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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66354 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66354)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Proof of the Pudding, by Meredith
-Nicholson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Proof of the Pudding
-
-Author: Meredith Nicholson
-
-Illustrator: C. H. Taffs
-
-Release Date: September 20, 2021 [eBook #66354]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PROOF OF THE
-PUDDING ***
-
-
-
-
-
-THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING
-
-
-[Illustration: _Page 160_
-
-“NOW WE’RE IN FOR IT!” SAID NAN UNCOMFORTABLY]
-
-
-
-
- THE PROOF OF THE
- PUDDING
-
- BY
- MEREDITH NICHOLSON
-
- _With Illustrations_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- The Riverside Press Cambridge
- 1916
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1915 AND 1916, BY THE RED BOOK CORPORATION
- COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY MEREDITH NICHOLSON
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
- _Published May 1916_
-
-
-By Meredith Nicholson
-
- =THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING.= Illustrated.
-
- =THE POET.= Illustrated.
-
- =OTHERWISE PHYLLIS.= With frontispiece in color.
-
- =THE PROVINCIAL AMERICAN AND OTHER PAPERS.=
-
- =A HOOSIER CHRONICLE.= With illustrations.
-
- =THE SIEGE OF THE SEVEN SUITORS.= With illustrations.
-
-
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- TO
- CARLETON B. McCULLOCH
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- I. A YOUNG LADY OF MOODS 1
-
- II. THE AFFAIRS OF MRS. COPELAND 20
-
- III. MR. FARLEY BECOMES EXPLICIT 39
-
- IV. NAN AND BILLY’S WIFE 57
-
- V. A COLLECTOR OF FACTS 68
-
- VI. AN ERROR OF JUDGMENT 87
-
- VII. WELCOME CALLERS 99
-
- VIII. MRS. COPELAND’S GOOD FORTUNE 113
-
- IX. A NARROW ESCAPE 124
-
- X. THE AMBITIONS OF MR. AMIDON 136
-
- XI. CANOEING 151
-
- XII. LAST WILLS AND TESTAMENTS 165
-
- XIII. A KINNEY LARK AND ITS CONSEQUENCES 175
-
- XIV. BILLS PAYABLE 194
-
- XV. FATE AND BILLY COPELAND 208
-
- XVI. AN ABRUPT ENDING 226
-
- XVII. SHADOWS 243
-
- XVIII. NAN AGAINST NAN 256
-
- XIX. NOT ACCORDING TO LAW 263
-
- XX. THE COPELAND-FARLEY CELLAR 275
-
- XXI. A SOLVENT HOUSE 283
-
- XXII. NULL AND VOID 292
-
- XXIII. IN TRUST 301
-
- XXIV. “I NEVER STOPPED LOVING HIM!” 317
-
- XXV. COPELAND’S UNKNOWN BENEFACTOR 327
-
- XXVI. JERRY’S DARK DAYS 337
-
- XXVII. “JUST HELPING; JUST BEING KIND!” 354
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- “NOW WE’RE IN FOR IT!” SAID NAN UNCOMFORTABLY _Frontispiece_
-
- “A VERY CHARMING PERSON--A LITTLE DEVILISH, BUT KEEN AND AMUSING” 26
-
- “OH, I HAD ONE GLASS; NOBODY HAD MORE, I THINK; THERE WAS SOME
- KIND OF MINERAL WATER BESIDES. IT WAS ALL VERY SIMPLE” 44
-
- NAN EXPERIENCED SUDDENLY A DISTURBING SENSE OF HER INFERIORITY
- TO THIS WOMAN 62
-
- “I’M NOT LOSING ANYTHING; AND BESIDES, I’M HAVING A MIGHTY GOOD
- TIME” 66
-
- THE FURTIVE TOUCH OF HIS HAND SEEMED TO ESTABLISH AN
- UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THEM THAT THEY WERE SPECTATORS, NOT
- PARTICIPANTS IN THE REVEL 188
-
- THE TOUCH OF HER WET CHEEK THRILLED HIM 372
-
-
-_From drawings by C. H. Taffs_
-
-
-
-
-THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-A YOUNG LADY OF MOODS
-
-
-It was three o’clock, but the luncheon the Kinneys were giving at the
-Country Club had survived the passing of less leisurely patrons and now
-dominated the house. The negro waiters, having served all the food and
-drink prescribed, perched on the railing of the veranda outside the
-dining-room, ready to offer further liquids if they should be demanded.
-Such demands had not been infrequent during the two hours that had
-intervened since the party sat down, as a row of empty champagne
-bottles in the club pantry testified. The negroes watched with discreet
-grins the antics of a girl of twenty-two who seemed to be the center
-of interest. She had been entertaining the company with a variety of
-impersonations of local characters, rising and moving about for the
-better display of her powers of mimicry. Hand-clapping and cries of “Go
-on!” followed each of these performances.
-
-She concluded an imitation of the head waiter--a pompous individual
-who had viewed this impiety with mixed emotions--and sank exhausted
-into her chair amid boisterous laughter. The flush in her cheeks was
-not wholly attributable to the heat of the June day, and the eagerness
-with which she gulped a glass of champagne one of the men handed her
-suggested a familiar acquaintance with that beverage.
-
-“Now, Nan, give us Daddy Farley. Do old Uncle Tim cussing the
-doctor--put it all in--that’s a good little Nan!”
-
-“Go to it, Nan; we’ve got to have it!” cried Mrs. Kinney.
-
-“I think it will kill me to hear it again,” protested Billy Copeland,
-who was refilling the girl’s glass; “but I’d be glad to die laughing.
-It’s the funniest stunt you ever did.”
-
-The girl’s arms hung limp, and she sat, a crumpled, dejected figure,
-glancing about frowningly with dull eyes.
-
-“I’m all in; there’s nothing doing,” she replied tamely.
-
-“Oh, come along, Nan. We’ll go for a spin in the country right
-afterwards,” said Mrs. Kinney--who had just confided to a guest from
-Pittsburg, for whom the party was given, that Nan’s imitation of Daddy
-Farley abusing his doctor was the killingest thing ever, and that she
-just must hear it.
-
-Their importunities were renewed to the accompaniment of much thumping
-of the table, and suddenly the girl sprang to her feet. She seemed
-immediately transformed as she began a minute representation of the
-gait and speech of an old man.
-
-“You ignorant blackguard! you common, low piece of swine-meat! How dare
-you come day after day to torture me with your filthy nostrums! You’ve
-poured enough dope into me to float a battleship and given me pills
-enough to sink it, and here I am limpin’ around like a spavined horse,
-and no more chance o’gettin’ out o’ here again than I have of goin’ to
-heaven! What’s that! You got the cheek to offer to give up the case!
-Just like you to want to turn me over to some other pirate and keep me
-movin’ till the undertaker comes along and hangs out the crape! There’s
-been a dozen o’ you flutterin’ in here like hungry sparrows lookin’
-for worms. You don’t see anything in my old carcass but worm-food! Hi,
-you! What you up to now? Oh, Lord, don’t leave me! Come back here; come
-back here, I say! Oh, my damned legs! How long you say I’d better take
-that poison you sent up here yesterday? Well, all right”--meekly--“I
-guess I’ll try it. Where’s that nurse gone? You better tell her again
-about the treatment. She forgets it half the time; tell her to double
-the dose. If I’ve got to die, I want to die full o’ poison to make it
-easier for the embalmer. I guess you’re all right, doc; but you’re
-slow, mighty damned slow. Hi, Nan, you grinnin’ little fool, who told
-you to come in here? Oh, Lord! Oh, my poor legs! Oh, for God’s sake,
-doctor, do something for me--do something for me!”
-
-She tottered toward her chair, imaginably the bed from which the old
-man had risen, and glanced at her audience indifferently, as they
-broke into hilarious applause. The vulgarity of the exhibition was
-mitigated somewhat by her amazing success in sinking herself in another
-personality. They all knew that the man she was imitating was her
-foster-father and benefactor; that he had rescued her from obscure,
-hopeless poverty, educated her and given her his name; and that but
-for his benevolence they never would have known or heard of her; but
-this clearly was not a company that was fastidious in such matters.
-The exhibition of her cleverness had been highly diverting. They waved
-their napkins and demanded more.
-
-She continued to survey them coldly, standing by her chair and absently
-biting her lip. Then she turned with an air of disdain and moved among
-the tables to the nearest door with languid deliberation. They watched
-her dully, mystified. This possibly was a prelude to some further
-contribution to the hour’s entertainment, and they craned their necks
-to follow her, expecting that at any moment she would turn back.
-
-The screen door banged harshly upon her exit. She crossed the veranda,
-ran down the steps toward the canal that lay a little below the
-clubhouse, and hurried away as though anxious to escape pursuit or
-questioning. She came presently to the river, pressed through a tangle
-of briars and threw herself down on the bank under a majestic sycamore.
-
-A woodpecker drummed upon a dead limb of the tree, and a kingfisher
-looked down at her wonderingly. She lay perfectly quiet with her face
-buried in the grass. Hers was not a happy frame of mind. Torn with
-contrition, she yielded herself to the luxury of self-scorn. She had
-no intention of returning immediately to the clubhouse, and she was
-infinitely relieved that none of her late companions had followed her.
-She wished that she might never see them again. Then her mood changed
-and she sat up, flung aside her hat, dipped her handkerchief in the
-river and held it to her burning face.
-
-“You little fool, you silly little fool!” she said, addressing her
-reflection in the water. She spoke as though quoting, which was indeed
-exactly what she was doing. It was just such endearing terms that her
-foster-father applied to her in his frequent fits of anger.
-
-Then she stretched herself at ease with her hands clasped under her
-head and stared at the sky. Beneath the cloud of loosened black hair
-that her various exertions had shaken free, her violet eyes were fine
-and expressive. Her face was slender, with dimples near the corners of
-her mouth: a sensitive face, still fresh and girlish. Her fairness was
-that of her type--a type markedly Irish. The wet handkerchief that had
-brought away a faint blotch of scarlet from her rather full lips had
-left them still red with the sufficient color of youthful health. Lying
-relaxed for half an hour, watching the lazily drifting white clouds,
-she became tranquillized. Her eyes lost their restlessness as she gazed
-dreamily at the heavens.
-
-The soft splash of oars caused her to lift her head guardedly and
-glance out upon the river. A young man was deftly urging a cedar
-skiff toward a huge elm that had been uprooted by a spring storm and
-lay with half its trunk submerged. He jumped out and tied the skiff
-to a convenient limb and then, standing on the trunk, adjusted a rod
-and line and began amusing himself by dropping a brilliant fly here
-and there on the rippling surface. It was inconceivable that any one
-should imagine that fish were to be wooed and won in this part of the
-stream; even Nan knew better than that. But failures apparently did not
-diminish the pleasure the fisherman found in his occupation.
-
-He was small and compactly made and wore white flannel trousers, canvas
-shoes, and a pink shirt with a four-in-hand to match. He moved about
-freely on the log to give variety to his experiments; he was indeed
-much nimbler with his feet than with his hands, for his whipping of the
-stream lacked the sophistication of skilled fly-casting. He lighted a
-cigarette without abating his efforts, and commented audibly upon his
-stupidity when a too-vigorous twist of the wrist sent the fly into a
-sapling, from which he extricated it with the greatest difficulty.
-
-He was not of her world, Nan reflected, peering at him through the
-fringing willows. She knew most of the young gentlemen who attended
-dances or played tennis and golf at the Country Club, and he was not
-of their species. Once in making a long cast his foot slipped, and
-he capered wildly while regaining his balance, fell astraddle of the
-log, and one shoe shipped water. He glanced about to make sure this
-misfortune had not been observed, shook the water out of his shoe and
-lighted a fresh cigarette.
-
-She admired the dexterity with which he held the rod under his arm,
-manipulated the “makings” and had the little cylinder burning in a
-jiffy and hanging to his lip--a fashion of carrying a cigarette not
-affected by the young gentlemen she knew. It was just a little rakish;
-but he was, she surmised, a rather rakish young man. A gray cap tilted
-over one ear exaggerated his youthful appearance; his countenance was
-still round and boyish, though she judged him to be older than herself.
-
-The patience and industry with which he plied the rod were admirable:
-though there was not the slightest probability that a fish would snap
-at the fly, he continued his futile casting with the utmost zeal and
-good humor. His sinewy arms were white--which, being interpreted, meant
-that their exposure to the sun had not been as constant as might be
-expected of one who was lord of his own time and devoted to athletics.
-She was wondering whether he intended to continue his exercise
-indefinitely, when his efforts to extricate the fly from a tangle of
-water-grass freed it unexpectedly, and the line described a semicircle
-and caught a limb of the sycamore under which she was lying.
-
-His vigorous tugs only tightened it the more, and she began speculating
-as to whether she should rise and loosen it or await his own solution
-of the difficulty. If it became necessary for him to leave the fallen
-tree to effect a rescue, he must find her hiding-place; and her
-dignity, she argued, would suffer if she allowed him to discover that
-she had been watching him. He now began moving toward the bank with the
-becoming air of determination that had attended his practice with the
-rod. She rose quickly, jumped up and caught the bough that held the
-fly, and tore it loose with a handful of leaves.
-
-“Lordy!” he exclaimed, staring hard. “Did you buy a ticket for this
-show, or did you stroll in on a rain-check?”
-
-“Oh, I was here first; but it isn’t my river!” she replied easily.
-“They don’t seem to be biting very well,” she added consolingly.
-
-“Biting? Well, I should say not! There hasn’t been a minnow in this
-river since the Indians left. I’m just practicing.”
-
-“You’ve done a lot of it,” said Nan, looking about for her hat and
-picking it up as an earnest of her immediate departure.
-
-He dropped his rod and walked toward her guardedly and with an assumed
-carelessness, his hands in his pockets.
-
-“That’s one good thing about fly-fishing,” he observed detainingly;
-“you don’t need to bother about the fish so long as there’s plenty of
-water.”
-
-He noted the handkerchief that she had spread on a bush to dry, and
-eyed her with appreciation as she thrust the pins through her hat.
-
-“Country Club?” he asked casually.
-
-She nodded affirmatively, glancing toward the red roof of the
-clubhouse, and brushed the bits of bark and earth from her skirt. If he
-meant to annoy her with further conversation, it might be just as well
-to make it clear that the club afforded an easily accessible refuge.
-
-“Excuse me, but you’re Miss Farley,--yes? It’s kind o’ funny,” he
-continued, still lounging toward her, “but I remember you away back
-when we were both kids--my name being Amidon--Jeremiah A., late of good
-old Perry County on La Belle Rivière--and I’ve seen you lots o’ times
-downtown. I’m connected in a minor capacity with the well-known house
-of Copeland-Farley Company, drugs, wholesale only--naturally sort o’
-take an interest in the family.”
-
-It was still wholly possible for her to walk away without replying; and
-yet his slangy speech amused her, and his manner was deferential. She
-remembered the Amidons from her childhood at Belleville, on the Ohio,
-and she even vaguely remembered the boy this young man must have been.
-Within three yards of her he paused, as though to reassure her that he
-was not disposed to presume upon an acquaintance that rested flimsily
-upon knowledge that might have awakened unwelcome memories; and seeing
-that she hesitated, he remarked:--
-
-“A good deal has happened since you sat in front of me in the public
-school down there. I guess a good deal has happened to both of us.”
-
-This was too intimate for immediate acceptance; but she would at least
-show him that whatever changes might have taken place in their affairs,
-she was not a snob.
-
-“You are Jerry; the other Amidon boy was Obadiah. I remember him
-because the name always seemed so funny.”
-
-“You’re playing safe! Obey died when he was ten--poor little kid!
-Scarlet fever. That was right after the flood you floated away on.”
-
-She murmured her regret at the death of his brother. It was, however,
-still a delicate question just how much weight should be given to these
-slight ties of their common youth.
-
-The disagreeable connotations of his introduction--the southward-looking
-vista that led back to the poverty and squalor to which she was
-born--were rather rosily obscured by the atmosphere of assured
-blitheness he exhaled. He seemed to imply that both had put Belleville
-behind them and that there was nothing surprising in this meeting under
-happier conditions. He was a clean-cut, well-knit, resolute young
-fellow. His brownish hair was combed back from his forehead with an
-onion-skin smoothness; indeed, he imparted a general impression of
-smoothness. His gray eyes expressed a juvenile innocence; his occasional
-smile was a slow, reluctant grin that disclosed white, even teeth. A
-self-confident young fellow, a trifle fresh, and yet with an unobtrusive
-freshness that was not displeasing, Nan thought, as she continued to
-observe and appraise him.
-
-“I broke away from the home-plate when I was sixteen,” he went
-on, “about four years after you pulled out; and I’ve been engaged
-in commercial pursuits in this very town ever since. Arrived in a
-freight-car,” he amplified cheerfully, as though she were entitled to
-all the facts. “Got a job with the aforesaid well-known jobbing house.
-Began by sweeping out, and now I swing a sample-case down the lower
-Wabash. Oh, not vulgarly rich! but I manage to get my laundry out every
-Saturday night.”
-
-“You travel for the house, do you?” she asked with a frown of
-perplexity.
-
-“That’s calling it by a large name; but I can’t deny that your words
-give me pleasure. They’re just trying me out; it’s up to me to make
-good. I’ve seen you in the office now and then; but you never knew me.”
-
-“If I ever saw you, I didn’t know you, of course,” she said with
-unaffected sincerity; “if I had, I should have spoken to you.”
-
-“Oh, I never worried about that! But of course it would be all right
-if you didn’t want to remember me. I was an ugly little one-gallus
-kid with a frowsy head and freckled face. I shouldn’t expect you to
-remember me for my youthful beauty; but you saved me from starvation
-once; I sat on your fence and watched you eat a large red apple, and
-traded you my only agate--it was an imitation--for the core.”
-
-She laughed, declaring that she could never have been so grasping,
-and he decided that she was a good fellow. Her manner of ignoring the
-social chasm that yawned between members of the fashionable Country
-Club and the Little Ripple Club farther down the river, to which young
-men who invaded the lower Wabash with sample-cases were acceptable, was
-wholly in her favor. Her parents had been much poorer than his own:
-his father had been a teamster; hers had been a common day laborer and
-a poor stick at that. And recurring to the maternal line, her mother
-had without shame added to the uncertain family income by taking in
-washing. His mother, on the other hand, had canned her own fruit
-and been active in the affairs of the First M.E. Church, serving on
-committees with the wives of men who owned stores and were therefore
-of Belleville’s aristocracy; she had even been invited to the parsonage
-to supper.
-
-If Nan Corrigan’s parents had not perished in an Ohio River flood, and
-if Timothy Farley, serving on a flood sufferers’ relief committee,
-had not rescued her from a shanty that was about to topple over by
-the angry waters, Nan Farley would not be standing there in expensive
-raiment talking to Jerry Amidon. These facts were not to be ignored and
-she was conscious of no wish to ignore them.
-
-“I’ve been fortunate, of course,” she said, as though condensing an
-answer to many questions.
-
-“I guess there’s a good deal in luck,” he replied easily. “If one of
-our best tie-hoppers hadn’t got killed in a trolley smash-up, I might
-never have got a chance to try the road. I’d probably have been doing
-Old Masters with the marking-pot around the shipping-room to the end of
-time.”
-
-His way of putting things amused her, and her smile heightened his
-admiration of her dimples.
-
-“I suppose you’re going fishing when you learn how to manage the fly?”
-she asked, willing to prolong the talk now that they had disposed of
-the past.
-
-“You never spoke truer words! It’s this way,” he continued
-confidentially: “When I see a fellow doing something I don’t know how
-to do, my heart-action isn’t good till I learn the trick. It used to
-make me sick to have to watch ’em marking boxes at the store, and I
-began getting down at six A.M. to practice, so when a chance came along
-I’d be ready to handle the brush. And camping once over Sunday a few
-miles down this romantic stretch of sandbars, I saw a chap hook a bass
-with a hand-made fly instead of a worm, and I’ve been waiting until
-returning prosperity gave me the price of a box of those toys to try it
-myself. And here you’ve caught me in the act. But don’t give me away
-to the sports up there.” He indicated the clubhouse with a jerk of the
-head. “It might injure my credit on the street.”
-
-“Oh, I’ll not give you away!” she replied in his own key. “But did the
-man you saw catch the fish that time ever enter more fully into your
-life? I should think he ought to have known how highly you approved of
-him.”
-
-“Well, I got acquainted with him after that, and he’s taken quite
-a shine to me, if I may say it which shouldn’t. The name being
-Eaton--John Cecil--lawyer by trade.”
-
-Her face expressed surprise; then she laughed merrily.
-
-“He’s never taken a shine to me; I think he disapproves of me. If he
-doesn’t”--she frowned--“he ought to!”
-
-“Oh, nothing like that!” he declared with his peculiar slangy
-intonation. “He isn’t half as frosty as he looks; he’s the greatest
-ever; says he believes he could have made something out of me if he’d
-caught me sooner. He works at it occasionally, anyway; trying to purify
-my grammar--a hard job; says my slang is picturesque and useful for
-commercial purposes, but little adapted to the politer demands of the
-drawing-room. You know how Cecil talks? He’s a grand talker--sort o’
-guys you, and you can’t get mad.”
-
-“I’ve noticed that,” said Nan, with a rueful smile. “You ought to be
-proud that he takes an interest in you. I suppose it’s your sense of
-humor; he’s strong for that.”
-
-This compliment, ventured cautiously, clearly pleased Amidon. He
-stooped, picked up a pebble and sent it skimming over the water.
-
-“He says a sense of humor is essential to one who gropes for the
-philosophy of life--his very words. I don’t know what it means, but he
-says if I’m good and quit opening all my remarks with ‘Listen,’ he’ll
-elucidate some day.”
-
-Her curiosity was aroused. The social conjunction of John Cecil Eaton
-and Jeremiah A. Amidon was bewildering.
-
-“He’s not in the habit of wasting time on people he doesn’t like--me,
-for example,” she remarked, lifting her handkerchief from the bush and
-shaking it out. “I suppose you met him in a business way?”
-
-“Not much! Politics! I room in his ward, and we met in the Fourth Ward
-Democratic Club. He tried to smash the Machine in the primary last
-spring, and I helped clean him up--some job, I can tell you! But he’s
-a good loser, and he says it’s his duty to win me over to the Cause
-of Righteousness. Cecil’s a thinker, all right. He says thought isn’t
-regarded as highly nowadays as it used to be; says my feet are well
-trained now, and I ought to begin using my head. He always wears that
-solemn front, and you never know when to laugh. Just toys with his
-funny whiskers and never blinks. Says he tries his jokes on me before
-he springs ’em at the University Club. I just let him string me; in
-fact, I’ve got to; he says I need his chastening hand. Gave me a copy
-of the Bible, Christmas, and told me to learn the Ten Commandments;
-said they were going out of fashion pretty fast, and he thought I could
-build up a reputation for being eccentric by living up to ’em. Says if
-Moses had made eleven, he couldn’t have improved on the job any. Queer
-way of talking religion, but Cecil’s different, any way you look at
-him.”
-
-These revelations as to John Cecil Eaton’s admiration for the Ten
-Commandments, coming from Amidon, were surprising, but not so puzzling
-as the evident fact that Eaton found Copeland-Farley’s young commercial
-traveler worth cultivating. Amidon was quick to see that he rose in
-Nan’s estimation by reason of Eaton’s friendly interest.
-
-“Well, I never get on with him,” she confessed, willing to sacrifice
-herself that Amidon might plume himself the more upon Eaton’s
-partiality.
-
-“Lord, I don’t _understand_ him!” Amidon protested. “If I was smart
-enough to do that, I wouldn’t be working for eighteen per. I guess he
-just gets lonesome sometimes and looks me up to have somebody to talk
-to--not that _anybody_ wouldn’t be tickled to hear him, but he says he
-finds in me a certain raciness and tang of the Hoosier soil--whatever
-that means. He took me over to the Art Institute last Sunday and gave
-me a lecture on the pictures, and me not understanding any more than
-if he’d been talking Chinese. Introduced me to a Frenchman fresh from
-Paris and told him my ideals were distinctly post-impressionistic. Then
-we bumped into a college professor, and he made me talk so the guy
-could note the mellow flavor of my idiom. Can you beat that? Cecil says
-the hostility of the social classes to each other is preposterous. Got
-me to take him to a dance the freight-handlers were throwing. It was
-funny, but they all warmed to him like flies to a leaky sugar-barrel.
-Wore his evening clothes, white vest and all, and he was the only guy
-there in an ironed shirt! I thought they’d sure kill him; but not on
-your life!”
-
-The John Cecil Eaton thus limned was not the austere person Nan knew.
-Her Eaton was a sedate gentleman who made cryptic remarks to her at
-parties and was known to be exceedingly conservative in social matters.
-Amidon, she surmised, was far too keen to subject himself unwillingly
-to Eaton’s caustic humor, nor was Eaton a man to trouble himself with
-any one unless he received an adequate return.
-
-“I must be going back,” she said, glancing at her watch. Her casual
-manner of consulting the pretty trinket on her wrist charmed him. He
-was pleased with himself that he had been able to carry through an
-interview with so superior a person.
-
-He had never been more at ease in his most brilliant conversations
-with the prettiest stenographer in the drug house, whose sole aim in
-life seemed to be to “call him down” for his freshness. Lunch-counter
-girls, shop-girls, attractive motion-picture cashiers, were an alluring
-target for his wit, and the more cruelly they snubbed him the more
-intensely he admired them. But the stimulus of these adventures was
-not comparable to the exaltation he experienced from this encounter
-with Nan Farley. If she had pretended not to remember him he would
-have hated her cordially; as it was, he liked her immensely. Though
-she lacked the pert “come-back” of girls behind desks and counters,
-he felt, nevertheless, that she would give a good account of herself
-in like positions if exposed to the bold raillery of commercial
-travelers. He was humble before her kindness. She turned away,
-hesitated an instant, then took a step toward him and put out her
-hand. There was something of appeal in the look she gave him as their
-hands touched--the vaguest hint of an appeal. Her eyes narrowed for
-an instant with the intentness of her gaze as she searched his face
-for--sympathy, understanding, confidence. Then she withdrew her
-hand quickly, aware that his admiration was expressing itself with
-disconcerting frankness in his friendly gray eyes.
-
-“It’s been nice to see you again,” she said softly. “Good luck!”
-
-“Good luck to you, Miss Farley; I hope to meet you again sometime.”
-
-“Thank you; I hope so too.”
-
-She nodded brightly and moved off along the path toward the clubhouse.
-He felt absently for his book of cigarette-papers as he reviewed what
-she had said and what he had said.
-
-He did not resume his whipping of the river, but restored his rod to
-its case and turned slowly downstream, not neglecting to lift his eyes
-to the clubhouse as he drifted by.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE AFFAIRS OF MRS. COPELAND
-
-
-In a quiet corner of the club veranda Fanny Copeland and John Cecil
-Eaton had been conscious of the noisy gayety of Mrs. Kinney’s party,
-and they observed Nan Farley’s hurried exit and disappearance.
-
-“Nan doesn’t seem to be responding to encores,” Eaton remarked. “She’s
-gone off to sulk--bored, probably; prefers to be alone, poor kid! It’s
-outrageous the way those people use her.”
-
-“They have to be amused,” replied Mrs. Copeland, “and I’ve heard that
-Nan can be very funny.”
-
-“There are all kinds of fun,” Eaton assented dryly. “She’s been taking
-off Uncle Tim again. I don’t see that he’s getting anything for his
-money--that is, assuming that she gets his money.”
-
-“If she doesn’t,” said Mrs. Copeland quickly, “she won’t be the only
-person that’s disappointed.”
-
-Eaton lifted his eyes toward a stretch of woodland beyond the river and
-regarded it fixedly. Then his gaze reverted to her.
-
-“You think Billy wants to get back the money he paid Farley for the
-drug business?” he asked, in a colorless, indifferent tone that was
-habitual.
-
-John Cecil Eaton was nearing the end of his thirties--tall, lean, with
-a closely trimmed black beard. He was dressed for the links, and his
-waiting caddy was guarding his bag in the distance and incidentally
-experimenting at clock golf. Eaton’s long fingers were clasped round
-his head in such manner as to set his cap awry. One was conscious
-of the deliberate gaze of his eyes; his drawling voice and dry
-humor suggested a man of leisurely habits. He specialized in patent
-law--that is to say, having a small but certain income, he was able
-to discriminate in his choice of cases, and he accepted only those
-that particularly interested him. He had been educated as a mechanical
-engineer, and the law was an afterthought. His years at Exeter and the
-Tech, prolonged by his law course at Harvard, had quickened his speech
-and modified its Hoosier flavor. He passed for an Eastern man with
-strangers. He was the fourth of his name in the community, and it was a
-name, distinguished in war and peace, that was well sprinkled through
-the pages of Indiana history. Though the Eatons had rendered public
-service in conspicuous instances they had never been money-makers,
-and when John heard of the high prices attained by Washington Street
-property in the early years of the twentieth century he reflected that
-if his father and grandfather had been a little more sanguine as to the
-city’s future he might have been the richest man in town.
-
-Eaton’s interests were not all confined to his profession. He read
-prodigiously in many fields; he observed politics closely and was
-president of a club that debated economic and social questions; he was
-the best fly-fisherman in the State. His occasional efforts to improve
-the tone of local politics greatly amused his friends, who could not
-see why a man who might have been pardoned for looking enviously upon
-a seat in the United States Senate should subject himself to the
-indignity of a defeat for the city council. To the men he lunched with
-daily at the University Club his interest in municipal affairs was only
-another of his eccentricities. He had never married, but was still
-carried hopefully on the list of eligibles. By general consent he was
-the best dinner man in town--a guest who could be relied upon to keep
-the talk going and make a favorable impression on pilgrims from abroad.
-
-Mrs. Copeland’s ironic smile at his last remark had lingered. Their
-eyes met glancingly; then the gaze of both fell upon the distant
-treetops. Theirs was an old friendship that rendered unnecessary the
-filling in of gaps. Eaton was thinking less concretely of her reference
-to Billy Copeland’s designs upon the Farley money than of the abstract
-fact that a divorced woman might sit upon a club veranda and hear her
-former spouse’s voice raised in joyous exclamation within, and even
-revert without visible emotion to the possibility of his remarrying.
-
-Times and standards had changed. This was no longer the sober capital
-it had been, where every one went to church, and particular merit might
-be acquired by attending prayer-meeting. It was a very different place
-from what it had been in days well within Eaton’s recollection, before
-the bobtail mule cars yielded to the trolley, or the automobile drove
-out the sober-going phaëtons and station-wagons that had satisfied
-the native longing for grandeur. The roster of the Country Club bore
-testimony of the passing of the old order. The membership committee no
-longer concerned itself with the ancestry or reputation for sobriety of
-applicants, or their place of worship, or whether their grandfathers
-had come to town before the burning of the Morrison Opera House, or
-even the later conflagration that consumed the Academy of Music. You
-might speak of late arrivals like the Kinneys with all the scorn
-you pleased, but they had been recognized by everybody but a few
-ultra-conservatives; and if Bob Kinney was something of a sport or his
-wife’s New York clothes were a trifle daring for the local taste, such
-criticisms did not weigh heavily as against the handsome villa in which
-these same Kinneys had established themselves in the new residential
-area on the river bluff. Curiosity is a stern foe of snobbishness; and
-when Mrs. Kinney seemed so “sweet” and had given a thousand dollars
-to the new Girls’ Club, besides endowing a children’s room in the
-Presbyterian Hospital, many very proper and dignified matrons felt
-fully justified in crossing the Rubicon (otherwise White River) for an
-inspection of Mrs. Kinney’s new house. Eaton had accepted such things
-in a philosophic spirit, just as he accepted Kinney’s retainer to
-safeguard the patents on the devices that made Kinney’s cement the best
-on the market and the only brand that would take the finish and tint of
-tile or marble.
-
-“It seems to be understood that they’re waiting for Farley to die so
-they can be married comfortably,” Eaton remarked. “But Farley’s a tough
-old hickory knot. He’s capable of hanging on just to spite them.”
-
-“He was always very kind to me. I saw a good deal of him and his wife
-after I came here. He was proud of the business and anxious that Billy
-should carry it on and keep developing it.”
-
-“I always liked the steamboating period of Farley’s life,” said
-Eaton, ignoring this frank reference to her former husband, in which
-he thought he detected a trace of wistfulness; “and he’s told me a
-good deal about it at times. It was much more picturesque than his
-wholesale-drugging. He never quite got over his river days--he’s always
-been the second mate, bullying the roustabouts.”
-
-“He never forgot how to swear,” Mrs. Copeland laughed. “He does it
-adorably.”
-
-“There was never anything like him when he’s well heated,” Eaton
-continued. “He never means anything--it’s just his natural way of
-talking. His customers rather liked it on the whole--expected him to
-commit them to the fiery pit every time they came to town and dropped
-in to see him. When he got stung in a trade--which wasn’t often--he’d
-go into his room and lock the door and curse himself for an hour or two
-and then go out and raise somebody’s wages. A character--a real person,
-old Uncle Tim!”
-
-The thought of the retired merchant seemed to give Eaton pleasure; a
-smile played furtively about his lips.
-
-“Then it must have been his wife who used to lure him to church every
-Sunday morning.”
-
-“Not a bit of it! It was the old man himself. He had a superstitious
-feeling that business would go badly if he cut church. He never
-swore on Sundays, but made up for it Monday mornings. He’s always
-been a generous backer of foreign missionaries on the theory that by
-Christianizing the heathen we’re widening the market for American
-commerce. We’ve had worse men than Farley. I suppose he never told
-a lie or did an underhanded thing through all the years he was in
-business. And all he has to leave behind him is his half million or
-more--and Nan.”
-
-“And Nan,” Mrs. Copeland repeated with a shrug of her shoulders. “I
-suppose Mr. Farley knows what’s up. He’s too shrewd not to know. Clever
-as Nan is, she could hardly pull the wool over his eyes.”
-
-“She’s much too clever not to know she can’t fool him; but he’s
-immensely fond of her, just as his wife was. And we’ve got to admit
-that Nan is a very charming person--a little devilish, but keen and
-amusing. She’s too good for that crowd she’s running with--no doubt
-of that! If Uncle Tim thought she meant to marry Billy, he would take
-pains to see that she didn’t.”
-
-“You mean he wouldn’t leave her the money?” she asked in a lower tone.
-“I suppose he’d have to.”
-
-Eaton shook his head.
-
-“He’s under no obligation to give it all to Nan. If he thought there
-was any chance of her marrying Billy--”
-
-“She’s been led to believe that it would all be hers. The Farleys
-educated her and brought her up in a way to encourage the belief. It
-would be cruel to disappoint her; he wouldn’t have any right to cut her
-off,” Mrs. Copeland concluded with feeling.
-
-“It might be less cruel to cut her off than to let her have it all and
-go on the way she’s started. She came about ten years too late upon the
-scene. It’s only within a few years that a party like we’ve listened
-to in there would have been possible in this town. If Nan had reached
-her twentieth year a decade ago, she’d have been the demurest of little
-girls, and there would have been no question of her marrying a man who
-had divorced his wife merely to be free to appropriate her.”
-
-[Illustration: “A VERY CHARMING PERSON--A LITTLE DEVILISH, BUT KEEN AND
-AMUSING”]
-
-Mrs. Copeland opened and closed her eyes quickly several times. No
-other man of her acquaintance would have dared to speak of her personal
-affairs in this blunt fashion. Eaton had referred to the divorce that
-had severed her ties with Copeland quite as though she were not an
-interested party to that transaction. He now went a step further, and
-the color deepened in her face as he said:--
-
-“I don’t understand why you didn’t resist his suit. I’ve never said
-this to you before, and it’s too late to be proffering advice, but
-you oughtn’t to have let it go as you did. Billy’s whole conduct was
-perfectly contemptible.”
-
-“There was no sense in making a fight if he wanted to quit. The law
-couldn’t widen the breach; it was there anyhow, from the first moment I
-knew what was in his mind.”
-
-“He acted like a scoundrel,” persisted Eaton in his cool, even tones;
-“it was base, rotten, damnable!”
-
-“If you mean”--she hesitated and frowned--“if you mean that he let the
-impression get abroad that I was at fault--that it was I who had become
-interested elsewhere--it’s only just to say that I never thought Billy
-did that. I don’t believe now that he did it.”
-
-He was aware that he had ventured far toward the red lamps of danger.
-This matter of her personal honor was too delicate for veranda
-discussion; in fact, it was not a matter that he had any right to
-refer to even remotely at any time or place.
-
-“Of course, unpleasant things were said,” she added. “I suppose they’re
-always bound to be. Manning was his friend, not mine.”
-
-Eaton received this impassively, which was his way of receiving most
-things.
-
-“By keeping out of the way, that gentleman proved that he couldn’t have
-been any friend of yours. If he’d been a gentleman or even a man--”
-
-She broke in upon him quietly, bending toward him with tense eagerness.
-
-“He offered to: I have never told that to any one, but I don’t want you
-to be unfair even to him. My mistake was that I meekly followed Billy
-when he began running with the new crowd. I knew I was boring him,
-and I thought if I took up with the Kinneys and the people they were
-training with, he might get tired of them after a while and we could go
-on as we had begun. But I hadn’t reckoned with Nan. I allowed myself to
-be put in competition with a girl of twenty--which is a foolish thing
-for a woman of thirty-five to do.”
-
-She carried lightly the thirty-five years to which she confessed, but
-sometimes, in unguarded moments, a startled, pained look stole into
-her brown eyes, as though at the remembrance of a blow that might
-repeat itself. There was a patch of white in her hair just at one side
-of her forehead. Its effect was to contribute to her natural air of
-distinction. She was of medium height and her trim figure retained
-its girlish lines. Her face and hands were tanned brown, and the color
-was becoming. She wore to-day a blue skirt and a plain blouse, with a
-soft collar opened at the throat. She had walked to the clubhouse from
-her home, a mile distant, and her meeting with Eaton had been purely
-incidental. After her divorce she had established herself as a dairy
-farmer on twenty acres of land that she had inherited from her father,
-a banker in one of the smaller county seats, who had been specially
-interested in dairying and had encouraged her interest in the diversion
-he made profitable. To please him she had taken a course in dairying
-at the State Agricultural School and knew the business in all its
-practical aspects. Copeland had first seen her at a winter resort in
-Florida where she had gone with her father in his last illness, and
-their common ties with Indiana had made it easily possible for him to
-cultivate her better acquaintance later at home. Billy Copeland was
-an attractive young fellow with good prospects; his social experience
-was much ampler than hers, and the marriage seemed to her friends an
-advantageous one. When after ten years she found herself free, she rose
-from the ruins of her domestic happiness determined to live her life
-in the way that pleased her best. She shrank from adjusting herself to
-a new groove in town; the plight of the divorced woman was still, in
-this community, not wholly comfortable. There was little consolation
-in the sympathy of friends--though she had many; and even the general
-attitude, that Copeland’s conduct was utterly indefensible, did not
-help greatly. She realized perfectly that in following Copeland’s lead
-unprotestingly when he caught step with the quicker social pace set by
-the Kinneys,--a name that stood as a synonym for noiser functions and
-heavier libations than the community had tolerated,--she had estranged
-many who were affronted by the violence with which the town was
-becoming kinneyized.
-
-Two years had passed and her broken wings again beat the air with
-something of their early rhythm. The pathos of her isolation was more
-apparent to her old friends in town than to herself. Whether she had
-dropped out of the Kinney crowd, or whether it was more properly an
-ejectment, there was all the more reason why women who had regarded the
-intrusions of that set with horror should manifest their confidence
-in her. If she had been poor, a _divorcée_ lodged in a boarding-house
-and in need of practical aid, she might have suffered from neglect;
-but having an assured small income which her investment in the dairy
-farm in no wise jeopardized, it was rather the thing to look in on
-her occasionally. Young girls in particular thought her handsome and
-interesting-looking, and risked their mothers’ displeasure by going to
-see her. And there were women who sought her out merely to emphasize
-their disapproval of Copeland and the scandal of his divorce, which
-they felt to be an affront to the community’s dignity in a man whose
-father had been of the old order of decent, law-abiding, home-keeping,
-church-going citizens. They admired the courage and dignity with
-which she met misfortune and addressed herself uncomplainingly to the
-business of fashioning a new life.
-
-“I’ve been keeping you from your game,” she said, rising abruptly; “and
-I must be getting home.”
-
-They walked down the veranda toward the entrance and reached the door
-at a moment when Copeland, who had been keeping company with a tall
-glass in the rathskeller below, waiting impatiently for Nan’s return,
-lounged out.
-
-He stopped short with a slightly challenging air. Eaton bowed and
-tugged at the visor of his cap. Copeland lifted his straw hat and
-muttered a good-afternoon that was intended for one or both as they
-chose to take it. Mrs. Copeland glanced at him without making any sign;
-she did not speak to Eaton again, but as they parted near the first
-tee and she started across the links toward the highway, she nodded
-quickly and smiled a forlorn little smile that haunted him for some
-time afterward.
-
-Half an hour later, standing erect after successfully negotiating a
-difficult putt, he said, under his breath:--
-
-“By George! She’s still in love with him!”
-
-He glanced around to make sure no one had overheard him, and crossed to
-the next tee with a look of deep perplexity on his face.
-
-Nan, having returned to the clubhouse, sauntered down the veranda
-toward Copeland, wearing a demure air she had practiced for his
-benefit. Her indifference to his annoyance at her long absence added to
-his vexation.
-
-“Well, what have you been up to?” he demanded irritably. “The others
-skipped long ago.”
-
-“Oh, I was tired and went down to the river to rest. I’m going home
-now.”
-
-“You can’t go home; Grace expects us to stop at her house; they’ll all
-be there in half an hour.”
-
-“Sorry, but I must skip. You run along like a good boy, and I’ll hop on
-the trolley. I must be home by five, and I’ll just about make it.”
-
-“That’s not treating Grace right, to say nothing of me!” he
-expostulated. “I’m getting sick of all this dodging and ducking. I’m
-coming up to the house to-morrow and have it out with Farley.”
-
-“You’re a nice boy, Billy, but you’re not going to do anything
-foolish,” she replied.
-
-He found the kindness of this--even its note of fondness--unsatisfying.
-He read into it a skepticism that was not flattering.
-
-“We’ve been fooling long enough about this; we’ve got to announce our
-engagement and be done with it.”
-
-“But, Billy, we’re not engaged! We’re just the best of friends. Why
-should we stir up a big fuss by getting engaged?”
-
-“What’s got into you, anyhow!” he exclaimed, eyeing her angrily. “This
-talk about not being engaged doesn’t go! I’m getting tired of all this
-nonsense--being kicked about and held off when I’ve staked everything
-I’ve got on you.”
-
-“You mean,” she said steadily, “that you divorced your wife, thinking I
-would marry you; and now you’re angry because I’m not in a hurry about
-it, and don’t want to trouble papa, who has been kinder to me than
-anybody else ever was--”
-
-“For God’s sake, don’t cry here! We’ve been talked about enough; I
-don’t understand what’s got into you to-day.”
-
-“I just mean to be sensible, that’s all. We’ve had some mighty fine
-times, and you’ve been nice to me; but there’s no hurry about getting
-married--”
-
-“No hurry!” He stared at her, unable in his impotent rage to deal with
-the situation as he thought it deserved. “Look here, Nan, I can stand a
-lot of this Irish temperament of yours, but you’re playing it a little
-too far.”
-
-“My Irish temperament!” she repeated poutingly. “Well, I guess the
-Irish is there all right; I don’t know about the temperamental part of
-it. A good many people call it something very different.”
-
-“When am I going to see you again?” he demanded roughly.
-
-“How should I know! You see me now and you don’t like me. You’d better
-go downtown and do some work, Billy; that’s what I should prescribe
-for you. And you’ve got to cut out the drink; it’s getting too big a
-hold on you. I’m going to quit, too.”
-
-Standing near the entrance, they had been obliged to acknowledge the
-greetings of a number of new arrivals. It was manifestly no place for
-a prolonged serious discussion of their future. Mrs. Harrington, whose
-husband’s bank, the Phœnix National, was the soundest in the State,
-climbed the steps from her motor without seeing Nan and her companion.
-Until Farley retired, the Copeland-Farley account was carried by the
-Phœnix; when Billy Copeland took the helm he transferred it to the
-Western, as likely to grant a more generous credit.
-
-Copeland flushed angrily at the slight; Nan bit her lip.
-
-“I’m off!” she said. “Be a good boy. I’ll see you again in a day or
-two. And for Heaven’s sake, don’t call me on the telephone; papa has an
-extension in his room, you know, and hears everything. Tell Grace I’m
-sorry--”
-
-“Let me run you into town; I can set you down somewhere near home. The
-trolleys are hot and dusty. Besides, I want to talk to you; I’ve got a
-lot to say to you.”
-
-“Not to-day, Billy. Good-bye!”
-
-Eaton found Nan waiting for him at the fourth green.
-
-“I was praying for a mascot, and here you are,” he remarked affably. “I
-can’t fail to turn in a good card. Glad to see you’ve taken up walking;
-there’s nothing like it--particularly on a humid afternoon.”
