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The Women In The Alcove: “it would never do for me to lose my wits in the presence of a man who had none too many of his own.”
The Women In The Alcove: “it would never do for me to lose my wits in the presence of a man who had none too many of his own.”
The Women In The Alcove: “it would never do for me to lose my wits in the presence of a man who had none too many of his own.”
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The Women In The Alcove: “it would never do for me to lose my wits in the presence of a man who had none too many of his own.”

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Anna Katharine Green was born in Brooklyn, New York on November 11th, 1846. Anna’s initial ambition was to be a poet. However that path failed to ignite any significant interest and she turned to fiction writing.. She published her first - and most famous work in 1878 – ‘The Leavenworth Case’. Wilkie Collins praised it and it sold extremely well. It led to Anna writing 40 novels and to becoming known as ‘the mother of the detective novel.’ In helping to shape the genre she brought many other innovations including a series detective: her main character was detective Ebenezer Gryce of the New York Metropolitan Police Force, but in three novels he is assisted by the nosy society spinster Amelia Butterworth, another innovation and a prototype for Miss Marple, Miss Silver and others. She also invented the 'girl detective': in the character of Violet Strange, a debutante with a secret life as a sleuth. Anna’s other innovations included the now familiar dead bodies in libraries, newspaper clippings as "clews," the coroner's inquest, and expert witnesses. Yale Law School once used her books to demonstrate how damaging it can be to rely on circumstantial evidence. Her career was now well advanced and she was much admired. On November 25, 1884, Green married the actor and stove designer, and later noted furniture maker, Charles Rohlfs, who was seven years her junior. They had three children; Rosamund, Roland and Sterling. Although Anna was a progressive she did not approve of many of her feminist contemporaries, and was opposed to women's suffrage. On November 25, 1884, Anna married the actor and noted furniture maker, Charles Rohlfs, who was seven years her junior. They had three children; Rosamund, Roland and Sterling. Anna Katherine Green died on April 11, 1935 in Buffalo, New York, at the age of 88.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 22, 2014
ISBN9781783942077
The Women In The Alcove: “it would never do for me to lose my wits in the presence of a man who had none too many of his own.”

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    The Women In The Alcove - Anna Katherine Green

    The Woman In The Alcove by Anna Katharine Green

    Anna Katharine Green was born in Brooklyn, New York on November 11th, 1846.

    Anna’s initial ambition was to be a poet. However that path failed to ignite any significant interest and she turned to fiction writing.. She published her first - and most famous work in 1878 – ‘The Leavenworth Case’. Wilkie Collins praised it and it sold extremely well.

    It led to Anna writing 40 novels and to becoming known as ‘the mother of the detective novel.’

    In helping to shape the genre she brought many other innovations including a series detective: her main character was detective Ebenezer Gryce of the New York Metropolitan Police Force, but in three novels he is assisted by the nosy society spinster Amelia Butterworth, another innovation and a prototype for Miss Marple, Miss Silver and others.

    She also invented the 'girl detective': in the character of Violet Strange, a debutante with a secret life as a sleuth. Anna’s other innovations included the now familiar dead bodies in libraries, newspaper clippings as clews, the coroner's inquest, and expert witnesses. Yale Law School once used her books to demonstrate how damaging it can be to rely on circumstantial evidence.

    Her career was now well advanced and she was much admired.

    On November 25, 1884, Green married the actor and stove designer, and later noted furniture maker, Charles Rohlfs, who was seven years her junior. They had three children; Rosamund, Roland and Sterling.

    Although Anna was a progressive she did not approve of many of her feminist contemporaries, and was opposed to women's suffrage.

    On November 25, 1884, Anna married the actor and noted furniture maker, Charles Rohlfs, who was seven years her junior. They had three children; Rosamund, Roland and Sterling.

    Anna Katherine Green died on April 11, 1935 in Buffalo, New York, at the age of 88.

    Index Of Contents

    I - THE WOMAN WITH THE DIAMOND     

    II - THE GLOVES     

    III - ANSON DURAND     

    IV - EXPLANATIONS     

    V - SUPERSTITION     

    VI - SUSPENSE     

    VII - NIGHT AND A VOICE     

    VIII - ARREST     

    IX - THE MOUSE NIBBLES AT THE NET     

    X - I ASTONISH THE INSPECTOR     

    XI - THE INSPECTOR ASTONISHES ME     

    XII - ALMOST     

    XIII - THE MISSING RECOMMENDATION     

    XIV - TRAPPED     

    XV - SEARS OR WELLGOOD     

    XVI - DOUBT     

    XVII - SWEETWATER IN A NEW ROLE     

    XVIII - THE CLOSED DOOR     

    XIX - THE FACE     

    XX - MOONLIGHT - AND A CLUE     

    XXI - GRIZEL! GRIZEL!     

