New Yorkers, when the city of their adoption is attacked by alien Americans. With
With polite contempt, she inquired,
"'And is that all you don't like?'
At her tone the man's bronze face went purple.
He answered coldly, slowly, with a faint gesture in the direction of Helen Tavener,
who stood conversing gaily with one of her white guests.
And I don't like that sort of thing.
In fact, I detest it.
Why?'
Helga was striving hard to be casual in her manner.
James Vale, it was evident, was beginning to be angry.
It was also evident that Helga Crane's question had embarrassed him, but he seized the bull by the horns and said,
You know as well as I do, Helga, that it's the colored girls these men come up here to see.
They wouldn't think of bringing their wives.
And he blushed furiously at his own implication.
The blush restored Helga's good temper.
Chames was really too funny.
That, she said softly, is Hugh Wentworth, the novelist, you know?
And she indicated a tall olive-skinned girl being whirled about to the streaming music
in the arms of a towering black man.
And that is his wife.
She isn't coloured, as you've probably been thinking.
And now let's change the subject again.
All right.
And this time let's talk about you.
You say you don't intend to live here.
Don't you ever intend to marry, Helga?
Someday, perhaps?
I don't know.
Marriage.
That means children to me.
And why add more suffering to the world?
Why add any more unwanted, tortured negroes to America?
Why do Negroes have children?
Surely it must be sinful.
Think of the awfulness of being responsible for the giving of life to creatures doomed
to endure such wounds to the flesh, such wounds to the spirit as Negroes have to endure.
James was aghast.
He forgot to be embarrassed.
But Helga!
Good heavens!
Don't you see that if we—I mean people like us don't have children the other
will still have. That's one of the few things that's the matter with us. The race is sterile
at the top. Few, very few negers of the better class have children, and each generation has
to wrestle again with the obstacle of the preceding ones, lack of money, education, and
background. I feel very strongly about this. We're the ones who must have the children of the
race is to get anywhere. Well, I, for one, don't intend to contribute any to the cause.
But how serious we are! And I'm afraid that I've really got to leave you.
you, I've already cut two dances for your sake. Do come to see me."
Oh, I'll come to see you all right. I've got several things that I want to talk to you
about, and one thing especially.
"'Don't,' Helga mocked. "'Tell me you're going to ask me again to marry you.'
"'That,' he said, is just what I intend to do.'
Helga Crane was suddenly, deeply ashamed, and very sorry for James Vale, so she told him laughingly
that it was shameful of him to joke with her like that, and before he could
answer, she had gone tripping off with a handsome, coffee-colored youth, whom she had beckoned from
across the room with a little smile. Later she had to go upstairs to pin up a place in the hem of
her dress which had caught on a sharp chair-corner. She finished the temporary repair and
stepped out into the hall, and somehow, she never quite knew exactly how, into the arms of
Robert Anderson. She drew back and looked up, smiling, to offer an apology. And then it happened.
He stooped and kissed her.
A long kiss, holding her close.
She fought against him with all her might.
Then strangely all power seemed to ebb away,
and a long, hidden, half-understood desire welled up in her with the suddenness of a dream.
Helga Crane's own arms went up about the man's neck.
When she drew away, consciously confused and embarrassed,
everything seemed to have changed in a space of time,
which she knew to have been only seconds.
Sudden anger seized her.
She pushed him indignantly aside,
and with a little pat for her hair and dress went slowly down to the others.
End of Chapter 18.
Chapter 19 of Quicksand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clette.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 19
That night, riotous and colorful dreams invaded Helga Crane's prim hotel bed.
She woke in the morning weary and a bit shocked,
at the uncontrolled fancies which had visited her.
Catching up a filmy scarf,
she paced back and forth across her narrow room and tried to think.
She recalled her flirtations and her mild engagement with James Vale.
She was used to kisses, but none had been like that of last night.
She lived over those brief seconds,
thinking not so much of the man whose arms had held her
as of the ecstasy which had flooded her.
Even recollection brought a little onrush of emotion,
that made her sway a little. She pulled herself together and began to fasten on the solid fact of Anne
and experienced a pleasant sense of shock in the realization that Anne was to her exactly what she had been
before the incomprehensible experience of last night. She still liked her in the same degree
and in the same manner. She still felt slightly annoyed with her. She still did not envy her
marriage with Anderson. By some mysterious process, the emotional upheaval which had racked her
had left all the rocks of her existence unmoved. Outwardly, nothing had changed. Days, weeks passed,
outwardly serene, inwardly tumultuous. Helga met Dr. Anderson at the social affairs to which
often they were both asked. Sometimes she danced with him, always in perfect silence. She
couldn't, she absolutely couldn't speak a word to him when they were
us alone together, for at such times lassitude encompassed her. The emotion which had gripped
her retreated, leaving a strange tranquility, troubled only by a soft stir of desire, and shamed by
his silence, his apparent forgetting, always after these dances she tried desperately to persuade
herself to believe what she wanted to believe, that it had not happened, that she had
never had that irrepressible longing. It was of no use. As the weeks multiplied, she became
aware that she must get herself out of the mental quagmire into which that kiss had thrown her,
and she should be getting herself back to Copenhagen, but she now had no desire to go.
Abruptly one Sunday in a crowded room in the midst of teacups and chatter, she knew that she
couldn't go, that she hadn't since that kiss intended to go, without exploring to the
end that unfamiliar path into which she had strayed. Well, it was no use lagging behind or pulling back,
It was no use trying to persuade herself that she didn't want to go on.
A species of fatalism fastened on her.
She felt that, ever since that last day in Naxos long ago,
somehow she had known that this thing would happen.
With this conviction came an odd sense of elation.
While making a pleasant ascent to some remark of a fellow-guest,
she put down her cup and walked without haste,
smiling and nodding to friends and acquaintances on her way
to that part of the room where he stood looking at.
at some examples of African carving. Helga Crane faced him squarely. As he took the hand which
she held out with elaborate casualness, she noted that his trembled slightly. She was secretly
congratulating herself on her own calm, when it failed her. Physical weariness descended on her. Her
knees wobbled. Gratefully she slid into the chair which he hastily placed for her. Timidity
came over her. She was silent. He talked. She did not listen. He came at last to the end of his
long dissertation on African sculpture, and Helga Crane felt the intentness of his gaze upon her.
"'Well,' she questioned, "'I want very much to see you, Helga. Alone.'
She held herself tensely on the edge of her chair, and suggested, "'Tomorrow?'
He hesitated a second, and then said quickly, "'Why, yes, that's all right.
Eight o'clock?'
"'Eight o'clock,' he agreed.
Eight o'clock tomorrow came.
Helga Crane never forgot it.
She had carried away from yesterday's meeting a feeling of increasing elation.
It had seemed to her that she hadn't been so happy, so exalted in years, if ever.