-
-“Sorry to disappoint you, but I hope to catch the four-thirty for town.
-What are my chances?”
-
-“Excellent, if you don’t waste more than ten minutes on me. You’ve
-never given me more than five up to date. How is Mr. Farley?”
-
-“He’s been very comfortable for a week; really quite like himself.
-You’d better come and see him.”
-
-“I meant to drop in often all winter, but was afraid of boring him.”
-
-“You’re one of the few that couldn’t do that. He likes to talk to you.
-You don’t bother him with questions about his health--a sure way of
-pleasing him.”
-
-“A rare man, Farley. Wiser than serpents, and stimulating. I’ve learned
-a good deal from him.”
-
-They reached his ball, that had accommodatingly effected a good lie,
-and after viewing it with approval he glanced at Nan and remarked:--
-
-“You’d better urge me to come to see you, too. It’s just occurred to me
-that it might be well for us to know each other better. I may flatter
-myself; but--”
-
-“That’s the nicest thing I’ve heard to-day! Please come soon.”
-
-“Thank you, Nan; I shall certainly do that.”
-
-“I met a friend of yours a while ago,” she said, “who pronounced you
-the greatest living man.”
-
-“Ah! A gentleman, of course; I identify him at once; he’s the only
-person alive I fool to that extent--Jeremiah A. Amidon! I can’t imagine
-why he hasn’t mentioned his acquaintance with you. I shall chide him
-for this.”
-
-He viewed her in his quizzical fashion through the thick-lensed
-spectacles he used for golfing. In his ordinary occupations these gave
-place to eyeglasses that twinkled with a sharp, hard brightness, as
-though bent upon obscuring the kindness that lay behind them.
-
-“I hadn’t seen him lately--not since I was a child. We used to be
-neighbors when we were children, and he was a very, very naughty boy.”
-
-“I dare say he was,” Eaton remarked, with his air of thinking of
-something else. “I suppose you didn’t find him at all backward in
-bringing himself to your notice. Shyness isn’t his dominant trait.”
-
-“On the other hand, he was rather diffident and wholly polite. I
-thought his manners did you credit--for he said you had been coaching
-him.”
-
-“He must be chidden; his use of my name in that connection is utterly
-unwarranted. He was one of Mrs. Kinney’s party, I suppose,--very
-interesting. I’m glad they have taken him up!”
-
-He was watching, with the quick eagerness that made him so
-disconcerting a companion, the passing of a motor toward the clubhouse,
-but she understood perfectly that this utterance had been with ironic
-intent. She laughed softly.
-
-“How funny you are! I wish I weren’t afraid of you.”
-
-“I’ve made a careful study of the phobias, and there is nothing in
-the best authorities to justify a fear of me. I’m as tame as buttered
-toast.”
-
-“Well, it’s clear Mr. Amidon isn’t afraid of you!”
-
-“I’m relieved--infinitely; I’m in mortal terror of _him_. He’s fixed
-standards of conduct for me that make me nervous. I’m afraid the
-young scoundrel will catch me with my visor down some day; then smash
-goes his poor idol. I’m glad you spoke of him; if he wasn’t at your
-luncheon--a guess you scorned to notice--I suppose you met by chance,
-the usual way.”
-
-“It was just like that,” she laughed. “Very much so!”
-
-“H’m! I warn you against accepting the attentions of just any young
-man who strolls up the river. A girl of your years must be discreet.
-Your early knowledge of Mr. Amidon in the loved spots your infancy knew
-won’t save you. You’d better refer all such matters to me. Pleasant
-as this is, you’re going to miss your car if you don’t rustle. And
-Harrington’s bawling his head off trying to fore me away. Good-bye!”
-
-With a neat stroke he landed his ball on the green and ran after it to
-raise the blockade. When Nan had halted the car and climbed into the
-vestibule, she waved her hand, a salute which he returned gallantly
-with a sweep of his cap.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MR. FARLEY BECOMES EXPLICIT
-
-
-The Farleys had lived for twenty years in an old-fashioned square
-brick house surrounded by maples. The lower floor comprised a parlor,
-sitting-room, and dining-room, with a library on the side. The
-library had been Farley’s den, where he smoked his pipe and read his
-newspapers. The bookcases that lined the walls had rarely been opened;
-they contained the “Waverley Novels,” Dickens’s “Works” complete, and
-a wide range of miscellaneous fiction, including “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,”
-most of Mark Twain, Tourgée’s novel of Reconstruction, “A Fool’s
-Errand,” Helen Hunt Jackson’s “Ramona,” and a number of Mrs. A. D.
-T. Whitney’s stories for girls--these latter reminiscent of Nan’s
-girlhood. The brown volumes of “Messages and Papers of the Presidents”
-were massed on the bottom shelves invincibly with half a dozen
-“Reports” of the State Geological Survey. The doors of the black-walnut
-bookcases were warped so that the contents were accessible only after
-patient tugging. Half the books were upside-down--and had been since
-the last house-cleaning. The room presented an inhospitable front to
-literature, and the other arts fared no better elsewhere in the house.
-A steel engraving of the Parthenon on the dining-room wall confronted
-a crude print of the JANE E. NEWCOMB, an Ohio River packet on which
-Farley had been second mate--and an efficient one--in ’69-’70.
-
-Mrs. Farley had established in her household the Southwestern custom
-of abating the heat by keeping the outer shutters closed through the
-middle of the day, and the negro servants who still continued in
-charge had not changed her system in this or in any other important
-particular. Nan had not lacked instruction in the domestic arts; in
-her school vacations she had been thoroughly drilled by Mrs. Farley.
-Cleanliness in its traditional relationship to godliness had been
-deeply impressed upon her; and she had been taught to sew, knit, and
-crochet. She knew how to cook after the plain fashion to which Mrs.
-Farley’s tastes and experience limited her; she had belonged to an
-embroidery class formed to give occupation to one of Mrs. Farley’s
-friends who had fallen upon evil times; and Nan had been the aptest of
-pupils.
-
-But Nan had never been equal to the task of initiating changes in the
-Farley household, with its regular order of sweepings, scrubbings, and
-dustings; its special days for baking, its inexorable rotation in meats
-and vegetables for the table. And if she had needed justification she
-would have given as her excuse Farley’s long acceptance of his wife’s
-domestic routine, and the fear of displeasing him by altering it. The
-colored cook’s husband did the heavier indoor cleaning and maintained
-the yard; and the dining-room and the upper floor were cared for by a
-colored woman. Hardly any one employed a black second girl, and Nan
-would have changed the color scheme in this particular and substituted
-a neatly capped and aproned white girl of the type that opened the
-door of her friends’ houses, but the present incumbent was a niece of
-the cook and not to be eliminated without rending the entire domestic
-fabric.
-
-Nan reached home a few minutes after five. She ran upstairs and
-found Farley in his room, bending over a table by the window playing
-solitaire. The trained nurse who had been in the house for a year
-appeared at the door and withdrew. Nan crossed the room and laid a hand
-on Farley’s shoulder. He had nearly finished the game, and she remained
-quietly watching his tremulous hands shifting the cards until he leaned
-back with a little grunt of satisfaction at the end. He put up his hand
-to hers and drew her round so that he could look at her.
-
-“Still wearing that fool hat! Take it off and sit down here and talk to
-me.”
-
-His small, round head was thickly covered with stiff white hair, though
-his square-cut beard had whitened unevenly and still showed traces of
-brown. While he lay in the chair with a pathetic inertness, his eyes
-moved about restlessly, and his bleached, gnarled fingers were never
-wholly quiet.
-
-“Let’s see what you’ve been up to to-day?” he asked.
-
-“Mamie Pembroke’s; she was having a luncheon for her cousin.”
-
-“Just girls, I suppose?” he asked indifferently. “You must have had a
-lot to eat to be gone all this time.”
-
-“Well, we went for a motor run afterward and stopped at the Country
-Club on the way back.”
-
-“More to eat, I suppose. My God! everybody seems able to eat but me!
-I told that fool doctor awhile ago I was goin’ to shoot him if he
-didn’t cut off this gruel he’s feedin’ me. You can lay in corn’ beef
-and cabbage for to-morrow; I’m goin’ to eat a barrel of it, too. If
-I can get hold of some real food for a week, I’ll get out of this.
-I understand they’ve got Bill Harrington playin’ golf. My God! he’s
-two years older than I am and sits on his job every day. If I’d never
-knuckled under to the doctors, I’d be a well man!” The wind rustling
-the maple by the nearest window attracted his attention. “Open that
-blind, and let the air in. Things have come to a nice pass when a man
-with my constitution can be shut up in a dark room without air enough
-to keep him alive.”
-
-It was necessary to lift the wire screen before the shutters could
-be opened, and he watched her intently as she obeyed him quickly and
-quietly.
-
-“Been to luncheon, have you?” he remarked as she sat down. “Well,
-eatin’ your meals outside doesn’t save me any money. Those damned
-niggers cook just as much as if they had a regiment in the house.
-What did they give you to eat at the Pembrokes’--the usual bird-food
-rubbish?”
-
-Before his illness he had scrupulously reserved his profanity for
-business uses; and it was only when his pain grew intolerable or the
-slow action of his doctor’s remedies roused him to fury that he had
-recourse to strong language. He allowed her to change the position
-of his footstool, which had slipped away from him, and grunted his
-appreciation as he stretched his long, bony figure more comfortably.
-
-“Well, go on and tell me what you had to eat.”
-
-It seemed best to meet this demand in a spirit of lightness. Having
-lied once, it might be well to vary her recital by resorting to the
-truth, and she counted off on her fingers, with the mockery that he had
-always seemed to like, the items of food that had really constituted
-Mrs. Kinney’s luncheon.
-
-“Grape-fruit, broiled chicken, asparagus, potatoes baked in their
-jackets and sprinkled with red pepper, the way you like them; romaine
-salad, ice-cream and cake--just plain sponge cake--coffee. Nothing so
-very sumptuous about that, papa.”
-
-It had always been “papa” and “mamma” since her adoption. When she came
-home from a boarding-school near Philadelphia where she had spent two
-years, her attempts to change the provincial “poppa” and “momma” to the
-French pronunciation had been promptly thwarted. Farley hated anything
-that seemed “high-falutin’”; and having grown used to being called
-“poppa,” his heart was as flint against the impious substitution.
-
-“Of course there were no cocktails or champagne. Not at the Pembrokes’!
-If all the women around here were like Mrs. Pembroke, we wouldn’t have
-nice little girls like you swillin’ liquor; nor these sap-headed boys
-that trot with you girls stewin’ their worthless little brains in gin.
-What do you think these cigarette-smokin’ swine are goin’ to do! Do you
-hear of ’em doin’ any work? Is there one of ’em that’s worth a dollar
-a week? My God! between you girls runnin’ around half-naked and these
-worthless young cubs plantin’ their weak, wobbly little chins against
-cocktails all night, things have come to a nice pass. Well, why don’t
-you go on and tell me who was at your party? Here I am, lyin’ here
-waitin’ for the pallbearers to carry me out, and never hearin’ a thing,
-and you sit there deaf and dumb! Who was at that party?”
-
-“Well, poppa, there were just seven girls, counting me: Mary Waterman,
-Minnie Briskett, Marian Doane, and Libby Davis, and Mamie and her
-guest--a cousin from Louisville. Of course, there was nothing to drink
-but claret cup, with sprigs of mint in the glasses.”
-
-[Illustration: “OH, I HAD ONE GLASS; NOBODY HAD MORE, I THINK; THERE
-WAS SOME KIND OF MINERAL WATER BESIDES. IT WAS ALL VERY SIMPLE”]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“So the Pembrokes are comin’ to it, are they? They’ve got to have
-something that looks like liquor--well, they’ll be passin’ the
-cocktails before long. Claret cup dressed up like juleps; and how much
-did you get of it?”
-
-“Oh, I had one glass; nobody had more, I think; there was some kind of
-mineral water besides. It was all very simple.”
-
-“Just a simple little luncheon, was it? Well, I suppose it’s not too
-simple to get into the newspapers. Nobody can put an extra plate on the
-table now without the papers have to print it.”
-
-He had never quizzed her like this, and his reference to the newspaper
-alarmed her. His usual custom was to ask her what she had been doing
-and whom she had seen and then change the subject in the midst of
-her answer. If he had laid a trap for her she had gone too far to
-retreat; and while she had lied to him before, she had managed it more
-discreetly. She had escaped detection so long that she believed herself
-immune from discovery.
-
-He began tugging at a newspaper that had been hidden under his wrapper,
-and her heart throbbed violently as he opened it and thrust it toward
-her. It was the afternoon paper, folded back to the personal and
-society items.
-
-“Just read that aloud to me, will you? I may have been mistaken. Maybe
-I didn’t get it straight. Go ahead, now, and read it--read it slow.”
-
-She knew without looking what it was; the reading was exacted merely to
-add to her discomfiture. The newspaper was delivered punctually at four
-o’clock every afternoon, so that before she left the Country Club he
-had known just where she had been and the names of her companions. She
-read in a low, monotonous tone:--
-
-“‘Mrs. Robert Smiley Kinney entertained at luncheon at the Country Club
-to-day for Mrs. Ridgeley P. Farwell, of Pittsburg, who is her house
-guest. The decorations were in pink. Those who enjoyed Mrs. Kinney’s
-hospitality were Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Towlesley, Miss Nancy Farley,
-Miss Edith Saxby, Mr. George K. Pickard, and Mr. William B. Copeland.’”
-
-She refolded the paper and placed it on the table beside him. Instead
-of the violent lashing for which she had steeled herself, he spoke her
-name very kindly and gently, with even a lingering caress.
-
-“I lied to you papa,” she faltered; “but I didn’t mean to see him
-again. I--”
-
-“Let’s be square about this,” he said, bending forward and clasping
-his fingers over his knees. “You promised me a year ago that you’d not
-meet or see Copeland; I didn’t ask you to drop Mrs. Kinney, for I don’t
-think she’s a particularly bad woman; she’s only a fool, and we’ve got
-to be charitable in dealin’ with fools. You can’t ever tell when you’re
-not one yourself; that means me as well as you, Nan. Now, about that
-worthless whelp, Copeland! I want the whole truth--no more little lies
-or big ones. You know that piece of carrion wouldn’t dare come to this
-house, and yet you sneak away and meet him and leave me to find it out
-by accident! Now, I want the God’s truth; just what does all this mean?”
-
-His quiet tone was weighted with the dignity, the simple righteousness,
-that lay in him. She could have met more courageously a violent tirade
-than his subdued demand. She was conscious that he had controlled
-himself with difficulty; throughout the interview his wrath had flashed
-like heat-lightning on far horizons, but he had kept himself well in
-hand. He was outraged, but he was hurt, troubled, perplexed by her
-conduct. The adoption of Nan had marked a high altitude in the married
-life of the Farleys, and they had lavished upon her the pent love of
-their childlessness. The very manner in which she had been flung upon
-their protection made her advent in their household something of an
-adventure, broadening their narrowing vistas and bringing a welcome
-cheer to their monotonous existence. They had felt it to be a duty, but
-one that would repay them a thousand-fold in happiness.
-
-Farley patiently awaited her explanation--an explanation she dared not
-make. She must satisfy him, if at all, by evasions and further lies.
-
-“Mrs. Kinney made a point of my coming; she was always very nice to
-me, and I haven’t been seeing her,--honestly I haven’t,--and I was
-afraid she’d be offended if I refused to go. And I didn’t know Mr.
-Copeland would be there. The luncheon was in the big dining-room, where
-everybody could see us. I didn’t see any more of him than of anybody
-else. In fact, I got tired and ran away--down to the river and was
-there by myself for an hour before I came home on the trolley. When I
-got back to the clubhouse, they had all gone motoring and I didn’t see
-them again.”
-
-“Left you there, did they? Well, Copeland waited for you, didn’t he?”
-
-“Yes,” she admitted quickly. “But I saw him only a minute on the
-veranda and told him I was coming home. He understands perfectly that
-you don’t want me to see him.”
-
-“H’m! I should hope he did! All that crowd understand it, don’t they?
-They’ve been puttin’ you in his way, haven’t they,--tryin’ to fix up
-something between you and that loafer! Look here, Nan, I’m not dead
-yet! I’m goin’ to live a long time, and if these fool doctors have
-been tellin’ you I’m done for, they’ve lied. And if Copeland thinks my
-money’s goin’ to drop into his lap, he’s waitin’ under the wrong tree.
-Never a cent! What you got to say to that?”
-
-“I don’t think he ever thought of it; it’s only because you don’t like
-him that you imagine he wants to marry me. I tell you now that I have
-never had any idea of marrying him. And as for your money--it isn’t
-my fault that you brought me here! You don’t have to give me a cent;
-I don’t want it; I won’t take it! I was only a poor, ignorant little
-nobody, anyhow, and you’ve been disappointed in me from the start.
-I’ve never pleased you, no matter how hard I’ve tried. But I’ve done
-the best I could, and I’m sorry if I’ve hurt you. I never told you an
-untruth before,” she ran on glibly; “and I wouldn’t to-day if I hadn’t
-guessed that you knew where I’d been and were trying to trick me into
-lying. You don’t love me any more, papa; I know that; and I’m going
-away--”
-
-Her histrionic talents, employed so successfully in imitating him in
-his fury, for the pleasure of Mrs. Kinney’s guests, were diverted now
-to self-martyrization to the accompaniment of tears. She had been
-closer to him than to his wife: what Mrs. Farley denied in the way of
-indulgences he had usually yielded. He had liked her liveliness, her
-keen wit, the amusing cajoleries with which she played upon him. The
-remote Irish in his blood had been responsive to the fresher strain in
-her.
-
-“For God’s sake, stop bawlin’!” he growled. “So you admit you lied, do
-you? Thought I had laid a trap for you, eh?”
-
-It was difficult for him to realize that she was twenty-two and quite
-old enough to be held accountable for her sins. Her appeal to tears
-had always found him weak, but her declaration that she had suspected
-a trap when he began to quiz her was a trifle too daring to pass
-unchallenged. He repeated his demand that she sit up and stop crying.
-
-“We may as well go through with this, Nan. I want to know what kind
-of an arrangement you have with Copeland. Are you in love with that
-fellow?”
-
-“No!”
-
-“Have you promised to marry him?”
-
-“No!”
-
-“Then why are you goin’ places where you expect to see him?”
-
-“I’ve explained that, papa,” she replied with more assurance, finding
-that he did not debate her answers. “I didn’t like to refuse Mrs.
-Kinney when I’d been refusing so many of her invitations. She asked me
-a while ago to come to her house to spend a week; and a little before
-that she wanted me to go on a trip with them, but you were sick and I
-knew you didn’t like her, anyhow, so I refused. You’ve got the wrong
-idea about her, papa,” she continued ingratiatingly. “She’s really very
-nice. The fact that she hasn’t been here long is against her with some
-of the older women, but that’s just snobbishness. I always thought you
-hated the snobbishness of some of these people who have lived here
-always and are snippy to anybody else.”
-
-He was conscious that she was eluding him, and he gripped his hands
-with a sudden resolution not to be thwarted.
-
-“I don’t care a damn about the Kinneys; I’m talkin’ about you and
-Copeland,” he rasped impatiently.
-
-“Very well, papa; I’ve told you all there is to know about that--”
-
-“I don’t care what you say ‘about that,’” he mocked; “that worthless
-scoundrel seems to have an evil fascination for you. I don’t understand
-it; a decent young girl like you and a whiskey-soaked, loafin’,
-gamblin’ degenerate, who shook his wife--a fine woman--to be free to
-trail after you! That slimy wharf-rat has the fool idea that I took
-advantage of him when I sold him my interest in the store--and just to
-show you what a fool he is I’ll tell you that I sold him my interest
-at a tenth less than I could have got from three other people--did it,
-so help me God, out of sheer good feelin’, because he’s the son of a
-father who’d given me a hand up, and I thought because he was a fool
-I wouldn’t be just fair with him--I’d be generous! I did that for Sam
-Copeland’s sake.
-
-“That was four years ago, and I hadn’t much idea then that he’d make
-good. He’s already cashed in everything Sam left him but the store. And
-I’ve still got his notes for twenty-five thousand dollars--twenty-five
-thousand, mind you!--that he’d like damned well to cancel by marryin’
-you. A man nearly forty years old, who gambles and soaks himself in
-cocktails and runs after a feather-head like you while the business his
-father and I made the best in the State goes plumb to hell! Now, you
-listen to what I’m sayin’: if you want to marry him, you do it,--you
-go ahead and do it now, for if you wait for me to die, you’ll find he
-won’t be so anxious; there ain’t goin’ to be anything to marry you
-_for_!”
-
-His voice that had been firm and strong at the beginning of this long
-speech sank to a hoarse whisper, but he cleared his throat and uttered
-his last words with sharp distinctness.
-
-“I never meant to; I never had any idea of marrying him,” she said.
-“And I’ve never thought of the money. You can do what you like with it.”
-
-“Well, a man can’t take his money with him to the graveyard, but he can
-tie a pretty long string to it; and it’s my duty to protect you as long
-as I can. I’d hoped you’d be married and settled before I went. Your
-mamma and I used to talk of that; you’d got a pretty tight grip on us;
-it couldn’t have been stronger if you’d been our own; and I don’t want
-anything to spoil this, Nan. I want you to be a good woman--not one of
-these high-flyin’, drinkin’ kind, that heads for the divorce court, but
-decent and steady. Now, I guess that’s about all.”
-
-She stood beside him for a moment, smoothing his hair. Then she knelt,
-as though from an accession of feeling, and took his hands.
-
-“I’m so sorry, papa! I never mean to hurt you; but I know I do; I know
-I must have troubled mamma, too, a very great deal. And you’ve both
-been so good to me! And I want to show you I appreciate it. And please
-don’t talk of the money any more or of my marrying anybody. I don’t
-want the money; I’m not going to marry: I want us to live on just as
-we have been. You’ve been cooped up too long, but you’re so much better
-now you’ll soon be able to travel.”
-
-“No; there’s no more travel for me; I’ll be glad to hang on as I am.
-There’s nothing in this change idea. About a year more’s all I count
-on, and then you can throw me on the scrap-heap.”
-
-She protested that there were many more comfortable years ahead of him;
-the doctors had said so. At the mention of doctors his anger flared
-again, but for an instant only. It was a question whether he had been
-mollified by her assurances or whether the peace that now reigned was
-attributable to his satisfaction with the plans he had devised to
-protect her from fortune-hunters.
-
-She hated scenes and trouble of any kind, and peace or even a truce was
-worth having at any price. She had grown so accustomed to the bright,
-smooth surfaces of life as to be impatient of the rough, unburnished
-edges. It was not wholly Nan’s fault that she had reached womanhood
-selfish and willful. In their ignorance and anxiety to do as well by
-her as their neighbors did by their daughters, there had been no bounds
-to the Farleys’ indulgence.
-
-“I’m going to have dinner up here with you,” she said cheerfully, after
-an interval. “I’m tired of eating alone downstairs with Miss Rankin;
-her white cap gets on my nerves.”
-
-She satisfied herself that this plan pleased him, and ran downstairs
-whistling--then was up again in her room, where he heard her quick
-step, the opening and closing of drawers.
-
-She faced him across the small table in the plainest of white frocks,
-with her hair arranged in a simple fashion he had once commended. She
-told stories--anecdotes she had gathered while dressing, from the back
-pages of “Life.” He was himself a capital story-teller, though at the
-age when a man repeats, and she listened to tales of his steamboating
-days that she had heard for years and could have told better herself.
-
-Soon a thunder-shower cooled the air, and made necessary the closing
-of windows, with a resulting domestic intimacy. The atmosphere was
-redolent of forgiveness on his part, of a wish to please on hers.
-
-At nine o’clock, when she had finished reading some chapters from “Life
-on the Mississippi,”--a book that he kept in his room,--and Miss Rankin
-appeared to put him to bed, he begged half an hour more. He hadn’t felt
-so well for a year, he declared.
-
-“Look here, Nan,” he remarked, when the nurse had retired after a
-grudging acquiescence, “I don’t want you to feel I’m hard on you. I
-guess I talk pretty rough sometimes, but I don’t mean to. But I worry
-about you--what’s goin’ to happen to you after I’m gone. I wish I’d
-gone first, so mamma could have looked after you. You know we set a lot
-by you. If I’m hard on you, I don’t mean--”
-
-She flung herself down beside him and clasped his face in her hands.
-
-“You dear old fraud!--there can’t be any trouble between you and me,
-and as for your leaving me--why, that’s a long, long time ahead.
-And you can’t tell! I might go first--I have all kinds of queer
-symptoms--honestly, I do! And the doctor made me stop dancing last
-winter because my heart was going jigglety. Please let’s be good
-friends and cheerful as we always have been, and I’ll never, never tell
-you any fibs any more!”
-
-She saw that her nearness, the touch of her hands, her supple young
-body pressed against his worn knees, were freeing the remotest springs
-of affection in his tired heart.
-
-Nan wanted to be good--“good” in the sense of the word that had
-expressed the simple piety of her foster-mother. She had the conscience
-of her temperament and from childhood had often been miserable over the
-smallest infractions of discipline. Her last words with Copeland on
-the club veranda had not left her happy. It had been in her mind for
-some time that she must break with Billy. She had never been able to
-convince herself that she loved him. She had liked his admiration, and
-had over-valued it as coming from a man much older than herself; one
-who, moreover, stood to her as a protagonist of the gay world. No one
-but Billy Copeland gave suppers for visiting actors and actresses or
-chartered a fleet of canoes for a thousand-dollar picnic up the river.
-It was because he was different and amusing and made love to her with
-an ardor her nature craved that she had so readily lent herself to the
-efforts of the Kinneys to throw them together.
-
-Being loved by Copeland, a divorced man rated “fast,” had all the more
-piquancy for Nan as affording a relief from the life of the staid,
-colorless household in which she had been reared. There were those who,
-without being snobs, looked down just a little upon a girl who was
-merely an adopted child to whom her foster-parents gave only a shadowy
-background. The Farleys were substantial and respectable, but they were
-not an “old family.” She was conscious of this, and the knowledge had
-made her the least bit rebellious and the more ready to surrender to
-the blandishments of the Kinneys, who were even more under the ban.
-
-As she undressed and crept wearily into bed, she pondered these things,
-and the thought of them did not increase her happiness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-NAN AND BILLY’S WIFE
-
-
-Farley improved as the summer gained headway. He became astonishingly
-better, and his doctor prescribed an automobile in the hope that a
-daily airing would exercise a beneficent effect upon his temper.
-Farley detested automobiles and had told Nan frequently that they were
-used only by fools and bankrupts. A neighbor who failed in business
-that spring had been one of the first men in town to fall a victim to
-the motor craze, and Farley had noted with grim delight that three
-automobiles were named among the bankrupt’s assets.
-
-When the idea of investing in a machine took hold of him, he went into
-the subject with his characteristic thoroughness. He had Nan buy all
-the magazines and cut from them the automobile advertisements and he
-sent for his friends to pump them as to their knowledge of various
-cars. Then he commissioned a mechanical engineer to buy him a machine
-that could climb any hill in the State, and that was free of the
-frailties and imperfections of which his friends complained.
-
-Farley manifested a childlike joy in his new plaything; he declared
-that he would have a negro chauffeur. It would be like old steamboat
-times, he said, to go “sailin’ around with a nigger to cuss.”
-
-Nan or the nurse went out with him daily--preferably Nan, who was
-immensely relieved to find that they were now on better terms than for
-several years. Life hadn’t been a gay promenade since she ceased to
-share the festivities of the Kinneys and their friends. Copeland she
-had dismissed finally, and the rest of them wearied of calling her on
-the telephone only to be told that it was impossible for her to make
-engagements. It may have been that Farley realized that she was trying
-to meet his wishes; at any rate, she had no cause to complain of his
-kindness.
-
-“This would have tickled mamma,” he would say, as they rolled through
-the country in the machine. “She was always afraid of horses; these
-things don’t seem half as risky when you get used to ’em. If I keep on
-feelin’ better, we’ll take some long trips this fall. There’s a lot o’
-places I’d like to see again. I’d like to go down and take another look
-at the Ohio.”
-
-He spoke much of his wife, and at least once every week drove to the
-cemetery, and watched Nan place flowers on her foster-mother’s grave.
-
-After one of these visits he ordered the chauffeur to drive north.
-He had read in the papers of the sale of a farm at what he said was
-a record price for land in that neighborhood, and he wanted to take
-a look at the property. After they had inspected the farm and were
-running toward home, Nan suggested that they stop at the Country Club
-for a cool drink.
-
-“Let’s drive to Mrs. Copeland’s place,” he remarked casually. “I’ve
-always meant to look at her farm.”
-
-He watched her sharply, as though expecting her to object. Possibly
-he had some purpose in this; or the suggestion might be due to
-malevolence; but she dismissed any such idea. He was always curious
-about people, and there was, to be sure, no reason why he should not
-call on Mrs. Copeland.
-
-“Certainly; I shall be very glad to go, papa,” she answered.
-
-“Nan,” he said, laying his hand on her wrist, “there was never any
-trouble between you and that woman about Copeland, was there? If it’s
-goin’ to make you uncomfortable to stop at her house, why, we won’t do
-it.”
-
-“Of course not, papa. I hope she understood that I couldn’t help the
-gossip. It wasn’t my fault.”
-
-“Well, it was nasty, anyhow,” he remarked. “And as you’ve got rid of
-Copeland, it wouldn’t be a bad idea to let her know it. I guess it
-won’t be long before that worthless scamp goes to the dump. I’ve got a
-pretty good line on him and the store. If I was ten years younger, I’d
-go down there and kick him out and put the house on its feet again.”
-
-He had frequently told her that Copeland-Farley was doing badly, but
-she supposed this to be only the wail of a retired pilot who thinks
-his old ship is doomed to disaster without his hand at the wheel.
-No communications had passed between her and Billy since the day of
-Grace Kinney’s party. She persuaded herself that she could face Billy
-Copeland’s former wife with a good conscience.
-
-“That hound,” began Farley after an interval of silence, “had the brass
-to try to put her in the wrong--didn’t dare go into court with it, but
-let it be whispered on the outside to save his own face! There was a
-man somewhere used to visit here, a friend of his. I guess nobody took
-any stock in that scandal.”
-
-“Of course, nobody would believe it of her,” said Nan. “I hardly--”
-
-She had begun to say that it was incredible that Billy would have done
-such a thing, but she caught herself in time.
-
-“What?” demanded Farley sharply. “Well, I guess nobody but the lowest
-cur would have done it.”
-
-Mrs. Copeland’s brown bungalow was set upon the highest point on her
-farm, and from her veranda and windows she could view every part of it.
-The veranda was made to be lived upon; there was a table with books and
-periodicals; a work-basket lay in a swing seat as though some one had
-just put it down; there were wall-pockets filled with fresh flowers.
-Along the veranda rail nasturtiums bloomed luxuriantly.
-
-As Nan waited for an answer to her ring, the lower floor of the
-house lay plainly in view through the screen door: a large raftered
-living-room with a broad fireplace and a dining-room beyond. Here at
-least were comfort and peace. Perhaps Billy Copeland’s wife hadn’t
-fared so ill after all!
-
-The maid said Mrs. Copeland was out on the farm, and an observation
-from the veranda discovered her in the barn lot.
-
-Nan had counted on Farley’s presence to ease the shock of the meeting,
-and she did not wholly relish being sent off alone to meet a woman who
-might be pardoned for wishing to avoid her. Farley said he would wait
-in the car, and Nan left him contentedly studying the house and its
-encompassing landscape.
-
-When Mrs. Copeland saw Nan approaching, she started across the lot
-to meet her. A handsome collie trotted beside her. She had not yet
-identified her visitor, and was flinging back an injunction to a
-workman as she moved toward the gate. She wore a dark skirt, blue
-waist, and heavy shoes, and a boy’s round felt hat. A pair of shabby
-tan driving-gloves covered her hands.
-
-“Good-afternoon!” said Nan. “Papa and I were passing, and he thought
-he’d like to see your place. If you’re busy, please don’t bother.”
-
-“Oh, I’m glad so see you, Miss Farley; I was just coming to the house.
-My pump works badly and we are planning some changes. I’m glad Mr.
-Farley is able to be out again.”
-
-She set the pace with a quick, eager step. Several times she turned
-smilingly toward Nan; the girl saw no trace of hostility. To all
-appearances Fanny Copeland was a happy, contented woman. The tempests
-might vent their spite on her, but she would still hold her head high.
-Nan, little given to humility, experienced suddenly a disturbing sense
-of her inferiority to this woman whose husband she had allowed to make
-love to her.
-
-“Yes, I get a great deal of fun out of the farm,” Mrs. Copeland was
-saying. “I don’t have any time to be lonesome; when there’s nothing
-else to do, I can fuss around the garden. And now that I’ve taken up
-poultry there’s more to do than ever!”
-
-“I believe I’d get on better with chickens than with cows,” said Nan.
-“They wouldn’t scare me so much.”
-
-“Oh, cows are adorable! Aren’t these in this pasture beauties!”
-
-A calf thrust its head through the bars of the fence, and Fanny patted
-its nose. Nan asked if they all had names and Mrs. Copeland declared
-that naming the calves was the hardest part of her work.
-
-“I think it’s a mistake for a girl to grow up without knowing how to
-earn her own living, and I don’t know a thing!” said Nan impulsively.
-
-[Illustration: NAN EXPERIENCED SUDDENLY A DISTURBING SENSE OF HER
-INFERIORITY TO THIS WOMAN]
-
-Fanny looked at her quickly. If it was in her mind that the obvious
-and expected thing for Nan to do was to marry Billy Copeland, she
-made no sign. Nan was amazed to find that she was anxious to appear
-to advantage before this woman who had every reason for disliking
-and distrusting her, and she was conscious that she had never seemed
-so stupid. Her modish gown, her dainty slippers with their silver
-buckles, contrasted oddly with Fanny’s simple workaday apparel. She
-was self-conscious, uncomfortable. And yet Fanny was wholly at ease,
-talking light-heartedly as though no shadow had ever darkened her life.
-
-They reached the house and found that Farley had braved the steps and
-established himself on the veranda. The maid had brought him a glass of
-milk which he was sipping contentedly while he ran his eye over a farm
-paper.
-
-“Mrs. Copeland, what will you take for your place?” he demanded. “If
-I’d moved into the country when I quit business, the doctors wouldn’t
-be doggin’ me to death.”
-
-“But Miss Farley tells me you are almost well again! It’s fine that
-you’ve taken up motoring--a new world to conquer every morning.”
-
-“I got tired o’ bein’ hitched to the bedpost; that’s all. But I want to
-talk farm. It’s a great thing for a woman to run a place like this and
-I want you to tell me all about it.”
-
-He examined and cross-examined her as to the joys and sorrows of
-dairying. She replied good-naturedly to most of his questions and
-parried the others.
-
-“Of course, I’m not going to tell you how much I lose a year! Please
-keep it a dark secret, but I’m not losing anything; and besides, I’m
-having a mighty good time.”
-
-“Well,” he warned her, “don’t let it put you in a hole. The place may
-be a leetle too fancy. You don’t want to make your butter too good;
-your customers won’t appreciate it.”
-
-“You preach what you never practiced,” laughed Nan. “Your rule at the
-store was to give full measure.”
-
-“Well, I guess I held trade when I got it,” he admitted.
-
-“I’ve been adding another department to the farm,” said Mrs. Copeland.
-“I started it early in the summer in the old farmhouse back there that
-was on the place when father bought it. Real homemade canned fruit,
-pickles, and so on. I’ve set up four girls who’d found life a hard
-business, and they’re doing the work with a farmer’s wife to boss them.
-It’s my business to sell their products. I’ve interested some of the
-farmers’ daughters, and they come over and help the regulars on busy
-days. We’re having a lot of fun out of it.”
-
-Farley was immensely interested. Nan had not in a long time heard him
-talk so much or so amiably; he praised and continued to praise Mrs.
-Copeland’s enterprise and success; for he had satisfied himself fully
-that she was successful. He clearly liked her; her quiet humor, her
-grace and prettiness. In his blunt way he told her she was getting
-handsomer all the time. She knew how to talk to men of his type and met
-him on his own ground.
-
-He began telling stories and referred to Old Sam Copeland half a dozen
-times, quite unconscious that the sometime daughter-in-law of Old Sam
-was sitting before him. Nan grew nervous, but Mrs. Copeland met the
-situation with perfect composure.
-
-Finally, when they were about to leave, Eaton appeared. He had walked
-over from the Country Club merely, he protested, to refresh himself at
-Mrs. Copeland’s buttermilk fountains. He addressed himself cordially
-to Farley, whose liking for him was manifest in a brightening of the
-old man’s eyes. It was plain that Eaton and Mrs. Copeland were on the
-friendliest terms; they called each other by their first names without
-mincing or sidling.
-
-Nan suspected that Eaton had come by arrangement and that in all
-likelihood he meant to stay for dinner; but already the lawyer was
-saying, as he saw Farley taking out his watch:--
-
-“I’m going to beg a lift into town from you plutocrats. I thought I
-could stay me with flagons of buttermilk and catch the interurban that
-gallops by at five fifty; but I made a miscalculation and have already
-missed the car.”
-
-“I can send you in,” said Mrs. Copeland, “if it isn’t perfectly
-convenient for Mr. Farley.”
-
-“Of course Eaton will go with us,” said Farley cordially. “It’s time to
-move, Nan.”
-
-While Eaton helped him down the steps, Mrs. Copeland detained Nan for
-glimpses of the landscape from various points on the veranda.
-
-“It was nice of you to stop; I think we ought to know each other
-better,” said Fanny.
-
-“Thank you!” said Nan, surprised and pleased. “It won’t be my fault if
-we don’t!”
-
-As they crossed the veranda their hands touched idly, and Mrs. Copeland
-caught Nan’s fingers and held them till they reached the steps. This
-trifling girlish act exercised a curious, bewildering effect upon Nan.
-She might have argued from it that Mrs. Copeland didn’t _know_--didn’t
-know that she was touching the hand of the woman who was accused of
-stealing her husband’s affections.
-
-“I don’t see many people,” Mrs. Copeland was saying; “and sometimes I
-get lonesome. You must bring your father out again, very soon. He can
-ride to the barn in his machine and see my whole plant.”
-
-“He would like that; he’s one of your warmest admirers, you know.”
-
-“We always did seem to understand each other,” she laughed; “probably
-because I always talk back to him.”
-
-[Illustration: “I’M NOT LOSING ANYTHING; AND BESIDES, I’M HAVING A
-MIGHTY GOOD TIME”]
-
-“He’s much gentler than he looks or talks; and he means to be kind and
-just,” replied Nan, knowing in her heart that she had frequently
-questioned both his kindness and his justice. “I hope you will stop
-and see us, very soon. Papa’s getting too much of my company; it would
-cheer him a lot to see you.”
-
-“I never make calls, you know,” said Mrs. Copeland, smiling, “but I’m
-going to accept your invitation.”
-
-Bitterness and resentment, traces of which Nan had sought in this
-cheery, alert little woman, were not apparent. Her kindness and
-sweetness and tolerance, as of the fields themselves, impressed Nan
-deeply.
-
-In saying good-bye Nan impulsively put out both hands.
-
-“I wish we could be good friends!” she exclaimed.
-
-Her face flushed scarlet the moment she had spoken, but Fanny’s manner
-betrayed no agitation.
-
-“Let’s consider that we’re already old friends,” she responded, smiling
-into the girl’s eyes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-A COLLECTOR OF FACTS
-
-
-When Jerry came in “off the road” Saturday, he found a note from Eaton
-asking him to call at his office that evening. To comply with this
-request, Jerry was obliged to forego the delights of a dance at the
-Little Ripple Club to which he had looked forward with the liveliest
-anticipations all the week. But Eaton was not, in Amidon’s estimation,
-a person to whom one telephoned regrets with impunity, and at eight
-o’clock he knocked at Eaton’s door on the fifteenth floor of the White
-River Trust Building and was admitted by the lawyer in person.
-
-Eaton’s office always exerted a curious spell on Jerry’s imagination.
-This was attributable in some measure to the presence of cabinets
-filled with models of patentable and unpatentable devices--queer
-contrivances with each its story of some inventor’s success or failure.
-The most perfect order was everywhere apparent. Books from the ample
-library were never strewn about in the manner of most law offices, and
-Eaton’s flat-top desk in the last room of the suite was usually clear;
-or if papers were permitted to lie upon it, they were piled evenly and
-weighted with a smooth stone that was never visible unless in use.
-The file-cases (of the newest and most approved type) contained not
-only letters, legal papers, and receipts, but, known to no one but the
-girl who cared for them, newspaper clippings and typewritten memoranda
-on a thousand and one subjects that bore no apparent relation to the
-practice of law.
-
-Facts were Eaton’s passion; with facts, one might, he believed, conquer
-the world; indeed, he was capable of demonstrating that all the battles
-in history were lost or won by the facts carried into the contest by
-the respective commanders. He had so often disturbed the office of the
-Commissioner of Patents with his facts that the public servants in
-charge of that department were little disposed to risk a brush with him
-on points that involved facts, facts that seemed, in his use of them,
-to glitter like the lenses of his eyeglasses.
-
-He seated himself in his office chair--a leathern affair with a high
-back--and bade Amidon shed his coat and be comfortable.
-
-“Smoke?” he suggested, opening a drawer containing cigars and
-cigarettes. Jerry hated ready-made cigarettes, but he was afraid to
-produce the “makings” before Eaton, who had once complained that the
-odor of the tobacco he affected was suggestive of burning jimson
-weed. Eaton produced a glass ash-tray, and filled a pipe with the
-deliberation he brought to every act.
-
-“Business is bad, I suppose, as usual,” he remarked leadingly.
-
-“Rotten! The shark that runs the credits has cut off one or two of my
-easiest marks; but I managed to end last month with a ten-per-cent
-advance over last year’s business, and that helps some.”
-
-“You have spoken well, Amidon. I suppose you were received with joyous
-acclaim by the boss, and urged to accept a raise in wages?”
-
-“Stop kidding me! I’m sensitive about my wages. They still pretend
-they’re just trying me out--not sure I’ll make good and that sort of
-piffle!”
-
-“That sort of piffle” was a phrase he had taken over bodily from
-Eaton’s familiar discourse. So sensitive was he to Eaton’s influence
-that he imitated, with fair success, the unruffled ease that was
-second nature to the lawyer. He was also practicing Eaton’s trick of
-blinking before uttering a sentence, and then letting it slip with a
-casual, indifferent air. Eaton had used this in the cross-examination
-of witnesses to good purpose. Amidon had exercised it so constantly
-in commercial and social conversation that he had to be on guard lest
-Eaton, whose discernment seemed to him to partake of the supernatural,
-should catch him at it and detect its spuriousness.
-
-“Won a case somewhat in your line the other day; defended a trade-mark
-of the Pomona Velvet Complexion Cream, warranted to remove whole
-constellations of freckles in one night. Seductive label, showing a
-lovely maiden unfreckling herself before a mirror; bottle of Pomona in
-her hand. Basely and clumsily imitated by a concern in Kansas that’s
-been feloniously uttering a Romona Complexion Cream. The only original
-Pomona girl held the bottle in her right hand; label on Romona nostrum
-showed it clenched in her left.”
-
-“Hard luck!” said Amidon, deeply interested. “We’ve been pushing that
-Kansas beautifier--a larger discount for the jobber than the Pomona.
-Reckon we’ll have to chuck it now. I suppose the judge didn’t know
-Pomona removes the cuticle--hasn’t the real soothing effect of the
-Romona.”
-
-“I’ll mention that to the district attorney and he can pass it on to
-the government inspectors. I’m annoyed by your revelation. Shock to my
-conscience--defending a company that poisons the young and beautiful of
-the republic.”
-
-“Now that you know what a swindle you defended, I suppose you’ll turn
-back your fee--if you’ve got it?”
-
-“Retainer of a thousand dollars,” Eaton replied easily; “it would
-be immoral to return it, thus increasing the dividends of such an
-unscrupulous corporation. However, I’ll consider giving half of it to
-the Children’s Aid Society.”
-
-It was pleasant in any circumstances to sit in Eaton’s presence, to
-enjoy his confidence; and yet nothing so far disclosed justified
-Jerry’s relinquishment of the Little Ripple Club dance.
-
-“Which of our noble streams did you follow this trip--the Pan-haunted
-Wabash or the mighty Ohio, sacred to the muses nine?”
-
-Allusions of this sort, to which Eaton was prone, were Jerry’s despair.
-He felt that it would be worth subjecting one’s self to the discomforts
-of a college education to be able to talk like this, easily and
-naturally. But he was aware that Eaton was driving at something; and
-while it was the lawyer’s way to lead conversations into blind alleys,
-he always arrived somewhere and fitted a key into the lock that had
-been his aim from the start.