    XXII - GUILT     

    XXIII - THE GREAT MOGUL

    Anna Katherine Green – A Concise Bibliography

    I. THE WOMAN WITH THE DIAMOND

    I was, perhaps, the plainest girl in the room that night. I was also the happiest up to one o'clock. Then my whole world crumbled, or, at least, suffered an eclipse. Why and how, I am about to relate.

    I was not made for love. This I had often said to myself; very often of late. In figure I am too diminutive, in face far too unbeautiful, for me to cherish expectations of this nature. Indeed, love had never entered into my plan of life, as was evinced by the nurse's diploma I had just gained after three years of hard study and severe training.

    I was not made for love. But if I had been; had I been gifted with height, regularity of feature, or even with that eloquence of expression which redeems all defects save those which savor of deformity, I knew well whose eye I should have chosen to please, whose heart I should have felt proud to win.

    This knowledge came with a rush to my heart (did I say heart? I should have said understanding, which is something very different) when, at the end of the first dance, I looked up from the midst of the bevy of girls by whom I was surrounded and saw Anson Durand's fine figure emerging from that quarter of the hall where our host and hostess stood to receive their guests. His eye was roaming hither and thither and his manner was both eager and expectant. Whom was he seeking? Some one of the many bright and vivacious girls about me, for he turned almost instantly our way. But which one?

    I thought I knew. I remembered at whose house I had met him first, at whose house I had seen him many times since. She was a lovely girl, witty and vivacious, and she stood at this very moment at my elbow. In her beauty lay the lure, the natural lure for a man of his gifts and striking personality. If I continued to watch, I should soon see his countenance light up under the recognition she could not fail to give him. And I was right; in another instant it did, and with a brightness there was no mistaking. But one feeling common to the human heart lends such warmth, such expressiveness to the features. How handsome it made him look, how distinguished, how everything I was not except -

    But what does this mean? He has passed Miss Sperry, passed her with a smile and a friendly word, and is speaking to me, singling me out, offering me his arm! He is smiling, too, not as he smiled on Miss Sperry, but more warmly, with more that is personal in it. I took his arm in a daze. The lights were dimmer than I thought; nothing was really bright except his smile. It seemed to change the world for me. I forgot that I was plain, forgot that I was small, with nothing to recommend me to the eye or heart, and let myself be drawn away, asking nothing, anticipating nothing, till I found myself alone with him in the fragrant recesses of the conservatory, with only the throb of music in our ears to link us to the scene we had left.

    Why had he brought me here, into this fairyland of opalescent lights and intoxicating perfumes? What could he have to say, to show? Ah in another moment I knew. He had seized my hands, and love, ardent love, came pouring from his lips.

    Could it be real? Was I the object of all this feeling, I? If so, then life had changed for me indeed.

    Silent from rush of emotion, I searched his face to see if this Paradise, whose gates I was thus passionately bidden to enter, was indeed a verity or only a dream born of the excitement of the dance and the charm of a scene exceptional in its splendor and picturesqueness even for so luxurious a city as New York.

    But it was no mere dream. Truth and earnestness were in his manner, and his words were neither feverish nor forced.

    I love you I! I need you! So I heard, and so he soon made me believe. You have charmed me from the first. Your tantalizing, trusting, loyal self, like no other, sweeter than any other, has drawn the heart from my breast. I have seen many women, admired many women, but you only have I loved. Will you be my wife?

    I was dazzled; moved beyond anything I could have conceived. I forgot all that I had hitherto said to myself, all that I had endeavored to impress upon my heart when I beheld him approaching, intent, as I believed, in his search for another woman; and, confiding in his honesty, trusting entirely to his faith, I allowed the plans and purposes of years to vanish in the glamour of this new joy, and spoke the word which linked us together in a bond which half an hour before I had never dreamed would unite me to any man.

    His impassioned Mine! mine! filled my cup to overflowing. Something of the ecstasy of living entered my soul; which, in spite of all I have suffered since, recreated the world for me and made all that went before but the prelude to the new life, the new joy.