All night, all day, she had mentally prepared herself for the coming consummation,
physically, too, spending hours before the mirror.
Eight o'clock had come at last, and with it, Dr. Anderson.
Only then had uneasiness come upon her, and a feeling of fear for possible exposure.
For Helga Crane wasn't, after all, a rebel from society, Negro society.
It did mean something to her. She had no wish to stand alone.
But these late fears were overwhelmed by the hardiness of insistent desire,
and she had got herself down to the hotel's small reception-room.
"'It was,' he had said, awfully good of her to see him.
She instantly protested.
No, she had wanted to see him.
He looked at her, surprised.
You know, Helga, he had begun with an air of desperation.
I can't forgive myself for acting such a swine at the Tavener's party.
I don't at all blame you for being angry and not speaking to me except when you had to.
But that, she exclaimed, was simply too ridiculous.
I wasn't angry a bit.
And it had seemed to her that things were not exactly going forward as they should.
It seemed that he had been very sincere and very formal,
deliberately. She had looked down at her hands and inspected her bracelets, for she had felt that
to look at him would be, under the circumstances, too exposing.
"'I was afraid,' he went on, "'that you might have misunderstood, might have been unhappy about it.
I could kick myself. It was—it must have been Tavener's rotten cocktails.'
Helga Crane's sense of elation had abruptly left her. At the same time she had felt the need
to answer carefully.
No, she replied.
She hadn't thought of it at all.
It had meant nothing to her.
She'd been kissed before.
It was really too silly of him to have been at all bothered about it.
For what?
She had asked.
Is one kiss, more or less, these days, between friends?
She had even laughed a little.
Dr. Anderson was relieved.
He had been, he told her, no end upset.
Rising, he said.
I see you're going out.
I won't keep you.
Helga Crane, too, had risen.
quickly a sort of madness had swept over her she felt that he had belittled and ridiculed her and thinking this she had suddenly savagely slapped robert anderson with all her might in the face
for a short moment they had both stood stunned in the deep silence which had followed that resounding slap then without a word of contrition or apology helga crane had gone out of the room and upstairs
she had she told herself been perfectly justified in slapping dr anderson but she was not convinced so she had tried hard to make herself very drunk in order that sleep might come to her but had managed only to make herself very sick
not even the memory of how all living had left his face which had gone a tope grey hue or the despairing way in which she had lifted his head and let it drop or the trembling hands which he had pressed into his pockets brought her any scrap of comfort she had ruined everything ruined
Ruined it because she had been so silly as to close her eyes to all indications that pointed to the fact that no matter what the intensity of his feelings or desires might be, he was not the sort of man who would for any reason give up one particle of his own good opinion of himself, not even for her, not even though he knew that she had wanted so terribly something special from him.
Something special.
And now she had forfeited it forever.
For ever.
Helga had an instantaneous, shocking perception of what forever meant, and then, like a flash,
it was gone, leaving an endless stretch of dreary years before her appalled vision.
End of Chapter 19
Chapter 20 of Quicksand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 20
The day was a rainy one.
Helga Crane, stretched out on her bed,
felt herself so broken physically, mentally,
that she had given up thinking.
But back and forth in her staggered brain
wavering incoherent thoughts shot shuttle-like,
her pride would have shut out these humiliating thoughts
and painful visions of herself.
The effort was too great.
She felt alone, isolated from all other human beings,
separated even from her own anterior existence
by the disaster of yesterday.
Over and over, she repeated,
there's nothing left but to go now.
Her anguish seemed unbearable.
For days, for weeks,
voluptuous visions had haunted her.
Desire had burned in her flesh
with uncontrollable violence.
The wish to give herself had been so intense
that Dr. Anderson's surprising, trivial apology
loomed as a direct refusal of the offering.
Whatever outcome she had expected,
it had been something else than this, this mortification, this feeling of ridicule and self-loathing,
this knowledge that she had deluded herself.
It was all, she told herself, as unpleasant as possible.
Almost she wished she could die.
Not quite.
It wasn't that she was afraid of death, which had, she thought, its picturesque aspects.
It was rather that she knew she would not die.
And death, after the debacle, would but intensify its absurdity.
Also, it would reduce her, Helga Crane, to unimportance, to nothingness.
Even in her unhappy present state, that did not appeal to her.
Gradually, reluctantly, she began to know that the blow to her self-esteem,
the certainty of having proved herself a silly fool, was perhaps the severest hurt which
she had suffered.
It was her self-assurance that had gone down in the crash.
After all, what Dr. Anderson thought didn't matter.
She could escape from the discomfort of his knowing gray eyes, but she couldn't escape from
sure knowledge that she had made a fool of herself. This angered her further, and she struck
the wall with her hands, and jumped up and began hastily to dress herself. She couldn't go on
with the analysis. It was too hard. Why bother, when she could add nothing to the obvious fact
that she had been a fool? I can't stay in this room any longer. I must get out or I'll choke.
Her self-knowledge had increased her anguish.
Distracted, agitated, incapable of containing herself,
she tore open drawers and closets,
trying desperately to take some interest in the selection of her apparel.
It was evening and still raining.
In the streets unusually deserted,
the electric lights cast dull glows.
Helga Crane, walking rapidly, aimlessly,
could decide on no definite destination.
She had not thought to take umbrella or even rubbers.
Rain and wind whipped cruelly about her, trenching her garments and chilling her body.
Soon the foolish little satin shoes which she wore were sopping wet. Unheeding these physical
discomforts she went on, but at the open corner of one hundred and thirty-eighth street,
a sudden more ruthless gust of wind ripped the small hat from her head. In the next minute
the black clouds opened wider and spilled their water with unusual fury. The streets became
swirling rivers. Helga Crane, forgetting her mental torment, looked about anxiously for a
sheltering taxi. A few taxis sped by, but inhabited, so she began desperately to struggle through
wind and rain toward one of the buildings, where she could take shelter in a store or a doorway.
But another whirl of wind lashed her, and scornful of her slight strength, tossed her into the
swollen gutter. Now she knew beyond all doubt that she had no desire to die, and certainly not there
or then, not in such a messy, wet manner.
Death had lost all of its picturesque aspects to the girl lying soaked and soiled in the flooded
gutter.
So though she was very tired and very weak, she dragged herself up and succeeded finally
in making her way to the store whose blurred light she had marked for her destination.
She had opened the door and had entered before she was aware that, inside, people were
singing a song which she was conscious of having heard years ago.
Hundreds of years, it seemed.
repeated over and over she made out the words showers of blessings showers of blessings showers of blessings
she was conscious too of a hundred pairs of eyes upon her as she stood there drenched and dishevelled
at the door of this improvised meeting-house showers of blessings the appropriateness of the song
with its constant reference to showers the ridiculousness of herself in such surroundings was too much for helga crane's
frayed nerves. She sat down on the floor, a dripping heap, and laughed and laughed, and laughed.