-
-“I shook hands with the trade along the Ohio this trip. I can tell
-you it’s lonesome at night in those river burgs; the folks just sit
-and wait for the spring flood--and even _it_ fails sometimes. They
-turn the reel once daily in the movies, and the whole town’s asleep at
-nine-thirty.”
-
-“A virtuous and home-loving people, but crime occasionally disturbs
-the peace. Murders should always occur along navigable streams, so
-the victim can be sent cruising at once toward New Orleans and the
-still-vexed Bermoothes.”
-
-Amidon thought he caught a gleam; but experience had taught him the
-unwisdom of anticipating the unfolding of Eaton’s purposes.
-
-“Oh, there’s always a lot of crooks loafing along the river; they keep
-their skins filled with whiskey and they fish and shoot muskrats and do
-a little murdering on the side.”
-
-“Interesting type,” said Eaton musingly. “If you were at Belleville
-this week, you must have heard of a murder down there--man found
-stabbed to death in a house-boat.”
-
-Jerry grinned, pleased with his own perspicacity in having surmised the
-object of the interview. Murder was not, Amidon would have said, within
-the range of Mr. John Cecil Eaton’s interests; and yet this was not the
-first time that the lawyer’s inquiries had touched affairs that seemed
-wholly foreign to his proper orbit.
-
-“I was there the day after they found the body. They had already
-arrested the wrong man and turned him loose--as usual. They always do
-that; and they’ll probably pick up some tramp who was visiting old
-college friends in New York when the murder was committed and indict
-him so the prosecuting attorney can show he’s on the job.”
-
-“You shouldn’t speak in that manner of sworn officers of the law,”
-Eaton admonished. “Better that forty innocent men should be hanged than
-that one guilty man escape.”
-
-Jerry fidgeted nervously as Eaton’s glasses were turned for a full
-minute upon the ceiling.
-
-“A Cincinnati paper printed an item yesterday about that murder case,
-mentioning the arrest of a suspect at Henderson on the Kentucky shore.”
-Eaton hesitated. “The suspect’s name was Corrigan. You have known
-Corrigans, perhaps?”
-
-There was a faint tinkle in the remote recesses of Jerry’s
-consciousness as the shot, so carelessly fired, reached the target.
-
-“The name’s common enough; I’ve known a number of Corrigans.”
-
-“But,” the lawyer continued, “there have been instances of Corrigans
-ceasing to be Corrigans and becoming something else.”
-
-“You mean,” Amidon replied, meeting Eaton’s eyes as they were bent
-suddenly upon him, “that a Corrigan might become a Farley. Am I right?”
-
-“Quite right. I was just wondering whether you had picked up anything
-about this particular case down along the river. I have no interest in
-it whatever--only the idlest curiosity. I happened to recall that Miss
-Farley had been a Corrigan; I have a note of that somewhere.”
-
-He swung his chair round and surveyed the file-cases back of him. His
-gaze fell upon a drawer marked _F_, as though he were reading the
-contents through the label--a feat which Amidon thought not beyond
-Eaton’s powers.
-
-Jerry resented the idea that Nan Farley might still be affected by
-the lawless deeds of any of her kinsfolk; he became increasingly
-uncomfortable the more he reflected that the lawyer, with all his
-indifference, would not be discussing this subject unless he had some
-reason for doing so.
-
-“It was stated that this particular Corrigan had wealthy
-connections--that always sounds well in such news items, as though
-rich relations were a mitigating circumstance likely to arouse public
-sympathy. Mere snobbishness, Amidon; and snobbishness is always
-detestable. If that particular Corrigan hopes to obtain help from a
-sister now known as Farley, it occurred to me that I ought to possess
-myself of the fact. You understand that what we’re saying to each other
-is entirely _sub rosa_. We’ve never happened to speak of Miss Farley;
-but having been connected with the Copeland-Farley Company before
-Farley retired, you probably have heard of her. A very interesting
-girl--slightly spoiled by prosperity, but really refreshingly original.
-Do you mind telling me whether you have any reason for believing that
-the particular Corrigan arrested down there as a suspect, and with
-those wealthy connections so discreetly suggested in the newspaper, is
-related in any way to Nan Farley?”
-
-“Well, there was a Corrigan boy, considerably older than I am--probably
-about thirty now, and not much to brag of. I’ve asked about him now and
-then when I dropped off at Belleville, and I never heard any good of
-him--just about the kind of scamp that would mix up in a cutting scrape
-and get pinched.”
-
-“And who, having been pinched,--what we may call a pinchee, one who
-has been pinched,--might perhaps remember that he had a prosperous
-sister somewhere and appeal to her for help? Such things have
-happened; it would be very annoying for a young woman who had
-emerged--risen--climbed away from her state of Corriganism, so to
-speak, to have her relationship with such a person printed in the
-newspapers of her own city. I merely wish to be prepared for any
-emergency that may arise. Not, of course, that this is any of my
-business; but it’s remarkable how other people’s affairs become in a
-way our own. Somebody has remarked that life is altogether a matter of
-our reciprocal obligations. There’s much truth in that, Amidon.”
-
-Jerry did not wholly grasp this, but he confirmed it with a nod. Now
-that Nan Farley had been mentioned, he hoped Eaton would drop life’s
-reciprocal obligations and talk of her; and he began describing his
-meeting with her, in such manner as to present his quondam schoolmate
-in the most favorable light.
-
-Eaton listened to this recital with as much interest as he ever
-exhibited in anything that was said to him. He smiled at the young
-fellow’s frank acknowledgment that it was in a spirit of the most
-servile imitation that he had gone forth with his fly-box. The ways in
-which Amidon aped him amused Eaton. He addressed him as “Amidon,” or as
-“my dear Amidon,” or “my dear fellow,” and talked to him exactly as he
-talked to his cronies at the University Club; for while he was looked
-upon as an aristocrat,--the last of an old family that dated back to
-the beginnings of the town,--at heart he was the soundest of democrats.
-Jerry’s meeting with Nan on the river bank seemed to him the most
-delightful of confrontations, and he sought by characteristic means to
-extract every detail of it.
-
-“Well, sir, after she had been so nice and turned to go, she swung
-round and came back--actually came back to shake hands! I call that
-pretty fine; and me just a little scrub that was only a bunch of
-freckles and as tough a little mutt as ever lived when she used to know
-me. Why, if she’d said she never heard of me, she’d have put it over
-and I couldn’t have said a word!”
-
-“She mentioned the meeting to me a little later,” observed Eaton
-carelessly.
-
-“Like thunder she did!” exploded Jerry. “So you knew all about it and
-let me go ahead just to kid me! Well, I like that!”
-
-“Merely to get as much light on the subject as possible. We stumble
-too much in darkness; the truth helps a good deal, Amidon. Miss
-Farley spoke of you in terms that would not have displeased you. I
-assure you that she had enjoyed the interview; her description of it
-was flattering to your tact, your intuitive sense of social values.
-But it was all very sketchy--you’ve filled in important omissions.
-For instance, the giving of her hand, as an afterthought, was not
-mentioned; but I visualize it perfectly from your narrative. We may
-read into that act good-fellowship, graciousness, and all that sort of
-thing. She’s a graceful person, and I can quite see her extending a
-perfectly gloved hand--”
-
-“Wrong for once; she hadn’t on any gloves! But she had a handkerchief.
-It was drying on a bush.”
-
-“Ah! That is very important. Tears, perhaps? Her presence alone on the
-shore rather calls for an explanation. If she had gone down there by
-herself to cry, it is imaginable that life hadn’t been wholly to her
-taste earlier in the afternoon.”
-
-“She didn’t look as though she had ever cried a tear in her life, and
-why should she?”
-
-“The Irish,” replied Eaton reflectively, “are a temperamental race.
-I had knowledge of her--remote but sufficient--before she sought the
-cool, umbrageous shore. Her companions were the gayest, and they
-doubtless bored her until a mood of introspection seized her--sorrow,
-regret, a resolve to do quite differently. Very likely you were a
-humble instrument of Providence to win her back to a good opinion
-of herself. So she seemed quite jolly and radiant? Conceivably your
-appearance caused her to think of her blessings--of her far flight from
-those scenes your presence summoned from the past.”
-
-“Well, she’s a fine girl all right,” Amidon commented to cover his
-embarrassment at being unable to follow Eaton in his excursion into the
-realm of psychology. “You wouldn’t have thought that girl, born in a
-shack with as good-for-nothing folks as anybody ever had, would grow
-up to be about the finest living girl! I guess you’d hunt pretty hard
-before you’d find a girl to touch her.”
-
-“I’ve thought of that myself, though not in quite your felicitous
-phrases.”
-
-“Don’t rub it in!” Amidon protested. “I guess the less I think about a
-girl like that the better for me. And I guess there’s plenty of fellows
-got their eye on her. I’ve heard some talk at the store about her and
-the boss.”
-
-“She doesn’t lack admirers, of course. When you say ‘boss,’ you refer,
-I assume, to Mr. Copeland?”
-
-Eaton looked up from the polishing of his glasses--a rite performed
-with scrupulous care. The vague stare of his near-sighted eyes,
-unprotected by his glasses, added to a disinterestedness expressed
-otherwise by his careless tone.
-
-“Well,” Amidon began, defensively, “Copeland is the boss, all
-right,--that is, when he’s on the job at all. He’s some sport, but when
-he calls me into his pen and goes over my orders, he knows whether I’m
-on the right side of the average. Only he doesn’t do that with any of
-the boys more than once in two months. He doesn’t quite get the habit;
-just seems to think of it occasionally.”
-
-“Capacity without application! Unfortunate, but not incurable. To be
-sure, an old business like Copeland-Farley is hard to kill. Billy
-Copeland’s father had the constructive genius, and Farley had the
-driving power. It’s up to Billy not to let the house die on his hands.
-Trouble is, the iron diminishes in the blood of a new generation: too
-easy a time of it, soft-handed, loss of moral force, and that sort of
-thing.”
-
-“I guess Copeland travels a pretty lively clip, all right,” ventured
-Amidon, not without a tinge of pride in his boss. “He and Kinney are
-pace-setters; they’ve got plenty of gasoline in the buggy and like to
-burn it. The boss may be a sport, but he’s a good fellow, anyhow. I
-guess if he wants to marry Miss Farley he’s got a right to.”
-
-He uttered this tamely, doubtful as to how his guide and mentor might
-receive it, but anxious to evoke an expression.
-
-“A trifle weak, but well-meaning,” remarked Eaton, as though he
-had been searching some time for a phrase that expressed his true
-appraisement of Copeland. “It’s deplorable that fellows like that--who
-really have some capacity, but who are weak-sinewed morally--can’t
-be protected from their own folly; saved, perhaps. Our religion,
-Amidon, is deficient in its practical application. A hand on your
-boss’s shoulder at the right moment, a word of friendly admonition,
-might--er--save him from a too-wasteful expenditure of gasoline. If I
-had the gift of literary expression, I should like to write a treatise
-on man’s duty to man. It’s odd, Amidon,” he went on, refilling his
-pipe, “that we must sit by--chaps like you and me--and see our brothers
-skidding into the ditch and never feel any responsibility about them.
-Doubtless you and I are known to many of our friends as weak mortals,
-in dire need of help,--or, perhaps, only a word of warning that the
-bridges are down ahead of us would suffice,--and yet how rarely do we
-feel that hand on the shoulder? We should be annoyed, displeased, hot
-clean through, if anybody--even an old and valued friend--should beg us
-to slow down. It’s queer, Amidon, how reluctant we are to extend the
-saving hand. Timidity, fear of offending and that sort of thing holds
-us back. It becomes necessary to perform our Christian duty in the
-dark, by the most indirect and hidden methods.”
-
-Amidon frowned, not sure that he understood; and he hated himself when
-he did not understand Eaton. Not to grasp his friend’s ideas convicted
-him of stupidity and ignorance. Religion in Amidon’s experience meant
-going to church and being bored. He remembered that the last time he
-had visited a church he had gone to hear a girl acquaintance sing
-a solo. She sang very badly, indeed, and he had been depressed by
-the knowledge that she was spending for music lessons wages earned
-as a clerk at the soap and perfumery counter in a department store.
-Eaton’s occasional monologues on what, for a better name, he called
-his friend’s religion, struck him as fantastic; he was never sure that
-Eaton wasn’t kidding him; and the suspicion that you are being kidded
-by a man at whose feet you sit in adoration is not agreeable. But Eaton
-had become intelligible again.
-
-“I’ve sometimes wondered whether Copeland shouldn’t be saved--a good
-subject for experiment, at least. To demonstrate that we have the
-courage of our convictions we must take a hard nut to crack. Queer
-thing, that religious effort, as we now see it, is directed solely to
-the poor and needy--the down-and-outers. Take a man of the day laborer
-type, the sort that casually beats his wife for recreation: gets clear
-down in the gutter, and the Salvation Army tackles his case--sets
-him up again; good work! Great institution--the Army. But you take
-the men who belong to clubs and eat course dinners; they don’t beat
-their wives--only say unpleasant things to them when the bills run too
-high; when such fellows get restless, absorb too much drink, neglect
-business, begin seeing their bankers in the back room--where’s your
-man, society, agency, to put the necessary hand on that particular
-shoulder? What we do, Amidon, when we see such a chap turning up Monday
-morning with a hang-over from Saturday night, is to remark, ‘Too bad
-about Tom’--or ‘Dick’ or ‘Harry’--and then go to the club and order a
-cocktail. That’s how we meet our reciprocal obligations!”
-
-There seemed nothing that Amidon could add to this; but plainly it was
-“Billy” Copeland, who was in Eaton’s mind, and no imaginary Tom, Dick,
-or Harry; so he ventured to remark:--
-
-“Well, I guess the boss hasn’t let go yet; he’ll pull up. He’s the best
-man on the street to work for--when you can feel you _are_ working for
-him.”
-
-“Pleasanter to work for a boss than the boss’s creditors, of course.
-And minor stockholders sometimes get anxious and cause trouble.”
-
-These utterances were like important memoranda jotted down on the
-margin of a page whose text is of little value in itself. Amidon stared
-blankly.
-
-“Well, I don’t know about that; I guess the house has always made
-money. We do more business than any other drug house in the State.”
-
-“An excellent business, of course. And we’d imagine that a man falling
-heir to it would take pride in holding on to it. But if he doesn’t,
-somebody else will take the job. I’ve seen the signs change on a good
-many business houses in my day. Your boss has taken several little
-flyers on the outside since his father died; he’s rather fascinated
-with the idea of being vice-president of new concerns: minor trust
-companies, doubtful manufacturing schemes, and that sort of thing.
-All this is entirely in confidence; I’m using you as an incentive to
-thought. Kindly consider that my reflections are all _inter nos_. That
-murder business got us started--but of course, it hasn’t anything to do
-with your boss. It had occurred to me, though, that both you and I may
-have certain reciprocal obligations in some of these matters we have
-touched on. One never can tell where the opportunity to serve--to lay
-that friendly hand on a particular shoulder--may present itself!”
-
-During a rather long silence Amidon pondered this, wholly mystified
-as to just what he or John Cecil Eaton had to do with the affairs
-of William B. Copeland, a gentleman whose shoulder did not, on the
-instant, seem to present itself as a likely object for the laying on of
-hands. But Eaton was saying:--
-
-“Coming to the matter of outside investments, there’s Kinney’s ivory
-cement. The Kinney Manufacturing Company’s a client of mine, and it
-wouldn’t be proper for me to express an opinion even to you, Amidon, on
-the stability of its patents.”
-
-“Well,” said Amidon, “everybody thinks Kinney’s making all the money
-there is; he’d have to, to put as much jam on his bread as he’s
-spreading. I meet his road men now and then, and they sob because
-they can’t fill orders. They’re not looking for new business; they’re
-shaking hands with the customers they’ve already got and telling ’em to
-sit at the freight house until the factory catches up with orders. And
-before he hit that cement, Kinney was bookkeeper in a brickyard!”
-
-“Have a care, Amidon! You must be careful of your facts even in social
-conversation. Mr. Kinney had a small interest in a brickyard, which
-is very different. By the way, your opportunities for cultivating Mr.
-Copeland’s acquaintance are rather restricted? Except on those rare
-occasions when he summons you to make sure your orders cover your
-expense account, you don’t see much of him?”
-
-“Oh, he used to give me a jolly occasionally before I went on the
-road--ask me why our ball team was glued to the tail of the league and
-things like that. Once he asked me to look up a good chauffeur for
-him--and I got him a chap who’d been a professional racer. I guess that
-made a hit with him.”
-
-“An assumption not wholly unwarranted. I hope he finds the chauffeur
-satisfactory?”
-
-“I guess he does; he must like him, for he bails him out about once a
-week when he gets pinched for speeding.”
-
-“Rather unfortunate that you’re not an inside man, so you could observe
-the boss more closely; not, of course, to the extent of exercising an
-espionage--but it might be possible--er--”
-
-“Well, I can have an inside job if I want it. My being on the road
-was just a try-out, and I’m not so keen about hopping ties with the
-sample-cases. If I’m going to tackle the reading you’ve laid out for
-me, I’ll have to change my job. The head stock-man’s quitting to go
-into heavy chemicals on his own hook; I guess I could get his place.”
-
-“Don’t refuse it without full consideration. My attitude toward you
-thus far has been wholly critical; I’ve refrained from compliments; but
-it would interest me to--er--see what you can do with your brains. I
-suggest that you learn everything there is about the business outside
-and in: become indispensable, be tolerant of stupidity, forbearing
-amid jealousy, and indifferent to contumely; zealous, watchful, polite,
-without, let us say, sissiness. Manners, my dear boy, are appraised far
-too low in our commercial life.”
-
-The grin occasioned by these injunctions died on Amidon’s face as he
-realized that the lawyer was in earnest; but he was very much at sea.
-Eaton was a busy man, as his generous office space and the variety of
-his paraphernalia testified; just why he had sought an interview, for
-the sole reason, apparently, of extracting a little information and
-giving a little advice, caused Amidon to wonder. He was still wondering
-when Eaton rose and glanced at the tiniest of watches, which he carried
-like a coin in his trousers pocket and always looked at as though
-surprised to find he had it.
-
-“Time for me to be off; arguing a case in Pittsburg Monday.”
-
-He opened a bag that lay beside him on the floor, pulled a packet from
-a drawer and dropped it in, and told Jerry he might, if he had nothing
-better to do, accompany him to the station.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-AN ERROR OF JUDGMENT
-
-
-Nan stood at her window watching a man turn out of the walk that led
-from the front door to the street. Her eyes followed him until the
-hedge hid him from sight, and then she sat huddled in the window-seat,
-breathing hard from her run upstairs. She went to her desk and
-glanced at a page of the pass-book of a trust company that showed the
-withdrawal on June 29 of one thousand dollars from her savings account.
-There remained a balance of sixteen hundred, and she verified the
-subtraction before thrusting the book into the bottom of a drawer under
-a mass of invitations she meant at some time to file in a book she kept
-as a record of her social activities.
-
-She knew that she had made a mistake, and she was considering the
-chances of discovery with a wildly beating heart. The man she had just
-closed the door upon had paid two calls on successive days. He had
-represented himself as the attorney for her brother, held on a charge
-of murder at Belleville. He had plausibly persuaded her that it was
-only fair for her to help her brother in his distress; that he was the
-victim of unfortunate circumstances, but that an investment of one
-thousand dollars for his defense would save her the humiliation of
-having one of her own flesh and blood convicted of a murder for which
-he was in no wise responsible. It had been intimated in discreet terms
-that her relationship to the prisoner could be hidden; it would even be
-denied if necessary.
-
-She knew now that she should not have yielded; that in all fairness
-to her foster-father she should have reported this demand to him. In
-secretly giving money that represented Christmas and birthday gifts
-through half a dozen years, for the defense of a man she had not heard
-of since the beginning of her life with the Farleys, she justified
-herself with the thought that it was kinder to her foster-father, in
-his invalid condition, to keep the matter from him. She experienced a
-sudden revulsion of feeling the moment the money passed from her hands
-in the ten one-hundred-dollar bills the man had specified.
-
-Farley had been seeing much of his lawyer since the row over the Kinney
-luncheon. While his wrath at her duplicity seemed to pass, she assumed
-that he had not forgotten his threat to disinherit her if she married
-Copeland.
-
-She was unwontedly attentive, spending much time reading to him or
-playing cards. She knew that he liked having young people about, and
-she asked to his room some of the girls and young men who called on
-her. She exercised all her arts, which were many, to keep him cheerful,
-and if he realized that the change had been abrupt, and that it dated
-from his outburst against Copeland, he made no sign. She mustn’t stay
-in too much, he said; he didn’t want to be a burden to her.
-
-Eaton had called shortly after his talk with her on the golf links, but
-on a night when Farley was receiving the attentions of his masseur. He
-had spent the evening and had been at pains to make himself agreeable.
-Now that Copeland had been thrust into the background, it occurred to
-her that Eaton was worth cultivating. We all maintain more or less
-consciously a mental list of people on whom we feel that we may rely in
-difficulties; it had occurred to Nan that in a pinch Eaton would be a
-friend worth having.
-
-While it was wholly unlikely that Farley would ever learn of her
-transaction with the stranger, it was nevertheless a possibility that
-would hang over her as long as he lived. She sought comfort in the
-reflection that the amount was small, and that Farley had never stinted
-her; moreover, that it was her own money, subject to her personal
-check; but there was little consolation to be had from such reasoning.
-She must talk to some one, and before dinner she telephoned Eaton and
-asked him to come up.
-
-Farley had spent two hours with his lawyer that day, and from the
-fact that two of his old friends had arrived hurriedly in answer to
-telephonic summons, she judged that he had been making a new will and
-that these men had been called to witness it.
-
-He ate his prescribed supper, grumbling at its slightness, and watched
-her consume her ampler meal with his usual expressions of envy at her
-appetite.
-
-“If I could eat like that, I’d be well in a week; it’s all rubbish,
-this infernal diet!”
-
-“But we tried disobeying the doctor the other night when the nurse was
-out, and you didn’t sleep a wink. You’ll have to be good until the
-doctor discharges you!”
-
-“Don’t be silly!” he snapped. “They know mighty well they can’t cure
-me; they’re just hangin’ on to me as long as they can for what they get
-out of it. But I may fool ’em yet! My grandfather lived to be ninety
-and died then from bein’ kicked by a horse; and my own father got up to
-seventy-eight, and that gives me eight years more,” he ended defiantly.
-
-“But you worked harder than they did, papa; you never used to come home
-to dinner until seven.”
-
-“Of course I didn’t!” he flared. “These young fellows that think four
-hours make a day’s work are fools; you won’t see them gettin’ very far
-in the world, spendin’ their time flyin’ around in automobiles and
-playin’ golf all day!”
-
-“Well, of course, some of the young men don’t amount to much,” she
-admitted conciliatingly; “but there are others who work like nailers.
-I suppose Mr. Eaton works as hard as any man in town; and he doesn’t
-need to.”
-
-“Doesn’t need to?” Farley caught her up. “Every honest man works; a
-man who doesn’t work’s a loafer and very likely a blackguard. John
-Eaton works because he has the brains to work with! He’s a rare man,
-John Eaton. There ain’t many men like John, brought up as he was, with
-everything easy; but he’s bucklin’ down to hard work just the same,
-like the man he is. You say he’s comin’ up? Well, we’ll let him do the
-talkin’. Maybe he can get a laugh out o’ me; he says some mighty funny
-things--and they’re mostly true.”
-
-He began feeling about for the evening paper that he had dropped at his
-side when his tray was brought in.
-
-“Just find the market page and read through the local stock-list. I
-noticed they’ve put a new figure on White River Trust; I used to be a
-director in that company. What’s that? Two hundred eighty-five? Let me
-see, that’s fifteen dollars more than it was last January when I bought
-fifty shares at two-seventy. She’ll go three hundred in five years.
-It’s the safest buy in town.”
-
-His long conference with his lawyer had left him tired and irritable.
-His doctor had repeatedly counseled Nan and the nurse to keep him
-quiet. As they seemed to be on perfectly safe ground, she began reading
-the financial comment preceding the general stock and bond list, and
-finding that he was interested, she followed it with the letter of a
-firm of brokers that buoyantly prophesied a strong upward movement in
-the immediate future. She thought he was listening attentively when he
-began murmuring half to himself:--
-
-“Two-eighty-five; she’s bound to go to three hundred. Hey? What’s that
-rubbish you’re readin’? Wall Street letter? What do I care what a lot
-of infernal gamblers say about a better tone in the market! Those
-fellows down there don’t produce anything; it’s the boys out here that
-grow the corn and feed the pigs that put value in the paper those
-fellows down there gamble in! Put that paper down; I want to talk a
-little business. How much money you got?”
-
-The question was like a blow in the face. Her wits danced nimbly in her
-effort to find an answer, to decide just how to meet the issue.
-
-“Do you mean the housekeeping money?” she asked faintly.
-
-Since Mrs. Farley’s death she had paid the household bills from a
-sum deposited to her credit the first of every month. Beyond asking
-occasionally how the bills were running, Farley had never questioned
-her as to her expenditures. There was a special allowance and a
-generous one for her clothing, and when she asked for additions to
-the household money to renew linen or pay for repairs, it was always
-readily forthcoming.
-
-“No, no!” he ejaculated impatiently. “I don’t mean the house money.
-How much you got in the trust company--the savings you’ve been gettin’
-three per cent on? You must have over two thousand dollars there. I
-been meanin’ to ask you about that; you’ve got too much to keep at
-three per cent, and we ought to put it into securities of some kind.
-Run along and get your pass-book. If you haven’t got enough to buy ten
-shares of White River Trust stock, I’ll bring it up a little so you can
-have an even number.”
-
-He was absorbed in mental calculations and did not notice the
-reluctance with which she rose and walked toward her room. The trust
-company required that books be presented when withdrawals were made,
-and she remembered the appearance of the teller’s notation. Farley
-had never looked at her pass-book since the day she brought it home
-and proudly displayed it. It was the unkindest fate that had turned
-his mind upon it at this juncture, and she canvassed all possible
-explanations: necessary expenditures in excess of her household and
-personal accounts; unusual repairs which she might pretend she had not
-wanted to trouble him with in his illness; or benevolences--the latter,
-she fancied, more likely to appease than the others in view of his own
-generosity to causes that appealed to him. She decided that a frank
-confession followed by an appeal to sentiment was the likeliest means
-of staying his anger.
-
-She waited twisting her hands nervously, while he examined the book.
-
-“What’s this? What’s this mean, Nan? You took out a thousand dollars in
-one lump--to-day! My God, what does this mean? What kind of investments
-you makin’, Nan? Yesterday you had with interest--lemme see--twenty-six
-hundred dollars, and now you’ve cut it down to sixteen hundred! What
-you spendin’ that money for, girl?”
-
-“Well, papa,” she began with the best air of frankness she could
-summon, “something very strange and sad has happened. I meant to tell
-you all about it just as soon as you were stronger, but I’m glad to
-tell you now, for I know you will understand and sympathize--as you’ve
-always done whenever I’ve had my little troubles--”
-
-He seemed to be taking this in good part until “troubles” caused him to
-sniff.
-
-“Troubles! What troubles you ever had? I guess there ain’t a girl in
-town that’s had less trouble than you have!”
-
-“Of course, I didn’t mean it that way, papa; I mean only the little
-things, little mistakes and slips I’ve made that you and mamma have
-always been kind about. No girl was ever treated as kindly as you have
-treated me. And I mean always to be perfectly frank with you; and I’m
-going to be now.”
-
-“Well,” he said impatiently.
-
-She felt that her contemplated explanation had been well chosen, but
-she must be adroit, risking no word that might spoil the effect of her
-disclosure.
-
-She knelt beside him and began in a tone that was eloquent of humility,
-yet with a confidence that she hoped would not be lost upon him.
-
-“You see, papa, when you brought me home with you, and you and mamma
-began caring for me, I was just a poor little waif, ready for an orphan
-asylum. My father and mother would never have been able to do anything
-for me if they had lived; and if it hadn’t been for you and mamma, I’d
-never have known any of the things I’ve learned through you. I might
-have been a dining-room girl right now in some cheap hotel if you
-hadn’t opened your doors and your hearts to me. And that has made me
-appreciate my blessings--all the comforts and luxuries you have given
-me. And it has made me feel, more than you may imagine, for people not
-so lucky as I am--the under dog that gets kicked by everybody. And even
-when people are wicked and do evil things, I think we ought to think
-kindly of them and help them when we can. I know you and mamma always
-practiced that. And I’ve tried to; I really have!”
-
-She lifted her eyes and there were tears in them, that seemed to be
-born of a deep compassion, a yearning toward all the poor and erring
-among mankind. Farley was not unmoved by this demonstration; he shifted
-his legs uneasily under the light pressure of her arms. Her spell upon
-him had never been more complete; she felt that she might risk much in
-the mood to which she had brought him.
-
-“And you know, papa, I have thought a great deal about my brother--who
-drifted away with the flood. I haven’t seen him since father and mother
-died. Tom is much older than I am, and the poor boy never had any
-chance. I hadn’t even heard of him since you brought me away until the
-other day. And he’s in trouble, very deep, serious trouble, papa; he’s
-been arrested--I’m sure not for anything he really did; but being poor
-and without friends it was perfectly natural for him to ask me to help
-him. I think you will agree to that. And he sent his lawyer to ask me
-for money to use in defending him. I meant to tell you all about it
-when you were well; I felt sure I was doing right and that you’d be
-glad to have me help him; and it’s all so horrible--”
-
-She felt his form grow rigid, felt his hands roughly push her away, as
-he blurted hoarsely:--
-
-“Blackmail! My God, it’s blackmail--or else you’re lyin’ to me!”
-
-She rose and faced him tearfully.
-
-“It’s the truth!” she declared. “He’s my brother--the only one of my
-family that’s left. You wouldn’t have me refuse to help--”
-
-“Help him! Turn a thousand dollars of your savings over to a worthless
-whelp that’s got into jail! How do you know he’s your brother?--a man
-that waits all these years before he shows himself and then plumps down
-on you for a thousand dollars! I tell you it’s blackmail, blackmail!
-And you hide all this from me just as though I hadn’t any right to know
-what kind o’ trouble you get mixed up in! Ain’t you got sense enough
-to know you’re touchin’ bottom when you give up money that way? What’s
-he threatened you with? You tell me everything there is to know about
-this, and I’ll find out mighty quick whether a contemptible scoundrel
-can come to my house and carry away a thousand dollars!”
-
-Farley glared at her unpityingly while she told her story, which seemed
-preposterously weak when reduced to plain terms. She sobbingly admitted
-her fear of newspaper notoriety, her wish to shield him from the shame
-of her connection with a man awaiting trial for murder. There was no
-mercy in his eyes; he was outraged that she had again deceived him.
-
-“Afraid o’ havin’ your name in the papers, were you? Just as though
-blackmailers didn’t always use that club on the fools they rob! And how
-many times do you think a man like that will come back, now he knows
-you’re easy--now you’ve gone into business with him?”
-
-The maid knocked at the door and announced Eaton, but Farley gave no
-heed.
-
-“Payin’ blackmail! You’ve got yourself into a nice mess! And after all
-I’ve done to protect you and make a decent woman of you, you’re scared
-to death of havin’ some of your relations go to jail--just as though
-you hadn’t turned your back on the whole set when we brought you here
-and gave you our name. That _ought_ to have made you respectable, if
-it didn’t! Afraid of newspapers, afraid of jackleg lawyers! It’s the
-rottenest case of blackmail I ever heard! And here I’ve been proud to
-think that we’d pulled you out of the river mud and made a high-minded
-woman of you, that could stand up with any girl anywhere!”
-
-She waited listening to his deep breaths, watching his tremulous hands;
-and then without attempting to answer his indictment, she said meekly:--
-
-“Of course, it was a mistake, papa. I ought to have told you about it;
-but it’s my trouble--you must remember that! The shame of the exposure
-would be something I’d have to bear alone; that was the way I looked at
-it; and I didn’t want you to have the worry of it when you were just
-beginning to get well.”
-
-His thoughts had wandered away from her, playing about her offense in
-its practical and legal aspects. When she ventured to remind him of
-Eaton’s presence in the house, he made no reply. The silence became
-intolerable and she stole from the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-WELCOME CALLERS
-
-
-Nan decided to explain to Eaton that Farley’s illness had taken a turn
-for the worse and that he had been abusing her as a relief from his
-suffering. She was surprised to find two men in the parlor, the second
-of whom she did not at once recognize as Jerry.
-
-“I’ve taken the liberty,” Eaton began, “of bringing Mr. Amidon along.
-Thought you wouldn’t mind, particularly as I couldn’t have come myself
-without him. He dropped in just as I was leaving and seemed greatly
-depressed; I hadn’t the heart to leave him. Depression is his normal
-state--no serenity, no hope, no vision!”
-
-Amidon grinned during this explanation, realizing that its lack
-of veracity was, in the circumstances, peculiarly Eatonesque and
-attributable to his friend’s wish to relieve Nan of embarrassment. They
-had been uncomfortable from the moment the maid admitted them and they
-became conscious of the discord above. Words and phrases of Farley’s
-furious arraignment had reached them and there was no escaping the
-conclusion that she had been the object of the castigation. Jerry,
-acting on his own impulses, would have grabbed his hat and bolted. It
-was only the demeanor of his idol, placidly staring at the wall, that
-held him back. The call had been suggested by Eaton as a gay social
-adventure, but it was disconcerting to find a girl whose good fortune
-had seemed so enviable with tears in her eyes, nervously fingering
-a moist handkerchief, and Jerry’s wits were severely taxed by his
-efforts to meet a situation without precedent in his experience. Once
-he had called on a girl whose father came home drunk and manifested
-an ambition to destroy the furniture and use the pieces in the
-chastisement of his daughter, and Amidon had enjoyed a brief, decisive
-engagement with the inebriated parent and had then put him to bed. But
-there was nothing in that incident that bore in the slightest degree
-upon the difficulties of people who lived in the best street in town,
-where, he had always assumed, the prosperous householders dwelt in
-peace and harmony with their fortunate families.
-
-“I’m glad to see you, both of you,” she said, with all the assurance
-she could muster. “Papa’s been having a bad time; you must have heard
-him talking. He’s very angry. I wish you’d go up, Mr. Eaton, and see if
-you can’t talk him into a better humor.”
-
-“If you think it’s all right--” Eaton began dubiously; but he was
-amused at Nan’s cheerful willingness to turn her angry foster-parent
-over to him for pacification. It was like Nan!
-
-“Oh, he’d been looking forward to seeing you,” she answered quite
-honestly. “These spells don’t last long; the very sight of you will
-cheer him.”
-
-She did not, however, offer to accompany him to Farley’s room, but
-discreetly left him to test the atmosphere for himself.
-
-“Well,” Jerry remarked, when he was alone with Nan, “Pittsburg put it
-over on New York to-day. Three to nothing!”
-
-He gave the score with a jubilant turn to the “nothing,” as though
-Pittsburg’s success called for universal rejoicing.
-
-Nan, intent upon catching some hint of the nature of Eaton’s reception,
-merely murmured her mild pleasure in this news. She was satisfied, from
-the calm that reigned above, that Eaton had begun well, and that under
-the spell of his presence Farley would soon be restored to tranquillity.
-
-“Sorry Mr. Farley is having a bad time,” Jerry went on, thinking the
-invalid’s outbreak required at least a passing reference. “You know
-down at the store the boys still talk about him. Somebody’s always
-telling how he used to do things, and the funny things he used to say.
-When I first struck the plant, he used to scare me to death, sticking
-his nose in the shipping-room without notice and catching the boys
-larking. Once I had gone to the mat with a plumber that was looking
-for a gas-leak, and the boss came in and got us both by the collar
-and threw us down the stairs like a pair of old shoes. I thought I
-was a goner for sure when he sent for me to come to the office that
-night and asked me who started the trouble. I told him the plumber
-said whenever he found gas-leaks in jobbing houses he always reckoned
-somebody was getting ready to collect the insurance. Uncle Tim--that’s
-what the boys call him--asked me if I’d hit him hard, and I told him I
-guess he’d have considerable business with the dentist, all right. Just
-for that he raised my wages a dollar a week! Say, can you beat it!”
-
-He snapped his fingers and shook his head impatiently.
-
-“Isn’t that rank--just after Cecil lectured me all the way up here
-about cutting out slang! I promised him solemnly before we started that
-I wouldn’t say _say_; and here I’ve already done it! How do you learn
-to talk like white folks, anyhow? I suppose you got to be born to it;
-it must be like swimming or rowing a boat, that you learn once and
-always catch the stroke right.”
-
-“Oh, I shouldn’t worry about that,” replied Nan consolingly. “I use a
-good deal of slang myself; and at school my English teacher said it
-wasn’t such a sin if we used it as though we were quoting--we girls
-held up two fingers--so!”
-
-“That sounds reasonable, all right; I must tell my noble knight about
-that. It seems sometimes as though I just couldn’t get a ball over the
-plate--there I go again! And Cecil warned me specially against talking
-like a bleacher hoodlum when we got here.”
-
-“Oh, that’s not worth bothering about. I’m so glad to see you that I
-could cry for joy. If you hadn’t come when you did, I don’t know what
-might have happened.”
-
-He had been trying to direct the talk into other channels, and her
-remark puzzled him. That this wholly charming, delightful Nan could
-have given her benefactor cause for the objurgations he had heard
-poured out upon her was unbelievable. Still, it was rather pleasant
-than otherwise to find that she was human, capable of tears, and it was
-not less than flattering that she should invite his sympathy.
-
-“Well,” he began cautiously, “I guess we all have our troubles. Life
-ain’t such an easy game. You think you’re sailing along all right,
-and suddenly something goes wrong and you’ve got to climb out and
-study astronomy through the bottom of the machine. Why,” he continued
-expansively, finding that he had her attention, “when I first went on
-the road I used to get hot when I struck some mutt who pulled lower
-prices on me or said he was over-stocked. But you don’t sell any
-goods by getting mad. I picked up one of these ‘Keep Smiling’ cards
-somewhere, and when I got blue I used to take a sneaking look at it and
-put on a grin and tell the stony-hearted merchant the funniest story
-I could think of and prove that our figures f.o.b. Peanutville were
-cheaper, when you figured in the freight, than Chicago or Cincinnati
-prices. I’ve made a study of freight tariffs; I can tell you the
-freight on white elephants all the way from Siam to Keokuk and back to
-Bangkok. I’ve heard the old boys down at the store talk about Farley
-till I know all his curves. Farley’s all right; there’s nothing the
-matter with Uncle Tim; only--you don’t want to shift gears on him too
-quick. You’ve got to do it gentle-like.”
-
-Nan smiled forlornly, but Amidon was glad that he could evoke any sort
-of smile from her.
-
-“It was all my fault,” she said. And then with a frankness that
-surprised her she added: “I had deceived him about something and he
-caught me at it. He gave me a big blowing-up, and I deserved it.”
-
-“Well, I wouldn’t say _that_; but, of course, playing the game straight
-was always a big card with him. I guess Cecil will smooth him down.”
-
-She was surprised to find herself talking to him so freely; his
-eagerness to take her mind away from the unpleasant episode with
-Farley gave her a comforting sense of his native kindliness. Her heart
-warmed with liking for him as she reappraised his good looks, his
-well-scrubbed appearance of a boy turned out for his first party by
-a doting mother; his general air of wholesomeness and good humor. He
-had known hard knocks, she did not question, but the bruises were well
-hidden. With all his slanginess and volubility there was a certain
-high-mindedness about him to which, in her hunger for sympathy, she
-gave fullest value.
-
-He was afraid of her further confidences; afraid that she would
-disclose something she would regret later, and this he foresaw might
-embarrass their subsequent relations. She had been humiliated by
-Farley’s abuse, and it was not fair, he argued, to take advantage of
-her present state of mind by allowing her to tell more of the trouble.
-But he was not able at once to change the current of her thoughts.
-
-“You know,” she said, sitting up straight and folding her hands on her
-knees, “I’ve been thinking a lot of things since I saw you out there
-by the river--about old times, and wondering whether it was good or
-bad luck that took me away from Belleville and brought me up here.
-I’d have been better off if I’d stayed there. I’d probably have been
-washing dishes in the Belleville hotel if the Farleys hadn’t picked me
-up, a dirty little beggar, and tried to make something decent out of
-me! I’m saying that to you because you know all about me. You’ve made
-your own way, and you’re a lot happier than I am, and you’re not under
-obligations to anybody; and here I am trying to climb a ladder my feet
-weren’t made for!”
-
-“Cut all that out!” he expostulated. “Just because Uncle Tim’s been a
-little fretful, you needn’t think everything’s gone to the bow-wows.
-And as for staying in Belleville, why, the thought of it gives me
-shivers! There ain’t any use talking about that.”
-
-Her face expressed relief at the vigor with which he sprang to her
-defense, and he plunged ahead.
-
-“Say, speaking of dining-room girls, there was a girl at that
-Belleville hotel that was some girl for sure. She was fruit to the
-passing eye, and a mutt carrying samples for a confectionery house
-called her Gladys one day, her real name being Sarah, and asked her
-how she’d like going to the movies with him after she got the dishes
-washed; and she landed one order of poached cold-storage eggs on his
-bosom the neatest you ever saw. Some men never learn how to size up
-character, and any fool could ’a’ told that that girl wasn’t open to a
-jolly from a sweet-goods peddler who’d never passed that way before.
-Sarah’s mother owns the hotel, and Sarah only helps in the dining-room
-Saturday nights to let the regular crockery-smasher off to punch the
-ivories for the Methodist choir practice. I was sitting next that chap
-and he thought he’d show me what a winner he was. I’m not justifying
-Sarah’s conduct, and about a half-portion of the golden side of that
-order caught me on the ear. I merely mention it to show you that you
-had better not think much of the life of the dining-room girl, which
-ain’t all the handbills make out.”
-
-“I hope,” remarked Nan, “that she didn’t break the plate!”
-
-“No more,” he came back promptly, “than you could break a ten-dollar
-bill at a charity fair. That’s another thing I learned from Cecil.
-He got me to take a stroll with him through a charity bazaar last
-winter--just to protect him from the snares of the huntress, he said.
-He started in with ten tens and had to borrow five I was hiding from
-my creditors before we got back to the door. And all we carried out of
-the place was a pink party-bag Cecil handed a tramp we found freezing
-to death outside and hoping a little charity would ooze through the
-windows.”
-
-“I was at the fancy-work counter at the fair,” said Nan, “and I
-remember that Mr. Eaton bought something. I didn’t see you, though.”
-
-“I noticed that you didn’t; I was plumb scared you might! There I go
-again! _Plumb scared!_ Oh, Cecil, if you had heard me then!”
-
-He was wondering just how he happened to be sitting in a parlor on a
-fashionable street, talking to the only girl he had ever known whose
-name figured in the society columns, quite as jauntily as he talked
-with any of the stenographers or salesgirls he knew. He was confident
-that parlor conversation among the favored of heaven was not of the
-sort he had, in his own phrase, been “handing out.” This thought gave
-him pause. He shook his cuffs from under the sleeves of his blue serge
-coat with a gesture he had caught from Eaton, and felt nervously of the
-knot of his four-in-hand.
-
-Nan was asking herself whether the fact that a young fellow of Amidon’s
-deficiencies could interest and amuse her wasn’t pretty substantial
-proof that he was the kind of young man the gods had designed for her
-companions. A year ago she would have resented his appearance in the
-house; to-night she had a feeling that his right to be there was as
-sound as her own. A different fling of the dice, and it might have been
-he whom the Farleys rescued from poverty and obscurity.
-
-In spite of his absurdities, she was conscious of definite manly
-qualities in him. Several times she caught him scrutinizing her
-sharply, as though something about her puzzled him and gave him
-concern. His manners were very good--thanks, perhaps, to his adored
-Eaton; and she liked his clean, fresh look and good humor. After her
-talk with Eaton on the golf links, she had wondered whether the lawyer
-wasn’t making a butt of him; but she dismissed this now as unjust to
-Eaton, and as appraising Amidon’s intelligence at too low a figure.
-During this reverie he waited patiently for her to speak, imagining
-that her mind was still upon her troubles, and when the silence became
-prolonged he rallied for a fresh attack.
-
-“If you’d rather read,” he remarked, “we’ll hang up the silence sign
-the way they have it in the library reading-room and I’ll say prayers
-till Cecil comes down.”
-
-“Oh, pardon me!” she laughed contritely. “You see I am treating you as
-an old friend. Why don’t you go on and talk. You’ve had ever so many
-interesting adventures, and I need to be amused. Please don’t think I’m
-always like this; I hope you’ll see me some time when I’m not in the
-dumps.”
-
-“I should be afraid to,” he retorted boldly; and then feeling that
-Eaton would have spurned such banality, ejaculated: “Oh, rot! Let me
-scratch that out and say something decent. Just for instance,”--and his
-face sobered,--“I think you’re nice! You were perfectly grand to me
-that day down on the river. I told Cecil about that, and I could see it
-made a hit with him; it set me up with him--that a girl like you would
-be polite to a scrub like me.”
-
-“Don’t be foolish,” she said. “I’m not proud of myself: I’m a failure,
-a pretty sad fizzle, at that.”