    Oh, I was happy, happy, perhaps too happy! As the conservatory filled and we passed back into the adjoining room, the glimpse I caught of myself in one of the mirrors startled me into thinking so. For had it not been for the odd color of my dress and the unique way in which I wore my hair that night, I should not have recognized the beaming girl who faced me so naively from the depths of the responsive glass.

    Can one be too happy? I do not know. I know that one can be too perplexed, too burdened and too sad.

    Thus far I have spoken only of myself in connection with the evening's elaborate function. But though entitled by my old Dutch blood to a certain social consideration which I am happy to say never failed me, I, even in this hour of supreme satisfaction, attracted very little attention and awoke small comment. There was another woman present better calculated to do this. A fair woman, large and of a bountiful presence, accustomed to conquest, and gifted with the power of carrying off her victories with a certain lazy grace irresistibly fascinating to the ordinary man; a gorgeously appareled woman, with a diamond on her breast too vivid for most women, almost too vivid for her. I noticed this diamond early in the evening, and then I noticed her. She was not as fine as the diamond, but she was very fine, and, had I been in a less ecstatic frame of mind, I might have envied the homage she received from all the men, not excepting him upon whose arm I leaned. Later, there was no one in the world I envied less.

    The ball was a private and very elegant one. There were some notable guests. One gentleman in particular was pointed out to me as an Englishman of great distinction and political importance. I thought him a very interesting man for his years, but odd and a trifle self-centered. Though greatly courted, he seemed strangely restless under the fire of eyes to which he was constantly subjected, and only happy when free to use his own in contemplation of the scene about him. Had I been less absorbed in my own happiness I might have noted sooner than I did that this contemplation was confined to such groups as gathered about the lady with the diamond. But this I failed to observe at the time, and consequently was much surprised to come upon him, at the end of one of the dances, talking With this lady in an animated and courtly manner totally opposed to the apathy, amounting to boredom, with which he had hitherto met all advances.

    Yet it was not admiration for her person which he openly displayed. During the whole time he stood there his eyes seldom rose to her face; they lingered mainly-and this was what aroused my curiosity, on the great fan of ostrich plumes which this opulent beauty held against her breast. Was he desirous of seeing the great diamond she thus unconsciously (or was it consciously) shielded from his gaze? It was possible, for, as I continued to note him, he suddenly bent toward her and as quickly raised himself again with a look which was quite inexplicable to me. The lady had shifted her fan a moment and his eyes had fallen on the gem.

    The next thing I recall with any definiteness was a tete-a-tete conversation which I held with my lover on a certain yellow divan at the end of one of the halls.

    To the right of this divan rose a curtained recess, highly suggestive of romance, called the alcove. As this alcove figures prominently in my story, I will pause here to describe it.

    It was originally intended to contain a large group of statuary which our host, Mr. Ramsdell, had ordered from Italy to adorn his new house. He is a man of original ideas in regard to such matters, and in this instance had gone so far as to have this end of the house constructed with a special view to an advantageous display of this promised work of art. Fearing the ponderous effect of a pedestal large enough to hold such a considerable group, he had planned to raise it to the level of the eye by having the alcove floor built a few feet higher than the main one. A flight of low, wide steps connected the two, which, following the curve of the wall, added much to the beauty of this portion of the hall.

    The group was a failure and was never shipped; but the alcove remained, and, possessing as it did all the advantages of a room in the way of heat and light, had been turned into a miniature retreat of exceptional beauty.

    The seclusion it offered extended, or so we were happy to think, to the solitary divan at its base on which Mr. Durand and I were seated. With possibly an undue confidence in the advantage of our position, we were discussing a subject interesting only to ourselves, when Mr. Durand interrupted himself to declare: You are the woman I want, you and you only. And I want you soon. When do you think you can marry me? Within a week, if -

    Did my look stop him? I was startled. I had heard no incoherent phrase from him before.

    A week! I remonstrated. We take more time than that to fit ourselves for a journey or some transient pleasure. I hardly realize my engagement yet.

    You have not been thinking of it for these last two months as I have.

    No, I replied demurely, forgetting everything else in my delight at this admission.

    Nor are you a nomad among clubs and restaurants.

    No, I have a home.

    Nor do you love me as deeply as I do you.

    This I thought open to argument.

    The home you speak of is a luxurious one, he continued. I cannot offer you its equal Do you expect me to?

    I was indignant.