It was into a shocked silence that she laughed, for at the first hysterical peal the words of the song
had died in the singer's throats, and the wheezy organ had lapsed into stillness. But in a moment
there were hushed solicitous voices. She was assisted to her feet, and led haltingly to a chair
near the low platform at the far end of the room. On one side of her a tall, angular black woman
under a queer hat sat down, on the other a fattish yellow man with huge outstanding ears and long,
nervous hands. The singing began again, this time a low, wailing thing.
O the bitter shame and sorrow that a time could ever be, when I let the saviour's pity plead
in vain and proudly answered, All of self and none of thee, all of self and none of thee.
Yet he found me, I beheld him, bleeding on the cursed tree, heard him pray, forgive them,
Father, and my wistful heart said faintly, some of self and some of thee, some of self
and some of thee.
There were it appeared endless moaning verses.
Behind Helga a woman had begun to cry audibly, and soon somewhere else another.
Outside the wind still bellowed.
The wailing singing went on.
Less of self and more of thee.
Less of self and more of thee.
Helga, too, began to weep, at first silently, softly, then with great racking sobs.
Her nerves were so torn, so aching, her body so wet, so cold.
It was a relief to cry unrestrainedly, and she gave herself freely to soothing tears,
not noticing that the groaning and sobbing of those about her had increased,
unaware that the grotesque ebony figure at her side had begun gently to pat her arm to the rhythm of the singing, and to croon softly,
Yes, child, yes, child.
Nor did she notice the furtive glances that the man on her other side cast at her between his fervent shouts of,
Amen, and, praise God for a sinner.
She did notice, though, that the tempo, that the atmosphere of the place had changed,
and gradually she ceased to weep and gave her attention.
to what was happening about her.
Now they were singing.
Jesus knows all about my troubles.
Men and women were swaying and clapping their hands,
shouting and stamping their feet
to the frankly irreverent melody of the song.
Without warning, the woman at her side
threw off her hat, leaped to her feet,
waved her long arms, and shouted shrilly,
Glory! Hallelujah!
And then in wild ecstatic fury
jumped up and down before Helga,
clutching at the girl's soaked coat,
and screamed,
"'Come to Jesus, you poor lost sinner!'
Alarmed for the fraction of a second.
Involuntarily Helga had shrunk from her grasp,
wriggling out of the wet coat when she could not loosen the crazed creatures hold.
At the sight of the bare arms and neck,
growing out of the clinging red dress,
a shudder shook the swaying man at her right.
On the face of the dancing woman before her,
a disapproving frown gathered.
She shrieked,
"'A scarlet woman!
"'Come to Jesus, you poor lost Jezebel!'
At this the short brown man on the platform
raised a placating hand, and sanctimoniously delivered himself
of the words,
"'Remember the words of our master.
Let him that is without sin cast the first stone.
Let us pray for our errand sister.'
Helga Crane was amused, angry, disdainful as she sat there,
listening to the preacher praying for her soul.
But though she was contemptuous,
she was being too well entertained to leave and it was at least warm and dry so she stayed listening to the fervent exhortation to god to save her and to the zealous shoutings and groanings of the congregation particularly she was interested in the writhings and weepings of the feminine portion which seemed to predominate
Little by little the performance took on an almost bachic vehemence.
Behind her, before her, beside her, frenzied women gesticulated, screamed, wept,
and tottered to the praying of the preacher, which had gradually become a cadenced chant.
When at last he ended, another took up the plea in the same moaning chant, and then another.
It went on and on without pause, with the persistence of some unconquerable faith
exalted beyond time and reality.
Fascinated, Helga Crane watched until there crept upon her an indistinct horror of an unknown world.
She felt herself in the presence of a nameless people, observing rights of a remote, obscure origin.
The faces of the men and women took on the aspect of a dim vision.
This, she whispered to herself,
"'Is terrible! I must get out of here.
But the horror held her.
She remained motionless, watching as if she lacked the strength to leave the place.
foul, violent, terrible, with its mixture of breaths, its contact of bodies, its concerted convulsions,
all in wild appeal for a single soul, her soul. And as Helga watched and listened,
gradually a curious influence penetrated her. She felt an echo of the weird orgy resound in her
own heart. She felt herself possessed by the same madness. She too felt a brutal desire to shout
and to sling herself about.
Frightened at the strength of the obsession, she gathered herself for one last effort to
escape, but vainly.
In rising, weakness and nausea from last night's unsuccessful attempt to make herself drunk
overcame her.
She had eaten nothing since yesterday.
She fell forward against the crude railing which enclosed the little platform.
For a single moment she remained there in silent stillness because she was afraid she
was going to be sick, and in that moment she was lost.
or saved. The yelling figures about her pressed forward, closing her in on all sides. Madden,
she grasped at the railing, and with no previous intention began to yell like one insane,
drowning every other clamor, while torrents of tears streamed down her face. She was unconscious
of the word she uttered, or their meaning. "'Oh, God, mercy, mercy, have mercy on me!'
But she repeated them over and over.
Those about her came a thunder-clap of joy.
Arms were stretched toward her with savage frenzy.
The women dragged themselves upon their knees or crawled over the floor like reptiles, sobbing
and pulling their hair and tearing off their clothing.
Those who succeeded in getting near to her leaned forward to encourage the unfortunate sister,
dropping hot tears and beads of sweat upon her bare arms and neck.
The thing became real.
A miraculous calm came upon her.
seemed to expand, and to become very easy. Helga Crane felt within her a supreme aspiration
toward the regaining of simple happiness, a happiness unburdened by the complexities of the
lives she had known. About her the tumult and the shouting continued, but in a lesser degree.
Some of the more exuberant worshippers had fainted into inert masses. The voices of others
were almost spent. Gradually the room grew quiet and almost solemn, and to the kneeling girl
time seemed to sink back into the mysterious grandeur at holiness of far-off simpler centuries.
End of Chapter 20. Chapter 21 of Quicksand. This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet. Quicksand by Nella Larson. Chapter 21. On leaving the mission,
Helga Crane had started straight back to her room at the hotel. With her had gone the
fatish yellow man who had sat beside her. He had introduced himself as the Reverend Mr. Pleasant Green,
in proffering his escort for which Helga had been grateful, because she had still felt a little
dizzy and much exhausted. So great had been this physical weariness that as she had walked beside
him, without attention to his verbose information about his own field, as he called it,
she had been seized with a hateful feeling of vertigo, and obliged to lay firm hold on his
arm to keep herself from falling. The weakness had passed as suddenly as it had come.
Silently they had walked on, and gradually Helga had recalled that the man beside her had
himself swayed slightly at their close encounter, and that frantically for a fleeting moment he
had gripped at a protruding fence-railing. That man! Was it possible? As easy as that?