-
-She ignored his rapid phrases of protest and asked him how much time he
-spent in town.
-
-“Well, I’m likely to spend a good deal, from now on. The boss has been
-shaking things up again, and he called me in by telephone yesterday and
-changed my job. That’s the way with him; he won’t show up sometimes
-for six weeks, and then he gets down early some morning and scares
-everybody to death.
-
-“I thought I was settled on the road for the rest of my life, and
-now he’s made a job for me to help the credit man--who doesn’t want
-me--and take country customers out to lunch. A new job made just for
-my benefit. And all because of a necktie Cecil gave me. The boss saw
-me sporting it one day and asked me where I got it. I had to make a
-show-down, and he thought I was kidding him. You see Cecil’s about
-the last man he’d ever think of giving me presents. If I’d laid that
-necktie on any other living human being, it wouldn’t have cut a bit of
-ice; but when I said, as fresh as paint, ‘John Cecil Eaton picked that
-up in New York for me,’ he laughed right out loud. ‘What’s the joke?’
-I asked him; and he says, ‘Oh, Eaton never gave me any haberdashery,
-and I’ve known him all my life.’ And like the silly young zebra I
-am, I came back with, ‘Well, maybe that’s the reason!’ You’d have
-thought he’d fire me for that; but it seemed to sort o’ make us better
-acquainted. He’s the prince, all right!”
-
-She had been trying, more or less honestly, to put Copeland out of her
-mind. Her knowledge of him as a business man had been the haziest; one
-never thought of Billy Copeland as a person preoccupied with business.
-She was startled when Amidon asked abruptly:--
-
-“Of course, you know the boss?”
-
-It was possible that Amidon had heard the gossip that connected her
-name with his employer’s, and she answered carelessly:--
-
-“Oh, yes; I know Mr. Copeland.”
-
-“I guess everybody knows William B.,” said Amidon. “He’s got the
-pep--unadulterated cayenne; he isn’t one of these corpses that are
-holding the town back. He’s a live wire, all right.”
-
-Then, realizing that he had ventured upon thin ice in mentioning
-Copeland, he came back to shore at once.
-
-“Cecil said that this being my first call, about thirty minutes would
-do for me, so I guess it’s time for me to skid. He must be handing out
-a pretty good line of talk on the upper deck.”
-
-She begged him not to leave her alone, saying that Farley lived by
-rules fixed by his doctor and that the nurse was likely to interrupt
-the call at any minute. As he stood uncertain whether to go or wait for
-Eaton, they heard the lawyer saying good-bye, and in a moment he came
-down.
-
-Nan looked at him quickly, but was able to read nothing in his
-impassive face.
-
-“I hope you two have been getting better acquainted,” Eaton remarked.
-“Mr. Farley and I have had a splendid talk; I never found him more
-amusing. One of the most interesting men I ever knew! What have you
-been talking about? The silence down here has been ominously painful!”
-
-“Mr. Amidon has been telling me of the egg-throwing habits of the
-waitresses in my native town. Life here in the city is nothing to what
-it is down on the river. He’s almost made me homesick!”
-
-“My dear Amidon,” said Eaton severely, “have you been telling that
-story--in a private house? I thought when I brought you here you’d be
-on your good behavior. I’m sorry, Nan; I apologize for him. Of course,
-he mustn’t come back; I’ll see to it that he doesn’t.”
-
-“Don’t be cruel!” laughed Nan. “We got on beautifully!”
-
-They heard Farley’s groans and mutterings as the nurse put him to bed,
-and it seemed necessary to refer to him again before the men left.
-
-“You won’t mind, Nan,” said Eaton, “if I say that Mr. Farley told me
-the cause of your little difficulty; I know the whole story. I think he
-probably won’t mention it to you again. I asked him not to. Just go on
-as though nothing had happened. It was unfortunate, of course; but I’ve
-persuaded him that your conduct is pardonable--really quite admirable
-from your standpoint. If anything further arises in regard to it, I
-wish you’d communicate with me, immediately.”
-
-Ignoring her murmurs of gratitude, he turned to Jerry.
-
-“Amidon, at this point we shake hands and move rapidly up the
-street. And, Nan, you needn’t be troubled because Mr. Amidon heard
-the last echoes of your difficulty. He’s perfectly safe,--discreet,
-wise,--though you’d never guess it. You may safely assume that he heard
-nothing. We must have some golf, you and I. My game’s coming up!”
-
-She went with them to the street door, where Amidon, in executing a
-final bow, nearly fell backward down the steps.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-MRS. COPELAND’S GOOD FORTUNE
-
-
-Now that they had the car, Farley insisted that Nan should go to
-market. His wife, like all the thrifty housewives of the capital, had
-always gone to market, and he thought the discipline would be good for
-Nan. He liked to accompany her and watch the crowd while she was doing
-her errands.
-
-One Saturday, as Nan returned to the machine, with the chauffeur
-following with the basket, she found Fanny Copeland seated in the car
-beside Farley.
-
-“Look here, Nan; I’ve picked up a surprise for you! We’re goin’ to take
-Mrs. Copeland home to lunch.”
-
-“I don’t know whether you are or not,” said Mrs. Copeland. “This is my
-busiest day and I’ve got to catch the twelve-o’clock interurban for the
-farm.”
-
-“Don’t worry about that; we’ll send you home all right,” said Farley.
-
-“Then I’m not going to have anything to say about it at all!” laughed
-Mrs. Copeland. “All right; if my cows die of thirst, I’ll send you the
-bill.”
-
-“You do that, and it will be paid,” Farley assented cheerfully.
-
-“But I’ve got to stop at the bank a moment--”
-
-“I suppose,” said Nan, “you want to get rid of the money I just paid
-at your stand for two yellow-legged chickens--you can see the legs
-sticking out of the basket.”
-
-Mrs. Copeland had failed to act upon Nan’s invitation to call upon
-her--a delinquency to which she referred now.
-
-“I really meant to come, but I’ve been unusually busy. I carry on just
-enough general farming to be a nuisance; and dairying requires eternal
-vigilance.”
-
-“That’s because you’ve got a standard,” said Farley, with his blunt
-praise. “You’ve got the best dairy in Indiana. The state inspectors
-have put it strong.”
-
-“Oh,” said Mrs. Copeland lightly, “they gave me a better report than I
-deserve just for being a poor, lone woman!”
-
-Farley’s admiration for Mrs. Copeland was perfectly transparent.
-It was Fanny’s efficiency, her general competence, Nan reflected,
-quite as much as her good looks and cheerfulness, that attracted her
-foster-father. Several times lately he had quoted what Bill Harrington,
-the banker, had said of her--that she was the best business man in
-town. And there was also Farley’s contempt for Copeland, which clearly
-accentuated his liking for Billy’s former wife.
-
-At the bank door Farley remembered that he had a check to cash and
-asked Nan to attend to it for him. As Mrs. Copeland and Nan mounted
-the bank steps together, they ran into Billy Copeland emerging in deep
-preoccupation. The juxtaposition of the two women plainly startled him.
-He took off his hat, mumbled something, and stood staring after them.
-Then his gaze fell upon Farley, bending forward in the touring-car and
-watching him with his small, sharp eyes. He instantly put on his hat
-and crossed the walk.
-
-“Good-morning, Mr. Farley,” he said cordially, offering his hand. “I’m
-glad to see you out again.”
-
-“Oh, I’m not dead yet,” growled Farley. “I’ve decided to hang on till
-spring anyhow.”
-
-His tone did not encourage conversation. His face was twisted into a
-disagreeable smile that Copeland remembered of old, and there was a
-hard, ironic glitter in the gray eyes. Farley had witnessed the meeting
-on the bank steps with relish, and was glad of this opportunity to
-prolong his enjoyment of his former associate’s discomfiture.
-
-“I’m sure you’ll see many more springs, Mr. Farley. That’s a good
-machine you’ve got there. The fact that you’ve taken up motoring has
-given a real boost to the auto business. The agents are saying that if
-you’ve got in line there’s no reason for anybody to hold back.”
-
-The old man grunted.
-
-“I had to have air; I knew all the time that was what I needed; these
-damned doctors only keep people in bed so they can bulldoze ’em
-easier.”
-
-Copeland was attempting to be friendly, but Farley was in no humor to
-meet his advances.
-
-“That last payment on the sale of my stock is due September first. I
-won’t renew it,” he said sharply.
-
-“I hadn’t asked for an extension,” Copeland replied coldly.
-
-“All right, then; that will be the end of _that_.”
-
-Farley’s tone implied that there might be other matters between them
-that this final payment would still leave open.
-
-Copeland’s ready promise that the twenty-five thousand would be paid
-irritated Farley, who saw one excuse for his animosity vanishing. He
-leaned forward and pointed his finger at Copeland, who was backing
-away, anxious to be gone before his former wife reappeared.
-
-“You’re ruinin’ the house! You’re lettin’ it go to hell--the business
-your father and I made the best jobbin’ house in this State! You’re a
-drunkard and a gambler, but, damn your fool soul, there’s one thing
-you can’t do--you can’t marry that little girl o’ mine! If you’ve got
-that up your sleeve, be sure there’s no money goes with her for you to
-squander! Remember that!”
-
-It was the busiest hour of the day and the street was thronged.
-Pedestrians turned and stared curiously. Copeland raged inwardly at his
-stupidity in giving Farley a chance to abuse him publicly.
-
-“You’re very unjust to me,” he said hotly. “I’ve known Nan ever since
-she was a child and never had any but a friendly feeling for her. I
-haven’t seen her for weeks. Now that I know how you feel toward me, I
-have no intention of seeing her.”
-
-“I guess you won’t see her!” Farley snorted. “Not unless you mean to
-make her pay for it!”
-
-Mrs. Copeland and Nan appeared at the bank entrance at this moment and
-witnessed the end of the colloquy. Copeland lifted his hat to Farley
-and walked rapidly away without glancing at them.
-
-Farley became cheerful immediately, as he usually did after an
-explosion. This opportunity for laying the lash across Billy Copeland’s
-shoulders had afforded him a welcome diversion; and the fact that
-Copeland had seen his former wife in Nan’s company tickled his sardonic
-humor. He made no reference to Copeland, but began speaking of a new
-office building farther down the street. It was apparent that neither
-Nan nor Fanny shared his joy in the encounter and they attacked the
-architecture of the new building to hide their discomfort.
-
-Nan appeared the more self-conscious. She was thinking of Billy. He
-had turned away from the machine with a crestfallen air which told her
-quite plainly that Farley had been giving him a piece of his mind. And
-Nan resented this; Farley had no right to abuse Billy on her account.
-
-When they reached the house she took Fanny upstairs. If the glimpse of
-Copeland on the bank steps had troubled Mrs. Copeland she made no sign.
-Her deft touches with the comb and brush, as she glanced in the mirror,
-her despairing comments upon the state of her complexion, which, she
-averred, the summer suns had ruined; her enthusiasm over Nan’s silk
-waist, which was just the thing she had sought without avail in all the
-shops in town,--all served to stamp her as wholly human.
-
-“But clothes! I hardly have time to think of them; they’re an enormous
-bother. And I wear the shoes of a peasant woman when I come to town,
-for I have to cut across the fields when I leave the interurban and I
-can’t do that in pumps! You see--”
-
-The shoes really were very neat ones, though a trifle heavy for
-indoors. Nan instantly brought her shiniest pumps, dropped upon the
-floor and substituted them for Fanny’s walking-shoes. It flashed
-through her mind that Fanny Copeland inspired just such acts.
-
-“You have the slim foot of the aristocrat,” observed Fanny. And then
-with a wistful smile she leaned toward the girl and asked, “Do you mind
-if I call you Nan?”
-
-Nan was touched by the tone and manner of her request. Of course there
-was no objection!
-
-“I always knew I should like you,” said Fanny. “Of course, I haven’t
-seen much of you lately, but I hear of you from a very ardent admirer:
-John Eaton talks of you eloquently, and to interest John Eaton is a
-real achievement! I’m afraid I bore him to death!”
-
-“I can’t believe it; he never lets himself be bored; but like everybody
-else, I’m never quite sure I understand him.”
-
-“Oh, I tell him that’s one of his poses--baffling people. He surrounds
-himself with mystery, but pretends that he doesn’t. If he were a gossip
-he’d be horrible, for he knows everything about everybody--and knows it
-first!”
-
-“He’s the kindest of mortals,” Nan observed. “He’s always doing nice
-things for people, but he has to do them in his own peculiar way.”
-
-“Oh, John has the spirit of the true philanthropist; his right hand
-never knows, you know--”
-
-“He’s a puzzle to the people he’s kindest to, sometimes, I imagine,”
-said Nan.
-
-She laughed as she thought of Amidon, and Fanny appealed for
-illumination as to what amused her.
-
-“Oh, I was thinking of his protégé--a young man named Amidon. He and
-I were kids together, back in my prehistoric days. He never had any
-advantages--if you can say that of a boy who’s born with a keen wit and
-a sense of humor. He does something at the Copeland-Farley store--went
-in as errand boy before papa left. They had him on the road for a
-while, but he’s in the office now. Mr. Eaton has taken a great shine
-to him and Jerry imitates him killingly. That fine abstracted air
-of Mr. Eaton’s he’s got nearly perfect; and he does the mysterious
-pretty well, too. But he’s most delicious when he forgets to Eatonize
-himself and is just natural. He’s quite short--which makes him all the
-funnier--and he wears tall, white-wing collars _à la_ Eaton.”
-
-“Tell me more!” said Fanny. “How old is the paragon?”
-
-“About twenty-five, I should say, figuring with my own age as a
-basis. He looked like a big boy to me in my river days. Mr. Eaton
-has undertaken his social and mental rehabilitation and the effects
-are amazing. They came to the house together to call, and I’ve
-rarely been more entertained than by Jerry while his good angel was
-upstairs talking to papa. He’s trying to avoid any show of emotion
-just like his noble example, but once in a while he forgets himself
-and grins deliciously. After a round of high-brow talk, he drops into
-reminiscence and tells the most killing stories of the odd characters
-he’s met in his travels with the sample-case. It can’t be possible that
-Mr. Eaton hasn’t introduced him to you?”
-
-“He hasn’t, and I’m going to complain about it bitterly,” said Mrs.
-Copeland, amused by Nan’s enthusiasm.
-
-“You should, for Jerry is a nice boy, and very wise and kind.”
-
-“The only one of his benefactions he ever confided to me was the case
-of a girl--the daughter of an old friend who had fallen on evil times.
-He wanted to send her to college, and I became the visible instrument,
-so he needn’t appear in the matter himself. The girl graduated last
-year and, like a fraud, I had to go down to Vassar and pose as her good
-angel. She’s a great success and is to teach somewhere, I think. But--I
-shouldn’t be telling you this!”
-
-“Oh, it’s quite safe! I value his friendship too much to do anything to
-displease him.”
-
-“Well, things like that ought to be told,” remarked Fanny reflectively;
-“particularly when some people think John Eaton cold and selfish.”
-
-Luncheon interrupted these confidences. Farley had not been to the
-dining-room for several months and he made much of the occasion.
-
-“This is a celebration for me, too,” said Fanny. “I’ve just had a piece
-of good fortune. Nobody knows of it yet; you’re the first people I’ve
-told! You know I haven’t many friends to confide in. An aunt of mine
-has just died and left me some money. In fact, there’s a great deal of
-it; I’m richer than I ever expected to be.”
-
-“Good! Good!” Farley ejaculated, interested and pleased.
-
-“It’s fine,” said Nan; “and it’s nice of you to tell us about it.”
-
-Nan was afraid that Farley would demand the amount of the legacy, but
-evidently Fanny knew he would be curious as to all the details, and
-she went on to explain that it was her mother’s sister, the last of the
-family, who had died recently in Ohio and left her all her property.
-
-“I have visited her every year or two since I was a child and knew her
-very well, but I never had any idea she meant to do this. It will take
-some time to settle it up, but there’s as much as two hundred thousand
-dollars in sight--maybe fifty more. She was a dear old woman; I’m so
-ashamed of myself that I wasn’t kinder to her, but she was difficult to
-handle--hadn’t left home for years, though she used to write to me two
-or three times a year. So there! That’s why I’m running into the bank
-these days, to ask Mr. Harrington about investments.”
-
-“If you take his advice,” said Farley emphatically, “you’ll never lose
-any of that money!”
-
-“Then what’s to become of the farm?” asked Nan.
-
-“Oh, I shall run it just the same. I’d rather lose that legacy than
-give it up. An unattached woman like me must have something to amuse
-herself with.”
-
-“That’s a lot o’ money; a whole lot o’ money,” said Farley; “and I’m
-mighty glad you’ve got it.”
-
-Nan saw a gleam in his eye and a covert smile playing about his lips.
-He chuckled softly.
-
-“Two hundred; two hundred fifty; that’s a whole lot o’ money; and you
-don’t want to let any of these sharks around here get it away from
-you; they’ll be after you all right. But I guess you’ll know how to
-handle ’em,” he added with satisfaction.
-
-When Fanny was ready to go he called for his car and he and Nan drove
-home with her.
-
-That night, after the nurse had put him to bed, Nan heard an unusual
-sound from his room. She crossed the hall and stood in the doorway a
-moment. He was muttering to himself and chuckling.
-
-“Picked up two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, just like findin’
-it! Turned her out; got rid of her! Well, that’s a hell of a joke on
-you, Billy Copeland!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-A NARROW ESCAPE
-
-
-On a rainy evening in mid-September, a salesman for an Eastern
-chemical firm invited Amidon to join him in a game of billiards at the
-Whitcomb House. As Russell Kirby was one of the stars of the traveling
-fraternity, Jerry was greatly honored by this attention. Moreover, when
-he hung up his coat in the billiard room and rolled up the sleeves of
-his silk shirt, the traveler’s arms proved to be thoroughly tanned--and
-this impressed Jerry as indicating that Kirby indulged in the
-aristocratic game of golf and did not allow the cares of business to
-interfere with his lawful amusements. Kirby played very good billiards,
-and did not twist his cigar into the corner of his mouth when he made
-his shots, as most of Jerry’s friends did.
-
-“The lid’s on a little looser in your town than it was last winter,”
-remarked the envied one, sipping a ricky. “I suppose by following our
-noses we could strike a pretty stiff game without going out into the
-wet.”
-
-“Oh, there’s always more or less poker around here,” replied Jerry,
-unwilling to appear ignorant of the moral conditions of his own city.
-
-He chalked his cue and watched Kirby achieve a difficult shot.
-Billiards afforded Jerry a fine exercise for his philosophic temper,
-steady hand, and calculating eye. He had developed a high degree of
-proficiency with the cue in the Criterion Billiard Parlors. It was a
-grief to him that in trying to live up to Eaton he had felt called upon
-to desert the Criterion, where the admiration of lesser lights had been
-dear to his soul.
-
-“Big Rodney Sykes is here,” Kirby remarked carelessly. “They chased him
-out of Chicago that last time they had a moral upheaval.”
-
-Jerry was chagrined that he knew nothing of Big Rodney Sykes,
-presumably a gambler of established reputation. To be a high-salaried
-traveler, with a flexible expense account, was to be in touch with
-the inner life of all great cities. Jerry’s envy deepened; it availed
-nothing that he could beat this sophisticated being at billiards.
-
-“Rather tough about that boss of yours,” Kirby continued. “It’s fellows
-of his size that Big Rodney goes after. A gentleman’s game and no
-stopping payment of checks the next morning.”
-
-“Oh, the boss is no squab; I guess he’s sat in with as keen sharps as
-Sykes and got out with carfare home,” replied Jerry.
-
-“Of course; but on a hot night like this many a good man feels the
-need of a little relaxation. It just happened”--he prolonged the
-deliberation of his aim to intensify Jerry’s curiosity--“happened I saw
-Copeland wandering toward Sykes’s room as I was coming down.”
-
-“I guess the boss knows a thing or two,” replied Jerry easily, in a
-tone that implied unlimited confidence in Copeland.
-
-He was consumed with indignation that Kirby should be able to tell him
-anything about Copeland. It had been done, too, with a neatness of
-insinuation that was galling.
-
-“Well, I guess,” persisted Kirby, “you miss old Uncle Tim at the store.
-I used to have many a jolly row with Uncle Tim; he was one man it
-never paid to fool with; but he was all right--just about as clean-cut
-and straight a man as I ever fought discounts with. Uncle Tim was a
-merchant,” he ended impressively as he bent over the table.
-
-In calling Farley a merchant with this air of finality he implied very
-clearly that William B. Copeland was something quite different, and
-Jerry resented this imputation as a slur upon his house. Much as he
-admired Kirby’s clothes and metropolitan ways, he hated him cordially
-for thus speaking of Copeland, who was one of Kirby’s important
-customers. Mere defeat was no adequate punishment for Kirby; Jerry
-proceeded to make a “run” that attracted the admiring attention of
-players at neighboring tables and precluded further discussion of
-Copeland.
-
-At midnight Kirby said he had had all the billiards he wanted and
-invited Jerry to his room.
-
-“I always like to tell people about their own town and I’ll show you
-where they’re piling up the chips,” he remarked.
-
-His room was opposite the elevator on the seventh floor, and having
-unlocked his door he piloted Jerry round a corner and indicated three
-rooms which he said were given over to gambling.
-
-“If you give the right number of taps that first door will open,” said
-Kirby, “but as an old friend I warn you to keep out.”
-
-As they were turning away a telephone tinkled faintly in one of the
-rooms and they heard voices raised excitedly, accompanied by the bang
-of over-turned furniture.
-
-“They’ve got a tip the cops are coming or there’s a fight,” said Kirby.
-“Here’s where we fade!”
-
-He led the way quickly back to his room, dragged Jerry in, and shut the
-door.
-
-While the sounds of hasty flight continued, the elevator discharged
-half a dozen men and they heard the hotel manager protesting to the
-police that it was an outrage; that the rooms they were raiding had
-been taken by strangers, and that if there was anything wrong he wasn’t
-responsible.
-
-A few minutes later the return of the prisoners to the elevator
-announced the success of the raid. Several of them were protesting
-loudly against riding to the police station in a patrol wagon; others
-were taking the whole matter as a joke. Above the confusion Copeland’s
-voice rose drunkenly in denunciation of his arrest.
-
-Kirby, anxious not to be identified even remotely with the sinners who
-had been caught in their transgressions, had taken off his coat and was
-lighting a cigar.
-
-“Try one of these, Amidon. We’d better sit tight until the cops get out
-of the building. Nice town this! Gambling in respectable hotels. No
-doubt all those fellows are leading citizens, including--”
-
-At this instant the electric lights were extinguished. The darkness
-continued and Jerry opened the door and stuck his head out. Half the
-prisoners had been sent down and the remainder were waiting for the
-elevator to return. They growled dismally and somebody said it was a
-good chance to give the cops the slip.
-
-One of the policemen struck a match and held it up to light the
-entrance to the car. Jerry’s eyes ran quickly over the group facing
-the shaft, but he recognized none of the men. As the match died out a
-prolonged, weary sigh near at hand caused him to start. Some one was
-leaning against the wall close beside him. He reached out, caught the
-man by the arm, drew him into the room and softly closed the door.
-
-Kirby demanded to know what Amidon had done, and during the whispered
-explanation the globes began to brighten. Jerry jumped for the switch
-and snapped off the lights. He climbed on a chair and surveyed the hall
-through the transom. The last officer was stepping into the elevator,
-and some one demanded to know what had become of Billy Copeland.
-
-“Oh, he went down in the first load,” replied another voice.
-
-Then the door clanged and the hall was quiet.
-
-“Turn on the lights,” commanded Kirby.
-
-Copeland sat on the bed, staring at them foolishly.
-
-“Wherenell am I?” he asked blinking. “Thiss jail or somebody’s parlor?”
-
-“Your nerve, young man,” Kirby remarked to Jerry, “leaves nothing to be
-desired. I suppose it didn’t occur to you that this is my room?”
-
-“Oh, that will be all right. If the cops ain’t back here in ten
-minutes, they’ll probably think he’s skipped; and they won’t waste time
-looking for him; they know they can pick him up to-morrow, easy enough.”
-
-“Zhat you, Kirby, good old boy; right off Broadway! Kind of you, ’m
-sure. Good boy, Amidon; wouldn’t let your boss get hauled off in patrol
-wagon. Raise wages for that; ’preciate it; mos’ grateful!”
-
-“All right; but please stop talking,” Jerry admonished. “We’ll all get
-pinched if the cops find out you’re here.”
-
-“Los’ five thous; five thou-sand dollars; hons’ to God I did!”
-
-Copeland’s face was aflame from drink and the heat, and unable to
-comprehend what had happened to him he tumbled over on the bed. Kirby
-eyed him contemptuously and turned upon Amidon angrily.
-
-“This is a nice mess of cats! Would you mind telling me what you’re
-going to do with our fallen brother? Please remember that reputation’s
-my only asset, and if I get arrested my house might not pass it off as
-a little joke!”
-
-“Oh, cheer up and be a good sport! I know the boys at the desk
-downstairs and I’m going to tell ’em you’ve cleared out to make way for
-an old comrade of the Army of the Potomac. I’ll have you moved, and
-then I’ll put the boss to bed.”
-
-“Anything to please you,” said Kirby ironically, as Copeland began
-to snore. “Your boss is lying on my coat and I hope you’ll have the
-decency to pay for pressing it!”...
-
-At ten the next morning Amidon called at the Whitcomb and found
-Copeland half dressed. He had telephoned to his house for toilet
-articles and clean linen and presented the fresh and chastened
-appearance with which he always emerged from his sprees.
-
-“I thought I’d drop in,” said Jerry, seating himself in the window.
-
-“Been to the store?” asked Copeland from before the mirror where he was
-sticking a gold safety pin through the ends of a silk collar.
-
-“Yes; I took a look in.”
-
-“Any genial policeman lying in wait for me?”
-
-“Nothing doing! Everything’s all fixed.”
-
-“Fixed? How fixed?”
-
-“Oh, I know the way around the pump at the police court, and I had a
-bum lawyer who hangs out there make the right sign to the judge. You
-owe me forty-seven dollars--that includes ten for the lawyer.”
-
-“Cheap at the price,” remarked Copeland. He had taken a check book from
-the table and was frowningly inspecting the last stub.
-
-“I didn’t come to collect,” said Jerry. “Any old time will do.”
-
-“How did the rest of the boys come out?” asked Copeland, throwing the
-book down impatiently.
-
-“Oh, the big sneeze from Chicago got a heavy soaking. The judge took
-it out on him for the rest of you. Wouldn’t do, of course, to send
-prominent business men to the work-house. All fined under assumed
-names.”
-
-“Rather expensive evening for me. Much obliged to you just the same for
-saving me a ride in the wagon.”
-
-“Oh, that was easy,” said Jerry. “By the way, I guess we’d better slip
-my lawyer friend another ten. He dug this up for you--no questions, no
-fuss; all on the dead quiet.”
-
-He drew from his trousers pocket a crumpled bit of paper and handed it
-to Copeland.
-
-Jerry was not without his sense of the dramatic. He rolled a cigarette
-and watched Copeland out of the corner of his eye.
-
-“See here, Jerry,” said Copeland quickly, “I don’t know about this. If
-I gave that check, and I know I did, I’ve got to stand by it. It’s not
-square--”
-
-“Oh, I wouldn’t burst out crying about that!” remarked Jerry easily.
-“Five thousand is some money, and the Chicago shark was glad enough to
-have the check disappear from the police safe. You were stewed when you
-wrote the check; and besides, it was a crooked game. Forget it; that’s
-all!” He stretched himself and yawned. “Can I do anything for you?”
-
-“It seems to me,” said Copeland, “that you’ve done about enough for
-me for one day,--kept me out of jail and then saved me five thousand
-dollars!”
-
-“We do what we can,” replied Jerry. “Keep us posted and when in doubt
-make the high sign. You’d better keep mum about the check. The deputy
-prosecutor’s a friend of mine and I don’t want to get him into trouble.”
-
-“It makes me feel a little better about that check to know that it
-wasn’t good when I gave it,” remarked Copeland dryly. “I’ve only got
-about a hundred in bank according to my stubs.”
-
-“I was just thinking,” said Jerry, playing with the curtain cord, “as
-I came down from the police court, that five thousand per night swells
-the overhead considerable. This isn’t a kick; I just mention it.”
-
-Copeland paused in the act of drawing on his coat to bestow a
-searching glance upon his employee. He shook himself into the coat and
-rested his hand on the brass bedpost.
-
-“What’s the odds?” he asked harshly. “I’m undoubtedly going to hell and
-a thousand or two, here and there--”
-
-“Why are you going?” asked Jerry, tying a loop in the curtain cord.
-
-Copeland was not prepared for this; he didn’t at once correlate
-Amidon’s question with his own remark that had inspired it.
-
-“Oh, the devil!” he ejaculated impatiently; and then he smiled ruefully
-as he realized that there was a certain appositeness in his rejoinder.
-
-The relations of employer and employee had been modified by the
-incidents of the night and morning. Copeland imagined that he was
-something of a hero to his employees, and that Jerry probably viewed
-the night’s escapade as one of the privileges enjoyed by the more
-favored social class. Possibly in his own way Amidon was guilty of
-reprehensible dissipations and therefore disposed to be tolerant of
-other men’s shortcomings. At any rate, the young fellow had got him
-out of a bad scrape, and he meant to do something for him to show his
-gratitude.
-
-“Well, a man’s got to let loose occasionally,” he said, as he began
-collecting his toilet articles.
-
-“I suppose he has,” Amidon admitted without enthusiasm.
-
-“I guess I ought to cut out these midnight parties and get down to
-business,” said Copeland, as though recent history called for some such
-declaration of his intentions.
-
-“Well, it’s up to you,” Jerry replied. “You can let ’er slide if you
-want to.”
-
-“You mean that the house is sliding already?” Copeland asked.
-
-“It’s almost worse than a slide, if you want to know. But I didn’t come
-here to talk about that. There’s plenty of others can tell you more
-about the business than I can.”
-
-“But they don’t,” said Copeland, frowning; “I suppose--I suppose maybe
-they’re afraid to.”
-
-“I guess that’s right, too,” Jerry affirmed.
-
-“Well, you’re in a position to learn what’s going on. I want to push
-you ahead. I hope you understand that.”
-
-“Oh, you treat me all right,” said Jerry, but in a tone that Copeland
-didn’t find cheering.
-
-“I mean to treat everybody right at the store,” declared Copeland
-virtuously. “If any of the boys have a kick I want them to come
-straight to me with it.”
-
-Jerry laid his hand on the door ready for flight and regarded Copeland
-soberly.
-
-“The only kick’s on you, if you can bear to hear it. Everybody around
-the place knows you’re not on the job; every drayman in the district
-knows you’re out with a paintbrush every night, and the solid men
-around town are saying it’s only a matter of time till you go broke.
-And the men down at the store are sore about it; it means that one of
-these mornings there’ll be a new shift and they’re likely to be out of
-a job. Some of them have been there a long time, and they don’t like to
-see the old business breaking down. And some of them, I guess, sort o’
-like you and hate to see you slipping over the edge.”
-
-During this speech Copeland stood with his cigarette-case half opened
-in his hand, looking hard at the top button on Amidon’s coat.
-
-“Well,” he said, thrusting a cigarette into his mouth and tilting it
-upwards with his lips while he felt for a match, “go on and hand me the
-rest of it.”
-
-“I guess that’s about all from me,” replied Jerry, “except if you want
-to bounce me right now, go ahead, only--let’s don’t have any hard
-feeling.”
-
-Copeland made no reply, and Jerry went out and closed the door. Then
-in a moment he opened it, saw Copeland staring out across the roofs in
-deep preoccupation, and remarked, deferentially:--
-
-“I’ll carry your bag down, sir. Shall I order a taxi?”
-
-“Never mind,” said Copeland, with affected carelessness; “I’ll attend
-to it. I’m going to the store.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE AMBITIONS OF MR. AMIDON
-
-
-No other branch of commerce is as fascinating as the wholesale drug
-business. A drug stock embraces ten thousand small items, and the
-remote fastnesses of the earth are raked to supply its necessities.
-The warehouses are redolent of countless scents that pique a healthy
-curiosity; poppy and mandragora and all the drowsy sirups of the world
-are enlisted in its catalogue. How superior to the handling of the
-grosser commodities of the wholesale grocery line! How infinitely more
-delightful than distributing clanging hardware or scattering broadcast
-the unresponsive units of the dry-goods trade!
-
-Such, at least, were Jerry Amidon’s opinions. Jerry knew his way around
-the store--literally. He could find the asafœtida without sniffing his
-way to it. He had acquired a working knowledge of the pharmacopœia, and
-under Eaton’s guidance he purchased a Latin grammar and a dictionary,
-over which he labored diligently in the midnight hours. His curiosity
-was insatiable; he wanted to know things!
-
-“Assistant to the President” was the title bestowed upon him by
-his fellow employees. By imperceptible degrees he had grown into
-a confidential relationship with Copeland that puzzled the whole
-establishment. The latest shifts had been unusually productive of
-friction, and Amidon had found his new position under the credit man
-wholly uncomfortable. Having asserted his authority, Copeland gave no
-heed to the results. The credit man was an old employee, very jealous
-of his prerogatives, and he had told Jerry in blunt terms that he had
-nothing for him to do. The auditor thereupon pounced upon him and set
-him to work checking invoices.
-
-Jerry wrote a good hand and proved apt, and as a result of this contact
-with the office he absorbed a vast amount of information pertaining
-to the business to which, strictly speaking, he was not entitled.
-Copeland, seeing him perched on a stool in the counting-room, asked
-him what he was doing there, and when Jerry replied that he was just
-helping out for a day or two, Copeland remarked ironically that he
-guessed he’d better stay there; that he’d been thinking for some time
-that fresh blood was needed in that department.
-
-No one else entered Copeland’s office with so much assurance. If Jerry
-hadn’t been so amiable, so willing to help any one who called for his
-assistance, he would have been cordially hated; but Jerry was a likable
-fellow. He prided himself on keeping cheerful on blue Mondays when
-everybody else about the place was in the doldrums.
-
-The auditor sent him to the bank frequently, and he experienced a
-pleasurable sensation in walking briskly across the lobby of the
-Western National. He knew many of the clerks he saw immured in the
-cages; some of them were members of the Little Ripple Club, and he made
-a point of finding out just what they did, and incidentally the amount
-of their salaries, which seemed disgracefully inadequate; he was doing
-quite as well himself. He liked to linger in the bank lobby and talk to
-people. He had hit on the happy expedient of speaking to men whether
-he knew them or not; he argued that in time they would ask who he was,
-which was a surer way of impressing himself upon them than through
-formal introductions.
-
-Ambition stirred in the bosom of Jeremiah A. Amidon. He lavished his
-admiration upon the “big” men of the “street”--in the main they were
-hard workers, and he was pretty well persuaded of the virtue and reward
-of industry.
-
-Nearly all the leading manufacturers and merchants were stockholders
-in banks. The fact that Copeland enjoyed no such distinction troubled
-Jerry. He studied the stock-list, hoping to see something some day that
-he could buy.
-
-The local stock exchange consisted of three gentlemen calling
-themselves brokers. Whenever they met by chance on the steps of the
-Western National or in a trolley going home, the exchange was in
-session. The “list” must be kept active, and when there were no
-transfers the brokers could trade a few shares with one another to
-establish a price. These agitations of the local bourse would be duly
-reported on the market page of the newspapers--all but the number of
-shares changing hands! “A better tone prevailing”; “brisk demand for
-tractions”; “lively trading in industrials” would soberly greet the eye
-of students of local financial conditions.
-
-Foreman, one of the brokers, who had been haunting the store for
-several days looking for Copeland, accosted Jerry in the bank one
-afternoon.
-
-“Your boss doesn’t sit on his job much,” Foreman remarked. “I’m getting
-tired chasing him.”
-
-“He’s off motoring with Kinney--they’re looking for a place to start
-another cement mill. Why don’t you call for me when you honor the
-house?”
-
-“Oh, my business with Copeland is too trifling to trouble you about,”
-the broker remarked ironically. “You haven’t any money, have you?”
-
-Jerry bent his ear to catch the jingle of coin inside the cages.
-
-“Oh, if you want to borrow, Copeland-Farley ain’t a pawnshop.”
-
-“I guess C-F doesn’t _lend_ much; it’s the biggest borrower on the
-street,” said Foreman.
-
-“Every big jobber is a heavy borrower. It’s a part of the game,” Jerry
-replied. Foreman’s anxiety to find Copeland had piqued his curiosity.
-“Of course, if your business with the boss can wait--”
-
-“It’s a trifling matter, that will probably annoy him when I mention
-it. I’ve got twenty shares of Copeland-Farley for sale. I thought he
-might want to pick ’em up.”
-
-“Must be a mistake,” replied Jerry indifferently; “there’s never any of
-our stock for sale.”
-
-“No; I suppose you’ve got most of it yourself downstairs in the safety
-vault!”
-
-“Come through and pour the dope!” said Jerry, grinning cheerfully.
-
-“Well, I’ve got ’em all right. An old party named Reynolds up at Fort
-Wayne had twenty shares and his executors wrote me that Copeland ought
-to have a chance to buy ’em. I’ve worn myself out trying to find your
-boss. I don’t know who’d buy if he didn’t. The things you hear about
-your house are a little bit scary: trade falling off; head of the
-company drinking, gambling, monkeying with outside things, like Kinney
-cement--”
-
-“Well, well!” Jerry chirruped; “you’re just chuck full of sad tidings.”
-
-“Of course, you know it all; but maybe you don’t know that Corbin &
-Eichberg are cutting into your business. There will be an involuntary
-consolidation one of these days and Copeland-Farley will be painted off
-the sign.”
-
-“You’re the best little booster I’ve heard sing this week! What’ll you
-take for the stock?”
-
-“Par.”
-
-“Sold! Bring your papers here to-morrow at two and I’ll give you the
-money.”
-
-Jerry had heard some one say that it was what you can do without money
-that proves your mettle in business. He had one thousand dollars, that
-represented the savings of his lifetime. The second thousand necessary
-to complete the purchase he borrowed of Eaton--who made the advance not
-without much questioning.
-
-“Very careless on Copeland’s part, but to be expected of a man who
-takes only a fitful interest in his business. You have about one
-thousand dollars! All right; I’ll lend you what you need to buy the
-stock. But keep this to yourself; don’t turn in the old certificate for
-a new one--not at present. Wait and see what happens. Copeland needs
-discipline, and he will probably get it. Kinney and Copeland seeing
-much of each other?”
-
-“Well, they’re off on a business trip together.”
-
-“I mean social affairs. They haven’t been driving peaceful citizens
-away from the Country Club by their cork-popping quite so much, have
-they? I thought not; that’s good. The general reform wave may hit them
-yet.”
-
-“On the dead, I think Copeland’s trying to cut out the early morning
-parties,” said Jerry earnestly. “He’s taken a brace.”
-
-“If he doesn’t want to die in the poorhouse at the early age of fifty,
-he’d better!” Eaton brushed an imaginary speck off his cuff as he
-asked, “How much did your boss give you of the five thousand you got
-back for him out of that poker game?”
-
-Amidon fidgeted and colored deeply.
-
-“Just another of these fairy stories!”
-
-“Your attempt to feign ignorance is laudable, Amidon. But my
-information is exact. Rather neat, particularly lifting him right out
-of the patrol wagon, so to speak. And recovering the check; creditable
-to your tact--highly so!”
-
-Jerry grinned.
-
-“Oh, it was dead easy! You see, after helping the gang lick you in the
-primaries last May, they couldn’t go back on me.”
-
-“If you turned your influence to nobler use, this would be a very
-different world! Let us go back to that Corrigan matter--you remember?”
-asked Eaton, filling his pipe. “You probably noticed that the gentleman
-who was arrested for murder down there was duly convicted. His lawyer
-didn’t do him much good. No wonder! I never saw a case more miserably
-handled--stupid beyond words.”
-
-“You wasn’t down there!” exclaimed Jerry, sitting up straight.
-
-“_Were_, not _was_, Amidon! I should think you’d know I’d been in the
-wilderness from my emaciated appearance. Believe I did say I was going
-to Pittsburg, but I took the wrong train. Met some nice chaps while I
-was down there,--one or two friends of yours, road agents, pirates,
-commercial travelers, drummers,--I beg your pardon!”
-
-Jerry was moved to despair. He would never be able to surround himself
-with the mystery or practice the secrecy that he found so fascinating
-in Eaton. He had not imagined that the lawyer would bother himself
-further about Corrigan. He had read of the conviction without emotion,
-but it would never have occurred to him that a man so busy as Eaton or
-so devoted to the comforts of life would spend three days in Belleville
-merely to watch the trial of a man in whom he had only the remotest
-interest.
-
-“They soaked him for manslaughter. I guess he got off easy!”
-
-“He did, indeed,” replied Eaton. “When did you see Nan last?”
-
-“I’ve been there once since you took me, and the old man sent down word
-he wanted to see me. He was feeling good and lit into me about the
-store. Wanted to know about everything. Some of the fellows Copeland
-has kicked out have been up crying on Farley’s doorstep and he asked
-me how the boss came to let them go. He sent Nan out of the room so he
-could cuss better. He’s sure some cusser!”
-
-“Amidon!” Eaton beat his knuckles on the desk sharply, “remember you
-are speaking English!”
-
-“You’d better give me up,” moaned Jerry, crestfallen.
-
-“You are doing well. With patience and care you will improve the
-quality of your diction. No reference to the Corrigan matter, I
-suppose,--either by Farley or Nan?”
-
-“Not a word. It was the night I read about the end of the trial, but
-nothing was said about it.”
-
-“She needn’t have worried,” Eaton remarked. “She was a very foolish
-little girl to have drawn her money out of the bank to hand over to a
-crooked lawyer.”
-
-“I suppose you coaxed the money back--”
-
-“Certainly not! It might have been amusing to gather Harlowe in for
-blackmail; but you can see that it would have involved no end of
-newspaper notoriety; most disagreeable. I had the best opportunities
-for observing that fellow in his conduct of the case; in fact, I had
-a letter to the judge and he asked me to sit with him on the bench.
-There’s little in the life or public services of Jason E. Harlowe that
-I don’t know.” He lifted his eyes to the solid wall of file-boxes.
-“H-66 is filled with data. Jason E. Harlowe,” he repeated musingly. “If
-I should die to-night, kindly direct my executor to observe that box
-particularly.”
-
-“I’ve heard of him; he ran for the legislature last year and got
-licked.”
-
-“By two hundred and sixteen votes,” added Eaton.
-
-“What’s your guess about that thousand bucks? Corrigan must have put
-Harlowe up to it.”
-
-“He did not,” replied Eaton, peering for a moment into the bowl of his
-pipe. “It was Mr. Harlowe’s idea--strictly so. And I’m ready for him
-in case he shows his hand again. Farley has some relations down that
-way, a couple of cousins at Lawrenceburg. Do you follow me? Harlowe
-may have something bigger up his sleeve. He ranges the whole Indiana
-shore of the Ohio; business mostly criminal. The more I’ve thought of
-that thousand-dollar episode, the less I’ve liked it. I take a good
-deal of interest in Nan, you know. She’s a little brash and needs a
-helping hand occasionally. Not that I’m called upon to stand _in loco
-parentis_, but there’s something mighty appealing in her. For fear you
-may misunderstand me, I assure you that I am not in love with her, or
-in danger of being; but her position is difficult and made the more
-so by her impulsive, warm-hearted nature. And it has told against
-her a little that the Farleys were never quite admitted to the inner
-circle here. This is a peculiar town, you know, Amidon, and there’s a
-good deal of caste feeling--deplorable but true! You and I are sturdy
-democrats and above such prejudices, but there are a few people amongst
-us who never forget what you may call their position. Unfortunate, but
-it’s here and to be reckoned with.”
-
-“Well, I guess Nan’s as good as any of them,” said Amidon doggedly.
-
-“She is! But it’s the elemental strain in her that makes her
-interesting. She’s of the race that believes in fairies; we have to
-take that into account.”
-
-Amidon nodded soberly. He had seen nothing in Nan to support this
-proposition that she believed in fairies, but the idea pleased him.
-
-Eaton’s way of speaking of women was another thing that impressed
-Jerry. It was always with profound respect, and this was unfamiliar
-enough in Jerry’s previous existence; but combined with this
-reverential attitude was a chivalrous anxiety to serve or protect them.
-The girls Jerry had known, or the ones he particularly admired, were
-those endowed with a special genius for taking care of themselves.
-
-“Nan,” Eaton was saying, “needs plenty of air. She has suffered from
-claustrophobia in her life with the Farleys. Oh, yes; claustrophobia--”
-
-He paused to explain the meaning of the word, which Jerry scribbled
-on an envelope that he might remember it and use it somewhere when
-opportunity offered.
-
-“I’m glad Farley talked to you. You will find that he will ask to see
-you again, but be careful what you say to him about the store. He’ll be
-anxious to worm information out of you, but he’s the sort to distrust
-you if you seemed anxious to talk against the house or the head of it,
-much as he may dislike him.”