    You know that I do not. Shall I, who deliberately chose a nurse's life when an indulgent uncle's heart and home were open to me, shrink from braving poverty with the man I love? We will begin as simply as you please -

    No, he peremptorily put in, yet with a certain hesitancy which seemed to speak of doubts he hardly acknowledged to himself, I will not marry you if I must expose you to privation or to the genteel poverty I hate. I love you more than you realize, and wish to make your life a happy one. I cannot give you all you have been accustomed to in your rich uncle's house, but if matters prosper with me, if the chance I have built on succeeds, and it will fail or succeed tonight, you will have those comforts which love will heighten into luxuries and, and -

    He was becoming incoherent again, and this time with his eyes fixed elsewhere than on my face. Following his gaze, I discovered what had distracted his attention. The lady with the diamond was approaching us on her way to the alcove. She was accompanied by two gentlemen, both strangers to me, and her head, sparkling with brilliants, was turning from one to the other with an indolent grace. I was not surprised that the man at my side quivered and made a start as if to rise. She was a gorgeous image. In comparison with her imposing figure in its trailing robe of rich pink velvet, my diminutive frame in its sea-green gown must have looked as faded and colorless as a half-obliterated pastel.

    A striking woman, I remarked as I saw he was not likely to resume the conversation which her presence had interrupted. And what a diamond!

    The glance he cast me was peculiar.

    Did you notice it particularly? he asked.

    Astonished, for there was something very uneasy in his manner so that I half expected to see him rise and join the group he was so eagerly watching without waiting for my lips to frame a response, I quickly replied:

    It would be difficult not to notice what one would naturally expect to see only on the breast of a queen. But perhaps she is a queen. I should judge so from the homage which follows her.

    His eyes sought mine. There was inquiry in them, but it was an inquiry I did not understand.

    What can you know about diamonds? he presently demanded. Nothing but their glitter, and glitter is not all, the gem she wears may be a very tawdry one.

    I flushed with humiliation. He was a dealer in gems, that was his business, and the check which he had put upon my enthusiasm certainly made me conscious of my own presumption. Yet I was not disposed to take back my words. I had had a better opportunity than himself for seeing this remarkable jewel, and, with the perversity of a somewhat ruffled mood, I burst forth, as soon as the color had subsided from my cheeks:

    No, no! It is glorious, magnificent. I never saw its like. I doubt if you ever have, for all your daily acquaintance with jewels. Its value must be enormous. Who is she? You seem to know her.

    It was a direct question, but I received no reply. Mr. Durand's eyes had followed the lady, who had lingered somewhat ostentatiously on the top step and they did not return to me till she had vanished with her companions behind the long plush curtain which partly veiled the entrance. By this time he had forgotten my words, if he had ever heard them and it was with the forced animation of one whose thoughts are elsewhere that he finally returned to the old plea:

    When would I marry him? If he could offer me a home in a month, and he would know by to-morrow if he could do so, would I come to him then? He would not say in a week; that was perhaps to soon; but in a month? Would I not promise to be his in a month?

    What I answered I scarcely recall. His eyes had stolen back to the alcove and mine had followed them. The gentlemen who had accompanied the lady inside were coming out again, but others were advancing to take their places, and soon she was engaged in holding a regular court in this favored retreat.

    Why should this interest me? Why should I notice her or look that way at all? Because Mr. Durand did? Possibly. I remember that for all his ardent love-making, I felt a little piqued that he should divide his attentions in this way. Perhaps I thought that for this evening, at least, he might have been blind to a mere coquette's fascinations.

    I was thus doubly engaged in listening to my lover's words and in watching the various gentlemen who went up and down the steps, when a former partner advanced and reminded me that I had promised him a waltz. Loath to leave Mr. Durand, yet seeing no way of excusing myself to Mr. Fox, I cast an appealing glance at the former and was greatly chagrined to find him already on his feet.

    Enjoy your dance, he cried; I have a word to say to Mrs. Fairbrother, and was gone before my new partner had taken me on his arm.

    Was Mrs. Fairbrother the lady with the diamond? Yes; as I turned to enter the parlor with my partner, I caught a glimpse of Mr. Durand's tall figure just disappearing from the step behind the sage-green curtains.

    Who is Mrs. Fairbrother? I inquired of Mr. Fox at the end of the dance.

    Mr. Fox, who is one of society's perennial beaux, knows everybody.

    She is, well, she was Abner Fairbrother's wife. You know Fairbrother, the millionaire who built that curious structure on Eighty-sixth Street. At present they are living apart, an amicable understanding, I believe. Her diamond makes her conspicuous. It is one of the most remarkable stones in New York, perhaps in the United States. Have you observed it?

    "Yes, that is, at

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