Instantly across her still half-hypnotized consciousness, little burning darts of fancy had shot
themselves.
No, she couldn't.
It would be too awful.
Just the same what or who was there to hold her back.
Nothing.
Simply nothing.
Nobody.
Nobody at all.
Her searching mind had become in a moment quite clear.
She cast at the man a speculative glance, aware that for a tiny space she had looked at
looked into his mind, a mind striving to be calm, a mind that was certain that it was secure,
because it was concerned only with things of the soul, spiritual things, which to him meant
religious things. But actually a mind by habit at home amongst the mere material aspect of
things, and at that moment consumed by some longing for the ecstasy that might lurk behind the
gleam of her cheek, the flying wave of her hair, the pressure of her slim fingers on his heavy arm.
An instant's flashing vision it had been, and it was gone at once,
escaped in the aching of her own senses and the sudden disturbing fear
that she herself had perhaps missed the supreme secret of life.
After all, there was nothing to hold her back, nobody to care.
She stopped sharply, shocked at what she was on the verge of considering,
appalled at where it might lead her.
The man—what was his name?
Thinking that she was almost about to fall again,
had reached out his arms to her. Helga Crane had deliberately stopped thinking. She had only smiled,
a faint, provocative smile, and pressed her fingers deep into his arms until a wild look had come
into his slightly bloodshot eyes. The next morning she lay for a long while, scarcely breathing,
while she reviewed the happenings of the night before. Curious. She couldn't be sure that it wasn't
religion that had made her feel so utterly different from dreadful yesterday. And gradually she became
a little sad, because she realized that with every hour she would get a little farther away from
this soothing haziness, this rest from her long trouble of body and of spirit, back into the
clear bareness of her own small life and being, from which happiness and serenity always faded,
just as they had shaped themselves, and slowly bitterness crept into her soul. Because,
she thought. All I've ever had in life has been things, except just this one time. At that
she closed her eyes, for even remembrance caused her to shiver a little. Things, she realized,
hadn't been, weren't enough for her. She'd have to have something else besides. It all came
back to the old question of happiness. Surely this was it. Just for a fleeting moment,
Helga Crane, her eyes watching the wind scattering the gray white cloud,
and so clearing a speck of blue sky, questioned her ability to retain, to bear this happiness
at such cost as she must pay for it. There was, she knew, no getting round that. The man's
agitation and sincere conviction of sin had been too evident, too illuminating. The question
returned in a slightly new form. Was it worth the risk? Could she take it? Was she able? Though
what did it matter, now? And all the while she knew,
one small corner of her mind that such thinking was useless. She had made her decision,
her resolution. It was a chance at stability, at permanent happiness, that she meant to take.
She had let so many other things, other chances escape her. And any way there was God,
he would perhaps make it come out all right. Still confused and not so sure that it wasn't
the fact that she was saved that had contributed to this after-feeling of well-being, she clutched
the hope, the desire to believe that now it
last she had found someone, some power, who was interested in her, would help her. She meant,
however, for once in her life to be practical, so she would make sure of both things, God and
man. Her glance caught the calendar over the little white desk, the tenth of November. The
steamer Oscar II sailed to-day. Yesterday she had half thought of sailing with it. Yesterday.
How far away! With the thought of yesterday came the thought of Robert Anderson,
and a feeling of elation, revenge. She had put herself beyond the need of help from him. She had made
it impossible for herself ever again to appeal to him. Instinctively she had the knowledge that he would
be shocked, grieved, horribly hurt even. Well, let him. The need to hurry suddenly obsessed her.
She must. The morning was almost gone, and she meant if she could manage it to be married today.
Rising, she was seized with a fear so acute that she had to lie down again.
for the thought came to her that she might fail, might not be able to confront the situation.
That would be too dreadful.
But she became calm again.
How could he, a naive creature like that, hold out against her?
If she pretended to distress, to fear, to remorse?
He couldn't.
It would be useless for him even to try.
She screwed up her face into a little grin,
remembering that even if protestations were to fail, there were other ways.
and, too, there was God.
End of Chapter 22 of Quicksand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 22
And so, in the confusion of seductive repentance, Helga Crane was married to the grandiloquent
Reverend Mr. Pleasant Green, that ratish-yellow man,
who had so kindly so unctuously proffered his escort to her hotel on the memorable night of her conversion with him she willingly even eagerly left the sins and temptations of new york behind her to as he put it
labour in the vineyard of the lord in the tiny alabama town where he was pastor to a scattered and primitive flock and where as the wife of the preacher she was a person of relative importance only relative
Helga did not hate him, the town, or the people. No, not for a long time.
As always, at first, the novelty of the thing, the change fascinated her. There was a recurrence
of the feeling that now at last she had found a place for herself, that she was really living,
and she had her religion, which in her new status as a preacher's wife had, of necessity
become real to her. She believed in it, because in its coming it has been a
had brought this other thing, this anesthetic satisfaction for her senses.
Hers was, she declared to herself, a truly spiritual union.
This one time in her life she was convinced she had not clutched a shadow and missed the actuality.
She felt compensated for all previous humiliations and disappointments, and was glad.
If she remembered that she had had something like this feeling before, she put the unwelcome
memory from her with the thought, This time I know I'm right. This time it will last."
Eagerly she accepted everything, even that bleak air of poverty, which in some curious way
regards itself as virtuous, for no other reason than that it is poor. And in her first hectic
enthusiasm she intended and planned to do much good to her husband's parishioners. Her young
joy and zest for the uplifting of her fellow-men came back to her.
She meant to subdue the cleanly scrubbed ugliness of her own surroundings, to soft, inoffensive beauty, and to help the other women to do likewise.
Two, she would help them with their clothes, tactfully point out that sunbonnets, no matter how gay, and aprons, no matter how frilly, were not quite the proper things for Sunday church-wear.
There would be a sewing-circle.
She visualized herself instructing the children, who seemed most of the time to run wild, in ways of gentler deport.
She was anxious to be a true helpmate, for in her heart was a feeling of obligation, of humble
gratitude.
In her ardor and sincerity, Helga even made some small beginnings.
True she was not very successful in this matter of innovations, when she went about to try
to interest the women in what she considered more appropriate clothing and in inexpensive ways
of improving their homes, according to her ideas of beauty, she was met always with smiling
agreement and good-natured promises.
Y'all is right, Miss Green, and I certainly will, Miss Green, fell courteously on her ear at each
visit.
She was unaware that afterwards they would shake their heads sullenly over their wash-tubs
and ironing boards, and that among themselves they talked with amusement or with anger of
that oppity meddling northerna, and poor reverend, who in their opinion would a don't
one bedder to a married Clementine Richards.
Knowing as she did nothing of this, Helga was unperturbed.