-
-“I guess that’s right,” said Jerry. “He asked about the customers on
-the route I worked last year and seemed to know them all--even to the
-number of children in the family.”
-
-“You’ve been back once since we called together? Anybody else
-around--any signs that Nan is receiving social attentions?”
-
-“I didn’t see any. She’d been reading ‘Huck Finn’ to the old gent when
-I dropped in.”
-
-“Isolated life; not wholesome. A girl like that needs to have people
-about her.”
-
-“Well,” Jerry ejaculated, “she doesn’t need a scrub like me! I felt
-ashamed of myself for going; and had to walk around the block about
-seven times before I got my nerve up to go in. It’s awful, going into a
-house like that, and waiting for the coon to go off to see whether the
-folks want to see you or not.”
-
-“The trepidation you indicate is creditable to you, Amidon. Your social
-instincts are crude but sound. Should you say, as a student of mankind
-and an observer of life, that Nan is pining away with a broken heart?”
-
-“Well, hardly; she was a lot cheerfuler than she was that first time,
-when you went with me.”
-
-“Thanks for the compliment! Of course, you get on better without me.
-’Twas always thus! Well, that first time was hardly a fair example of
-my effect upon womankind. The air was surcharged with electricity; Nan
-had made a trifling error of judgment and had been brought promptly to
-book. I’ve always rather admired people who follow their impulses;
-it’s my disposition to examine my own under the microscope. Don’t check
-yourself too much: I find your spontaneity refreshing, particularly
-now that your verbs and nouns are more nearly in agreement. You say
-Copeland and Kinney are off motoring, to look at a new factory?” He
-lifted his eyes to one of the file-boxes absently. “I wish they’d wait
-till we get rid of that suit over Kinney’s patents before they spread
-out. The case ought to be decided soon and there are times--”
-
-He rose quickly, walked to the shelves and drew down a volume in
-which he instantly became absorbed. Then he went back to his desk and
-refilled his pipe deliberately.
-
-“I think,” he remarked, “that we shall win the case; but you never can
-tell. By the way, what is your impartial judgment of the merits of
-Corbin & Eichberg--rather wide-awake fellows, aren’t they?”
-
-As Jerry began to express scorn by a contemptuous curl of the lip and
-an outward gesture of his stiffened palm, Eaton reprimanded him sharply.
-
-“Speak judicially; no bluster; none of this whang about their handling
-inferior goods. The fact is they are almost offensively prosperous and
-carry more traveling men after ten years’ business than Copeland-Farley
-with thirty years behind them.”
-
-“Well,” Jerry replied meekly, “I guess they are cutting in a little;
-Eichberg had made a lot of money before he went into drugs and they’ve
-got more capital than C-F.”
-
-“That increases the danger of the competition. Eichberg is a pretty
-solid citizen. For example, he’s a director in the Western National.”
-
-“I guess that won’t help him sell any drugs,” said Amidon, who resented
-this indirect praise of Corbin & Eichberg.
-
-“Not directly; no.” And Eaton dropped the subject with a finality Jerry
-felt bound to accept.
-
-Foreman had intimated that in due course Copeland-Farley would
-be absorbed by Corbin & Eichberg; possibly the same calamity was
-foreshadowed in Eaton’s speculations.
-
-Before he returned to his boarding-house Jerry strolled into the
-jobbing district and stood for some time on the sidewalk opposite
-Copeland-Farley’s store. His twenty shares of stock gave him an exalted
-sense of proprietorship. He was making progress; he was a stockholder
-in a corporation. But it was a corporation that was undoubtedly going
-to the bad.
-
-It was quite true that Corbin & Eichberg were making heavy inroads
-upon Copeland-Farley trade. They were broadening the field of their
-operations and developing territory beyond the farthest limits to which
-Copeland-Farley had extended local drug jobbing. It was not a debatable
-matter that if Copeland persisted in his evil courses the business
-would go by the board.
-
-Copeland hadn’t been brought up to work; that was his trouble, Jerry
-philosophized. And yet Copeland was doing better. As Jerry thought of
-him his attitude became paternal. He grinned as he became conscious of
-his dreams of attempting--he, Jeremiah Amidon--to pull Billy Copeland
-back from the pit for which he seemed destined, and save the house of
-Copeland-Farley from ruin.
-
-He crossed the street, found the private watchman sitting in the open
-door half asleep, roused him, and gave him a cigar he had purchased for
-the purpose.
-
-Then he walked away whistling cheerfully and beating the walk with his
-stick.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-CANOEING
-
-
-Life began to move more briskly for Nan. She was not aware that certain
-invitations that reached her were due to a few words carefully spoken
-in safe quarters by Eaton.
-
-One of the first large functions of the dawning season was a tea given
-by Mrs. Harrington for a visitor. Mrs. Harrington not only asked Nan
-to assist, but she extended the invitation personally in the Farley
-parlor, much to Nan’s astonishment.
-
-One or two young gentlemen who had paid Nan attentions when she first
-came home from school looked her up again. John Cecil Eaton was highly
-regarded by the younger men he met at the University Club, and was
-not without influence. A reference to Nan as an unusual person; some
-saying of hers, quoted carelessly at the round table, was instrumental
-in directing attention anew to her as a girl worth knowing. If any
-one said, “How’s her affair with Copeland going?” Eaton would retort,
-icily, that it wasn’t going; that there never had been anything in it
-but shameless gossip.
-
-Jerry now reserved his Thursday evenings for Nan: not for any
-particular reason except that Eaton had taken him to the Farleys on a
-Thursday and from sentimental considerations he consecrated the day
-to repetitions of the visit. Nan was immensely kind to him; it was
-incredible that a girl so separated from him by immeasurable distances
-should be so cordial, so responsive to his overtures of friendship.
-Once she sent him a note--the frankest, friendliest imaginable note--to
-say that on a particular Thursday evening she could not see him. His
-disappointment was as nothing when weighed against his joy that she
-recognized his claim upon that particular evening and took the trouble
-to explain that the nurse would be out and that she would be too busy
-with Farley to see him. He replied with flowers--which brought him
-another note.
-
-He had laid before her all his plans for self-improvement and her
-encouragement was even more stimulating than Eaton’s. She fell at times
-into a maternal attitude toward him, scolding and lecturing him, and he
-was meek under her criticism.
-
-Nan felt more at home with him than with any other young man who
-called on her. With some of these, whose mothers and sisters had been
-treating her coldly, she felt herself to be playing a part--trying to
-assume a dignity that was not naturally hers in order that they might
-give a good account of her at home. With Jerry she could be herself
-without dissimulation. When it came to mothers, he remembered her
-mother perfectly and she remembered his. In a sense she and Jerry were
-allies, engaged in accommodating themselves to a somewhat questioning
-if not hostile atmosphere. In all her acquaintance he was the one
-person who could make the necessary allowances for her, who was able to
-give her full credit for her good intentions.
-
-On his seventh call he summoned courage to ask her to join him on a
-Saturday afternoon excursion on the river.
-
-“The foliage is unusually beautiful this year,” he suggested with his
-air of quoting, “and it’ll be too cold for canoeing pretty soon.”
-
-“I’m afraid--” Nan began.
-
-“I knew you’d say that; but you’re as safe in my boat as in your own
-rocking-chair.”
-
-“I wasn’t going to say that,” laughed Nan. “I was going to say that I
-was afraid you wouldn’t enjoy the foliage so much if I were along.”
-
-He saw that she was laughing at him. Nan and Eaton were the only
-persons whose mirth he suffered without resentment.
-
-“I’ll have to ask papa about it; or maybe you’ll ask him.”
-
-“I’ve already asked him.”
-
-“When did you ask him?”
-
-“About ten minutes ago, just before I came downstairs. I told him two
-good stories and then shot it in quick. He said he thought it would do
-you good!”
-
-“I like your nerve! Why didn’t you ask me first?”
-
-“Because it was much more proper for me to open negotiations with the
-man higher up. I hope you appreciate my delicacy,” he added, in Eaton’s
-familiar, half-mocking tone, which he had caught perfectly.
-
-“You’re so thoughtful I suppose you’ve also arranged for a chaperone?”
-
-“The canoe,” he replied, “is more comfortable for two.”
-
-“Two have been in it rather often, I suppose.”
-
-“Yes; but that was last summer. I’ve seen everything different this
-season. I practiced casting on a day in June and met with an experience
-that has changed the whole current of my life.”
-
-“I hope it changed your luck with the rod! You got snagged on
-everything that would hold a hook, but I must say that you bore your
-troubles in a sweet spirit.”
-
-“I learned that early in the game. Even if you refused my invitation
-I’d try to bear up under it.”
-
-“I think I’ll decline, then, just to see how you take it.”
-
-“Well, it’s only polite to say it would be a blow. I have a pocketful
-of strychnine and it might be unpleasant to have me die on the
-doorstep.”
-
-“I could stand that probably better than the neighbors could. You’d
-better try a poison that’s warranted not to kill on the premises.”
-
-Jerry tortured himself with speculations as to whether he should hire
-a taxi to transport them to the Little Ripple Club, but finally
-decided against it as an unwarranted extravagance, calculated to arouse
-suspicion in the mind of Farley. However, when he reached the house at
-two o’clock on Saturday, Nan announced that the nurse was taking her
-place as Farley’s companion for his regular drive and that they would
-carry them to the club. This arrangement caused his breast to swell.
-
-“That will give my credit a big boost; you’ll see a lot of the boys
-drop dead when we roll up with Uncle Tim.”
-
-Farley alighted to inspect the clubhouse and the fleet of canoes that
-bobbed at the landing. It was a great day for Jerry.
-
-“There’s something nice about a river,” said Nan, as Jerry sent his
-maroon-colored craft far out into the stream. “Ever since I came away
-I’ve missed the old river at Belleville.”
-
-This was one of the things he liked about Nan. She referred often to
-her childhood, and it even seemed that she spoke of it with a certain
-wistfulness.
-
-“The last girl I had out here,” Jerry said as he plied his blade, “was
-Katie McCarthy, who works in the County Treasurer’s office--mighty
-responsible job. I used to know Katie when she stenogged at four per
-for a punk lawyer, but I knew she was better than that, so I pulled a
-few wires and got her into the court-house. Katie could be cashier in
-a bank--she’s that smart! No; not much to look at. I studied Katie’s
-case a good deal, and she’d never make any headway in offices where
-they’d rather have a yellow-haired girl who overdresses the part and is
-always slipping out for a retouch with the chamois. It’s hard to find a
-job for girls like Katie; their only chance is some place where they’ve
-got to have a girl with brains. These perfumed office darlings, that’s
-just got to go to vaudeville every Monday night so they can talk about
-it the rest of the week, never get anywhere.”
-
-“My heart warms to Katie. I wonder,” murmured Nan lazily, as Jerry
-neatly negotiated a shallow passage between two sandbars, “if I had to
-do it--I wonder how much I could earn a week.”
-
-“Oh, I guess you’d make good all right. You’ve got brains and I’ve
-never caught you touching up your complexion.”
-
-“Which isn’t any sign I don’t,” she laughed. “I’ve all the necessary
-articles right here in my sweater pocket.”
-
-“Well, somebody has to use the talcum; we handle it in carload lots.
-It’s one of the Copeland-Farley specialties I used to brag about
-easiest when I bore the weighty sample-case down the line. It was a
-good stunt to ask the druggist to introduce me to some of the girls
-that’s always loafing round the soda-counter in country-town drug
-stores, and I’d hand ’em out a box and ask ’em to try it on right
-there. It cheered up the druggist and the girls would help me pull a
-bigger order than I’d get on my own hook. A party like that on a sleepy
-afternoon in a pill-shop would lift the sky-line considerable.”
-
-“Well, if you saw me in a drug store wrestling with a chocolate sundae
-and had your sample-case open and were trying to coax an order out of a
-druggist, just how would you approach me?”
-
-“I wouldn’t!” he responded readily. “I’d get your number on the quiet
-and walk past your house when your mother was sitting on the porch all
-alone, darning socks, and I’d beg her pardon and say that, having heard
-that her daughter was the most beautiful girl in town, Copeland-Farley
-had sent me all the way from the capital to ask her please to accept,
-with the house’s compliments, a gross of our Faultless Talcum. If
-mother didn’t ask me to supper, it would be a sign that I hadn’t put it
-over.”
-
-“But if father appeared with a shotgun--”
-
-“I’d tell him it was the closed season for drummers, and invite him
-down to the hotel for a game of billiards.”
-
-“You think you always have the answer, don’t you?” she taunted.
-
-“I don’t think it; I’ve got to know it!”
-
-“Well, I haven’t seen you miss fire yet. My trouble is,” she
-deliberated, touching the water lightly with her hand, “that I don’t
-have the answer most of the time.”
-
-“I’ve noticed it sometimes,” replied Jerry, looking at her quickly.
-
-It was unseasonably warm, and he drove the canoe on to a sandy shore
-in the shade of the bank. He had confessed to himself that at times,
-even in their juvenile badgering, Nan baffled him. From the beginning
-of their acquaintance he had noted abrupt changes of mood that puzzled
-him. Occasionally, in the midst of the aimless banter in which they
-engaged, she would cease to respond and a far-away look would come into
-her violet eyes. One of these moods was upon her now.
-
-“Do you remember the shanty-boat people down along the river? I used
-to think it would be fun to live like that. I still feel that way
-sometimes.”
-
-“Oh,” he answered indulgently, “I guess everybody has a spell of that
-now and then, when you just want to sort of loaf along, and fish a
-little when you’re hungry, and trust to luck for a handout at some back
-door when you’re too lazy to bait the hook. That feeling gets hold
-of me lots of times; but I shake it off pretty soon. You don’t get
-anywhere loafing; the people that get along have got to hustle. Cecil
-says we can’t just mark time in this world. We either go ahead or slide
-back.”
-
-“Well, I’m a slider--if you can slide without ever getting up very far!”
-
-“Look here,” he said, drawing in the paddle and fixing his eyes upon
-her intently, “you said something like that the first night Cecil
-took me up to see you, and you’ve got a touch of it again; but it’s
-the wrong talk. I’m going to hand it to you straight, because I guess
-I’ve got more nerve than anybody else you know: you haven’t got a
-kick coming, and you want to cut all that talk. Uncle Tim gets cross
-sometimes, but you don’t want to worry about that too much. He used to
-be meaner than fleas at the store sometimes, but the boys never worried
-about it. He’s all sound inside, and if he riles you the best thing to
-do is to forget it. You can’t please him all the time, but you can most
-of the time, and it’s up to you to do it. Now, tell me to jump in the
-river if you want to, but it was in my system and I had to get it out.”
-
-“Oh, I know I ought to be grateful; but I’m wrong some way.”
-
-“You’re all right,” he declared. “Your trouble is you don’t have enough
-to do. You ought to get interested in something--something that would
-keep you busy and whistling all the time.”
-
-“I _don’t_ have enough to do; I know that,” she assented.
-
-“Well, you ought to go in good and strong for something; that’s the
-only ticket. Let’s get out and climb the bank and walk awhile.”
-
-She had lost her bearings on the river, but when they had clambered to
-the top of the bank she found that they were near the Kinneys’. The
-road was a much-frequented highway, and she was sorry now that they had
-left the canoe; but Jerry, leading the way along a rough path that
-clung close to the river, continued to philosophize, wholly unconscious
-of the neighborhood’s associations for Nan.
-
-Where the margin between the river and the road widened they sat on a
-log while Jerry amplified his views of life, with discreet applications
-to Nan’s case as he understood it. He was a cheery and hopeful soul,
-and in the light of her knowledge of him she marveled at his clear
-understanding of things. He confided to her that he meant to get on; he
-wanted to be somebody. She was wholly sympathetic and told him that he
-had already done a great deal; he had done a lot better than she had;
-and it counted for more because no one had helped him.
-
-As they passed the Kinneys’ on their way back to the canoe, a roadster
-whizzed out of the gate and turned toward town. They both recognized
-Copeland. As he passed, his eyes fell upon them carelessly; then he
-glanced back and slowed down.
-
-“Now we’re in for it!” said Nan uncomfortably.
-
-“I guess I’m the one that’s in for it,” returned Jerry ruefully.
-
-Copeland left his car at the roadside and walked rapidly toward them.
-He nodded affably to Jerry and extended his hand eagerly to Nan.
-
-“This is great good luck! Grace is at home; why didn’t you come in?”
-
-“Oh, Mr. Amidon is showing me the river; we just left the canoe to
-come up for a view from the bank.”
-
-“Why not come back to Kinneys’; I want to see you; and this is a fine
-chance to have a talk.”
-
-Jerry walked away and began throwing pebbles into the river.
-
-“I can’t do that. And I can’t talk to you here. Papa drove me out and
-he’s likely to come back this way.”
-
-“You seem to be pretty chummy with that clerk of mine,” Copeland
-remarked.
-
-“I am; it began about sixteen years ago,” she answered, with a laugh.
-“We rose from the same ash-dump.”
-
-He frowned, not comprehending. She was about to turn away when he began
-speaking rapidly:--
-
-“You’ve got to hear me, Nan! I haven’t bothered you for a long time;
-you’ve treated me pretty shabbily after all there’s been between us;
-but you can square all that now. I’m in the deepest kind of trouble.
-Farley deliberately planned to ruin me and he’s about done it! I’ve
-paid him off, but I had to pledge half my stock in the store with the
-Western National to raise the money, and now my notes are due there and
-they’re going to pinch me. Eichberg is a director in the bank and he
-means to buy in that stock--you can see the game. Corbin & Eichberg are
-scheming to wipe me out and combine the two houses. And Farley’s put
-them up to it!”
-
-His face twisted nervously as he talked. He was thinner than when
-she saw him last, but he bore no marks of hard living. His story was
-plausible; Farley had told her a month ago that he had got his money
-out of Copeland, but it hadn’t occurred to her that the loan might have
-been paid with money borrowed elsewhere.
-
-“Of course, you won’t lose the business, Billy. It wouldn’t be square
-to treat you that way.”
-
-“Square! I tell you it was all framed up, and I’ve reason to know that
-Farley stands in with them. It’s a fine revenge he’s taking on me for
-daring to love you!”
-
-She shook her head and drew further away from him.
-
-“Now, Billy, none of that! That’s all over.”
-
-“No; it isn’t over! You know it isn’t, Nan! I’ve missed you; it cut
-me deep when you dropped me. You let Farley tell you I was all bad
-and going to the dogs and you didn’t even give me a chance to defend
-myself. I tell you I’ve suffered hell’s torments since I saw you last.
-But now I want you to tell me you do care. Please, dear--”
-
-His voice broke plaintively. She shook her head.
-
-“Of course we were good friends, Billy; but you knew we had to quit. It
-was wrong all the time--you knew that as well as I do.”
-
-“I don’t see what was wrong about it! It can’t be wrong for a man
-to love a woman as I love you! If you hadn’t cared, it would be a
-different story, but you did, Nan! And you’re not the girl I know you
-to be if you’ve changed in these few weeks. I’ve got a big fight on and
-I want you to stand by me. Kinney’s in all kinds of trouble with the
-cement business. If he goes down, I’m ruined. But even at that you can
-help me make a new start. It will mean everything to have your love and
-help.”
-
-He saw that his appeal had touched her. She was silent a moment.
-
-“This won’t do, Billy; I can’t stand here talking to you; but I’m sorry
-for your troubles. I can’t believe you’re right about papa trying to
-injure you; he’s too fond of the old business for that. But we were
-good pals--you and I. I’ll try to think of some way to help.”
-
-He caught her hands roughly.
-
-“I need you; you know I love you! Farley’s told you I want to marry you
-for his money; but you can’t tell anything about him. Very likely he’ll
-cut you out, anyhow; he’s likely to do that very thing.”
-
-She lifted her head and defiance shone for an instant in her eyes.
-
-“I’ll let you hear from me within a week; I must have time-- But keep
-up your spirits, Billy!”
-
-The distant honking of a motor caused her to turn away quickly. Amidon
-had settled himself halfway down the bank and she called to him and
-began the descent....
-
-If Jerry had expressed his feelings he would have said that Copeland’s
-appearance had given him a hard jar. It was annoying, just when
-you have reached the highest aim of your life, to have your feet
-knocked from under you. To have your boss spoil your afternoon with
-the prettiest girl in town was not only disagreeable, but it roused
-countless apprehensions.
-
-For the afternoon _was_ spoiled. Nan’s efforts to act as though
-nothing had happened were badly simulated, and finding that she lapsed
-frequently into long reveries, Jerry paddled doggedly back to the
-clubhouse.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-LAST WILLS AND TESTAMENTS
-
-
-From the beginning of his infirmities Farley’s experiments in
-will-writing had taxed the patience of Thurston, his lawyer. Within
-two years he had made a dozen wills, and he kept them for comparison
-in a secret drawer of Mrs. Farley’s old sewing-table in his room.
-He penciled cryptic marks on the various envelopes for ease of
-identification, and he was influenced often by the most trivial
-circumstances in his revisions. If Nan irritated him, he cut down her
-legacy; when things went happily, he increased it. He was importuned
-to make bequests to great numbers of institutions, by men and women he
-knew well, and his attitude toward these changed frequently. There was
-hardly a phase of the laws of descent that Thurston had not explained
-to him.
-
-A few days after her river excursion, the colored man-of-all-work
-handed Nan an envelope that had dropped from Farley’s dressing-gown as
-it hung on a clothes-line in the backyard for its periodical sunning.
-The envelope was unsealed. In the upper left-hand corner was the name
-and address of Thurston and in the center were four small crosses in
-pencil. Nan thrust it into a bureau drawer, intending to restore it
-to the dressing-gown pocket when she could do so without attracting
-Farley’s attention.
-
-Her eyes fell upon it that night as she was preparing for bed. She laid
-it on her dressing-table and studied the queer little crosses as she
-brushed her hair.
-
-Copeland had complained of Farley’s hardness, and if Billy had told
-the truth about the plight to which he had been reduced by Farley’s
-refusal to renew the last notes for the purchase money, the complaint
-was just. She crouched on a low stool before the table and gazed into
-the reflection of her eyes.
-
-She played idly with the envelope, resisting an impulse to open it
-for a glance at the paper that crinkled in her fingers. She had been
-very “good” lately, and to pry into affairs that Farley had sedulously
-kept from her was repugnant to her better nature.... Farley’s abuse
-of her on the day of the luncheon, and his rage over her payment of
-the thousand dollars for the defense of her brother came back to her
-vividly. He had threatened to make it impossible for Billy to profit by
-marrying her.... She had a right to know what provision Farley meant
-to make for her. If in the end he intended to throw her upon her own
-resources or to provide for her in ways that curtailed her liberty,
-there was every reason why she should prepare to meet the situation.
-
-The paper slipped from the envelope and she pressed it open.
-
- I, Timothy Farley, being of sound mind,--
-
-She had never seen a will before, and the unfamiliar phraseology
-fascinated her.
-
- ... in trust for my daughter, Nancy Corrigan Farley, for a period
- of twenty years from my decease, or until the death of said Nancy
- Corrigan Farley, should said death occur prior to the expiration
- of said twenty years, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. The
- income from said sum shall be paid to the said Nancy Corrigan Farley
- on the first day of each calendar month....
-
-Two hundred thousand dollars he gave outright to the Boys’ Club
-Association; fifty thousand to the Children’s Hospital; and ten
-thousand each to five other charitable organizations....
-
-One hundred thousand dollars in trust! An income of five or six
-thousand--less than half the cost of maintaining the Farley
-establishment, exclusive of her personal allowance for clothes! And
-this was Farley’s idea of providing for her. She had always heard that
-the act of adoption conferred all the rights inherent in a child of
-the blood; it was inconceivable that Farley would deal in so miserly a
-fashion with his own daughter.
-
-The will was dated June 17, a week after the row over Copeland. She had
-heard that Farley’s property approximated a million, and on that basis
-she was to pay dearly for that day at the Country Club!
-
-The trusteeship,--in itself an insult, an advertisement of Farley’s
-lack of confidence in her,--was to continue for what might be all
-the years of her life, restricting her freedom, fastening hateful
-bonds upon her. In case she married and died leaving children, the
-trusteeship was continued until they attained their majority. A paltry
-hundred thousand, and Farley’s lean hand clutched even that!
-
-Two hundred thousand for the Boys’ Club--just twice what he gave
-her--and without restrictions! The Farleys’ love for her was now
-reduced to exact figures. Her foster-father meant to humiliate her
-in the eyes of the world by a niggardly bequest. And he had been
-protesting his love for her and permitting her to sacrifice herself for
-him!
-
-The revelations of the will reinforced Copeland’s arraignment of Farley
-as a harsh and vindictive man, who drove hard bargains and delighted in
-vengeance.
-
-She lay awake for hours, torturing herself into the belief that she was
-the most abused of beings. Then her better nature asserted itself. She
-reviewed the generosity and kindness of her foster-parents, who had
-given her a place in the world to which she felt, humbly, that she was
-not entitled. A hundred thousand dollars was more money than she had
-any right to expect; and the trusteeship was only a part of Farley’s
-kindness--a device for safeguarding and protecting her.
-
-Then she flew to the other extreme. He had brought her up as his own
-child, encouraging a belief that she would inherit his whole fortune,
-and now he was cutting her off with something like a tenth and
-contemptuously bidding her beg for alms at the door of a trust company!
-
-She stared into the dark until the light crept through her blinds. Then
-she slept until the nurse called her at eight.
-
-“Mr. Farley’s waiting for you to have breakfast with him; how soon can
-you be ready?”
-
-“Isn’t he so well?” Nan asked quickly.
-
-“Nothing unusual; but he seemed tired after his ride yesterday and had
-a bad night.”
-
-Nan, sitting up in bed, thrust her hand under her pillow and touched
-the will guiltily.
-
-“I suppose,” she said, as the nurse crossed to the windows and threw
-up the shades, “that he may have a relapse at any time. The doctor
-prepared me for that. Please order breakfast sent up and tell papa I’ll
-be ready in five minutes.”
-
-In her broodings of the night she had dramatized herself as confronting
-him in all manner of situations, but she was reluctant to face him
-now. She jumped out of bed, fortified herself for the day with a cold
-shower, and presented herself to him in a flowered kimono as the maid
-was laying the cloth on the stand by his bed.
-
-“Well, Nan,” he said wearily, “I hope you had a better night than I
-did.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t need much sleep,” she answered. “Edison says we all sleep
-too much, anyhow.”
-
-“That’s a fool idea. The doctor’s got to give me the dope again if I
-have another such night. I guess there wasn’t anything I didn’t think
-of. Lyin’ awake is about as near hell as I care to go.”
-
-The querulousness manifest in the worst period of his illness had
-returned. He grumbled at the nurse’s arrangement of his pillows and
-asked for a tray in bed, saying he didn’t feel equal to sitting at the
-table.
-
-“You sit there where I can look at you, Nan.”
-
-She was aglow from her bath and showed no trace of her sleepless night.
-It was pathetically evident that her presence brought him pleasure and
-relief. He had been very happy of late, accepting fully her assurance
-that everything was over between her and Copeland. Her recent social
-activities and the fact that some of the “nice people” were showing a
-renewed interest in her added to his satisfaction. He bade her talk as
-he nibbled his toast and sipped his milk.
-
-“I read the newspaper an hour ago clear through the births and deaths
-and didn’t see anything very cheerful. You been followin’ that Reid
-will case up at Cleveland? I guess you don’t read the papers much.
-You never did; but you ought to keep posted. Well, that’s a mighty
-interestin’ case. I guess the lawyers are goin’ to get all the money.
-I knew old Reid, and he was as sane a man as ever lived. There ain’t
-much use in a man tryin’ to make a will when they’re sure to tear it to
-pieces.”
-
-Nan looked at him quickly. It was possible that he had missed the will
-and was speaking of wills in general as a prelude to pouncing upon her
-with a question as to whether she had seen it. But he was not in a
-belligerent humor. He went on to explain the legal points involved in
-the Reid case.
-
-“If a lot o’ rascally lawyers get hold o’ my property, I won’t just
-turn over in my grave; I’ll keep revolvin’! Reid tried to fix things so
-his children wouldn’t squander his money. His daughters married fools
-and he wanted to try and protect ’em. And just for that they’ve had the
-will set aside on the ground that Reid was crazy.”
-
-Nan acquiesced in his view of this as an outrage. And she really
-believed that it was, as Farley spoke of it.
-
-“I sometimes wonder whether it ain’t better just to let things go,” he
-continued. “I been over this will business with Thurston a thousand
-times, and I’m never sure he knows what he’s talkin’ about. Wills made
-by the best lawyers in the country seem to break down; there ain’t
-nothin’ sure about it.”
-
-“Well, I wouldn’t worry about that, papa. Mr. Thurston ought to know
-about those things if anybody does.”
-
-Ordinarily he would have combated this, as he combated most emphatic
-statements; but his willingness to let it pass unchallenged convinced
-her that there had been a sharp change for the worse in his condition.
-
-It was the way of her contradictory nature to be moved to pity for him
-in his weakness, and a wave of tenderness swept her. After all, if he
-wished to cut her off with a hundred thousand dollars and give the rest
-to charity he had a right to do it.
-
-She took the tray from the bed, smoothed the covers and passed her cool
-hand over his hot forehead.
-
-“Please, papa,” she said, “don’t bother about business to-day. Miss
-Rankin says it’s only a cold, but she’ll have to report it to the
-doctor. I’m going to telephone him to drop in this morning.”
-
-He demurred, but not with his usual venomous tirade against the whole
-breed of doctors.
-
-“All right, Nan,” he said, clinging to her hand. “And I wish you’d tell
-Thurston to come in this afternoon. I want to talk to him about some
-matters.”
-
-“Well, we’ll see the doctor first, papa. We can have Mr. Thurston in
-any time.”
-
-She knelt impulsively beside the bed.
-
-“I want you to know, papa, about wills and things like that, that
-I don’t want you to bother about me. I hope we’re going to live on
-together for long, long years. And anything you mean to do for me is
-all right.”
-
-She hardly knew herself as she said this. It was an involuntary
-utterance; something she could not have imagined herself saying a few
-hours earlier as she lay in bed hating him for his meanness.
-
-“Well, dear, I want to do the right thing by you. It’s worried me a
-lot, tryin’ to decide the best way. I don’t want to leave any trouble
-behind me for you to settle. And I don’t want to do anything that’ll
-make you think hard o’ me. I want to be sure you never come to want:
-that’s what’s worried me. I want you to be happy and comfortable,
-little girl.”
-
-“I know you do, papa,” she replied. “But don’t bother about those
-things now.”
-
-The nurse came in to take his temperature. Nan went to her room for
-the will and, feigning to be straightening some of the things in his
-closet, she thrust the paper into the dressing-gown pocket.
-
-An hour later the Kinney’s chauffeur left a note from Grace:--
-
- Come out this afternoon at any hour you can. Telephone me where
- to meet you downtown and I’ll bring you out in the car. I needn’t
- explain why, but after Saturday you’ll understand.
-
-The doctor found nothing alarming in Farley’s condition, but ordered
-him to remain in bed for a few days. He said he must have sleep and
-prescribed an opiate.
-
-At three o’clock Nan left the house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-A KINNEY LARK AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
-
-
-“It’s certainly good to see you again!” Mrs. Kinney exclaimed as Nan
-met her by arrangement at a confectioner’s. “How much time are you
-going to give me?”
-
-“Oh, I haven’t any,” laughed Nan. “I’ve run away. Papa isn’t so well
-to-day and couldn’t take his drive as usual, so I’m truanting--and very
-naughty. I must be back in the house before five.”
-
-“Well, when I got your message I telephoned Billy to come to the house
-and he’ll be there as soon as we are. He’s been in the depths for
-weeks. You know you had got a mighty strong hold on dear old Billy, and
-when you dropped him it hurt. And we’ve all missed you!”
-
-The Kinneys and their friends had missed her; they had missed her dash,
-her antics--the Nan she had resolved to be no more. But it was pleasant
-to be in Mrs. Kinney’s company again. She was a simple, friendly soul
-who liked clothes and a good time; her capacity for enjoying anything
-serious was wholly negligible.
-
-“I knew, of course, that Billy was back of your invitation. I saw him
-Saturday--quite accidentally, and he was bluer than indigo.”
-
-“He spent Sunday with us and told us all about meeting you. He was
-perfectly furious because you were out skylarking with one of his
-clerks! But he got to laughing about it,--told us some funny stories
-about your new suitor,--Jerry, is that the name?”
-
-“Mr. Jeremiah Amidon, please,” laughed Nan. “It was killing that Billy
-should find me out canoeing with him. Jerry and I were kids together,
-and he’s grown to be a great consolation to me.”
-
-“He must be a consolation to Billy, too; he says the youngster’s trying
-to reform him!” Grace suddenly clasped Nan’s hand. “You ought to take
-charge of Billy! He’s awfully in love with you, Nan. He’s going to urge
-you to marry him--at once. That’s why--”
-
-“No! No! I’ll never do it,” cried Nan despairingly.
-
-It was another of her mistakes, this yielding to Copeland’s demand
-for an interview that could have but one purpose. She was thoroughly
-angry at herself, half angry at Mrs. Kinney for acting as Copeland’s
-intermediary.
-
-Copeland was pacing the veranda smoking a cigarette when they reached
-the house.
-
-“It’s mighty nice of you to come, Nan,” he said.
-
-“I’ve heard, Billy, that the haughty John Eaton’s rather attentive to
-the late Mrs. Copeland,” said Grace, when they had gathered about the
-tea-table. “She was among those present at a little dinner he gave at
-the University Club the other night in honor of that English novelist
-who’s visiting here.”
-
-“You’re bitter because he left you out,” said Copeland indifferently.
-
-“Oh, my bitterness won’t hurt Fanny. I suppose you’ve heard that she’s
-come into a nice bunch of money--something like a quarter of a million!”
-
-Copeland’s surprise was evident.
-
-“That sounds like a fairy story; but I hope it’s true.”
-
-“I know it’s true,” said Nan quietly. “Mrs. Copeland told me herself.”
-
-Mrs. Kinney had risen to leave them and Copeland had crossed the room
-to open the door for her. They were arrested by Nan’s surprising
-confirmation of this report that Mrs. Copeland had come into an
-unexpected inheritance. Nan vouchsafed nothing more; and at a glance
-from Copeland Grace left them.
-
-“I didn’t know you and Fanny were seeing each other these days,” he
-remarked as he sat down beside her. “Something new, isn’t it?”
-
-“Well, papa always admired her and he took me out to see her a little
-while ago, and then that day you saw her with us at the bank he
-insisted on taking her home for luncheon. She told us then about the
-money.”
-
-Copeland smiled grimly.
-
-“Of course, you know what it means--Farley’s sudden affection for
-Fanny?”
-
-“Oh, he used to see a good deal of her, didn’t he, when you were first
-married?”
-
-“Mrs. Farley and Fanny exchanged a few calls and we were there
-for dinner once, while you were still away at school. But this is
-different; he’s throwing you with her for a purpose, as you ought to
-see. It does credit to the old man’s cunning. He thinks that if you
-become good friends with Fanny, he can be sure you’ve dropped me.”
-
-“Rubbish! Papa has always liked her; he likes the kind of woman who can
-run a farm and make money out of it; he thinks she’s a good example for
-me!”
-
-“Don’t let him fool you about that!” he said petulantly. “He’s an old
-Shylock and he’s about taken the last ounce out of me. Paying him that
-last twenty-five thousand has put me in a bad hole. And it’s pure
-vengeance. If he wasn’t afraid you were going to marry me, he would
-never have driven me so hard. He thinks if he can ruin me financially
-you’ll quit me for good. It was understood when I bought him out that
-he’d be easy about the payments. There’s a frame-up between him and
-Corbin & Eichberg to force me out of business. And he’s been calling
-some of the old employees up to see him, and encouraging Amidon to
-trot up there so he can worm things out of him. I don’t think he gets
-anything out of Jerry,” he added, taking warning of a resentful gleam
-in Nan’s eyes. “I think the boy’s loyal to me; in fact”--he grinned
-ruefully--“he’s full of an ambition to make a man of me! But you must
-see that it’s all a game to draw you away from me. Farley’s not the
-sort of man to waste time on a youngster like Amidon for nothing, and
-this throwing you in Fanny’s way is about as smooth a piece of work as
-I ever knew him to do.”
-
-“You’re exaggerating, Billy; and as far as Jerry is concerned, papa
-likes him; he always takes an interest in poor boys. And the fact that
-Jerry came from down there on the river where he had his own early
-struggles probably makes him a little more sympathetic with him.”
-
-“The old gentleman’s sympathies,” said Copeland, bending forward and
-meeting her gaze with a significant look, “are likely to cost you a
-whole lot of money, Nan.”
-
-“Just how do you make that out, Billy?”
-
-“All the hospitals and charitable concerns in town have been working
-on Farley to do something for them in his will, and I heard yesterday
-that he’s promised to do something big for the Boys’ Club people.
-You’ve probably seen Trumbull at the house a good deal--he’s the kind
-of fellow who’d make an impression on Farley. I got this from Kinney.
-He gave them some money last year and they put him on the board of
-directors. They’re all counting on something handsome from the old
-man. I assume he hasn’t told you anything about it; it wouldn’t be like
-him to! He means to die and let you find out just what his affection
-for you comes down to in dollars.”
-
-“Well, he has a right to do what he likes with his money,” Nan replied
-slowly, repeating the phrase with which she had sought to console
-herself since the will fell into her hands. “I suppose he thinks he’s
-done enough for me.”
-
-The phrases of the will danced before her eyes: Copeland’s intimations
-squared with the facts as she knew them to be; she had seen tangible
-proof of their accuracy.
-
-“We have to admit that he’s been kind to you, but he hasn’t any right
-to bring you up as his daughter and then cut you off. You stand in law
-as his own child, and if he should die without making a will, you’d
-inherit everything.”
-
-“Well, the law hasn’t made me his own child,” said Nan bitterly.
-
-Seeing her resentment, and feeling that he was gaining ground, he
-proceeded cautiously.
-
-“I suppose he’s likely to have a sudden call one of these days?”
-
-“Yes; or he may live several years, so the doctor told me. But I don’t
-want to think of that. And I don’t like to think of what he may do or
-not do for me,” she added earnestly.
-
-“Of course you don’t!” he assented. “But he hasn’t any right to stand
-between you and your happiness. If he had the right feeling about you,
-he’d want to see you married and settled before he dies. I suppose he’s
-never told you what he meant to do for you?”
-
-“No. But he’s told me what he wouldn’t do if I married you; he laid
-that down in the plainest English!”
-
-“I don’t doubt it; but no man has a right to do any such thing. Just
-why he hates me so I don’t understand. It oughtn’t to be a crime to
-love you, Nan.”
-
-His hand touched hers, then clasped it tightly.
-
-“I don’t see why we should be talking of these things at all,” he went
-on. “I love you; and I believe that deep down in your heart you love
-me. You’re not going to say you don’t, Nan?”
-
-“You know I’ve always liked you a lot, Billy,” she answered evasively.
-
-“Before Farley got the idea that I wanted to marry you for his money
-and abused me and made you unhappy, you cared; you can’t deny that. And
-I don’t believe his hatred of me really made any difference.”
-
-It was the wiser course not to abuse Farley. He felt that he was
-winning her to a yielding mood, and his hopes rose.
-
-She withdrew her hand suddenly and bent her eyes upon him with
-disconcerting intentness.
-
-“Please tell me, Billy, the real truth about your trouble with Fanny?”
-
-The abruptness of her question startled him. The color deepened in his
-face and he blinked under her searching gaze. She had never before
-spoken of his trouble with his former wife.
-
-“That,” he said rallying quickly, “is all over and done. It hasn’t
-anything to do with you and me.”
-
-“Yes, Billy; I think it has! If you’re really serious in wanting to
-marry me, I think I ought to know about that.”
-
-“I don’t see how you could doubt my seriousness; you’ve been the one
-serious thing in my whole life!”
-
-“But Fanny--” she persisted, gently touching his hands that were
-loosely clasped on his knee.
-
-“Oh, the trouble was that we were never suited to each other. She’s
-quiet, domestic--a country-town girl, and never fitted into things
-here. She wanted to sit at home every evening and sew and expected me
-to wait around for her to drop a spool so I could get excitement out of
-scrambling for it. And she didn’t like my friends, or doing the things
-I like. Her idea of having a gay time was to go to the state fair once
-a year and look at live stock! I think she hated me toward the end.”
-
-“But that other story about her--about another man; she doesn’t look
-like that sort of woman, Billy.”
-
-He shrugged his shoulders impatiently.
-
-“That wasn’t in the case at all. The divorce was given for
-incompatibility. Whatever else there may have been didn’t figure. I
-made it as easy for her as possible, of course. And I’ve no doubt she
-was as glad to quit as I was!”
-
-“But you didn’t think--you didn’t honestly believe--”
-
-“Well, I thought she was interested in Manning; and we had some trouble
-about that. He used to come here a good deal. He was an old friend of
-mine and his business brought him to town pretty often for a couple of
-years. He’s a fellow of quiet tastes--just her sort--and I hoped when
-I got out of the way she’d marry him. I want you to be satisfied about
-everything, Nan. I tell you everything’s over between Fanny and me.”
-
-She rose and took a turn across the room, paused at the window, glanced
-out upon the lawn and the strip of woodland beyond. He became impatient
-as the minutes passed. Then she faced him suddenly.
-
-“It’s no use, Billy,” she said.
-
-He was eagerly protesting when Mrs. Kinney appeared at the door.
-
-“What are you two looking so glum about? You need cheering up and I’ve
-got a fine surprise for you!”
-
-“I must go,” said Nan, relieved at the interruption.
-
-“Not much, you’re not! Bob has just telephoned that the Burleys of
-Chicago are in town and they’re coming out for dinner. And I’ve
-telephoned the Liggetts and the Martins and George Pickard and Edith
-Saxby and the Andrews. It will be like old times to have the old crowd
-together once more!”
-
-“Of course, Nan will stay! She’s been making me miserable lately and
-that will help her square herself,” said Copeland.
-
-“I must go, really,” Nan reiterated, suspecting that the party had been
-arranged in advance.
-
-“Please don’t!” cried Copeland. “You can telephone home that you’ve
-been delayed--you can arrange it someway.”
-
-“When I went downtown on an errand! I don’t see it!”
-
-“Dinner’s at six; the Burleys have to go into town early,” said Mrs.
-Kinney.
-
-“Oh, let her go!” exclaimed Copeland. “Our Nan isn’t the good sport she
-used to be, and she doesn’t love any of us any more. She’s gone back on
-all her old friends.”
-
-“Oh, no, she hasn’t. I never knew her to take a dare! I don’t believe
-she’s going to do it now.”
-
-Nan surveyed them defiantly and looked at her watch.
-
-She felt that she had finally dismissed Billy, and her last word to him
-had left her elated. It might be worth while to wait, at any hazard, to
-ease his discomfiture, and to show the Kinneys and their friends that
-she had not cut them; and, moreover, she was unwilling to have them
-know how greatly her old freedom was curtailed. The time had passed
-quickly and she could not reach home before seven even if she left
-immediately. Miss Rankin had covered up her absences before and might
-do so again.
-
-“Let me telephone and I’ll see how things are going.”
-
-The nurse’s report was reassuring. Farley, who had rested badly for
-several nights, was sleeping. He might not waken for an hour--perhaps
-not for several hours. Miss Rankin volunteered to explain Nan’s absence
-if he should call for her.
-
-“All right, Grace, you may a lay a plate for me!” she announced
-cheerfully. “But I must be on my way right after dinner. You understand
-that!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It’s great to see you on the good old cocktail route again, Nan!”
-declared Pickard. “We heard you’d taken the veil!”
-
-The cocktails were passed before they went to the table; there were
-quarts for everybody, Grace assured them. The men had already fortified
-themselves downtown against any lack of an appetizer at the house.
-Mocking exclamations of surprise and alarm followed Nan’s rejection of
-her glass.
-
-“That’s not fair, Nan!” they chorused, gathering about her. “You used
-to swallow six without blinking an eye.”
-
-“She’s joined the crape-hangers for sure! I didn’t think it of our
-Nan!” mourned Pickard.
-
-“Oh, anything to stop your crying!” Nan took the glass Kinney had been
-holding for her. “There! I hope you’re satisfied. It’s silly to make so
-much fuss about a mere cocktail. No, thanks; not another! There’s no
-point in taking the same dare twice!”
-
-At the table the talk at once became animated. Nan had been away from
-them so long that she had half forgotten their range of interests.
-Burley’s expensive new machine, in which he had motored down from
-Chicago; “shows” they had seen; a business scheme--biggest thing
-afoot, Burley threw in parenthetically, with a promise to tell Kinney
-more about it later; George Pickard’s attentions to the soubrette in
-a musical comedy, and references to flirtations which the married men
-present had been engaging in--these things were flung upon the table to
-be pecked at and dismissed.
-
-“You people are the only real sports in this dismal swamp of a town! I
-don’t know how you live here among so many dead ones!” said Burley.