But even had she known she would not have been disheartened, the fact that it was difficult
but increased her eagerness, and made the doing of it seem only the more worthwhile.
Sometimes she would smile to think how changed she was.
And she was humble, too, even with Clementine Richards, a strapping black beauty of
magnificent Amazon proportions and bold shining on.
eyes of jet-like hardness. A person of awesome appearance. All chains, strings of beads, jingling
bracelets, flying ribbons, feathery neckpieces and flowery hats. Clementine was inclined to
treat Helga with an only partially concealed contemptuousness, considering her a poor thing without
style and without proper understanding of the worth and greatness of the man, Clementine's own
adored pastor, whom Helga had somehow had the astounding good luck to marry.
Clementine's admiration of the Reverend Mr. Pleasant Green was open. Helga was at first astonished,
until she learned that there was really no reason why it should be concealed. Everybody was aware of it.
Besides, open adoration was the prerogative, the almost religious duty of the female portion of the flock.
If this unhidden and exaggerated approval contributed to his already oversized pomposity, so much the better.
It was what they expected, liked, wanted,
The greater his own sense of superiority became, the more flattered they were by his notice
and small attentions, the more they cast at him killing glances, the more they hung enraptured
on his words.
In the days before her conversion, with its subsequent blurring of her sense of humor, Helga
might have amused herself by tracing the relation of this constant ogling and flattering
on the proverbially large families of preachers.
The often disastrous effect on their wives of this constant stirring of the sea.
senses by extraneous women. Now, however, she did not even think of it. She was too busy. Every
minute of the day was full, necessarily. And to Helga this was a new experience. She was charmed by
it, to be mistress in one's own house, to have a garden and chickens and a pig, to have a husband,
and to be right with God. What pleasure did that other world which she had left contained
that could surpass these? Here she had found she was sure,
the intangible thing for which indefinitely always she had craved. It had received embodiment.
Everything contributed to her gladness in living. And so for a time she loved everything and everyone,
or thought she did. Even the weather. And it was truly lovely. By day a glittering gold sun
was set in an unbelievably bright sky. In the evening silver buds sprouted in a Chinese blue sky,
and the warm day was softly soothed by a slight cool breeze. And night—night, when a languid moon
peeped through the wide-opened windows of her little house, a little mockingly it may be.
Always at night's approach Helga was bewildered by a disturbing medley of feelings, challenge,
anticipation, and a small fear. In the morning she was serene again. Peace had returned,
and she could go happily, inexpertly, about the humble tasks of her household.
cooking, dish-washing, sweeping, dusting, mending, and darning. And there was the garden.
When she worked there, she felt that life was utterly filled with the glory and the marvel of God.
Helga did not reason about this feeling, as she did not at that time reason about anything.
It was enough that it was there, coloring all her thoughts and acts.
It endowed the four rooms of her ugly brown house with a kindly radiance,
obliterating the stark bareness of its white plaster walls and the nakedness of its uncovered
painted floors. It even softened the choppy lines of the shiny oak furniture, and subdued
the awesome horribleness of the religious pictures. And all the other houses and cabins shared
in this illumination, and the people. The dark, undecorated women unceasingly concerned with the actual
business of life, its rounds of births and christenings, of loves and marriages, of deaths and funerals,
were to Helga miraculously beautiful. The smallest, dirtiest, brown child, bare-footed in the fields
or muddy roads, was to her an emblem of the wonder of life, of love, and of God's goodness.
For the preacher, her husband, she had a feeling of gratitude, amounting almost to sin. Beyond
that she thought of him not at all. But she was not conscious that she had shut him out
from her mind, besides what need to think of him. He was there. She was at
peace and secure. Surely their two lives were one, and the companionship in the Lord's grace
so perfect that to think about it would be tempting Providence. She had done with soul-searching.
What did it matter that he consumed his food, even the softest varieties, audibly? What did it
matter that, though he did no work with his hands, not even in the garden, his fingernails were
always rimmed with black? What did it matter that he failed to wash his fat body, or to shift his
clothing as often as Helga herself did. There were things that more than outweighed these.
In the certainty of his goodness, his righteousness, his holiness, Helga somehow overcame her
disgust at the odor of sweat and stale garments. She was even able to be unaware of it.
Herself, Helga had come to look upon as a finicky, showy thing of unnecessary prejudices and
fripperies, and when she sat in the dreary structure, which had once been a stable belonging to the
estate of a wealthy horse-racing man, and about that she sat in the stee-and-a-house-racing man, and about
which the odor of manure still clung. Now the church and social centre of the Niggers of the
town, and heard him expound with verbal extravagance the gospel of blood and love, of hell and
heaven, of fire and gold streets, pounding with clenched fists the frail table before him,
or shaking those fists in the faces of the congregation like direct personal threats,
or pacing wildly back and forth, and even sometimes shedding great tears, as he besought
them to repent. She was, she told herself,
proud and gratified that he belonged to her. In some strange way she was able to ignore the atmosphere
of self-satisfaction which poured from him like gas from a leaking pipe. And night came at the end of
every day. Emotional, palpitating, amorous. All that was living in her sprang like rank
weeds at the tingling thought of night, with a vitality so strong that it devoured all shoots
of reason.
End of Chapter 22.
Chapter 23 of QuickSand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 23.
After the first exciting months, Helga was too driven, too occupied, and too sick, to carry
out any of the things for which she had made such enthusiastic plans, or even to care that
she had made only slight progress toward their accomplishment. For she, who had never thought of
her body, save as something on which to hang lovely fabrics, had now constantly to think of it.
It had persistently to be pampered to secure from it even a little service. Always she felt
extraordinarily and annoyingly ill, having forever to be sinking into chairs. Or if she was
out, to be pausing by the roadside, clinging desperately to some convenient fence or tree,
waiting for the horrible nausea and hateful faintness to pass.
The light, carefree days of the past, when she had not felt heavy and reluctant or weak and spent,
receded more and more with increasing vagueness, like a dream passing from a faulty memory.
The children used her up.
There were already three of them, all born within the short space of twenty months,
two great healthy twin boys, whose lovely bodies were to Helga-likey.
like rare figures carved out of amber, and in whose sleepy and mysterious black eyes all that
was puzzling, evasive, and aloof in life seemed to find expression. No matter how often or how long
she looked at these two small sons of hers, never did she lose a certain delicious feeling
in which were mingled pride, tenderness, and exaltation. And there was a girl, sweet, delicate,
and flower-like. Not so healthy or so loved as the boys, but still murrayingled.
miraculously her own proud and cherished possession. So there was no time for the pursuit
of beauty, or for the uplifting of other harassed and teeming women, or for the instruction
of their neglected children. Her husband was still, as he always had been, deferentially
kind and incredulously proud of her, and verbally encouraging. Helga tried not to see that
he had rather lost any personal interest in her, except for the short spaces between the times
when she was preparing for, or recovering from childbirth. She shut her eyes to the fact that
his encouragement had become a little platitudinous, limited mostly to,
The Lord will look out for you. We must accept what God sends, or, my mother had nine children
and was thankful for every one. If she was inclined to wonder a little just how they were to
manage with another child on the way, he would point out to her that her doubt and uncertainty
were stupendous ingratitude. Had not the good gods saved her soul from hell-fire and eternal
damnation? Had he not in his great kindness given her three small lives to raise up for his glory?
Had he not showered her with numerous other mercies? Evidently too numerous to be named separately.
You must, the Reverend Mr. Pleasant-Green would say unctuously,
trust the Lord more fully, Helga. This pabulum did not irritate her.
Perhaps it was the fact that the preacher was, now, not so much at home, that even lent to
it a measure of real comfort.
For the adoring women of his flock, noting how, with increasing frequency their pastor's
house went unswept and undusted, his children unwashed, and his wife untidy, took pleasant
pity on him, and invited him often to tasty, orderly meals, prepared specially for him,
in their own clean houses.
Helga looking about in helpless dismay and sick disgust at the disdust.
order around her, the permanent assembly of partly emptied medicine bottles on the clock-shelf,
the perpetual array of drying baby-clothes on the chair-backs, the constant debris of broken
toys on the floor, the unceasing litter of half-dead flowers on the table, dragged in by the toddling
twins from the forlorn garden, failed to blame him for the thoughtless selfishness of these
absences, and she was thankful whenever possible to be relieved from the ordeal of cooking.
were times when, having had to retreat from the kitchen in lumbering haste, with her sensitive
nose gripped between tightly squeezing fingers, she had been sure that the greatest kindness
that God could ever show to her would be to free her forever from the sight and smell of food.
How, she wondered, did other women, other mothers, manage?
Could it be possible that, while presenting such smiling and contented faces, they were
all always on the edge of health, always worn out and apprehensive?
Or was it only she, a poor, weak, city-bred thing, who felt that the strain of what the Reverend
Mr. Pleasant Green had so often gently and patiently reminded her was a natural thing,
an act of God, was almost unendurable.
One day on her round of visiting, a church duty to be done no matter how miserable one was,
she summoned up sufficient boldness to ask several women how they felt, how they managed.
The answers were a resigned shrug, or an amusement.
used snort, or an upward rolling of eyeballs with a mention of the Lord looking after
us all.
"'Tain't nothin, nothing, nothing at all, child,' said one, Sarie Jones, who, as Helga knew,
had had six children in about as many years.
"'Y'all takes it too hard.
Just remember it's natural for a woman to have chillings and don't fret so.'
But, protested Helga, I'm always so tired and half sick, that can't be natural.
"'The laws, child, we's all tired, and I reckons we's all goin'a be tired till kingdom come.
Just make the best of it, honey. Just make the best you can.'
Helga sighed, turning her nose away from the steaming coffee which her hostess had placed for her,
and against which her squeamish stomach was about to revolt. At the moment the compensations of
immortality seemed very shadowy and very far away.
"'Just remember?'
sary went on staring sternly into helga's thin face we all git so o rest by an by in de next world we's all recompense jest put yo trust in de saib ya
looking at the confident face of the little bronze figure on the opposite side of the immaculately spread table helga had a sensation of shame that she should be less than content why couldn't she be as trusting and as certain that her troubles would not overwhelm her as sary jones was
sari who in all likelihood had toiled every day of her life since early childhood except on those days totaling perhaps sixty following the birth of her six children and who by dint of superhuman saving had somehow succeeded in feeding and clothing them and sending them all to school
before her helga felt humbled and depressed by the sense of her own unworthiness and lack of sufficient faith thanks sari she said rising in retreat from the coffee
You've done me a world of good. I'm really going to try to be more patient.
So, though with growing yearning she longed for the great ordinary things of life,
hunger, sleep, freedom from pain, she resigned herself to the doing without them.
The possibility of alleviating her burdens by a greater faith became lodged in her mind.
She gave herself up to it. It did help.
And the beauty of leaning on the wisdom of God, of trusting, gave to her a queer sort of satisfaction.
Faith was really quite easy. One had only to yield, to ask no questions. The more weary, the more weak
she became, the easier it was. Her religion was to her a kind of protective coloring,
shielding her from the cruel light of an unbearable reality. This utter yielding in faith to
what had been sent her, found her favor to in the eyes of her neighbors. Her husband's flock
began to approve and commend this submission and humility to a superior.
wisdom. The women-folk spoke more kindly and more affectionately of the preacher's northern
wife. "'Poor, Miss Green, with all them small chill''uns at once! She sure do hab it hard,
and she don't never complain some frets no more. Just trustin' the Lord like the good
book say. Mighty sweet little woman, too.'
Helga didn't bother much about the preparations for the coming child. Actually, and metaphorically,
she bowed her head before God, trusting in him to see her through.
Secretly she was glad that she had not to worry about herself or anything.
It was a relief to be able to put the entire responsibility on someone else.
End of Chapter 23.
Chapter 24 of QuickSand.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Quicksand by Nella Larson.
Chapter 24.
It began, this next childbearing, during the morning services of a breathless hot Sunday,
while the fervent choir soloist was singing,
I am freed of my sorrow, and lasted far into the small hours of Tuesday morning.
It seemed for some reason not to go off just right.
And when, after that long frightfulness, the fourth little dab of amber humanity
which Helga had contributed to a despised race,
was held before her for maternal approval. She failed entirely to respond properly to this
sop of consolation for the suffering and horror through which she had passed. There was from her
no pleased, proud smile, no loving, possessive gesture, no manifestation of interest in the
important matters of sex and weight. Instead, she deliberately closed her eyes, mutely shutting out
the sickly infant, its smiling father, the son.
soiled midwife, the curious neighbors, and the tousled room. A week she lay so, silent and listless,
ignoring food, the clamoring children, the comings and goings of solicitous, kind-hearted women,
her hovering husband, and all of life about her. The neighbors were puzzled. The Reverend
Mr. Pleasant Green was worried. The midwife was frightened. On the floor, in and out among the
furniture and under her bed, the twins played. Eager to help, the churchwomen crowded in,
and meeting there others on the same laudable errand, stayed to gossip and to wonder.
Anxiously the preacher sat, Bible in hand beside his wife's bed, or in a nervous, half-guilty
manner invited the congregated parishioners to join him in prayer for the healing of their sister.
Then, kneeling, they would beseech God to stretch out his all-powerful hand on behalf of
afflicted one, softly at first, but with rising vehemence, accompanied by moans and tears,
until it seemed that the God to whom they prayed must in mercy to the sufferer grant relief,
if only that she might rise up and escape from the tumult, the heat and the smell.