-
-Kinney declared that he intended to move to New York as soon as he got
-rid of his patent suits; he was tired of living in a one-horse town.
-This suggested a discussion of the merits of New York hotels--a subject
-which the Kinneys everywhere west of Manhattan Island find endlessly
-exciting.
-
-When champagne was served, Burley rose with elaborate dignity and
-invited the other men to join in a toast to the ladies; they were the
-best girls in America; he defied anybody to gainsay him. He wished they
-might all travel about together all the time hitting only the high
-places; and he extended a general invitation to the company to meet him
-at Palm Beach the next winter for what he promised should be a grand
-time.
-
-“He’d make it Japan if he’d only had a few more drinks,” his wife
-remarked to Nan.
-
-By the time salad was served George Pickard thought it well to justify
-his reputation as a “cut-up.” His father, a successful lawyer, had left
-him a comfortable fortune which George was rapidly distributing. George
-had rebelled against the tame social life of the town in which he was
-born; he was bored by respectability, and found the freedom of the
-Kinneys’ establishment wholly to his liking. He went to the living-room
-for the victrola and wheeled it in, playing the newest tango, to a
-point just behind Nan’s chair.
-
-“Got to have music; got the habit and can’t eat without music!”
-
-This was accepted as a joke until Copeland protested that he couldn’t
-stand the noise and began struggling with Pickard, who bitterly
-resented his effort to push the machine out of the room. The music was
-hushed presently and Pickard resumed his seat with the understanding
-that he might play all he pleased after dinner.
-
-“And we’ll have a dance--I haven’t danced a step in ages!” cried Nan,
-entering into the spirit of the occasion.
-
-She had always excused their vulgarity on the ground that they were at
-least cheerful, and that probably they were just as good as the people
-who frowned upon them. Their admiration was evident from the frequency
-with which they invited her opinion on the questions under discussion;
-and it was a relief to escape from the invalid air of home and from
-what she had convinced herself was Farley’s hostility.
-
-Several times her fingers touched the stem of her wineglass, only to be
-withdrawn quickly. Copeland, sitting beside her, noticed her indecision
-and drew the glass toward her.
-
-“Just one, for old times’ sake, Nan?”
-
-“All right, Billy!”
-
-She emptied her glass, and then, turning to Copeland, laid her fingers
-lightly across the rim.
-
-“That’s all; not another drop!” she said in a low tone.
-
-He laughed and held up his glass for inspection; he had barely touched
-his lips to it.
-
-“I had only one cocktail and I haven’t taken any of this stuff,” he
-said with a glance that invited approval. “I can do it; you see I can
-do it! I can do anything for you, Nan!”
-
-The furtive touch of his hand seemed to establish an understanding
-between them that they were spectators, not participants in the revel.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: THE FURTIVE TOUCH OF HIS HAND SEEMED TO ESTABLISH AN
-UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THEM THAT THEY WERE SPECTATORS, NOT PARTICIPANTS
-IN THE REVEL]
-
-“I know you can, and you must, Billy.”
-
-The noise and confusion increased. Edith Saxby had begun to cry--Nan
-remembered that Edith usually cried when she was tipsy. She was
-bewailing the loss of her salted almonds which she charged Andrews with
-appropriating. Andrews thereupon went to the sideboard and brought the
-serving-dish of almonds and poured the contents upon the girl’s head.
-
-Pickard leaned across the table to wipe away her tears with his napkin.
-In attempting this feat he upset the wine-glasses of his immediate
-neighbors, causing a wild scamper to escape the resulting deluge.
-Liggett and Burley retaliated by pushing him upon the table, where he
-crowned himself with the floral centerpiece. Boisterous expressions of
-delight greeted this masterstroke.
-
-“This is getting too rotten!” shouted Copeland.
-
-He seized Pickard and dragged him from the table amid general protests.
-
-“Biggest joke of all,” cried Kinney, pointing at Copeland, “that
-Billy’s sober. Everybody else drunk, but Billy sober’s a judge!”
-
-Mrs. Liggett, a stout blonde, shrilly resenting this as an imputation
-upon her character, attempted to retaliate by slapping Kinney, who
-began running round the table to escape her. This continued with the
-others cheering them on until she tripped and fell headlong amid
-screams of consternation from the women and roars of delight from the
-men.
-
-“This is what I call a real ball!” declared Burley.
-
-After Mrs. Liggett had been carried to a divan in the hall to
-recuperate, they decided that the possibilities of the table had been
-exhausted and returned to the living-room where the victrola was again
-set going.
-
-Nan, lingering in the hall, found Andrews beside her.
-
-“Always meant to tell you I loved you, Nan; now’s a good time,” he
-blurted. “No girl like you, Nancy!”
-
-His wife appeared suddenly at the door and screamed at him to behave
-himself, while the others laughed loudly.
-
-“Rules all suspended to-night; nobody going to be jealous!” cried
-Burley encouragingly.
-
-“Got to kiss me, Nan,” Andrews resumed; “kiss everybody else but you
-never--”
-
-She pushed him away in disgust. Kinney entertainments, viewed soberly,
-clearly lacked the zest she had found in them when exhilarated. She
-looked at her watch. She must leave immediately. Copeland beckoned to
-her and she turned to him with relief.
-
-“It’s half-past eight, Nan; how soon must you go?”
-
-“At once; I shouldn’t have stayed in the first place.”
-
-“Well, I’ll be glad enough to shake this bunch! Get your things and
-I’ll go for the car.”
-
-He had been a very different Billy to-night. It was clear that he meant
-to be kind and considerate. The butler passed them bearing a jingling
-tray to answer a demand for high-balls from the living-room. Billy was
-the only sober man in the company, and she gave him full credit for his
-abstemiousness. They were calling her insistently to come and do some
-of the “stunts” that she had always contributed to their parties.
-
-She walked to the open door and laughed at them mockingly.
-
-“I’m all in, dead tired! Billy’s going to take me home!”
-
-The sight of them, flushed, rumpled, maudlin, increased her desire to
-escape as quickly as possible. She bade them good-night amid their loud
-reproaches, went for her hat and coat, and was soon in Copeland’s white
-roadster spinning toward town.
-
-“Well, Nan, this is fine. We can go on with our talk now.”
-
-“But we finished that, Billy. We can’t go back to it again!”
-
-“Oh, yes, we can; there’s only one way to end it! That sort of
-thing”--he jerked his head toward the Kinneys’--“isn’t for you and me.
-I’ve cut it out; passed it up for good. I’m going to live straight and
-try to get back all I’ve lost: I know everybody’s down on me--waiting
-to see me take the count. But with you everything will be different.
-You know that; you understand it, Nan!”
-
-Nan’s thoughts were sober ones. She did like Billy; his good conduct
-at the party was encouraging; he could be a man if he would. He was a
-boy--a big, foolish boy, kind of heart, and generous, with a substratum
-of real character. The actual difference in years did not matter
-greatly; he was as slim and trim as a youngster just out of college.
-From the beginning of their acquaintance they had got on amazingly
-well together. And he loved her; she was honestly convinced of this.
-Like many young girls she had found the adoration of an older man
-flattering. A Farley had been cruelly unjust to her; there was always
-that justification. Even after she had given him her solemn assurances
-that she would not marry Billy, he had deliberately planned to give the
-bulk of his fortune to charity.
-
-After the scenes at the Kinneys’ she found infinite relief and comfort
-in the rush of the cool night air, and in the bright shield of stars
-above. Billy was the only person in all the world who cared, who
-understood! In her anxiety to be just, she gave to his good conduct
-during the evening an exaggerated importance and assured herself that
-there was a manliness in him that she had never appreciated.
-
-“Dear old Billy!” she said softly, and laid her hand lightly on his arm.
-
-“Oh, Nan!”
-
-With a happy laugh he brought the machine to an abrupt stop.
-
-“Dear little girl! Dear little Nan!” he murmured, his arms clasping
-her. “You belong to me now; nobody’s ever going to take you away from
-me. I love you; you’re dearer to me than all the world; and I’m so
-happy and proud!”
-
-They talked for a time in subdued tones of the future. Yes; she had
-made the great decision. It seemed, now that she had given her word,
-that it had been inevitable from the beginning. There would be no more
-uncertainty, no more unhappiness. His arms were a happy refuge. No one
-had ever been as kind to her as he had been. She no longer questioned
-his good faith, or doubted his love.
-
-“Oh, Billy, we must hurry! I’m in for a bad time, if I’m caught.”
-
-When she reached the house the nurse let her in. Farley had wakened
-once and asked for her, Miss Rankin said, but he had been satisfied
-with an explanation that Nan had gone early to bed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-BILLS PAYABLE
-
-
-At six o’clock every morning Mr. Jeremiah Amidon’s alarm-clock sent
-him trotting down the hall of his boarding-house to the bathroom for
-an immersion in cold water. When he had carefully dressed himself, he
-pulled weights for ten minutes, and thus refreshed and strengthened was
-able to wring a smile from the saddest boarder at the breakfast table.
-
-He now opened the office mail. No one knew who had conferred this
-responsibility upon him; all that any one knew about the matter was
-that Jerry got down first and had the job done usually by eight
-o’clock. He did it well; there was no denying that. It was the only
-way, he told Copeland, that you could keep track of the business.
-He assumed also the task of replying to complaints of protesting
-customers, and carried the replies to Copeland to sign. The errors,
-omissions, and delays complained of became, under Jerry’s hand,
-a matter of chagrin and personal grief to the head of the house.
-These literary performances were in a key of cheerful raillery, made
-possible by his knowledge of the domestic affairs or social habits of
-the kicking customer. Where there was real ground for complaint and
-the patron was a valued one, Jerry telegraphed an apology. Copeland
-demurred at this.
-
-“What if that fellow does get a damaged shipment occasionally?” said
-Copeland, frowning over one of these messages; “he’s one of the slowest
-customers on our list. It wouldn’t be any great calamity if we lost
-him.”
-
-“He’s slow all right,” Jerry admitted, “but he’s dead sure; and he has
-an old uncle who owns about a section of the fattest bottom land on the
-Wabash. When the old gent dies, Sam’s going to put up a building for
-himself and build a drug store that will be more beautiful than Solomon
-in full evening dress.”
-
-“These old uncles never die,” observed Copeland dryly, handing back the
-telegram.
-
-“Sam’s will. He’s mostly paralyzed now and it won’t be long till we get
-an order for a new stock. Sam was in town last week and talked over the
-fittings for his new store. You’ll find seven dollars in my expense
-account that covers victuals and drink I threw into Samuel; but I paid
-for the tickets to the Creole Queens Burlesque out of my own pocket
-so’s to bring down my average.”
-
-“All right; let ’er go,” laughed Copeland.
-
-No one else in the establishment ever joked with Copeland. His father
-had been a melancholy dyspeptic; and the tradition of Farley’s bad
-temper and profanity still caused the old employees to walk softly.
-Copeland found Jerry’s freshness and cheek diverting. Jerry, by
-imperceptible degrees, was infusing snap into the organization. And
-Copeland knew that the house needed snap.
-
-“About telegrams: I guess we do more telegraphing than any house on
-the street!” Jerry informed him. “You can send a jolly by lightning
-anywhere in Indiana for a quarter; and nothing tickles one of these
-country fellows like getting a telegram.”
-
-“You’ve got to consider the dignity of the house just a little bit; try
-to remember that.”
-
-“Our game,” replied Jerry confidently, “is to hold the business
-we’ve got and get more. The old system’s played out. This isn’t the
-only house that feels it,” he added consolingly. “Everybody’s got to
-rustle these days. We’re conservative, of course, and deliver the
-goods straight every time, but we must keep shooting pep into the
-organization.”
-
-Jerry had gone to the private office with one of his sugar letters, as
-he called his propitiatory masterpieces, on the day after Copeland’s
-meeting with Nan at the Kinneys’.
-
-“By the way, Jerry,” said Copeland, as Amidon turned to go, “what’s
-this joke you’ve put over in the Bigger Business Club? I didn’t tell
-anybody I wanted to be president. I was never in the club-rooms but
-once and that was to look at that billiard table I gave the boys.”
-
-Jerry ran his finger round the inside of his collar and blinked
-innocently.
-
-“It was just an uprising of the people, Mr. Copeland. The boys had
-to have you. You got two hundred votes, and Sears, of the Thornwood
-Furniture Company, was the next man with only sixty-two.”
-
-“You did that, you young scoundrel,” said Copeland good humoredly, “and
-I suppose you gave ‘The News’ my picture to print in their account of
-the hotly contested election!”
-
-“No, sir; I only told the reporter where I thought he would find one.”
-
-The Bigger Business Club was an organization of clerks and traveling
-men, that offered luncheon and billiards and trade journals in a suite
-of rooms in the Board of Trade Building. It took itself very seriously,
-and was highly resolved to exercise its best endeavors in widening the
-city’s markets. Incidentally the luncheon served at thirty cents was
-the cheapest in town, and every other Saturday night during the winter
-there was a smoker where such subjects as “Selling Propositions,” “The
-Square Deal” and “Efficiency” were debated.
-
-“Well, now that you’ve wished it on me, what am I going to do about it?”
-
-“Your election scores one for the house and, of course, you’re going
-to take the job. The directors meet once a month, and you’ll have to
-attend some of the meetings; and you ought to turn out at a few of
-the smokers, anyhow. It will help the boys a lot to have you show an
-interest.”
-
-Copeland’s face became serious. He swung round in his chair and stared
-at the wall for a moment.
-
-“You think I might do those young fellows some good, do you?” he
-demanded bitterly. “Well, you seem to have a better opinion of me than
-most people. I’m much obliged to you, Jerry. If you’re going up there
-for lunch to-day I’ll go along.”
-
-Copeland had ceased to be amused by Jerry’s personal devotion; there
-was something the least bit pathetic in it. If any one else had taken
-the trouble to make him president of a club of clerks and drummers he
-would have scorned it,--but no one else would have taken the trouble!
-He was satisfied of that.
-
-Copeland was at last thoroughly sobered by his financial situation. For
-two years the drug business had been losing steadily. Farley’s strong
-hand was missed; in spite of his animosity toward Farley, Copeland
-realized that his father’s old partner had been the real genius of the
-business.
-
-His original subscription of fifty thousand dollars for Kinney’s
-cement stock had been increased from time to time in response to the
-importunities of the sanguine and pushing Kinney until he now had three
-hundred thousand dollars invested. The bank had declined to accept
-his cement stock as collateral for the loan he was obliged to ask to
-take up Farley’s notes and had insisted that he put up Copeland-Farley
-stock, a demand with which he had reluctantly complied.
-
-One hundred thousand dollars of paper in the Western National matured
-on the 1st of November, only five days distant. Copeland was pondering
-a formidable list of maturing obligations that afternoon when Eaton
-appeared at the door of his private office. Copeland had never had
-any business with Eaton. Though Eaton was defending Kinney’s patents,
-Copeland had never attended any of their conferences and the lawyer’s
-attenuated figure and serious countenance gave him a distinct shock.
-
-It was possible, if not likely, that Farley had got wind of Nan’s
-interview with him and had sent the lawyer with a warning that
-Nan must be let alone. Eaton would be a likely choice for such an
-errand--likelier than Thurston. Copeland had always found Eaton’s
-gravity disconcerting; and to-day the lawyer seemed unusually sedate.
-
-“Hope I haven’t chosen an unfortunate hour for my visit? I don’t have
-much business down this way and I’m never sure when you men on the
-street are busy.”
-
-“Glad to see you at any time,” Copeland replied with a cordiality he
-did not feel.
-
-“We don’t seem to meet very often,” remarked Eaton. “I used to see you
-at the University Club in old times, but you’ve been cutting us out
-lately.”
-
-“I don’t get there very often. The Hamilton is nearer the store and
-it’s a little more convenient place to meet anybody you want to see.”
-
-“I shall have to quit the University myself if the members don’t
-stop napping in the library after luncheon,” remarked Eaton musingly.
-“Rather a dim room, you remember? Only a few afternoons ago a fellow
-was sprawled out on a divan sleeping sweetly and I sat down on
-him--very annoying. The idea of gorging yourself so in the middle of
-the day that you’ve got to sleep it off is depressing. I suppose we can
-be undisturbed here for a few minutes?”
-
-“Yes; we’re all right here,” Copeland assented with misgivings. He
-thrust the list of accounts payable into a drawer, and waited for Eaton
-to unfold himself.
-
-“I come on a delicate matter, Copeland; business that is rather out of
-my line.”
-
-“I hoped you’d come to tell me we’d got a decision in the cement case.
-It would cheer us a good deal to know that Kinney’s patents have been
-sustained.”
-
-“I’m sorry we haven’t got a decision yet. But I’m reasonably sure of
-success there. If I hadn’t had faith in Kinney’s patents I shouldn’t
-have undertaken to defend them. We ought to have a decision now very
-shortly; any day, in fact.”
-
-“Well, Kinney isn’t worrying; he’s been going ahead just as though his
-rights were founded on rock.”
-
-“I think they are. It might have been better policy not to extend the
-business until we had clearance papers from the highest court, but
-Kinney thought he ought to push on while the going’s good. He’s an
-ambitious fellow, and the stuff he makes is in demand; but you know
-more about that than I do.”
-
-“To be frank about it, I’d be glad to clear out of it,” said Copeland.
-“But I can’t desert him while his patents are in question--the stock’s
-unsalable now, of course.”
-
-“There was a time when we might have compromised those suits on fairly
-good terms; but I advised Kinney against it. The responsibility of
-making the fight is mine. And,” Eaton added with one of his rare
-smiles, “I shall owe you all an apology if I get whipped.”
-
-Copeland shrugged his shoulders. His uncertainty as to the nature of
-Eaton’s errand caused him to fidget nervously.
-
-“As I said before,” Eaton resumed, “my purpose in coming to see you
-is wholly out of my line. In fact, I shan’t be surprised if you call
-it sheer impudence; but I wish to assure you that I come in the best
-spirit in the world. I hope you will understand that.”
-
-Copeland was confident now that Eaton brought some message from Farley.
-There was no other imaginable explanation of the visit. He was thinking
-hard, and to gain time he opened his top drawer and extended a box of
-cigars.
-
-“No, thanks,” said Eaton, staring absently at the cigars. “To repeat,
-Copeland, my errand isn’t an agreeable one, and I apologize for my
-presumption in undertaking it.”
-
-Copeland chose a cigar carefully and slammed the drawer on the box.
-Perhaps Farley had chosen Eaton as a proper person to marry Nan; she
-liked him; Eaton had always had an unaccountable fascination for women.
-He became impatient for the lawyer to continue; but Eaton had never
-been more maddeningly deliberate.
-
-“May I assume, for a moment, Copeland, that you have obligations
-outstanding that cause you, we will say, temporary embarrassment?
-Just a moment, please!” Copeland had moved forward suddenly in his
-chair with resentment burning hot in his face. “The assumption may be
-unwarranted,” Eaton continued; “if so, I apologize.”
-
-Copeland thrust his cigar into his mouth and bit it savagely. Farley
-had undoubtedly taken over the maturing notes at the Western National
-and had sent Eaton to taunt him with the change of ownership.
-Eaton removed his eyeglasses and polished them with the whitest of
-handkerchiefs. His eyes, unobscured by the thick lenses, told Copeland
-nothing.
-
-“I may have misled you into thinking that my errand is purely social.
-I shall touch upon business; but I am not personally concerned in it
-in any way whatever. You might naturally conclude that I represent
-some corporation, bank, or trust company. I assure you that I do not.
-It may occur to you that Mr. Farley sent me, but he has not mentioned
-you to me in this, or in any other connection remotely bearing upon my
-errand. You may possibly suspect that some one near you--some one in
-your office, for example--has been telling tales out of school. I will
-say explicitly that young Amidon, while a friend of mine, and a boy I
-particularly like, has given me no hint--not even the remotest idea--of
-any such state of things. I hope you are satisfied on those points?”
-
-Many persons at different times in John Cecil Eaton’s life, enraged by
-his cool, unruffled demeanor, had been moved to tell him to go to the
-devil; but no one had ever done so. Copeland did not do so now, though
-he was strongly impelled to violent speech.
-
-“I will go the length of saying that you are in considerable danger
-right now,” Eaton went on as Copeland continued to watch him
-impassively. “If the Western National should foreclose on your stock,
-you would be pretty nearly wiped out of this old concern, that was
-founded and conducted for years by your father and is still identified
-with his name. I am in a position to pay those notes and carry
-them--carry renewals until you can take them up. I will say frankly
-that I don’t consider them a good investment, and I have said so to the
-person I represent; but to repeat again, I am not here as a lawyer or
-business man. My purpose is wholly friendly, and quite disinterested.
-I should merely go to the bank and take up the notes--thus destroying
-the hopes of certain gentlemen--your competitors in business--who
-entertain the cheerful idea of buying in your stock and putting you
-out of business. That would be a calamity--for you; and it would be
-deplorable to have an old house like Copeland-Farley lose its identity.”
-
-Copeland was still silent. He had caught at one motive for this
-visit after another, but Eaton had disposed of all of them. Eaton’s
-reputation as a man of strict--of rather quixotic--honor did not
-encourage the belief that he would deliberately lie. But there was a
-trap concealed somewhere, Copeland reflected; he resolved not to be
-caught. If he effected an immediate marriage with Nan, Farley would,
-he believed, do something handsome for her. He would storm and bluster
-in his usual way; but he would hardly dare go the length of cutting
-her off entirely. It was conceivable that he might advance money to
-save Copeland-Farley from catastrophe. There was a vein of sentiment
-in Timothy Farley; brought face to face with the idea of having the
-business he had done so much to establish eliminated, it was wholly
-possible that he would come down handsomely if Nan were introduced into
-the situation as a factor.
-
-Copeland was irritated by Eaton’s cocksure manner--a manner well
-calculated to cause irritation. Men did not make such offers from
-purely philanthropic motives. Eaton, moreover, was no friend of
-his; they hardly spoke the same language. Nan, he still suspected,
-was somehow the object and aim of these overtures. His mind worked
-quickly. He meant to marry Nan at once, within a few days if his plans
-succeeded, and he was not to be frustrated by any scheme for placing
-himself at the mercy of a new and concealed creditor.
-
-“I’m much obliged to you, Eaton,” he answered steadily; “but I’m not
-quite all in yet. I can’t imagine where you got that idea. If I didn’t
-know you were a gentleman I should be pretty hot. Things have been a
-little tight with me, I confess; but that’s largely due to cutting down
-my capital in the drug business to back up what I had invested with
-Kinney. I’m working out satisfactorily and don’t need help; but I’m
-obliged to you just the same.”
-
-Eaton nodded reflectively; his face betrayed no surprise.
-
-“It might be possible, of course, for me to buy those maturing notes
-without your knowledge or consent. But I thought it would look
-better--help your credit, in other words--if you took them up yourself.
-You can see that.”
-
-Copeland had already thought of this; the idea did not add to his
-comfort. The mystery that enveloped Eaton enraged him; business was not
-done in this way. If anybody wanted to put one hundred thousand dollars
-into the drug house, there were direct businesslike ways of suggesting
-it. He tipped himself back in his chair and pointed the unlighted cigar
-he had been fumbling at a calendar that hung on the wall over his desk.
-
-“My paper in the Western National isn’t due for five days: I dare
-them to sell it--to you or anybody else! As you know perfectly well,
-it would be bad banking ethics for a bank to sell the paper of an
-old customer. It isn’t done! I’ve about made up my mind to quit the
-Western, anyhow. Those fellows over there think they’ve got the right
-to sweat every customer they’ve got. They’re not bankers; they’ve got
-the souls of pawnbrokers and ought to be making loans on household
-goods at forty per cent a month.”
-
-“That,” replied Eaton calmly, “has nothing to do with the matter in
-hand. I understand that you decline my offer, which is to take up the
-Western’s notes.”
-
-“You’re right, mighty right! You wouldn’t accept such an offer
-yourself, Eaton. If I were to come to you with a mysterious offer to
-advance you money, you’d turn me out of your office.”
-
-“Very likely,” Eaton assented. “And I don’t undertake to defend the
-idea; I confess that it’s indefensible. As I understand you, you’ve
-passed on the matter finally.”
-
-“I have,” replied Copeland sharply.
-
-Eaton rose. He bent his gaze with an absent air upon the calendar, as
-though surprised to find it there. Then, seeming to recall that he had
-finished his errand, he walked to the door.
-
-“Thank you very much, Copeland,” he said; and passed out.
-
-Jerry Amidon paused in the act of shaking hands with a country customer
-to stare at the departing figure, but Eaton stalked austerely into the
-street quite unmindful of him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-FATE AND BILLY COPELAND
-
-
-When Nan left Copeland the night of the Kinney party she promised to
-call him the next day. As telephoning from home was hazardous, she
-made an excuse for going downtown and called from a department store.
-Copeland was not in, and she repeated her call several times without
-reaching him. Copeland, if she had known it, was in the directors’ room
-at the Western National, discussing his affairs with the president.
-
-She had a superstitious awe of petty frustrations of her plans
-and hopes. The Celt in her was alert for signs and miraculous
-interventions. It occurred to her that perhaps the angels of light or
-darkness were bent upon interfering; the idea kindled her imagination.
-
-In the street she ran into Fanny Copeland. To meet Billy’s former wife,
-just when she was trying to perfect plans for marrying Billy, was
-altogether dismaying.
-
-“You dear child, I’m so glad to see you!” cried Fanny, taking both
-Nan’s hands. “I was just wondering whether I had time to run up to the
-house. How is Mr. Farley?”
-
-“Papa hasn’t been quite so well,” Nan answered; “but it’s only a
-slight cold. I had to come downtown on an errand,” she explained.
-
-She experienced once more a feeling of self-consciousness, of
-unreality, in meeting Fanny face to face: within a day or two she
-might be another Mrs. Copeland! And yet Billy had once loved this
-woman, undeniably; and she had loved him--she might, for all Nan knew,
-still love him. She envied the little woman her equanimity, her poise,
-her good cheer. If she were only like that, instead of the wobbly
-weather-vane she knew herself to be! Why hadn’t she a firm grip on life
-instead of a succession of fatuous clutches at nothing! Nan wished, as
-she had wished a thousand times, that troublesome problems would not
-rise up to vex her.
-
-The Farley chauffeur had run his machine to the sidewalk to pick her up.
-
-“I hope your father will be better soon,” said Fanny. “Give him my
-love, won’t you?”
-
-Nan’s eyes followed her as the car got under way.
-
-When she reached home she met a special delivery messenger at the door.
-Her heart jumped; it was a note from Billy, who had risked sending her
-a message that might very easily have fallen under her foster-father’s
-eye. She thrust it into her pocket unopened and ran upstairs.
-
-“Well, you’re back again, are you?” Farley said harshly.
-
-“Yes, papa; I had an errand I couldn’t put off.”
-
-“It’s always been a mystery to me,” he grumbled, “what women find to
-trot downtown for so much.”
-
-“Pins!” she replied lightly. “We always need little things. I met Mrs.
-Copeland--looking for pins, too; so you see I’m not the only one.”
-
-“You saw _her_, did you?” he asked with a show of eagerness.
-
-“Yes; I met her as I was coming out of Sterling’s. She was just
-starting home.”
-
-“I’d been hoping she’d stop in to see me, but she’s a busy woman.”
-
-“She has a lot to do, of course. If you’d like to see her I’ll
-telephone her to come in for luncheon to-morrow.”
-
-He appeared to be pondering this and his hands opened and shut several
-times before he answered.
-
-“No; never mind. She’s busy and it really doesn’t matter.” He stared
-vacantly at the ceiling for a moment. “I guess that’s all fixed now,”
-he added musingly, apparently forgetting her.
-
-She was anxious to be off to her room to read Billy’s note; but she
-lingered, curious as to what further he might have to say about Fanny.
-
-“You like that woman, don’t you, Nan? You and she get on--you haven’t
-found any traces of ill-feeling toward you?”
-
-His small gray eyes were bent upon her with an odd expression of
-mingled hostility and kindness.
-
-“Of course I like her, papa; and I believe she likes me. There’s no
-reason why she shouldn’t like me!”
-
-“No reason!” he caught her up contemptuously.
-
-She knew that he was thinking of Billy. His face twitched as a wave of
-anger seized him.
-
-“That man is a scoundrel!” he blurted. “If he hadn’t been he’d never
-have treated that woman as he did!”
-
-“It doesn’t seem to worry her much!” she flashed back at him. “I don’t
-know a happier woman anywhere!”
-
-She realized instantly that the remark was unfortunate. He pointed a
-shaking finger at her.
-
-“That woman,” he said, pronouncing the words with ominous deliberation,
-“ought to get down on her knees every night and thank God that she’s
-rid of him! That great bully, that worthless loafer! But I’ll show him
-a few things! If that blackguard thinks he can put anything over on me
-he’ll find that I’m smarter than he thinks I am! You remember that!”
-
-“You must be quiet, Mr. Farley,” admonished Miss Rankin, who had
-been standing by the window; “the doctor said you weren’t to excite
-yourself.”
-
-“I’m not excited,” he flared. “Doctors and lawyers make a nice mess of
-this world. They don’t any of ’em know anything!”
-
-He gave himself an impatient twitch and several documents slipped from
-under his pillow. He clutched them nervously and thrust them back.
-
-Nan was jubilant for a moment in the knowledge that she knew what those
-documents contained--devices for humiliating her after he was gone. If
-only he knew how little she cared! He thought of nothing but his money
-and means of keeping it from her.
-
-“Go away; I want to think,” he said gruffly.
-
-Nan was grateful for this dismissal, and a moment later had softly
-closed her door and was eagerly reading Copeland’s message. It covered
-three letter-sheets and the daring of its contents caused her heart to
-beat wildly.
-
-What he proposed was immediate marriage. There was to be a military
-wedding that night at the church in the next block. Nan, he assumed,
-would attend. At the end of the ceremony she had merely to pass out
-of the church and his machine would be waiting around the corner.
-She could pack a suit-case, ostensibly filled with articles for the
-cleaner’s, and he would have a messenger call for it. They would run up
-to Lafayette, where he had a married cousin who would have a minister
-ready to marry them; then take a train for Chicago and return the next
-day and have it out with Farley.
-
-Nan had never shared Copeland’s faith in the idea that once they were
-married they might safely rely on Farley’s forgiveness. Farley’s
-passionate outbreaks at the mere mention of Copeland pretty effectually
-disposed of that hope. But that was not so important, for, in spite
-of Farley’s unfavorable opinion of Copeland’s business capacity and
-Billy’s own complaint of hard times, she had an idea that Copeland was
-well off, if not rich. To outward appearances, the drug business was
-as flourishing now as in the days when Farley was still active in its
-affairs. It was the way of business men to “talk poor” even when they
-were most prosperous; this had, at least, always been Farley’s way.
-
-The gaunt figure in the room across the hall rose wraithlike before
-her, giving her pause. Yes, the Farleys had been kind to her; they
-had caught her away from the world’s rough hand and had done all that
-it was in their power to do to make a decent, self-respecting woman
-of her. Her advantages had been equal to those enjoyed by most of
-the girls she knew. Many people--the town’s “old stock,” Farley’s
-substantial neighbors--would see nothing romantic or amusing in her
-flight with Copeland. They would call her the basest ingrate; she
-could fancy them saying that blood will tell; that after all she was a
-nobody, a girl without background or antecedents, whom the Farleys had
-picked up, out of the kindness of their simple hearts, and that she had
-taken the first chance to slap them in the face.
-
-Then she remembered the will that had given her the key to Farley’s
-intentions. Possibly the new will, which Thurston had brought to the
-house that day, cut her expectations to an even lower figure....
-
-It pleased her to think that she was studying the matter
-dispassionately, arguing with herself both for and against Billy’s
-plan. It was more honest to marry Copeland now and be done with it
-than to wait and marry him after Farley’s death. This she found a
-particularly satisfying argument in favor of marrying him at once. Her
-histrionic sense responded to the suggestion of an elopement; it would
-be a great lark, besides bringing her deliverance from the iron hand
-of Farley. Yes; she would do it! Her pulses tingled as she visualized
-herself as the chief figure in an event that would stir the town. It
-was now four o’clock. Copeland had written that at five a messenger
-would call for her suit-case, and all she had to do was to step into
-his car when she came out of the church.
-
-She was downstairs listening for the bell when the messenger rang. As
-she handed him the suit-case she felt herself already launched upon a
-great adventure. While she was at the door the afternoon paper arrived
-and she carried it up to Farley and read him the headlines.
-
-She had her dinner with him in his room. There was a pathos in his lean
-frame, his deep-furrowed brow, in the restless, gnarled hands. She was
-not so happy over her plans as she had expected to be. She kept saying
-to herself that it wasn’t quite fair--not an honest return for all the
-kindnesses of her foster-parents--to run away and leave this broken old
-man. As she thought of it, every unkind word he had said to her had
-been merited; she had lied to him, disobeyed him, and tricked him.
-
-“What’s the matter with your appetite, Nan?” he asked suddenly. “Seems
-to me you’ve looked a little peaked lately. Maybe you don’t get enough
-exercise now we’ve got the machine.”
-
-“Oh, I’m perfectly well,” she replied hastily.
-
-“Well, you’ve been cooped up here all summer. You’d better take a trip
-this winter. We’ll keep a lookout for somebody that’s goin’ South and
-get ’em to take you along.”
-
-“Oh, that isn’t necessary, papa. I never felt better in my life.”
-
-“Isn’t this the night for that Parish girl’s wedding?” he asked later.
-
-“Yes; I thought I’d go,” she answered carelessly. “It’s at the
-Congregational Church, and I can go alone.”
-
-“All right; you be sure to go. You never saw an army wedding? I guess
-’most everybody will be there.”
-
-When he reminded her that it was time to dress she answered
-indifferently that she didn’t care to go to the reception, and that the
-gown she had on would be perfectly suitable.
-
-“I’ll just watch the show from a back seat, papa; you can see a wedding
-better from the rear, anyhow.”
-
-“Well, don’t hurry back on my account.”
-
-She had been afraid that he would raise some objection to her going
-without an escort; but he made no comment.
-
-She ran her eyes over the things in her room--photographs of girls she
-had known at boarding-school, trifles for the toilet-table that had
-been given her on birthdays and holidays. It was a big comfortable
-room, the largest bedroom in the house, with a window-seat that had
-been built specially for her when she came home from school. She
-glanced over the trinkets that littered the mantel, and took from
-its leathern case a medal she had won in school for excellence in
-recitations. On the wall hung a photograph of herself as Rosalind, a
-part she had played in an out-of-doors presentation of “As You Like
-It.”...
-
-She must leave some explanation of her absence--so she sat down at her
-desk and wrote:--
-
- _Dear Papa_:--
-
- Please don’t be hard on me, but I’ve run away to marry Mr. Copeland.
- We are going to Lafayette to his cousin’s and shall be married at
- her house to-night. I hope you won’t be hard on me; I shall explain
- everything to you when I see you and I think you will understand. We
- shall be back very soon and I will let you know where I shall be.
-
-She hesitated a moment and then closed with “Your loving daughter,
-Nan.” She thrust this into an envelope, addressed it in a bold hand to
-Timothy Farley, Esq., and placed it under a small silver box on the
-mantel.
-
-She stood a moment at the door, then closed it softly and went in to
-say good-night to Farley. He took the hand on which she had half-drawn
-her glove and held it while his eyes slowly surveyed her.
-
-“I didn’t know whether you’d wear a hat to an evening wedding. I never
-know about those things.”
-
-“Oh, this is such a foolish little thing, papa; you’d hardly call it a
-hat,” she laughed.
-
-“Well, don’t let one of those army officers pick you up and carry you
-off. I want to hold on to you a little longer.”
-
-As she bent to kiss him tears sprang to her eyes. Face to face with it,
-there was nothing heroic, nothing romantic in abandoning the kindest
-friend she was ever likely to know, and in a fashion so shamelessly
-abrupt and cruel.
-
-“Good-night, papa!” she cried bravely and tripped downstairs, humming
-to keep up her courage.
-
-She absently took her latch-key from a bowl on the hall table and did
-not remember until she had thrust it into her glove as she went down
-the steps that she would have no use for it. It was the finest of
-autumn nights and many were walking to the church; there was a flutter
-of white raiment, and a festal gayety marked the street. She waited
-for those immediately in sight to pass before leaving the yard and
-then walked toward the church.
-
-She eluded an officer resplendent in military dress who started toward
-her and stole into the nearest seat. The subdued happiness that seemed
-to thrill the atmosphere, the organist’s preludings, the air of
-expectancy intensified her sense of detachment and remoteness.
-
-The notes of the “Lohengrin” march roused her from her reverie and she
-craned her neck for a first sight of the attendants and the bride.
-
-Just before the benediction she left, and was soon in the side
-street where Billy was to leave his car. She had expected him to
-be in readiness, but he had evidently waited for the end of the
-ceremony--which seemed absurd when they were so soon to have a wedding
-of their own! It was inconsiderate of him to keep her waiting. The
-street began to fill and she loitered, ill at ease, while the organ
-trumpeted joyfully.
-
-Then she saw the familiar white roadster, with Billy in the chauffeur’s
-seat, turning into the side street where several policemen were
-already directing the movements of the parked carriages and motors
-toward the church entrance. His overcoat was flung open and the light
-of the lamp at the intersecting streets smote upon his shirt bosom.
-It was ridiculous for him to have put on evening clothes and a silk
-hat when he had a long drive before him! The policemen bawled to him
-not to interfere with the traffic. Ignoring their signals he drove
-his car forward. Nan watched with mounting anger the disturbance he
-was creating. The crowd that had assembled in the hope of catching a
-glimpse of the bride now found Copeland and his altercation with the
-police much more diverting.
-
-“Billy Copeland’s drunk again,” some one behind Nan remarked
-contemptuously.
-
-The white car suddenly darted forward and crashed into a motor that
-was advancing in line toward the corner, causing a stampede among the
-waiting vehicles.
-
-While the police were separating the two cars, Nan caught sight of
-Eaton, who seemed to be trying to persuade the policemen of Copeland’s
-good intentions. Billy’s voice was perfectly audible to the spectators
-as he demanded to be let alone.
-
-“They haven’t got any right to block this street; it’s against the law
-to shut up a street that way!”
-
-The policemen dragged him from the seat and a chauffeur from one of
-the waiting cars jumped in and backed the machine out of the way. Nan
-waited uncertainly to see what disposition the police were making of
-Billy; but having lifted the blockade they left him to his own devices.
-He had been drinking; that was the only imaginable explanation of his
-conduct, and her newly established confidence in him was gone. However,
-it would be best to wait and attempt to speak to him, as he might
-mingle in the crowd and make inquiries for her that would publish the
-fact that they had planned flight.
-
-Suddenly she heard her name spoken, and turned to find Eaton beside her.
-
-“Too bad about Copeland,” he remarked in his usual careless fashion;
-“but one of those policemen promised to see that he went home.”
-
-She was bewildered by his sudden appearance. Eaton never missed
-anything; he would certainly make note of her gown and hat as not
-proper for occasions of highest ceremony. Nor was it likely that he had
-overlooked the two suitcases strapped to the rear of Billy’s car.
-
-“Looked for you all over the church, and had given you up,” Eaton was
-saying. “You can’t say no--simply got to have you! Stupid to be pulling
-off a wedding the night we’re dedicating the new swimming-pool at
-the Wright Settlement House. Programme all shot to pieces, but Mamie
-Pembroke’s going to sing and you’ve got to do a recitation. Favor
-to an old friend! They dumped the full responsibility on me at six
-o’clock--six, mind you!”
-
-Nan bewildered, uncertain, suffered him to pilot her round the corner,
-wondering how much he knew, and trying to adjust herself to this new
-situation. A car that she recognized as the Pembrokes’ stood at the
-curb.
-
-“Oh, come right along, Nan; there’s no use saying you won’t!” cried
-Mamie Pembroke.
-
-The Pembrokes were among those who had dropped her after she became
-identified with the Kinneys, and her rage at Copeland was mitigated by
-their cordiality.
-
-“Hello, Mamie! What on earth do you want with me!”
-
-“Oh, it’s a lark; one of this crazy Eaton man’s ideas.”
-
-Nan knew that she had been recognized by many people, and that even if
-Copeland had not made a fool of himself the elopement was now out of
-the question. She felt giddy and leaned heavily on Eaton’s arm as he
-helped her into the car.
-
-“You were alone, weren’t you, Nan?” Eaton asked as the machine started.
-
-“Yes,” she faltered, settling back into a seat beside Mrs. Pembroke.
-
-“Then we’d better stop at your house so Mr. Farley won’t be troubled
-about you.”
-
-As she had not meant to return at all, it seemed absurd to go back now
-to say that she was going to a settlement house entertainment and would
-be home in an hour or so. The telltale letter could hardly have been
-found yet and she must dispose of it immediately. The car whirled round
-to the Farleys’ and Nan let herself in with her key.
-
-Farley was awake, reading a magazine article on “The Ohio in the Civil
-War.”
-
-“Back already! Getting married doesn’t take long, does it?--not as long
-as getting out of it!”
-
-“Oh, the wedding was stunning!” she cried breathlessly. “I never saw so
-much gold braid in my life. I’m going with the Pembrokes and Mr. Eaton
-down to dedicate a swimming-pool at the Wright Settlement House. I just
-stopped to tell you, so you wouldn’t worry.”
-
-“Tom Pembroke going down there?” he growled. “I thought that tank was
-for poor boys. What’s Eaton got to do with it?”
-
-She explained that Eaton was substituting for the president of the
-Settlement House Association, who had been called from town, and that
-he had asked her to recite something.
-
-“Well, ‘The Ole Swimmin’ Hole’ will come in handy. I always like the
-way you do that. Run along now!”
-
-She darted into her room and found the letter just as she had left
-it on the mantel. She tore it into strips and threw them into
-her beribboned waste-paper basket. Her revulsion of feeling was
-complete. It was like waking from a nightmare to find herself secure
-amid familiar surroundings. She turned to Farley’s room again and
-impulsively bent and kissed him.
-
-“Ain’t you gone yet?” he demanded, with the gruffness that often
-concealed his pleasure.
-
-“I’m off for sure this time,” she called back. “Thanks for suggesting
-‘The Ole Swimmin’ Hole’--that’s just the thing!”
-
-They found the hall packed with an impatient crowd. Eaton led the
-way to the platform and opened the exercises without formality. The
-superintendent of the house dealt in statistics as to the service
-rendered by the Settlement. Mamie Pembroke sang “The Rosary” and
-responded to an encore.
-
-Nan had not faced so large an audience since her appearance as Rosalind
-at school. She drew off her gloves before her name was announced, and
-as she stood up put aside her hat. At least half a dozen nationalities
-were represented in the auditorium; and she resolved to try first
-a sketch in which an Irishman, an Italian and a German debated in
-brisk dialogue the ownership of a sum of money. She had heard it done
-in vaudeville by a comedian of reputation and had mastered it for
-dinner-table uses. She had added to it, recast, and improved it, and
-she now gave it with all the spirit and nice differentiation of which
-she was capable. Eaton, who had heard her several times before, was
-surprised at her success; she had taken pains; and how often Eaton, in
-thinking of Nan, had wished she would take pains!
-
-There was no ignoring the demand for more, and she gave another comic
-piece and added “The Ole Swimmin’ Hole” for good measure. She received
-her applause graciously and sat down wondering at her own happiness.
-Mrs. Pembroke patted her hand; she heard somebody saying, “Yes,
-Farley’s daughter,--adopted her when she was a child!”
-
-Eaton was announcing the close of the programme. It was his pleasant
-office, he said, to deliver the natatorium that had been added to the
-Settlement House into the keeping of the people of the neighborhood.
-
-“Many lives go to the making of a city like this. Most of you know
-little of the men who have built this city, but you profit by their
-care and labor as much as though you and your fathers had been born
-here. It is the hope of all of us who come here to meet you and to help
-you, if we can, that you may be builders yourselves, adding to the
-dignity and honor and prosperity of the community.
-
-“Now, only one man besides myself knows who gave the money for the
-building of the swimming-pool. The other man is the donor himself. He
-is one of the old merchants of this city, a man known for his honesty
-and fair dealing. He told me not to mention his name; and I’m not going
-to do it. But I think that if some one who is very dear to him--the
-person who is the dearest of all in the world to him--should hand the
-keys to the superintendent, I should not be telling--and yet, you would
-understand who this kind friend is.”
-
-He crossed the platform and handed Nan a bunch of keys.
-
-“I’m sure,” he said, turning to the interested spectators, “that you
-will be glad to know that the keys to the bathhouse have come to you
-through Miss Farley.”
-
-Tears sprang to Nan’s eyes as she rose and handed the keys to the
-superintendent amid cheers and applause. She was profoundly moved by
-the demonstration. They did not know--those simple foreign folk who
-lifted their faces in gratitude and admiration--that an hour earlier
-it had been in her heart to commit an act of grossest ingratitude
-against their benefactor. She turned away with infinite relief that the
-exercises were over, and followed the rest of the visitors to inspect
-the house. It was like Farley not to tell any one of his gift; and she
-felt like a fraud and a cheat to stand in his place, receiving praise
-that was intended for him.