Helga, however, was unconcerned, undisturbed by the commotion about her. It was all part
of the general unreality. Nothing reached her.
Nothing penetrated the kind darkness into which her bruised spirit had retreated.
Even that red-letter event, the coming to see her of the old white physician from downtown,
who had for a long time stayed talking gravely to her husband, drew from her no interest.
Nor for days was she aware that a stranger, a nurse from Mobile, had been added to her household,
a brusquely efficient woman, who produced order out of chaos and quiet out of bedlam.
Neither did the absence of the children, removed by good neighbours at Miss Hartley's insistence,
impress her. While she had gone down into that appalling blackness of pain, the ballast of her
brain had got loose, and she hovered for a long time somewhere in that delightful borderland
on the edge of unconsciousness, an enchanted and blissful place, where peace and incredible
quiet encompassed her. After weeks she grew better, returned to earth,
set her reluctant feet to the hard path of life again.
"'Well, here you are,' announced Miss Hartley,
in her slightly harsh voice one afternoon just before the fall of evening.
She had for some time been standing at the bedside,
gazing down at Helga, with an intent, speculative look.
"'Yes,' Helga agreed in a thin little voice.
"'I'm back.'
The truth was that she had been back for some hours.
purposely she had lain silent and still, wanting to linger forever in that serene haven,
that effortless calm where nothing was expected of her. There she could watch the figure of the
past drift by. There was her mother, whom she had loved from a distance, and finally so scornfully
blamed, who appeared as she had always remembered her, unbelievably beautiful, young, and remote.
Robert Anderson, questioning, purposely detached, affecting, as she realized now, her life
in a remarkably cruel degree, for at last she understood clearly how deeply, how passionately
she must have loved him.
Anne, lovely, secure, wise, selfish.
Axel Olson, conceited, worldly, spoiled.
Audrey Denny, Placid, taking quietly and without,
fuss the things which she wanted. James Vale. Snobbish, smug, servile. Mrs. Hayes roar,
important, kind, determined. The dolls, rich, correct, climbing. Flashingly, fragmentarily,
other long-forgotten figures, women in gay, fashionable frocks, and ben in formal black and white,
blighted by in bright rooms to distant, vaguely familiar music.
It was refreshingly delicious, this immersion in the past.
But it was finished now.
It was over.
The words of her husband, the Reverend Mr. Pleasant Green, who had been standing at the window
looking mournfully out at the scorched melon-patch, ruin because Helga had been so long
ill and unable to tend it, were confirmation of that.
"'The Lord be praised,' he said, and came.
forward. It was distinctly disagreeable. It was even more disagreeable to feel his moist hand
on hers. A cold shiver brushed over her. She closed her eyes. Obstinately, and with all her
small strength, she drew her hand away from him, hid it far down under the bed covering, and turned
her face away to hide a grimace of unconquerable aversion. She cared nothing at that moment for
his hurt surprise. She knew only that, in the hideous agony that for interoperable,
terminable hours, no centuries she had borne, the lustre of religion had vanished, that
revulsion had come upon her, that she hated this man. Between them the vastness of the
universe had come. Miss Hartley, all seeing and instantly aware of a situation, as she had been
quite aware that her patient had been conscious for some time before she herself had announced
the fact, intervened, saying firmly, I think it might be better if you didn't try to talk to her
now. She's terribly sick and weak yet. She's still got some fever and we mustn't excite her,
or she's liable to slip back. And we don't want that, do we?'
"'No,' the man, her husband responded. They didn't want that.' Reluctantly he went from the
room with a last look at Helga, who was lying on her back with one frail, pale hand under
her small head, her curly black hair scattered loose on the pillow. She regarded him from behind
dropped lids. The day was hot.
her breasts were covered only by a nightgown of filmy crape, a relic of pre-matrimonial
days, which had slipped from one carved shoulder. He flinched. Helga's petulant lip curled,
for she well knew that this fresh reminder of her desirability was like the flick of a whip.
Miss Hartley carefully closed the door after the retreating husband.
"'It's time,' she said, "'for your evening treatment, and then you've got to try to sleep for a while.
No more visitors to-night."
Helga nodded and tried unsuccessfully to make a little smile.
She was glad of Miss Hartley's presence.
It would, she felt, protect her from so much.
She mustn't, she thought to herself, get well too fast, since it seemed she was going to get
well.
In bed she could think, could have a certain amount of quiet, of aloneness.
In that period of racking pain and calamitous fright, Helga had learned what
passion and credulity could do to one. In her was born angry bitterness, and an enormous disgust.
The cruel, unrelieved suffering had beaten down her protective wall of artificial faith in the
infinite wisdom, in the mercy of God. For had she not called in her agony on him, and he had not
heard. Why? Because, she knew now, he wasn't there, didn't exist. Into that yawning gap of
unspeakable brutality had gone to her belief in the miracle and wonder of life. Only scorn,
resentment and hate remained, and ridicule. Life wasn't a miracle, a wonder. It was, for Negroes
at least, only a great disappointment. Something to be got through with as best one could.
No one was interested in them or helped them. God! Ba! And they were only a nuisance to other people.
everything in her mind was hot and cold beating and swirling about within her emaciated body raged disillusion chaotic turmoil with the obscuring curtain of religion rent she was able to look about her and see with shocked eyes this thing that she had done to herself
She couldn't, she thought, ironically, even blame God for it, now that she knew that he didn't exist.
No.
No more than she could pray to him for the death of her husband, the Reverend Mr. Pleasant Green.
The white man's God!
And his great love for all people regardless of race!
What idiotic nonsense she had allowed herself to believe!
How could she, how could any one have been so deluded?
How could ten million black folk credit it?
when daily before their eyes was enacted its contradiction.
Not that she had all cared about the ten million,
but herself, her sons, her daughter.
These would grow to manhood, to womanhood,
in this vicious, this hypocritical land.
The dark eyes filled with tears.
I wouldn't, the nurse advised.
Do that.
You've been dreadfully sick, you know.
I can't have you worrying.
Time enough for that when you're well.
Now you must sleep all you possibly can."
Helga did sleep.
She found it surprisingly easy to sleep.
Aided by Miss Hartley's rather masterful discernment,
she took advantage of the ease with which this blessed enchantment stole over her.
From her husband's praisings, prayers, and caresses she sought refuge in sleep,
and from the neighbor's gifts, advice, and sympathy.
There was that day on which they told her that the last sickly infant,
born of such futile torture and lingering torment, had died after a short week of slight living,
just closed his eyes and died. No vitality. On hearing it Helga too had just closed her eyes,
not to die. She was convinced that before her there were years of living, perhaps of happiness
even, for a new idea had come to her. She had closed her eyes to shut in any telltale gleam of the
relief which she felt. One less. And she had gone off into sleep. And there was that Sunday morning
on which the Reverend Mr. Pleasant Green had informed her that they were that day to hold a
special Thanksgiving service for her recovery. There would, he said, be prayers, special testimonies,
and songs. Was there anything particular she would like to have said, to have prayed for,
to have sung? Helga had smiled from sheer amusement as she replied, as she replied,
that there was nothing, nothing at all. She only hoped that they would enjoy themselves,
and closing her eyes that he might be discouraged from longer tarrying, she had gone off into sleep.
Waking later to the sound of joyous religious abandon floating in through the opened windows,
she had asked a little diffidently that she be allowed to read. Miss Hartley's sketchy brows
contracted into a dubious frown. After a judicious pause, she had answered,
No, I don't think so.
Then, seeing the rebellious tears which had sprung into her patient's eyes, she added kindly.
But I'll read to you a little if you would like.
That, Helga replied, would be nice.
In the next room on a high-up shelf was a book.
She'd forgotten the name, but its author was Anatole France.
There was a story, the procurator of Judea.
Would Miss Hartley read that?
Thanks.
Thanks awfully
Lelius Lamia, born in Italy of illustrious parents,
began the nurse in her slightly harsh voice.
Helga drank it in.
For to this day the women bring down doves to the altar as their victims.
Helga closed her eyes.
Africa and Asia have already enriched us with a considerable number of gods.
Miss Hartley looked up.
Helga had slipped into slumber,
while the superbly ironic ending which she had so much
desired to hear, was yet a long way off. A dull tale was Miss Hartley's opinion, as she
curiously turned the pages to see how it turned out. "'Jesus? Jesus of Nazareth? I cannot call him
to mind.' "'Hah!' she muttered, puzzled. "'Silly!' And closed the book.
"'Eend of Chapter 24. Chapter 25 of Quick-Sand. This Liberival
box recording is in the public domain. Recording by Elizabeth Clett.
Quicksand by Nella Larson. Chapter 25
During the long process of getting well, between the dreamy intervals when she was beset
by the insistent craving for sleep, Helga had had too much time to think. At first she had
felt only an astonished anger at the quagmire in which she had engulfed herself. She
had ruined her life. Made it impossible ever.
her again to do the things that she wanted, have the things that she loved, mingle with
the people she liked.
She had, to put it as brutally as anyone could, been a fool, the damnedest kind of fool,
and she had paid for it.
Enough, more than enough.
Her mind swaying back to the protection that religion had afforded her, almost she wished
that it had not failed her.
An illusion, yes, but better, far better than this terrible reality.
Religion had, after all, its uses. It blunted the perceptions, robbed life of its crudest truths.
Especially it had its uses for the poor, and the blacks. For the blacks, the Negroes.
And this, Helga decided, was what ailed the whole Negro race in America, this fatuous belief
in the white man's god, this childlike trust in full compensation for all woes and privations
in kingdom come.
Sary Jones' absolute conviction,
"'In de next world we's all recompense!' came back to her.
And ten million souls were as sure of it as was Sari.
How the white man's god must laugh at the great joke he had played on them!
Bound them to slavery, then to poverty and insult,
and made them bear it unresistingly, uncomplainingly almost
by sweet promises of mansions in the sky by and by!
"'Pie in the sky,' Helga said aloud derisively, forgetting for the moment Miss Hartley's
brisk presence, and so was a little startled at hearing her voice from the adjoining room
saying severely, "'My goodness! No, I should say you can't have pie! It's too indigestible,
maybe when you're better.'
"'That,' assented Helga, "'is what I said. Pie, by and by. That's the trouble.'
The nurse looked concerned. Was this an approach?
approaching relapse. Coming to the bedside, she felt at her patience's pulse while giving
her a searching look. "'No.'
"'You'd better,' she admonished, a slight edge to her tone. Try to get a little nap.
You haven't had any sleep to-day, and you can't get too much of it. You've got to get
strong, you know.' With this Helga was in full agreement. It seemed hundreds of years since
she had been strong, and she would need her strength, for in some way she was determined
to get herself out of this bog into which she had strayed.
Or, she would have to die.
She couldn't endure it.
Her suffocation and shrinking loathing were too great, not to be born, again.
For she had to admit that it wasn't new, this feeling of dissatisfaction, of asphyxiation.
Something like it she had experienced before, in Naxos, in New York, in Copenhagen.
This differed only in degree.
And it was of the present and therefore seemingly more reasonable.
The other revulsions were of the past, and now less explainable.
The thought of her husband roused in her a deep and contemptuous hatred.
At his every approach she had forcibly to subdue a furious inclination to scream out in protest.
Shame, too, swept over her at every thought of her marriage.
Marriage!
This sacred thing of which Parsons and other Christian folk ranted so sanctimoniously!
How immoral!
according to their own standards, it could be. But Helga felt also a modicum of pity for him,
as for one already abandoned. She meant to leave him. And it was, she had to concede,
all of her own doing, this marriage. Nevertheless, she hated him. The neighbours and church-folk
came in for their share of her all-embracing hatred. She hated their raucous laughter,
their stupid acceptance of all things, and their unfailing trust in de laud.
And more than all the rest, she hated the jangling Clementine Richards with her provocative smirking's,
because she had not succeeded in marrying the preacher and thus saving her, Helga, from that crowning idiocy.
Of the children Helga tried not to think. She wanted not to leave them, if that were possible.
The recollection of her own childhood, lonely, unloved, rose too poignantly before her for her to consider calmly such a solution,
though she forced herself to believe that this was very different.
was not the element of race, of white and black. They were all black together, and they
would have their father. But to leave them would be a tearing agony, a rending of deepest
fibers. She felt that through all the rest of her lifetime she would be hearing their cry
of, "'Mummy! Mummy!' through sleepless nights. No, she couldn't desert them.
How then was she to escape from the oppression, the degradation that her
her life had become. It was so difficult. It was terribly difficult. It was almost hopeless.
So for a while, for the immediate present, she told herself, she put aside the making of any plan
for her going. I'm still, she reasoned, too weak, too sick, by and by when I'm really strong.
It was so easy and so pleasant to think about freedom and cities, about clothes and books,
about the sweet mingled smell of hubigant and cigarettes in softly lighted rooms filled with inconsequential chatter and laughter and sophisticated tuneless music.
It was so hard to think out a feasible way of retrieving all these agreeable desired things.
Just then.
Later.
When she got up.
By and by.
She must rest.
Get strong.
Sleep.
Then afterward she could work out some arrangement.
So she dozed and dreamed in snatches of sleeping and waking, letting time run on, away.
And hardly had she left her bed and become able to walk again without pain,
hardly had the children returned from the homes of the neighbors,
when she began to have her fifth child.
End of Chapter 25.
End of Quicksand, by Nella Larson.