-
-On the way home she was very quiet. The many emotions of the day had so
-wearied her that she had no spirit to project herself into the future.
-And it seemed futile to attempt to forecast a day’s events, when she
-had, apparently, so little control of her own destiny.
-
-“Hope Mr. Farley won’t abuse me for giving him away?” Eaton
-remarked, as he left her at the door. “But the temptation was too
-strong--couldn’t resist putting you into the picture. Your recitations
-made a big hit; and those people are real critics!”
-
-She lay in the window-seat till daybreak, dreaming, staring at the
-stars.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-AN ABRUPT ENDING
-
-
-Nan sang as she dressed the next morning. The gods had ordained
-that she shouldn’t marry Billy, and after her uncertainties on that
-point she was relieved to find that the higher powers had taken the
-troublesome business out of her hands. She was surprised at her
-light-hearted acceptance of the situation. She hadn’t married Billy and
-she sang in the joy of her freedom.
-
-Just as she was ready to leave her room the maid brought up a special
-delivery letter from Copeland. It had been posted at six o’clock. She
-tore open the envelope and read frowningly:--
-
- _Dear Nan_:--
-
- Sorry about the row at the church last night. Never occurred to me
- that there’d be such a jam. I hung around the neighborhood as long as
- I could, hoping to find you. But it will be nicer, after all, to make
- the run by daylight. Telephone me where we can meet this morning, say
- at ten. I shall be at the office early and shall expect to hear from
- you by nine-thirty. For God’s sake, don’t fail me, Nan!
-
-This was scrawled in pencil on Hamilton Club paper. She propped it
-against her dressing-table mirror and stared at it wonderingly. It
-did not seem possible that she had ever contemplated running away with
-Billy. The remembrance of him as he sat in his car, quarreling with the
-police, with the eyes of a hundred people upon him, sickened her.
-
- Either you love me, Nan, or you don’t; you either have been fooling
- me all along or you mean to stand by me now and make me the happiest
- man alive....
-
-She smiled at Billy’s efforts to be pathetic--a quizzical little smile.
-The paper smelt odiously of tobacco smoke. She tore the note to pieces
-and let them slip slowly from her hand into her waste-basket. No; she
-did not love Billy. Only a few hours earlier she had been ready to run
-away with him; but that was all over now. She was sorry for Billy,
-but she did not love him. How could she have ever been foolish enough
-to think she did! But why, she wondered, was she forever yielding to
-impulses from which a kind fate might not always protect her? “You
-little fool!” she ejaculated. A moment later she stood smiling in
-Farley’s door.
-
-“Nan, look here what they say about you in the paper!” he said,
-glancing at her over his spectacles. “I told Eaton not to blab about
-that swimmin’-tank business and here they’ve got us all in the paper!”
-
-“Oh, if only you could have been there, papa!”
-
-She saw that he was pleased. He bade her ring for the maid to bring
-up their breakfast; he wanted to know all about the exercises at the
-Settlement House.
-
-“I guess you made a hit all right,” he said proudly, after making her
-read the account aloud. “I never liked your sayin’ pieces in public;
-but I guess if you can tickle a crowd like that I ain’t got any right
-to kick.”
-
-The reporter had built his story around her; and had done full justice
-to her part in the surprise of the evening. Her recitations were
-praised extravagantly as worthy of a professional; “it is unfortunate,”
-ran the article, “that Miss Farley’s elocutionary talents are so rarely
-displayed in public.”
-
-It was compensation for much greater catastrophes than the loss of
-Billy Copeland to find Farley so pleased.
-
-“It’s kind o’ nice to do things like that--to do things for people,”
-Farley remarked wistfully, after subjecting Nan to a prolonged
-cross-examination. “I’m sorry now I didn’t tell you about that swimmin’
-pool. You’ve got a mighty kind heart, Nan. I used to think I wouldn’t
-make any will, but let what I’ve got go to you, and leave it to you to
-help some of these schemes for the poor. You know you’ve worried me
-sometimes--we won’t talk about that any more; I guess it’s all over
-now.”
-
-The questioning look he bent upon her gave her conscience a twinge.
-If Billy hadn’t become embroiled with the police she would not be
-listening to Farley’s praise!
-
-“Yes, papa; it’s all over,” she replied softly, and bent down and
-kissed him.
-
-When later she called Copeland on the telephone it was to laugh at
-their misadventure--it seemed safer to make light of it.
-
-“Please forget all about it, Billy. It wasn’t my fault or yours either;
-it was all wrong any way. No--”
-
-He was talking from his desk at the store and as he began to argue she
-dismissed him firmly.
-
-“Please don’t be cross, Billy. You ought to be as glad as I am that we
-didn’t do it. No; never again! Cheer up; that’s a nice boy!”
-
-She hung up on his angry reply.
-
-Nan spent all day at home virtuously addressing herself to household
-affairs, much to the surprise of the cook and maid.
-
-Mamie Pembroke stopped to leave a huge bunch of chrysanthemums for Mr.
-Farley. He sent for her to come to his room and asked her all about
-the evening at the Settlement House. Mamie’s appearance added to his
-happiness. He had been deeply grieved when Mamie and the Harrington
-girls dropped Nan; it was a good sign that they were beginning to
-evince a renewed interest in her. He attributed the change in their
-attitude to Nan’s abandonment of Copeland and the Kinneys, never
-dreaming in his innocence of the quiet missionary work that Eaton had
-been doing with the cautious mothers of these young women.
-
-“You’d better give Nan some work to do on some of your charity schemes,
-Mamie. She’s been shut up here with me so much she hasn’t got around
-with the rest of you girls as I want her to.”
-
-“Oh, don’t think I do so much! Mamma does it for the whole family. I’m
-sure Nan does as much as any of the girls.”
-
-“Thanks for your kind words, Mamie; you know perfectly well they
-dropped me from the Kindergarten Board for cutting all the meetings.
-But I think we all ought to help in these things. It certainly opened
-my eyes to see that crowd down there last night; I had no idea the
-Settlement had grown so big.”
-
-“I wish you and Mamie would go down and look at the Boys’ Club
-sometime. They’ve only got a tumble-down house, but they’re talkin’ of
-doin’ something better. A poor boy has a mighty hard time. When I was a
-boy down on the Ohio--”
-
-The story was a familiar one to Nan, and as he talked her thoughts
-reverted to the will in which his provisions for the Boys’ Club had so
-angered her.
-
-All day she marveled at her happiness, her newly-awakened
-unselfishness. In her gratitude for what she sincerely believed to have
-been a providential deliverance from Copeland she voluntarily gave the
-nurse the night off.
-
-Her good cheer had communicated itself to Farley. The nurse was a
-nuisance, he said, and he would soon be well enough to dispense with
-her altogether. Over the supper they ate together in his room she
-exerted herself to amuse him and he proved unusually amiable. The
-afternoon paper’s account of his gift of the swimming-pool revived this
-as a topic of conversation.
-
-“I haven’t done as much as I ought to for the poor and unlucky. I
-expect they’ve called me a pretty hard specimen; and I’ve turned down
-lots of these people that’s always chasin’ round with subscription
-papers. But I always had an idea I’d like to do something that would
-count. I’m sorry now I didn’t give those Boys’ Club folks a boost while
-I could see the money spent myself. I’ve tried makin’ wills and ain’t
-sure about any of ’em. I got a good mind to burn ’em all, Nan, and
-leave it up to you to give away what you think’s right. Only I wouldn’t
-want you to feel bound to do it. These things don’t count for much
-unless you feel in your heart you want to do ’em.”
-
-She tried to divert his thoughts to other channels, but he persisted
-in discussing ways and means of helping the poor and unfortunate.
-She was surprised at his intimate knowledge of local philanthropic
-organizations; for a number of them he expressed the greatest contempt,
-as impractical and likely to do harm. Others he commended warmly and
-urged her to acquaint herself with their methods and needs.
-
-“We ought to do those things ourselves, while we’re alive. You can’t
-tell what they’ll do with your money after you’re dead,” he kept
-repeating.
-
-She wondered whether he regretted now having made the will that
-had caused her so much anguish. Perhaps.... But her resentment had
-vanished. His solicitude for friendless boys, based upon his own
-forlorn youth, impressed her deeply. It was out of the same spirit
-that he had lifted her from poverty--she had even greater cause for
-gratitude and generosity than he, and she said so in terms that touched
-him.
-
-“You mustn’t think of those things any more, papa,” she said finally.
-“If you have a bad night, Miss Rankin will give me a scolding. I’m
-going to read you something.”
-
-“All right,” he acquiesced. “To-morrow I’ll talk to you some more about
-my will. It’s worried me a whole lot; I want to do the right thing,
-Nan; I want you to know that.”
-
-“Of course I know that, papa; I’d be a mighty stupid girl if I didn’t;
-so don’t waste your strength arguing with me. You’ve been talking too
-much; what shall I read?”
-
-“Don’t read me any of this new-fangled stuff. Take down ‘Huck Finn’ and
-read that chapter about the two crooks Huck meets on the river. You
-ain’t read me that lately.”
-
-He lay very quiet until she had finished the chapter.
-
-“Much obliged,” he said absently. “You run along now. I’ll be all
-right.”
-
-In the hall she met the maid coming to announce a caller.
-
-Jerry, chastely attired in a new fall suit, greeted her with the
-ambassadorial dignity that he assumed for social occasions, with
-apologies to J. C. E. He could bow and shake hands like his idol and
-mentor, and though his manner of speech was still his own, he had
-greatly subdued its original violences. The area of collar and cuff
-that could be sustained on a salary lately increased to eighty dollars
-a month might provoke smiles; but Jerry was not troubled. By discreetly
-soliciting custom for a tailor who made a twenty-five dollar suit
-which only the most sophisticated sartorial critic could distinguish
-from a sixty-dollar creation, he got his clothes at a discount. While
-he had not yet acquired a dress-suit or a silk hat, he boasted a
-dinner-coat and a cutaway. He had dedicated the latter by wearing it
-boldly to Christ Church, where he was ushered to the third pew from
-the chancel and placed beside a lady whose kneelings and risings he
-imitated sedulously. This was Eaton’s church, and while that gentleman
-was not present on that particular morning, a tablet commemorating
-his father’s virtues (twenty years warden and vestry-man) gave Jerry
-a thrill of pride and a sense of perspective. His mother had been a
-Campbellite, and a vested clergy and choir, sprung upon him suddenly,
-had awed him to a mood of humility.
-
-“I’d been wondering as I came up what I’d do if you were out: I
-couldn’t decide whether to jump in the river or lie down in the middle
-of the street and be killed by a large, fat auto. Nan,”--he held her
-hand and gazed into her face with tragic intensity,--“Nan, you have
-saved my life!”
-
-She met him promptly on his own ground.
-
-“I should have worn mourning for you, Jerry; you may be sure of that.”
-
-“The thought seems to give you pleasure. But I like you best in
-blue--that suit you had on the day we paddled up the river still haunts
-me.”
-
-“Oh, that was a last year’s bird-nest. I have a lot better clothes than
-that, but I don’t wear them to picnics.”
-
-“You’d be dazzling in anything; I’m dead sure of that!”
-
-He ran on in his usual key for some time, and then rose abruptly and
-walked toward her.
-
-“Are we quite alone?” he whispered tragically.
-
-“We are,” she replied, imitating his tone. “I hope you don’t mean to
-rob the house.”
-
-“No,” he replied; “I didn’t come to steal; I’ve brought you a large
-beautiful present.”
-
-This she assumed to be the preliminary to a joke of some kind.
-
-“I left it behind that big rosebush in the yard and I’ll bring it
-in--nobody likely to come--no?”
-
-“No; the nurse is out and I just now heard the maid climbing the back
-stairs to her room.”
-
-A smothered “Oh!” greeted him as he reappeared bearing the suit-case
-she had entrusted to Copeland’s messenger the day before. He placed it
-quietly by the door, a little shame-facedly, in spite of his efforts to
-pass the matter off lightly. Nan flushed, staring at him defiantly.
-
-“I saw this down at the works and I just thought I’d bring it up.
-Maybe,” he said reflectively, “it ain’t yours; but I thought I’d take a
-chance.”
-
-“N. F.” neatly printed on the end of the bag advertised its ownership
-to any observant eye.
-
-“You and I are good friends, I hope,” she said uneasily.
-
-“Don’t be silly, Nan; if we’re not, what are we?”
-
-This was not a question she cared to debate; the immediate matter was
-the narrowness of her escape from a marriage with Copeland and just
-what she should tell Jerry about it.
-
-“If you know about--_that_--”
-
-“I make it my business never to know anything! I don’t want to know
-anything about that bag. So we’ll just forget it.”
-
-Seeing that her eyes rested nervously on the suit-case, he carried it
-into the hall out of range of any chance caller’s eyes.
-
-“Thank you,” she said absently as he came back. He began speaking
-volubly of the delights of “Ivanhoe” which Eaton had lately given him
-to read.
-
-“How many people know about--_that_?” she demanded, breaking in sharply
-upon his praise of Scott.
-
-“Oh, the bag? Not a soul; I told you not to worry about that. I found
-it behind the door in his private office. Purely accidental--honest,
-it was! He wasn’t feeling well to-day,” he added. “He hung around the
-store all morning looking pretty glum and didn’t show up at all this
-afternoon. I went to the club and fished him out about six o’clock and
-took him home in a taxi. That’s all.”
-
-Reduced to terms, Billy had characteristically celebrated the failure
-of the elopement by continuing the drunk he had begun the night before.
-Her good luck had not deserted her if no one but Jerry knew that her
-suit-case, packed for flight, had stood all day in Copeland’s office.
-Jerry’s intuitions were too keen for her to attempt dissimulation. It
-would be better to confess and assure herself of his secrecy.
-
-“You don’t need to worry about that little matter, Nan,” Jerry
-continued reassuringly. “Nobody’s going to know anything about it.
-Nobody _does_ know anything about it--”
-
-“Mr. Eaton?” she suggested faintly.
-
-“I haven’t seen Cecil for two days. I’ve told you all there is to
-tell. I don’t know any more and I don’t want to know. Now, forget it!
-Only”--he deliberated a moment and then added brokenly--“only, for
-God’s sake, don’t ever try it again!”
-
-It flashed upon her suddenly that the presence of her suit-case in
-Copeland’s office was susceptible of grave misconstruction.
-
-“I’m going to tell you the whole story, Jerry; I think I’ll feel
-happier if I do.”
-
-“Well, you don’t have to tell me anything; remember that!”
-
-“Maybe not, Jerry. But I feel that having known me away back in the old
-times, you’ll understand better than anybody else.”
-
-There was an appeal in this that filled his heart with pride. He was
-struck with humility that a girl like Nan should confide in him. He had
-not yet recovered from his surprise that she tolerated him at all.
-
-“Please don’t think I was going to do anything wrong, Jerry,” she said
-pleadingly; “we were to have been married last night; it wasn’t--it
-wasn’t anything worse!” she faltered.
-
-“Nan!” he gasped; “don’t say things like _that_! I wouldn’t think it--I
-hadn’t thought it of him! And you--!”
-
-“Well, you might have thought it,” she said, with a despairing note;
-“but you didn’t because you’re my good friend and a gentleman.”
-
-He was so astounded by her unsparing self-condemnation that he almost
-missed this heart-warming praise. She hurried on with the story, tears
-filling her eyes. It was an undreamed-of thing that he should see his
-divinity weep. For the first time in his life he felt that he, too, was
-capable of tears. But he must restore her equanimity, and before she
-concluded he had decided to pass the whole thing off as a joke.
-
-“Forget it, Nan! You never really meant to do it, anyhow. If Cecil
-hadn’t turned up, it’s a safe bet you’d have weakened before you got
-into the boss’s machine. It was a good joke--on the boss; that’s all
-I see in it. Come on, now, and give a merry ha-ha. The only sad thing
-about it is that it put the boss on the blink all day. If he’d been a
-real sport he wouldn’t have let you escape so easy; looks as though he
-wasn’t exactly crazy about it himself!”
-
-“Oh, you think he wasn’t!” she flared.
-
-“I thought I’d get a rise out of you with that! Take it from me, if I’d
-framed up a thing like that I’d ’ve pulled up large shade trees and
-upset tall buildings putting it over. But all you’ve got to do is to
-charge it up to profit and loss. Hereafter you’d better not make any
-engagements without seeing me,” he concluded daringly.
-
-“There may be something in that,” she laughed. “I’m glad I told you,
-Jerry. It helps a lot to tell your troubles to some one--and you don’t
-think much worse of me?”
-
-“Oh, too much sympathy wouldn’t be good for you!” he said, looking at
-her fixedly. “Your trouble is, Nan, if you will take it from an old
-friend, that you’ve had too soft a time. You need a jar or two to make
-you watch the corners. So do I; so does everybody! When things come
-easy for me I get nervous. I’ve got to have something to fight; but I
-don’t mean punching heads; not any more. Cecil says his great aim in
-life is to teach me to fight with my brains instead of my fists and
-feet. But it’s hard work, considering the number of heads there are
-that need punching.”
-
-She was touched by his anxiety to serve her, to see her always in
-the best possible light. He was a comforting person, this Jerry. His
-philosophy was much sounder than her own; he was infinitely wiser. He
-had done much better with his life than she had with hers, and the
-advantages had been so immensely in her favor! There was no one else
-in the world, she reflected, to whom she could confide as in him. She
-marveled that she trusted him so implicitly--and he knew how little she
-merited trust! A sudden impulse carried her across the room to where he
-stood fingering a book.
-
-“You are very good to me, Jerry!” she said with deep feeling.
-
-Her hand touched his--a light, caressing stroke; then she sprang away
-from him, abashed. The color mounted to his face, and he thrust the
-hand awkwardly into his pocket. The touch of her hand had thrilled him;
-a wave of tenderness swept him.
-
-“I want to be good to you; I want to help you if I can,” he said simply.
-
-But he was afraid of Nan in tears, and there were tears in the eyes
-with which she now regarded him. She turned away, slipping her
-handkerchief from her sleeve. This would never do. He waited a moment,
-then began talking, as though nothing had happened, of old times on the
-river, of steamboat men and their ways, in the hope of restoring her
-tranquillity.
-
-“I guess I had my share of fun down there; if I could be a kid again
-I’d want to be born right down there on the old Ohio. I remember once--”
-
-A muffled crash in the room above sent her flying into the hall and
-upstairs.
-
-“Papa!” she called, standing in the doorway of Farley’s room and
-fumbling for the electric button.
-
-As the ceiling lights flooded the room she called loudly to Jerry.
-
-Farley lay on the floor in a crumpled heap. The crash that had
-accompanied his collapse had been due to the overturning of the
-electric table lamp, at which he had caught as he felt himself falling.
-
-Jerry was already on his knees beside the prone figure.
-
-Nan snatched the receiver of the telephone from its bracket and called
-the regular physician; and then, remembering another doctor who lived
-just around the corner, she summoned him also. Amidon lifted Farley and
-placed him on the bed. While waiting for her numbers she told him where
-to find a restorative the doctor had provided for emergencies, and
-before she finished telephoning he had tried vainly to force a spoonful
-of the liquid between Farley’s lips.
-
-“It’s no use,” said Jerry, placing his hand over the stricken man’s
-heart.
-
-“No! No! It can’t be possible!” Nan moaned. “He’d been so well to-day!”
-
-In a few minutes both physicians were in the room. They made a hurried
-examination, asked a few questions, and said there was nothing to be
-done.
-
-The indomitable spirit of Timothy Farley had escaped from its
-prison-house; what was mortal of him remained strangely white and
-still. Nan, kneeling beside the bed, wept softly. Her foster-mother had
-died after a brief illness and she had experienced no such shock as
-now numbed her. She had, after all, been closer to Farley than to his
-wife. Mrs. Farley, with all her gentleness and sweetness, had lacked
-the positive traits that made Timothy Farley an interesting, masterful
-character.
-
-“There will be things to do,” Amidon was saying gently. “Do you mind
-if I tell Mr. Eaton? He’d want to know.”
-
-“No; I should like him to come,” she replied.
-
-Jerry went below with the physicians and called Eaton on the telephone
-in the lower hall.
-
-Nan rose and began straightening the room. Farley had evidently drawn
-on his dressing-gown with a view to remaining up some time, and had
-walked to the quaint little table that had so long stood near the
-window. Nan saw now what had escaped her when she rushed into the room.
-The oblong top of the table had been so turned that it disclosed a
-compartment back of the trio of drawers in which Mrs. Farley had kept
-her sewing articles. Four long envelopes lay on the lid; two others had
-fallen to the floor and lay among the debris of the lamp. At a glance
-she saw that these were similar to the ones she had seen Farley hiding
-on several occasions, and the counterpart of the envelope containing
-the will she had read with so much concern. One of the envelopes was
-torn twice across, as though he had intended disposing of it finally.
-The others were intact.
-
-She gathered them all together and thrust them back into the table;
-then ran her fingers along the underside of the lid until she found a
-tiny catch. Noting the position of this, she drew the top into place,
-satisfied herself that the spring had caught, and rose just as Jerry
-came back.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-SHADOWS
-
-
-Nan lay on her bed, fully dressed, on the evening of the day of the
-funeral, listening to the sounds of the street with an uncomfortable
-sense of strangeness and isolation. The faint tinkle of the bell roused
-her and the maid came up bearing Eaton’s card. She had told the girl to
-excuse her to callers, but Eaton sent word that he wished particularly
-to see her. She appeared before him startlingly wan and white in her
-black gown.
-
-“I knew you wanted to be alone, Nan, but there’s a matter I must speak
-to you about, and I thought it best to do it at once. I shan’t bother
-you long. I left a dinner at the Lawyers’ Club to run up for a minute;
-in about an hour I shall be making a speech; so you needn’t prepare for
-a long visit!”
-
-“I’m glad you came. It’s much harder than I thought it would be. I’m
-sorry I didn’t keep Mrs. Copeland or one of the girls with me.”
-
-“Of course, you’re bound to feel it. It came as a great shock to all of
-us. A man like your father can’t pass out of the world without being
-missed--very deeply missed. He was a real person; a vivid personality.
-It has done me good to hear the fine things said of him; the crowd here
-at the services showed that he had been held in very deep affection by
-all sorts of people.”
-
-There was a moment’s silence. The tears had come into her eyes and he
-waited for her to control herself.
-
-“I shouldn’t be troubling you if I hadn’t felt that my business--if it
-can be called business--was urgent. I’m taking the liberty of an old
-friend--of yours and of Mr. Farley’s.”
-
-“Oh, there can’t be any question of liberty!” she protested. “You’re
-always so thoughtful, so kind!”
-
-“My purpose is in no sense professional,” he continued. “Mr. Thurston
-was Mr. Farley’s lawyer and he will no doubt confer with you at once
-on business matters. He’s an excellent man; wholly trustworthy. No one
-stands higher at our bar.”
-
-“Yes; I know papa had every confidence in him,” Nan replied, wondering
-what Eaton, who looked very distinguished in his evening clothes, could
-have to say to her.
-
-“It’s in relation to that little difficulty--an unfortunate but wholly
-pardonable mistake you made--you see I speak frankly--in reference to a
-man named Harlowe, a lawyer from the south part of the State, in regard
-to a demand he made on you some time ago. Mr. Farley explained about
-it--all that he knew.”
-
-Nan clenched her hands tightly and drew a deep breath. It was
-inconceivable that that specter could reappear to trouble her.
-
-“Yes,” she whispered faintly; “I remember. I was so grateful to you
-for your help that night. I don’t know what would have happened if you
-hadn’t come just then. Papa was very bitter about what I did, and of
-course it was cowardly of me; and very stupid, not to have advised with
-some one.”
-
-“You did what seemed perfectly justifiable at the moment; Mr. Farley
-saw it that way afterward.”
-
-“He never spoke to me about it again; I have you to thank for that.”
-
-“No; it was Mr. Farley’s aim to be just. Now, about this Harlowe: I
-don’t want to alarm you, but I have found it best to be prepared for
-difficulties even where there’s only a remote chance of having to
-confront them. I merely want you to know that if that man turns up
-again I’m ready for him. I have, in fact, accumulated a considerable
-amount of data that can be used against him if he makes another move.
-He’s an unscrupulous blackguard, a disgrace to the profession.”
-
-“But that case against my brother is all over now. He couldn’t ask for
-more money?”
-
-“Not in that particular way,” Eaton replied slowly; “but having
-succeeded once in frightening money out of you, he might try it again.
-I suppose Mr. Farley never told you what I discovered--established
-with documentary proof that I have safely put away in my office--that
-the Corrigan this Harlowe pretended to represent was not in fact your
-brother.”
-
-He went on quickly, ignoring the astonishment and bewilderment written
-on her face.
-
-“That man was no more your brother than he is mine--you need have no
-doubts about it. Harlowe’s client went to the penitentiary--quite
-properly, no doubt. The poor fellow never knew how he had been
-used--never heard of that money! I take off my hat to Brother
-Harlowe--a shrewd scoundrel. It’s because I respect his talents that
-I’ve taken so much pains to look him up! Possibly you won’t hear from
-him at all; then again, you may. I’ve given some study to the peculiar
-moral nature of persons like Harlowe, and I won’t deny that it would
-please me to have a chance at him--though, of course, Mr. Thurston
-would be quite as competent to deal with the case as I am. My aim would
-be to get rid of him quietly, perhaps by methods that wouldn’t appeal
-to Mr. Thurston. Please listen to him carefully, if he should come to
-you. Concede nothing, but let him go as far as he will. That’s all, I
-think. Pardon me if I look at my watch.”
-
-“It’s very kind of you to warn me,” she said, with feeling. “It’s
-horrible to know there are people plotting against you in the dark. I
-was ashamed of myself for yielding as I did when that man came to me; I
-knew right away that I had made a mistake.”
-
-“Well, as our friend Mr. Amidon would remark, forget it! forget it! We
-all make mistakes. I wish I had never made a worse one than that little
-slip of yours,” he added kindly.
-
-She had always been amused by Eaton’s oddities, his mysteriousness;
-but in this hour of dejection his sympathy and friendliness warmed her
-heart. She rose and stood before him, her hands clenched at her sides,
-and demanded passionately:--
-
-“Why am I always doing the wrong thing? Why do I escape so often when I
-have every intention of doing what I know to be wrong? I suppose if I’d
-waited another day I shouldn’t have sneaked my money out of the trust
-company and turned it over to that man! But I’ve had escapes I don’t
-understand; something gets in the way and I don’t--I _can’t_--do things
-I fully mean to do! And I look back and shudder. Why is that--can you
-tell me?”
-
-He lifted his arm with one of his familiar gestures and inspected his
-cuff-links absently.
-
-“You’re seeing things a little black now, that’s all, Nan. When you
-gave up that money you thought it was the right thing to do. You saw
-the mistake yourself the moment after it was done. That’s just our
-human frailty. It’s our frailties that make life the grand fight it is!”
-
-“That’s not very consoling,” she replied, with a rueful smile. “I
-suppose we never know how much we count in other people’s lives. Oh, I
-don’t mean that I do--except to do harm; I was thinking of you!”
-
-His eyeglasses gleamed as he bent her a swift glance.
-
-“I--I’d be very happy to think I’d been of use to somebody.”
-
-“Oh, you saved me once from going clear over the brink! You didn’t know
-that, did you?” she cried earnestly.
-
-“I most certainly did not!”
-
-“If you don’t know,” she said gravely, “I shall never tell you. Are you
-really sure you don’t know what I’m talking about?”
-
-“My dear Nan, why do you ask me if I guess things--when facts are the
-consuming passion of my life! If I was ever of the slightest service to
-you it was unconscious good fortune on my part. And I hope there may
-be many such occasions! But, Nan,”--he waited until he was quite sure
-of her attention,--“Nan, we can’t rely too much on the man on shore in
-emergencies. He won’t always reach us in time. We’ve got to mind the
-thin ice ourselves--skate away as soon as we hear it cracking! We can’t
-trust to chance. Luck supports sound judgment--mainly. And we’ve got to
-fight our own battles.”
-
-“But if you’re a worthless, wobbly person like me, what are you going
-to do?” she demanded.
-
-“Cease wobbling! Good-night!”
-
-Eaton had not been gone more than five minutes when a light knock on
-the glass panel of the front door startled her. The clocks through
-the house had just struck ten and she had dismissed the maid for the
-night. The rap was repeated more loudly, and stealing to the door she
-drew back a corner of the curtain and peered out. Copeland stood in the
-entry, plainly revealed by the overhead light; his hand was lifted for
-another knock.
-
-Her heart throbbed with fear and anger. Billy had no right to come at
-this hour in this furtive fashion--and on this day, of all days, to the
-house of the man who had so cordially hated him. She waited a moment
-hoping he would go away, but he began beating upon the glass.
-
-This clearly would not do, and she drew back the bolt and opened the
-door a few inches.
-
-“Please go away! You have no right to come here at this time of night!”
-
-He seized the door as she was about to close it and forced his way past
-her.
-
-“I’ve got to see you a minute--just a minute,” he said eagerly. “It’s
-a matter of importance or I shouldn’t have come to-night. I thought it
-best not to wait. It’s really a serious matter, Nan!”
-
-“You have no right to come at all,” she replied angrily. “What if the
-neighbors saw you! they know I’m alone. You know this won’t do; please
-go, Billy!” she pleaded.
-
-“I suppose,” he said, walking toward the parlor, “that it’s all right
-for John Eaton to come when he pleases, but not for me.”
-
-“That was very different; he rang the bell and the maid let him in! And
-he came on a business matter. You can’t stay, Billy; you understand
-that. You must go at once!”
-
-“Well, I came earlier, but saw Eaton’s silk hat bobbing in and I’ve
-been hanging around waiting for him to go. I didn’t care to meet
-him here; and as far as business is concerned, maybe mine’s just as
-important as his. You’ll have to take my word for that.”
-
-His manner and tone were amiable. There clearly was nothing to be
-gained by debating the question of his right to be there, but she
-remained resolutely in the parlor door, trying to devise some means of
-getting rid of him.
-
-“You’ll have to be quick, then,” she said, without relaxing her
-severity.
-
-“Yes; I understand that, Nan,” he agreed readily. “It’s about
-the property--no--don’t stop me!” he exclaimed as she cried out
-impatiently. “You have certain rights and it’s the business of your
-friends to see that you get them. Another day and it will be too late.”
-
-“I’m to see Mr. Thurston to-morrow; everything’s in his hands; you have
-nothing to do with it!”
-
-He took a step toward her and his voice sank to a whisper.
-
-“That’s just it! Everything is not in his hands. That’s what I want to
-tell you.”
-
-She stared at him blankly. His excited manner aroused her curiosity as
-to what he might have to say, but it was unlikely that he knew anything
-of importance about Farley’s affairs.
-
-“They’re saying downtown that Farley was a crank about will-making; he
-made a lot of wills and kept them hid. Thurston’s let that out himself.
-If you know this, we can drop that part of it.”
-
-She made no reply, and her silence encouraged him to go on.
-
-“The fact is, as we all know,” he began ingratiatingly, “that
-Farley wasn’t himself at all times. He probably made wills that he
-destroyed--or meant to destroy. It’s wholly possible that he vented
-his wrath on you at times by cutting down what he meant to give you,
-and the next day he’d be sorry for it. That would be like him. In old
-times at the store he used to blow up with fury one minute and be
-as tame as a lamb the next. But there’s no reason--there’s not the
-slightest reason why you should suffer if he died leaving a will lying
-around that might rob you of your just inheritance--that didn’t really
-express his normal attitude toward you. He never meant to be mean to
-you; I’m satisfied of that; but if there are some of those wills here
-in the house--you would have a right, considering his condition and all
-that--you would have a right--you see--”
-
-He had been watching her narrowly for some sign of interest or
-encouragement, but finding neither he broke off without saying just
-what it might be right for her to do. However, while he waited a quick
-flutter of her lids indicated that she comprehended. Their eyes met
-in a long gaze. Her face grew white and her lips opened several times
-before any sound came from them. He had drawn closer, but he stepped
-back as he saw horror and repugnance clearly written in her face.
-
-“You have no right to talk to me like this! It’s too shameful, too
-terrible!” she gasped.
-
-“Please, Nan, don’t take it that way,” he begged.
-
-“How else can I take it! To think that you should believe me capable of
-that, Billy!”
-
-“If I hadn’t known that he had treated you like a brute and that he
-always carried his vindictiveness to the limit, I shouldn’t be here.
-I don’t want to see you cut off with little or nothing when the whole
-estate ought to be yours--_will_ be yours if you don’t make a fool of
-yourself! He had no right to bring you up as his daughter and then
-leave you with nothing. Thurston isn’t going to protect your interests;
-he merely did from time to time what Farley told him to do, and you
-won’t get any help out of him. If there are different wills hidden
-about--you may know where he hid them--”
-
-He threw out his arms with a gesture meant to demonstrate the ease with
-which matters might be taken into her own hands. In the sobering hours
-that had followed Farley’s death only his great kindness and generosity
-had been in her thoughts. The enormity of what Copeland proposed grew
-upon her. She bestirred herself suddenly. She must not let him think
-that she was tolerating his suggestion for an instant.
-
-“I’m sorry you thought that kind of thing would appeal to me! That’s
-your idea of me, is it?”
-
-“I’m appealing to your good sense, Nan; in a few hours it will be too
-late, and if you know where he kept his papers, you can easily look
-them over and satisfy yourself as to just what he meant to do; and then
-you can do as you like. His last will would stand; maybe you don’t know
-that; and if it’s in the house, why shouldn’t you, at least, have a
-look at it?”
-
-“I wouldn’t--I _couldn’t_ do such a thing!” she cried.
-
-“If there shouldn’t be any will at all,” he resumed, with his eyes
-fixed upon her intently, “then you would inherit everything! The
-adoption made you his child in law; there wouldn’t be any way of
-escaping that. It’s these wills that you’ve got to fear--the whims, the
-sudden vindictive anger of an old man who really meant to do the right
-thing by you. Neither he nor his wife had any near kin; there would be
-nobody to share with you in case there proves to be no will at all!”
-
-“You make it perfectly plain what it would be possible for me to
-do!” she replied with quivering lips. “That seems to be all you have
-to say--and it’s enough! I want you to leave this house, and be quick
-about it!”
-
-“But, Nan, you are taking this all wrong! It’s not as though you were
-robbing other people: you certainly have a better right to the money
-than anybody else. Suppose that in one of his mental lapses he had
-willed the greater part of his fortune to some silly charity; all the
-rest of your days you’d be sorry you hadn’t done what you could to
-protect yourself.”
-
-“Please go,” she urged in a plaintive whisper, “so I can forget that
-you’ve been here!”
-
-“Of course I’ll go,” he assented. “If I hadn’t felt that you looked to
-me at least as a friend, I shouldn’t have come. And if there’s anything
-to be done it must be done quickly--that’s as plain as daylight.”
-
-He advanced this in a crisp, businesslike tone, as though there were
-nothing remarkable in his suggestions. She was already wondering, as he
-meant she should, whether, after all, there was anything so enormous in
-the idea. Fear stole into her heart; it would be unsafe to listen to
-anything further lest he persuade her of the justice of his plan. But
-he dropped the matter instantly, wisely calculating that he had said
-enough.
-
-“You know, Nan, that nobody is as interested in your happiness as I am.
-If I didn’t care so much--if I didn’t hope that you cared, I shouldn’t
-have come here to-night; I shouldn’t have dared!”
-
-She made no response, but stared at him with widely distended eyes. Her
-silence made him uneasy. Her black gown had strangely transformed her.
-She was not the Nan who had promised to marry him--who would now, but
-for his folly, be his wife. He walked to the door and then said in the
-low tone he had employed from the beginning,--
-
-“There are other things I want to speak of, but I know this is not
-the time. I shall hope to see you again soon, and please try to think
-better of me, Nan!”
-
-She remained where she had stood throughout the interview until she
-heard the iron gate click behind him.
-
-She put out the lights and climbed the stairs slowly. The loneliness
-that had stifled her before Eaton’s appearance had deepened. She passed
-through the silent upper hall and locked herself in her room, resolved
-not to leave it until the world woke to life again.
-
-“No! No! No!” she moaned aloud to fortify her resolution....
-
-At one o’clock she was still awake, questioning, debating with herself,
-while strange shadow-shapes danced in the surrounding blackness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-NAN AGAINST NAN
-
-
-Was Billy right, after all?
-
-The question haunted her insistently. She lighted the lamp by her bed
-and tried to read, but the words were a confused jumble. She threw down
-her book impatiently. If only she had kept Fanny Copeland in the house
-or had given the papers hidden away in the old table to Eaton to carry
-away, she would have escaped this struggle.
-
-Her thoughts were fixed upon Eaton for a time. He had enjoined her to
-take a firmer hold of herself. She readily imagined what his abhorrence
-would be of the evil thing Copeland had proposed....
-
-But, after all, Farley had meant to treat her generously, as Copeland
-had said, and if in some angry mood he had rewritten his will to reduce
-his provision for her, there was no reason why she shouldn’t seize an
-opportunity to right a wrong he never really intended....
-
-She rose, drew on her kimono, snapped on all the lights and found that
-it was only half-past one. She assured herself that she would not open
-the door of Farley’s room; and yet, the thought kept recurring that no
-one would ever know if she read those wills and destroyed them. The
-fear that she might yield chilled her. She became frantic for something
-to do and set herself the task of putting the drawers of her desk in
-order. Some letters that Mrs. Farley had written her while she was at
-boarding-school caught her eye.
-
-Yes, the Farleys had been kind, even foolishly indulgent. She read in
-her foster-mother’s even, old-fashioned hand:--
-
- Don’t worry about your money, dear. I suppose when you go into town
- you see a lot of little things that it’s nice for a girl to have.
- We want you to appear well before the other girls. I’m slipping a
- twenty-dollar bill into this letter just for odds and ends. Don’t say
- anything to papa about it, as I would rather he didn’t know I send
- you money.
-
-A little later she turned up a letter of Farley’s in which he had
-enclosed a fifty-dollar bill as an addition to her regular allowance.
-In a characteristic postscript he enjoined her not “to tell mamma. She
-thinks you have enough money and it might make her jealous!”
-
-She closed the drawer, leaving it in worse confusion than before.
-Comforts and luxuries were dear to her. She had enjoyed hugely her
-years at boarding-school. To be set adrift with a small income while
-the greater part of Farley’s money went to philanthropy--maybe Billy
-was right, after all!...
-
-Two o’clock. She was in Farley’s room, crouched in a low rocker with
-her arms flung across the table in which the papers were hidden. Her
-heart beat furiously, and her breath came in quick gasps. She had
-decided now to read the wills; it would do no harm to have a look at
-them. If everything was to be taken away from her, she might as well
-know the worst and prepare for it.
-
-Her fingers sought the catch that released the spring; the top turned
-easily. The papers lay as she had left them the night Farley died. She
-folded the open ones and thrust them into their envelopes. She counted
-them deliberately; there were six, including the one that had fallen
-from the dressing-gown, which she identified by the crosses on the
-envelope....
-
-If there should be no will, Copeland had said, all the property would
-go to her as the only heir. There was a grate in the room with the fuel
-all ready for lighting. It would be a simple matter to destroy all
-the wills. She could explain the burnt-out fire to the maid by saying
-that the house had grown cold in the night and that she had gone into
-Farley’s room to warm herself. She was surprised to find how readily
-explanations covering every point occurred to her. The very ease with
-which she thought of them appalled her. No doubt it was in this fashion
-that hardened criminals planned their defense....
-
-She struck a match and touched it to the paper under the kindling.
-The fire blazed brightly. She was really chilled and the warmth was
-grateful. As she held her hands to the flames she surveyed the trifles
-on the mantel and her gaze wandered to a portrait of Mrs. Farley which
-had been done from photographs by a local artist after her death. The
-memory of her foster-mother’s simple kindliness and gentleness gave her
-a pang. She turned slowly until her eyes rested upon the bed in which
-Farley had suffered so long. She went back to the beginning and argued
-the whole matter over again.
-
-As at other times, in moods of depression, she thought of the squalor
-of her childhood; of her father, Dan Corrigan, trapper, fisherman,
-loafer, brutal drunkard. She gazed at her white, slim fingers and
-recalled her mother’s swollen, red hands as she had bent for hours
-every day over the wash-tub. Her mother had been at least an honest
-woman, who had addressed herself uncomplainingly to the business of
-maintaining a home for her children.
-
-All that the Farleys had done in changing her environment to one of
-comfort and decency and educating her in a fashionable school with the
-daughters of gentlefolk had not affected the blood in her. She had not
-been worthy of their pity, their generosity, their confidence. Yet it
-had meant much to these people in their childlessness to take her into
-their hearts and give her their name. Farley’s ideas of honor had been
-the strictest; the newspapers in their accounts of his career had laid
-stress on this. And how he would hate an act such as she meditated,
-that would prove her low origin, stamp her as the daughter of a
-degenerate!...
-
-Still, there was no reason why she shouldn’t read the wills. She
-returned to the table, drew one of them out, played with it for a
-moment uncertainly, then thrust it back.
-
-It was Nan against Nan through the dark watches of the night. If she
-yielded now she would never tread firm ground again. Once this trial
-was over, she would be a different woman--better or worse; and she must
-reach a decision unaided. She buried her face in her arms to shut out
-the light and wept bitterly in despair of her weakness....
-
-Four o’clock. A sparrow cheeped sleepily in the vines on the wall
-outside the window. Farley had liked the sparrows and refused to have
-them molested. They were “company,” he said, and he used to keep crumbs
-of bread and cake for them....
-
-She lifted her head, and confidence stole into her heart. She had not
-done the evil thing; she had not even looked at the sheets of paper
-that recorded Farley’s wavering, shifting faith in her.
-
-“Why don’t you do it? You are a coward; you are afraid!”
-
-Her voice sank to a whisper as she kept repeating these taunts. Then
-she was silent for a time, sitting with arms folded, her eyes bent
-unseeingly upon the envelopes before her. There could be no happiness
-in store for her if she yielded. She saw herself carrying through life
-the memory of a lawless act dictated by selfishness and greed. Suddenly
-she rose and walked to the bed; and her voice rang out with a note of
-triumph, there in the room where Farley had died:--
-
-“I have not done it; I will not do it!”
-
-The sound of her voice alarmed her, and she glanced nervously over her
-shoulder. Then she laughed, struck by the thought that if Farley’s
-spirit lurked there expecting to see her yield, it was a disappointed
-ghost!
-
-“You silly little fool,” he had often said to her in his anger. Well,
-she was not so wicked as he had believed; but she thought of him now
-without bitterness.
-
-Wings fluttered; the sparrows began a persistent twitter.
-
-Light was creeping in under the shades. She returned to the table,
-stared at it, frowning, drew away quickly, ran to the door, and glanced
-back breathlessly. She walked back slowly, turned the papers over,
-peered into the drawer to make sure that she had overlooked nothing.
-
-She took up the wills that recorded Timothy Farley’s doubts and
-uncertainties and wavering generosities, dropped them into the little
-well in the table and drew the top into place.
-
-A feeling of exaltation possessed her as she heard the click of the
-spring. This, perhaps, was the reward of righteousness. “We’re all
-happier,” the simple-hearted Mrs. Farley used to say, “when we’re
-good!”
-
-She stood very still for a minute, stifling her last regret. Then she
-turned to the window and opened it, unfastened the shutters, and thrust
-her hands out into the gray light. A farmer’s wagon, bound for market,
-passed slowly by, the driver asleep with a lighted lantern on the seat
-beside him.
-
-She remained there for a quarter of an hour listening to the first
-tentative sounds of the new day. The newspaper carrier threw the
-morning paper against the door beneath the window, unconscious that
-she saw him. She closed the window, crept back to her room and threw
-herself exhausted on her bed....
-
-Outside Farley’s windows the sparrows chirruped impatiently for crumbs
-from the hand that would feed them no more.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-NOT ACCORDING TO LAW
-
-
-Nan was reading the newspaper report of Eaton’s speech over her coffee
-when at nine o’clock he called her on the telephone.
-
-“Your speech sounds fine, though I don’t understand all the jokes,” she
-said. “But I’m sure you made a hit.”
-
-“Not so sure of it myself, Nan. But please listen to me carefully. Our
-friend from the southern part of the State is here. I have him marked
-at his hotel. He has probably come to see you. Let him say all he has
-on his mind, then report to me. You will probably hear from Thurston,
-too, during the day. He’s trying a case this morning. But our brother
-from the South comes first. Don’t let him frighten you; just listen and
-encourage him if necessary to show what he’s up to this time.”
-
-“Very well,” she replied, though the thought of facing Harlowe alone
-filled her with misgivings.
-
-Mrs. Copeland was on the wire immediately afterward, to ask if she
-could be of any service. Then Thurston’s clerk called her to make an
-appointment for three o’clock.
-
-The night’s vigil had left its marks upon her. She was nervously alert
-for the day’s developments, but nothing could be worse than the long
-struggle against temptation. She had, she fancied, considered every
-possibility as to the future and she was prepared for anything that
-might befall her. She was happy in the thought that she faced the world
-with a clean conscience; never in her life had she been on so good
-terms with herself.
-
-She was standing at the parlor window when at eleven a familiar figure
-entered the gate. Harlowe, tall, slightly stooped, advanced to the
-door. She called to the maid not to trouble to answer the ring and let
-the man in herself.
-
-He began with formal condolences on what he called “her irreparable
-loss.”
-
-“Much as we may be prepared for the death of a loved one, it always
-comes with a shock. I sympathize with you very deeply, Miss Farley.”
-
-She murmured her thanks and bade him be seated. She wished she had
-asked Eaton to be present at the interview, which he had forecast with
-a prescience that justified all her faith in his unusual powers.
-
-“I came as quickly as possible after hearing of Mr. Farley’s death, in
-the hope of being of some service to you--of avoiding any difficulties
-that might possibly arise with reference to the settlement of Mr.
-Farley’s affairs.”
-
-She nodded, and remembering Eaton’s injunction, gave him strict
-attention.
-
-“I hope,” he went on, “that my handling of the very distressing and
-delicate matter that brought me here last June won your confidence to
-such an extent--”
-
-He paused, watching her narrowly for any sign of dissent.
-
-“I appreciated that, Mr. Harlowe; it was very considerate of you to
-come to me as you did.”
-
-“I didn’t report on that case further, feeling that it might embarrass
-you, assuming that the whole matter was strictly between ourselves.”
-
-“Quite so,” she agreed.
-
-“I was distressed that after all our interest, and your own generosity,
-we could not save your unfortunate brother. Still, it’s something that
-we were able to secure what was a light sentence--taking everything
-into consideration. Only circumstantial evidence, to be sure, but it
-pointed very strongly to his guilt. You doubtless read the result in
-the papers?”
-
-“Yes, I followed the case,” she answered. “And I’m sure you did the
-best you could.”
-
-His solemnity would have been amusing at any other time. He clearly had
-no idea that she had learned of his duplicity in taking money from her
-for the defense of a Corrigan who was in no manner related to her.
-
-“I assume,” he said, “that no steps have yet been taken to offer for
-probate any will Mr. Farley may have left. I had hoped to see you
-first; this accounts for my visit to-day. I thought it best to see you
-before going to Mr. Thurston. Mr. Joseph C. Thurston was, I believe,
-Mr. Farley’s attorney?”
-
-“Yes. He was one of papa’s best friends and he had charge of his
-affairs as far back as I can remember.”
-
-“An excellent man. There’s no better lawyer in the State,” Harlowe
-responded heartily. “But I occasionally find it best to deal directly
-with a client. We lawyers, you know, are sometimes unwisely obstinate,
-and lead our clients into unnecessary trouble. As you are the person
-chiefly concerned in this matter, I came directly to you. I did this
-because in that former matter you were so quick to see the justice of
-my--er--request.”
-
-Her amazement at his effrontery almost equalled her curiosity as to
-what lay behind his deliberate approaches.
-
-“It is generally known that Mr. Farley was a man of violent temper,”
-he went on. “Some of his old friends on the river remember him well,
-and you may never have known--and I am sorry to be obliged to mention
-so unpleasant a fact--that his mother died insane. That is a matter of
-record, of course. The malady from which Mr. Farley suffered for many
-years is one that frequently affects the mind. No doubt living with him
-here, as you did, you noticed at times that he behaved oddly--didn’t
-conduct himself quite normally?”
-
-Remembering Eaton’s instructions she acquiesced without offering any
-comment. His designs, she now assumed, were not personal to herself,
-but directed against Farley’s estate.
-
-“I represent two cousins of Mr. Farley’s who live in my county. Very
-worthy men they are; you may have heard Mr. Farley speak of them.”
-
-“Yes; I knew about them. I sent them telegrams advising them of his
-death.”
-
-“That was very thoughtful on your part, Miss Farley, and they
-appreciate it. But by reason of their poverty they were unable to
-attend the funeral. They asked me to thank you for thinking of them.
-Several times during the past twenty years Mr. Farley had advanced them
-small sums of money--an indication of his kindly feeling toward them.”
-
-“I didn’t know of that; but it was like papa.”
-
-“In case Mr. Farley left a will, it is my duty to inform you, that
-you may have time for reflection before taking up the matter with
-Mr. Thurston, that we are prepared to attack it on the ground of Mr.
-Farley’s mental unsoundness. I assume, of course, that Mr. Farley made
-a handsome provision for you, but quite possibly he overlooked the
-natural expectations of his own kinsfolk.”
-
-She merely nodded, thinking it unnecessary to impart information while
-he continued to show his hand so openly.
-
-“You have probably understood, Miss Farley, that in case your
-foster-father died intestate, that is to say, without leaving a will in
-proper form, you would, as his heir, be entitled to the whole of his
-property.”
-
-“Yes; I think I have heard that,” she answered uneasily.
-
-The cold-blooded fashion in which he had stated his purpose to contest
-the will on the ground of Farley’s insanity had shocked her. Copeland
-had suggested the same thing, but it was a preposterous pretension
-that Timothy Farley’s mind had been affected by his long illness. Even
-the assertion that his mother had been a victim of mental disorder,
-plausibly as he had stated it, would hardly stand against the fact that
-Farley’s faculties to the very end had been unusually clear and alert.
-
-“In case there should be no will,” Harlowe continued, “your rights
-would rest, of course, upon your adoption. It would have to be proved
-that it was done in accordance with law. The statutes are specific as
-to the requirements. I’m sorry, very sorry indeed, my dear Miss Farley,
-that in your case the law was not strictly complied with.”
-
-“I don’t know what you mean; I don’t understand you!” she faltered.
-
-“Please don’t be alarmed,” he went on, with a reassuring smile. “I’m
-sure that everything can be arranged satisfactorily; I am not here to
-threaten you--please remember that; I merely want you to understand my
-case.”
-
-“But my father never dreamed of anything of that kind,” she gasped;
-“it’s impossible--why, he would never have made a mistake in so
-serious a matter.”
-
-“Unfortunately, we are all liable to err, Miss Farley,” he answered,
-with a grotesque affectation of benevolence. “And I regret to say that
-in this case the error is undeniable. What Mr. Farley’s intentions
-were is one thing; what was actually done to make you his child in law
-is another. We need not go into that. It is a legal question that Mr.
-Thurston will understand readily; the more so, perhaps,” he added with
-faint irony, “because he was not himself guilty of the error, not being
-Mr. Farley’s attorney at the time the adoption was attempted.”
-
-The room swayed and she grasped the arms of her chair to steady
-herself. The man’s story was plausible, and he spoke with an easy
-confidence. All Farley’s deliberation about the disposal of his
-property would go for naught; her victory over the temptation to
-destroy his wills had been futile!
-
-“Please don’t misunderstand me, Miss Farley,” the man was saying.
-“My clients have no wish to deprive you wholly of participation in
-the estate. And we should deplore litigation. In coming to you now,
-I merely wish to prepare you, so that you may consider the case in
-all its aspects before taking it up with your lawyer. No doubt a
-satisfactory settlement can be arranged, without going into court. I
-believe that is all. Henceforth I can’t with propriety deal directly
-with you, but must meet your counsel. I assume, however, that he
-will not wholly ignore your natural wish to--er--arrange a settlement
-satisfactory to all parties.”...
-
-The door had hardly closed upon him before she was at the telephone
-calling Eaton, and in half an hour he was at the house. Harlowe’s words
-had so bitten into her memory that she was able to repeat them almost
-_verbatim_. Eaton listened with his usual composure. It might have
-seemed from his manner that he was more interested in Nan herself than
-in her recital. She betrayed no excitement, but described the interview
-colorlessly as though speaking of matters that did not wholly concern
-her. When she concluded Eaton chuckled softly.
-
-“You’re taking it nobly,” were his first words; “I’m proud of you! You
-see, I had expected something of the sort--prepared for it, in fact,
-right after this fellow got that thousand dollars out of you. He’s
-crafty, shrewd, unscrupulous. But you have nothing to worry over. He
-came to you first and at the earliest possible moment in the hope of
-frightening you as he did before, hoping that you’d persuade Thurston
-to settle with him. As for Farley’s incompetence to make a will, that’s
-all rubbish! His mother suffered from senile dementia--no symptoms
-until she was nearly ninety. Every business man in town would laugh at
-the idea that Tim Farley wasn’t sane. He was just a little bit saner
-than most men. His occasional fits of anger were only the expression of
-his vigorous personality; wholly characteristic; nothing in that for
-Harlowe to hang a case on.
-
-“But this point about the adoption is more serious. When I was down
-there watching Harlowe defend the man he pretended to you--but to
-nobody else--was your brother, I looked up those adoption proceedings,
-out of sheer vulgar curiosity. The law provides that adoption
-proceedings shall be brought in the county where the child resides, and
-that the parents appear in court and consent. Your parents were dead,
-and Mr. Farley’s petition was filed in this county after you had been a
-member of his household for fully two years.
-
-“I seriously debated mentioning these points to Thurston, after my
-visit down there, but on reflection decided against it. Contrary to
-the common assumption the law is not an ass--not altogether! I can’t
-imagine the courts countenancing an effort to set aside this adoption
-on so flimsy a pretext. Mr. Farley not only complied with the law to
-the best of his belief, but let the world in general understand that he
-looked on you as his child and heir.”
-
-“That’s what every one believed, of course,” Nan murmured.
-
-“I dare say there’s a will,” Eaton continued. “Thurston may have
-to defend that--but you may rely on him. I have already made an
-appointment to meet him at luncheon to turn over to him all my data.
-I’ll say to you in all sincerity that I don’t see the slightest cause
-for uneasiness. If there’s a valid will, that settles the adoption line
-of attack, though this man may go the length of trying to annul it on
-the insanity plea, merely to tie up the estate until you pay something
-to these cousins to get rid of him.”
-
-“There is a will; there are a number of them, I think,” said Nan
-soberly.
-
-“Mr. Farley told you about them--let you know what he was doing?”
-
-“No; he never spoke of them, except in general terms. I used to see him
-hiding them; once one dropped out of his dressing-gown.” She hesitated;
-then added quickly: “I read that one before putting it back. I know
-I shouldn’t have done it, but I did--as I’ve done a good many things
-these last two years I shouldn’t!”
-
-“Don’t be so hard on yourself! It was quite natural for you to look at
-it.”
-
-“The night he died,” she went on breathlessly, “he had been looking at
-a number of wills he kept hidden in mamma’s old sewing-table. I put
-them back in the drawer. I suppose Mr. Thurston will ask for them when
-he comes.”
-
-“Yes; he should see all such papers. You must tell him everything you
-know that relates to them.”
-
-“I almost burnt them all up last night,” she exclaimed in a strange,
-hard tone. “That one I read made me angry. I thought it niggardly
-and unjust. And--some one told me”--in her eagerness to make her
-confession complete she nearly blurted out Copeland’s name--“that if
-there should be no will I’d inherit everything. And last night I fought
-that out. And it was a hard fight; it was horrible! But for once in
-my life I got a grip on myself. You may remember saying to me, ‘Don’t
-wobble.’ Well, I wobbled till I was dizzy--but I wobbled right! And now
-that that’s over, I believe--though I’m afraid to say it aloud--that
-I’m a different sort of a girl some way. I hope so; I mean to be very,
-very different.”
-
-“You poor, dear, little Nan,” he said softly. “I’m proud of you--but
-not very much surprised!”
-
-“But you see it doesn’t count, anyhow,” she said, smiling, pleased and
-touched by his praise. “If there’s a will, it’s bad; if there isn’t,
-I’m not to be considered!”
-
-“Don’t belittle your victory by measuring it against mere money. As for
-those purely business matters, they’ll be attended to. You’re not going
-to be thrown out on the world just yet.”
-
-“I shouldn’t cry--not now--if it came to that! Now that I know what
-they mean, I think I rather like these little wars that go on inside
-of us. But I tell you it was good to see the daylight this morning and
-know I could pass a mirror and not be afraid of my own face!”
-
-“It is rather nicer that way; much nicer,” he said, with his rare
-smile. “I’m glad you told me this. I see that I don’t need to worry
-about you any more.”
-
-“You haven’t really been doing that?”
-
-“At times, at times, my dear Nan,” he said, looking at her quizzically,
-“you’ve brought me to the verge of insomnia!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-THE COPELAND-FARLEY CELLAR
-
-
-At twelve o’clock on the night of Nan’s prolonged struggle, Jerry,
-having walked to the station with a traveling man of his acquaintance,
-paused at the door of Copeland-Farley, hesitated a moment, and then let
-himself in. He whistled a warning to the watchman, as was his habit
-when making night visits to the establishment. Hearing no response, he
-assumed that the man was off on his rounds and would reach the lower
-floor shortly.
-
-He opened his desk and busied himself with some memoranda he had made
-from the books that afternoon. There was no denying that the house
-was in a bad way; the one hundred thousand dollars of notes carried
-by the Western National matured the next day, and in addition to
-these obligations the Company was seriously behind in its merchandise
-accounts.
-
-A quarter of an hour passed, and the watchman made no sign. Jerry
-closed his desk, walked back to the elevator-shaft, and shouted the
-man’s name. From the dark recesses of the cellar came sounds as of some
-one running, followed by a stumble and fall. He called again, more
-loudly, but receiving no response, he ran to the stairway, flashed on
-the lights, and hurried down.
-
-His suspicions were aroused at once by a heap of refuse, surmounted
-by half a dozen empty boxes, piled about the wooden framework of the
-elevator-shaft.
-
-The room where oils, paints, ethers, acids and other highly inflammable
-or explosive stock was stored was shut off from the remainder of the
-cellar by an iron door that had been pushed open. As he darted in
-and turned on the lights, he heard some one stealthily moving in the
-farther end of the room.
-
-Seizing a fire-extinguisher he bawled the watchman’s name again and
-plunged in among the barrels. A trail of straw indicated that the same
-hand that had piled the combustibles against the shaft had carried
-similar materials into the dangerous precincts of the oil room. In a
-moment he came upon a barrel of benzine surrounded with kindling.
-
-He decided against calling for help. No harm had yet been done, and
-it was best to capture the guilty person and deal with him quietly if
-possible. He kicked the litter away from the barrel and waited. In a
-moment a slight noise attracted his attention, and at the same instant
-a shadow vanished behind an upright cask. He waited for the shadow to
-reappear, advancing cautiously down the aisle with his eyes on the
-cask.
-
-“Come out o’ that!” he called.
-
-A foot scraped on the cement floor and definitely marked the cask as
-the incendiary’s hiding-place. He jumped upon a barrel, leaped from it
-to the cask, and flung himself upon a man crouched behind it. They went
-down together with Jerry’s hand clutching the captive’s throat.
-
-“Good God!” he gasped, as he found himself gazing into Copeland’s eyes.
-
-The breath had been knocked out of Billy and he lay still, panting
-hard. His right hand clenched a revolver.
-
-“Give me that thing!”
-
-Jerry wrenched it from Copeland’s convulsive clutch, thrust it into his
-coat pocket, and stood erect.
-
-“I’m very sorry, sir,” he said.
-
-“Damn’ near shootin’ you, Jerry,” drawled Copeland, sitting up and
-passing his hand slowly across his face; “damn’ near! Gimme your hand.”
-
-Jerry drew him to his feet. Copeland rested heavily on the cask and
-looked his employee over with a slow, bewildered stare.
-
-“Might ’a’ known I couldn’t pull ’er off! Always some damn’ fool like
-you buttin’ into my blizness. ’S _my_ blizness! Goin’ do what I damn’
-please with _my_ blizness. Burn whole damn’ thing down ’f want to. I’m
-incenjy--what you call ’m?--incenjyary,--what you call ’m--pyromaniac.
-Go to jail and pen’tenshary firs’ thing I know.”
-
-“Not this time,” said Jerry sternly. “I’m going to take you home.”
-
-“Home? Whersh that?” asked Copeland, grinning foolishly.
-
-“Well, I guess a Turkish bath would be better. Where’s Galloway?”
-
-“Gall’way’s good fellow; reli’ble watchman. Wife’s sick; sent him home
-with my comp’ments. Told ’im I’d take full reshponshibility.”
-
-“You didn’t expect to collect the insurance on that story, did you? You
-must have a low opinion of the adjusters. I’ll fire Galloway to-morrow
-for leaving you here in this shape.”
-
-“Not on yer life y’ won’t! Silly old man didn’t know I wuz loaded.
-Came on me sud’ly--very sud’ly. Only had slix slocktails--no; thass
-wrong; thass all wrong. You know what I mean. Effect unusual--mos’
-unusual. Just a few small drinks at club. Guess I can’t carry liquor’s
-graceful-ly as I used to. Billy Copeland’s no good any more. Want lie
-down. Good place on floor. Nice bed right here, Jerry. Lemme go t’
-sleep.”
-
-He grasped the edge of the cask more firmly and bent his head to look
-down at the heap of straw he had been planting round it when Amidon
-interrupted him.
-
-“Not much I won’t! But before we skip I’ve got to clean up this trash.
-Steady, now; come along!”
-
-He seized Copeland’s arm and forced him to the stairway, where he left
-him huddled on the bottom step.
-
-“No respec’ for head of house; no respec’ whatever,” Copeland muttered.
-
-Jerry bade him remain quiet, and began carrying the straw and boxes
-back to the packing-room. He swept the floor clean, and when he was
-satisfied that no telltale trace remained he got Copeland to the
-counting-room and telephoned for a taxi.
-
-“Goin’ to be busted to-morrow; clean smash. You made awful mistake,
-Jeremiah, in not lessing--no, not lesting me burn ’er up. Insurance’d
-help out consid’ble. Need new building, anyhow.”
-
-“I guess we don’t need it that bad,” remarked Jerry, rolling a
-cigarette. He called the police station and asked for the loan of an
-officer to do watchman duty for the remainder of the night; and this
-accomplished he considered his further duty to his befuddled employer.
-
-Now that the calamity had been averted, his anger abated. Copeland’s
-condition mitigated somewhat the hideousness of the crime he was about
-to commit. Only his desperate financial situation could have prompted
-him to attempt to fire the building. Jerry’s silence and unusual
-gravity seemed to trouble Copeland.
-
-“Guess you’re dis’pointed in your boss, Jeremiah. Don’ blame you.
-Drunken fool--damn’ fool--incenjy-ary; no end bad lot.”
-
-“Put your hat on straight and forget it,” remarked Jerry.
-
-He telephoned to Gaylord, an athletic trainer who conducted a Turkish
-bath, and told him to prepare for a customer. He knew Gaylord well,
-and when they reached his place Jerry bade him stew the gin out of
-Copeland and be sure to have him ready for business in the morning.
-While Copeland was in the bath, Jerry tried all the apparatus in the
-gymnasium and relieved his feelings by putting on the gloves with
-Gaylord’s assistant. After all the arts of the establishment had been
-exercised upon Copeland and he was disposed of for the night, Jerry
-went to bed....
-
-In the morning Gaylord put the finishing touches on his patient and
-turned him out as good as new. It had occurred to Amidon that Copeland
-might decide to avoid the store that day. He was relieved when he
-announced, after they had shared Gaylord’s breakfast, that he would
-walk to the office with him.
-
-“Guess I’ll give the boys a jar by showing up early,” he remarked.
-
-It was a clear, bracing morning, and Copeland set a brisk pace. He was
-stubbornly silent and made no reference to the night’s affair until
-they reached the heart of the city. Then he stopped suddenly and laid
-his hand on Jerry’s arm.
-
-“Jerry, I never meant to do that; for God’s sake, don’t believe I
-did!” he broke out hoarsely. “I was troubled about the business, and
-some other things had worried me lately. I took too many drinks--and
-I’d never meant to drink again! I wouldn’t have tried that sober--I
-wouldn’t have had the nerve!”
-
-“It was the drink, of course,” Jerry assented. “It’s all over now.
-You’d better forget it; I’m going to!”
-
-“I wish to God I could forget it!”
-
-Copeland shrugged his shoulders impatiently, then drew himself erect
-and walked on more quickly. Jerry cheerfully changed the subject, and
-when they were near the store dived into an alley that led to the
-rear door of Copeland-Farley to avoid appearing before the clerks in
-Copeland’s company.
-
-Copeland remained in his room all morning, summoning the auditor from
-time to time to ask for various data. He called Jerry once and bade him
-make every effort to find Kinney by telephone. Kinney was in New York;
-had been there for a week. Copeland smiled sardonically at this news.
-
-“All right. I knew he’d been away, but the fool said he’d be back
-to-day,” he said spitefully. “That’s all!”
-
-At two o’clock he put a bundle of papers into his pocket and walked
-toward the Western National. The bookkeepers exchanged meaningful
-glances and Jerry imagined that even the truckmen loading freight
-appeared depressed. Copeland’s desperation had been expressed vividly
-enough in his drunken attempt to burn the store. And now, if the
-Western National refused to extend his loans, Copeland-Farley might
-cease to exist. Jerry’s usual nonchalance left him. He failed to seize
-a chance to “land” on a drummer from a New York perfumery house who was
-teasing him for the latest news of Main Street....
-
-At three o’clock Eaton called Jerry on the telephone.
-
-“I want to see Copeland; please call me the minute he comes in,” said
-the lawyer.
-
-Shortly before four Copeland came back and walked directly to his
-office. There was another exchange of glances along the accountants’
-desks, where the clerks bent with affected diligence over their books.
-
-The auditor was summoned again, carried a book into Copeland’s room,
-and reappeared instantly. The air was tense. It was a source of relief
-to Jerry to hear Eaton’s voice as he reported Copeland’s return.
-
-“Watch him,” said the lawyer, with his usual calmness; “and don’t let
-him leave the store.”
-
-As Jerry nervously watched the door for Eaton’s appearance, Louis M.
-Eichberg, of Corbin & Eichberg, entered and asked for Copeland. The
-bookkeepers exchanged glances again and bent over their ledgers with
-renewed zeal. The door of the private office closed upon Eichberg. It
-snapped shut sharply--ominously, Jerry thought.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-A SOLVENT HOUSE
-
-
-“I’ve bought in your stock,” Eichberg was saying to Copeland. “You put
-up fourteen hundred and eighty-five shares with the Western National
-and I’ve bought ’em in at private sale under your collateral agreement.
-As I understand it there are fifteen shares held by employees to
-qualify as directors. I guess there won’t be any trouble about them,
-and we’ll let ’em stand for the present.”
-
-“Those men paid for their stock and you have no right to touch it,”
-said Copeland. “The stock in this company has an actual value of two
-hundred dollars a share--”
-
-“Rubbish! Your capital’s shrunk till you can’t see it any more.”
-
-“Don’t you believe it! The house was never as sound as it is to-day.
-I hope you don’t think I’m going to stand by and let the Western sell
-me out on a small loan in this high-handed fashion! It’s a frame-up, a
-conspiracy to clean me out. I’ve still got a majority of the stock, and
-I’ll give you a run for your money before you get through with me!”
-
-“Keep your temper, Copeland! I don’t like doing this, but it’s better
-for me to have the business than to let it peter out, the way it’s
-doing. I’ll even say that after we consolidate I’ll be glad to make a
-place for you in the house.”
-
-“Oh, you needn’t trouble!” returned Copeland hotly. “You’re not going
-to get rid of me so easy!”
-
-“All right! Just how much stock do you think you’ve got?” asked
-Eichberg with a faint ironic smile.
-
-“I’ve got fifteen hundred shares; the bank understood that when I
-refused their demand for a majority,” Copeland replied, frowning over
-the stock-ledger.
-
-“That shows how much you know about your own business! There’s twenty
-shares out of your half that I’ve been trying to lay my hands on for
-two months. It was a deal Farley made the last year he was down here
-with a Fort Wayne jobber named Reynolds that he bought out after your
-father died. I know because we tried to buy up Reynolds ourselves, but
-old Uncle Tim went us one better. There wasn’t much to the business,
-but the good-will was worth something and Farley let Reynolds have
-twenty shares just to beat us out of the sale. Farley had sense! When
-Reynolds died his executor sold the stock to somebody here. Foreman
-handled it, but he won’t tell me who he sold to. I know you didn’t get
-it! Foreman says he spent a month last summer lookin’ for you to give
-you a chance to buy the stock, but he couldn’t get hold of you. You
-were always off sportin’ with Kinney!”
-
-Copeland had forgotten about the Reynolds shares. He mentally cursed
-Farley for not reminding him of them; Farley had never dealt squarely
-with him! Very likely he had personally told Eichberg and the Western
-National of the Reynolds shares. It was galling to be obliged to learn
-from Eichberg things he should have known himself. He had flattered
-himself that in persuading the bank to accept fourteen hundred and
-eighty-five shares as collateral instead of the majority for which
-demand had been made at first, he had shown his business sagacity; but
-evidently Eichberg had known of the Reynolds shares all along.
-
-“I don’t intend that what’s left of this business shall go to the bad,”
-said Eichberg. “Either you come to terms, and let ’em know outside that
-we’ve arranged a merger in a friendly way, or I’ll call up my lawyer
-and tell him to apply for a receiver.”
-
-Outside, the interested and anxious clerks and stenographers, cold
-with excitement, watched their associate, Mr. Jeremiah Amidon, who was
-inviting the wrath of the gods by knocking upon Copeland’s door. When
-he entered in response to an angry bellow, they expected to see him
-reappear instantly, possibly at the end of William B. Copeland’s foot.
-To their chagrin Amidon remained in the private office for some time;
-and they judged from the sudden quiet that followed his disappearance
-that he was exerting a calming influence upon Copeland and his
-visitor....
-
-“I beg your pardon,” Jerry remarked while Copeland and Eichberg glared
-at him.
-
-To Copeland the sight of Jerry was an unwelcome reminder of the
-previous night. His remorse over his effort to burn the store
-vanished; if it hadn’t been for this meddlesome cub he wouldn’t now be
-entertaining Eichberg in his office!
-
-“Well, what does the boy want?” demanded Eichberg, when Copeland found
-it impossible to express his wrath at Jerry’s intrusion.
-
-Eichberg knew Jerry perfectly well; everybody in the street knew Jerry!
-And it was the basest insult to refer to him as the boy.
-
-“Excuse me, Mr. Eichberg! I just wanted to hand a memorandum to Mr.
-Copeland.”
-
-He drew from his pocket the certificate he had purchased from Foreman,
-and handed it to Copeland, who snatched it from him with an angry snarl.
-
-“Where did you get this?” he asked faintly after a glance at the paper.
-
-“Oh, it just blew in my way early in the fall. I never bothered to get
-a new certificate, but I’ll turn it in right now.”
-
-He pulled out a fountain pen, removed the cap deliberately, and wrote
-his name in the blank space above the executor’s endorsement. This
-done, he brushed an imaginary speck from his cuff, as he had seen Eaton
-do, and went out, closing the door softly.
-
-“Well, here’s the answer, Eichberg,” said Copeland, with affected
-nonchalance; “here are those Reynolds shares.”
-
-“How did that damn’ little fool get this?” demanded Eichberg, after a
-careful scrutiny of the certificate and endorsements.
-
-“Oh, he’s a useful little damn’ fool! He’s always picking up
-something,” replied Copeland coolly.
-
-“I suppose it was all set up,” Eichberg sneered. “Why didn’t you come
-right out and say you had that stock, and save my time? It’s worth
-something if yours ain’t! You’ll either sell me that stock or I’ll have
-the court throw you out. It’s up to you!”
-
-“I told you the truth about these shares,” said Copeland, whose good
-humor was returning. “I’m ashamed to say I’d clean forgotten them; but
-you see stock never figured much in our corporation; it’s always been
-a sort of family affair. I have no idea where Amidon got Reynolds’s
-shares--that’s straight! He’s always doing something he isn’t paid for.
-And you see it isn’t quite so easy to clean me out. But I take off my
-hat to you; you’re a business man!”
-
-Hope had risen in him. In spite of his futile efforts to tide over
-the crisis there was still the remote chance that Kinney, who always
-seemed able to borrow all he wanted for his own purposes, might extend
-a helping hand. His change of manner had its effect on Eichberg.
-
-“The stock doesn’t cut any ice,” he fumed. “I’m not goin’ to have a
-hundred thousand dollars in a concern that’s losin’ money like this
-one! That statement you showed the bank was rotten! You ain’t got any
-credit; and you know mighty well you can’t go on here. You’ll either
-come to terms or I’ll get a receiver to-morrow. That’s all there is of
-that!”
-
-He clapped on his hat and turned to the door just as it opened upon
-Eaton.
-
-“I’ll look in again in the morning, Copeland,” said Eichberg in a loud
-tone. “You just think over that matter, and I guess you’ll see it my
-way.”
-
-“Never put off till to-morrow what you can do to-day,” remarked Eaton,
-projecting himself into the office. “I’ll close the door if you don’t
-mind, Copeland. And, Mr. Eichberg, please wait a moment.”
-
-“If you’re his lawyer, you don’t want me here. I’ve said all I’ve got
-to say to Copeland,” Eichberg answered. But he waited, glowering at
-Eaton, who removed his overcoat, placed it carefully on a chair, and
-began drawing off his gloves.
-
-“Mr. Eichberg, they told me a moment ago at the Western National that
-certain stock held as collateral for maturing Copeland-Farley notes had
-been bought by you. Is that true?”
-
-“That’s correct! I guess it was all regular,” Eichberg snapped.
-
-“We’ll come to that presently. You have now in your possession through
-that purchase fourteen hundred and eighty-five shares of stock?”
-
-“Right!” ejaculated Eichberg loudly.
-
-Eaton raised his hand, glanced intently at the palm, and then, with one
-of his familiar tricks, bent his gaze directly upon Eichberg.
-
-“Being a competitor of Copeland-Farley and a director of the bank, you
-have naturally--quite naturally--thought it would be a good investment
-to own a large block of the stock? And it undoubtedly occurred to you
-that a combination of Copeland-Farley with Corbin & Eichberg would
-be highly advantageous? In fact, you thought you had more stock than
-Copeland owns, and that you could come in here and discharge him like a
-drayman!”
-
-“That’s my business! You haven’t explained yet how you come to be
-buttin’ in here.”
-
-“Presently--presently!” replied Eaton soothingly.
-
-His calm demeanor and refusal to lift his voice further infuriated
-Eichberg, who breathed hard for a moment, then pointed a stubby
-forefinger at the lawyer as his wrath found utterance.
-
-“Copeland-Farley’s ruined--busted! If you’ll take a look at their last
-statement you’ll see they can’t pull out!”
-
-“You anticipate me,” replied Eaton gently. “The fact is I had meant to
-buy that stock myself, but the bank’s haste to turn it over to you has
-spoiled that. I was annoyed--greatly annoyed--when I found awhile ago
-that the stock had been sold--sold, in violation of the stipulation--on
-the bank’s usual form--that three days’ grace were to be given to the
-debtor to release his collateral. I don’t believe the Comptroller would
-like that. I shall consider seriously bringing it to his attention.”
-
-“What good would three days have done him?” cried Eichberg. “The sooner
-he’s put out the better. His accounts payable are goin’ to bring his
-general creditors down on him in a few days! Don’t you suppose I know?
-Haven’t they been telegraphin’ me from all over the country for months
-askin’ about this house?”
-
-“And, of course,” said Eaton softly, “you did all you could to
-protect your competitor--neighborly feeling, and that sort of thing.
-Well, it will be a great relief to you to know that those accounts
-will be paid to-morrow--just as soon as the exchange window of your
-piratical bank is opened. There’s a hundred thousand dollars to the
-credit of Copeland-Farley over there right now. I know, because I
-went in a quarter of an hour ago and made the deposit. This house is
-solvent--absolutely solvent. Moreover, Copeland’s stock in the Kinney
-Ivory Cement Company is now marketable. I take some pride in that fact
-myself--immodestly, I dare say, and yet--I am only human!”
-
-He drew a telegram from his waistcoat pocket and handed it to Copeland.
-
-“That patent case was decided to-day--in favor of Kinney. Copeland, I
-congratulate you!”
-
-Copeland read the message, and looked dully from Eaton to Eichberg.
-He was roused by Eichberg, who had no difficulty in expressing his
-emotions.
-
-“You fool,” he shouted, shaking his fist in Eaton’s face. “If you’re
-tellin’ the truth, what do you mean to do about my stock?”
-
-Eaton was drawing on his gloves without haste. His face expressed the
-mildest surprise at Eichberg’s perturbation.
-
-“My dear Mr. Eichberg, you were in such a rush to buy the Western’s
-collateral that I’m surprised that you should trouble me--a casual
-acquaintance--with such a question.”
-
-“It’s a cheat; it’s a swindle! If there’s any law for this--”
-
-He flung out of the office and tramped heavily to the front door, while
-the clerks, worn with the many agitations of the day, stared after him
-mutely.
-
-“In the morning,” Eaton was saying to Copeland, “I’ll have fuller
-details of the decision, but there’s no doubt about it--we’ve won on
-every point. Allow me to congratulate you!”
-
-Copeland half rose to take his proffered hand; then with a groan he
-sank back and buried his face in his hands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-NULL AND VOID
-
-
-“Those documents have a familiar look,” remarked Thurston with a smile
-as Nan placed the packet of wills on the table beside him in the Farley
-parlor. “Mr. Farley was hard to please; I’ve learned a lot about
-will-writing just from studying the different schemes he proposed from
-time to time.”
-
-Nan described the manner in which she had found the wills on the night
-of Farley’s death.
-
-“He was evidently troubled about them and got out of bed to look them
-over. This one, that I found lying open on the table, is torn across as
-though he had begun to destroy it when the end came.”
-
-“Very likely that was his intention,” Thurston replied. “I had just
-written a new will for him, but it wasn’t signed--not unless he
-executed it that same afternoon. Perhaps you know about that?”
-
-“No one was here, I’m sure,” said Nan, after a moment’s consideration.
-“The nurse was off duty; she left for the evening at four o’clock, and
-I’m sure the servants weren’t in his room. I carried up his dinner tray
-myself.”
-
-“It’s hardly possible he had signed that last will. I was always
-present on such occasions and I got the witnesses. When I called now
-and then with a couple of his friends, or telephoned for them, there
-was a will to be signed. You probably understood that.”
-
-He began opening the papers, glancing quickly at the last sheet of
-each will, and turning them face down on the table. The torn one he
-scrutinized more carefully, and returned to it for further examination
-when he had disposed of the others. Nan watched him nervously. He was
-a small, slight man of sixty, with a stiff gray mustache and a sharp,
-rasping voice. It would not have been easy to deceive Thurston if she
-had destroyed the wills; she could never have gone through with it!
-
-She felt that she had touched with her finger-tips the far horizons
-and knew at last something of the meaning of life. She had subjected
-herself to pitiless self-analysis and stood convicted in her own
-conscience of vanity, selfishness, and hardness. The recollection of
-her gay adventures with the Kinneys and her affair with Copeland had
-become a hideous nightmare. Not only was she ashamed of her dallying
-with Billy, but she accused herself of having exerted a baneful
-influence upon him. In all likelihood he would never have sunk so low
-as to propose the destruction of Farley’s will but for his infatuation
-for her.
-
-Farley’s death had in itself exercised a chastening effect upon her.
-She was conscious of trying to see herself with his eyes and fortify
-herself with something of the stern righteousness that made him, in the
-retrospect, a noble and inspiring figure. The upturned faces at the
-Settlement haunted her; there was a work for her to do in the world
-if only she could lay her hands upon it! In this new mood the life of
-ease which money would secure weighed little against self-dependence
-and service. Money had ceased to be an important integer in her
-calculations.
-
-Having concluded his examination of the papers, the lawyer lifted his
-head with an impatient jerk, then sighed, and began smoothing the open
-sheets into a neat pile.
-
-“Those wills are worthless, Miss Farley,--not one of them can be
-probated. The testator’s signatures and the names of the witnesses have
-been scratched out!”
-
-In proof of his statement he extended one of the wills, pointing to the
-heavy cross-crosses at the bottom of the sheet.
-
-“You have no idea when he did this--you weren’t present, I suppose?”
-
-“No; he used to do his writing at the table where he hid the wills. He
-occasionally wrote a letter or a check there; but I never saw him open
-the table. I never knew of that inner compartment till the night he
-died.”
-
-“Oh, I know that table very well; he had shown me the hidden drawer and
-explained how to open it. But this is most unfortunate, deplorable! I
-kept in touch with his doctor about his condition and feared something
-like this might happen. And he dreaded it himself--was afraid he might
-die some time without leaving just the will he had determined to make.
-I account for all the wills I wrote for him but the last. The last time
-I was here I brought a new will, which I don’t find among these. Are
-you sure you haven’t overlooked it?”
-
-She was quite sure of it, but after she had described in minute detail
-the events of the last afternoon of Farley’s life, to confirm her
-statement that no one who could have acted as witness had visited
-Farley, she took the lawyer upstairs to examine the table for himself.
-They broadened the scope of the search, but without success.
-
-“For the present I think it best for you not to read those wills,”
-he said, when they had returned to the parlor. “They represent Mr.
-Farley’s changes of feeling in regard to many things--including
-yourself. A little later I shall be glad to submit them to you. The
-important thing just now is the threat of this man Harlowe to attack
-your rights under the adoption. Mr. Eaton and I have already discussed
-that. Now that we’re pretty sure there’s no will, this may give us some
-trouble, but with characteristic thoroughness Mr. Eaton has prepared
-for just this emergency. His reasons for not telling me earlier about
-these things are sound enough--his fear of disturbing Mr. Farley
-unnecessarily. He would undoubtedly have wanted a proceeding brought to
-correct the adoption, but that could only have advertised the error,
-and Mr. Farley might have died before we finished it. Still, if I
-had known I should have taken care that he didn’t die intestate. But
-from what Mr. Eaton tells me, this man is all primed to attack any
-will that might have been left, on the ground of Mr. Farley’s mental
-incapacity--which is ludicrous, of course. There was never a saner man;
-and yet his eccentricities might be magnified before a jury--you never
-can tell. On the whole, Mr. Eaton’s silence was justified. But our next
-step must be carefully considered. In the mean time--”
-
-He paced the floor, considering means of relieving her anxiety.
-
-“Of course, while these things are pending we shall arrange for your
-maintenance, on the old basis, in this house. No one can pretend that
-Mr. Farley didn’t have every intention of providing for you generously.
-It’s only fair to tell you this, that even when he seemed to waver at
-times he never cut your legacy below a hundred thousand dollars; and
-I know he regretted the comparative meagerness of that--tripled the
-amount in the very next will he made! You need have no fears, Miss
-Farley,” he went on reassuringly. “But you are entitled to your own
-counsel; it’s only right that I should say this to you immediately;
-and I suggest that you ask Mr. Eaton to represent you. I hope you will
-confer with him at once.”
-
-He bowed with old-fashioned formality. He was more troubled than he
-cared to have Nan know, and her silence disconcerted him. But her face
-expressed neither disappointment nor alarm. She stood erect by the
-table, an intent look in her eyes. Not wishing to leave her weighed
-down by the uncertainties of her future, he said briskly:--
-
-“You mustn’t bother yourself about these matters, Miss Farley. In the
-end you will find yourself a rich woman. So--”
-
-He waved his hand as the preliminary to a quick exit, but she called
-him back. He did not like being called back; now, he thought, there
-would be the tears he dreaded.
-
-“You don’t understand,” she said quietly. “I ought to have made it
-clear in the first place, but I didn’t know just how--or when--to say
-it. I can’t--I will not take any of Mr. Farley’s money--not even if the
-law should give it to me.”
-
-He looked at her with the mute appeal of the deaf when they fail to
-catch a meaning.
-
-“Really, Miss Farley--”
-
-“I won’t take one cent of Mr. Farley’s money,” Nan repeated firmly.
-
-“I can’t blame you for being disappointed--for resenting what may
-appear to be a lack of consideration on his part for your comfort--”
-
-“Oh, it isn’t that! I wouldn’t have you think _that_! I’m sure he
-meant to do what was right--what was generous! You don’t know how glad
-I am that our last day together was a happy one--we had never been on
-better terms. It’s not that I have any unkind feeling toward papa; it’s
-all myself. The Farleys were only too kind to me. I went my own way and
-it made me selfish--and pretty hard, too, I’m afraid. Papa knew it; and
-you know yourself how little he trusted me. And he was right about me:
-I didn’t deserve his confidence. But I’m going to begin all over again,
-as I couldn’t if I began fighting for this money. I can see now that
-money can’t make me happy. I’m going to work; I’m going to stop living,
-as I always have, just for myself: I’m going--I’m going to think about
-the rest of the folks a lot!”
-
-“The folks?” repeated Thurston feebly. “What folks?”
-
-“Oh, everybody! The down-and-outers--girls like me who get a bad start
-or make mistakes!”
-
-Thurston’s brows worked convulsively. He had been prepared for anything
-but this.
-
-“Do I--do I understand you to mean that, even if this estate could be
-turned over to you to-morrow, you’d decline to receive it? It can’t be
-possible--”
-
-“Yes; that’s what I mean!” she cried eagerly. “I’ve thought it all out
-and have made up my mind about it. I don’t want to be considered in
-anything that has to do with papa’s property.”
-
-“But, my dear child, you can’t--you _can’t_ abandon your claims in any
-such fashion! It’s my duty--I owe it to my friend and client to see
-that his wishes are fulfilled. Why--”
-
-“Well,” she persisted, “between all those wills you can’t tell what
-he wanted--only that I was a great problem to him. I caused him a
-great deal of unnecessary worry and heartache. I hope this isn’t going
-to cause you any trouble--” And she smiled in spite of herself at
-his consternation, as indicated by the twitching of his brows. And
-there _was_, she realized, something absurd to her cool statement to
-a hard-headed lawyer that she renounced claims whose validity he was
-in duty bound to support. The situation was too much for him; he must
-escape as quickly as possible from this young woman who brushed away a
-fairly tangible fortune as a waiter clears away bread crumbs.
-
-“Really, Miss Farley--” he began; but, thinking of nothing further to
-say, he backed awkwardly into the hall.
-
-She helped him into his coat and opened the street door. He hurried off
-without saying good-bye, clasping Timothy Farley’s wills tightly under
-his arm.
-
-A light snow was falling; Nan stood on the steps and lifted her hot
-face to the fluttering flakes. She watched Thurston until he turned the
-corner and then went to the telephone.
-
-In a moment she was connected with Mrs. Copeland at the farm. “I want
-a job,” she was saying in a cheerful tone; “yes, that’s it--a chance to
-work. You told me the other day you needed some one to look after your
-business at the market-house. I’m applying for the job. Oh, no! I’m not
-fooling; I want that place! Well, I want to see you, too; I’ll be out
-early in the morning!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-IN TRUST
-
-
-“Copeland Farm Products” in blue letters against a white background
-swung over Nan’s head on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday mornings in
-the city market-house. On those days she left Mrs. Copeland’s farm at
-five o’clock with the day’s offerings and by six the stand was in order.
-
-An endless, jostling throng surged by, and every sale she effected,
-every negotiation for the future delivery of an order, had all the
-joy of an adventure. Her immediate neighbors were a big-fisted
-German gardener and a black-eyed Italian girl who sold fruits and
-vegetables. When business lagged, the German chaffed her about her
-wares or condoled with her when some frugal marketer priced her butter,
-sniffed, and departed. Nan commanded a meager knowledge of Italian and
-flung a phrase at her dark-eyed neighbor now and then in the spirit
-of comradeship which the place encouraged. She liked her “job.” She
-assured herself that she had never had so much fun in all her life, and
-that never again would she eat the bread of idleness.
-
-But it had not proved so easy as she imagined it would be to slip out
-of her old life into the new. If she had left the Farley house preceded
-by a brass band and had marched round the monument and the length of
-Washington Street before taking her place in the market, her flight
-could hardly have attracted more attention.
-
-The town buzzed. The newspapers neglected no phase of Nan’s affairs,
-nor did they overlook her as she stood behind the counter dispensing
-“Copeland Farm Products.” She was surprised and vexed by her sudden
-notoriety. A newspaper photographer snapped her, in her white sweater
-and blue-and-white tam o’shanter, passing eggs over the counter. The
-portrait bore the caption, “Miss Nancy Farley in a New Rôle,” and was
-supplemented by text adorned with such sub-headings as “Renounces her
-Fortune” and “Throws Away a Million Dollars.” To be thus heralded was
-preposterous; she had merely gone to work for reasons that were, in any
-view of the matter, her own private affair. But public sentiment was
-astonishingly friendly; even those who had looked askance at her high
-flights with the Kinney crowd said it was an outrage that Farley had
-failed to provide for her decently.
-
-Fanny, thinking at first it was only a joke, a flare of temperament
-(references to her temperament had begun to pall upon Nan!), had
-welcomed Nan to her house and given her charge of the market-stand; but
-it was not without difficulty that she persuaded the girl to occupy her
-guest-room and share her meals.
-
-“You’d better scold me when I make mistakes, for if I find I don’t suit
-I’ll fire myself,” Nan declared. “And if I have to leave you, I’ll go
-to clerking in a department store. I just mention this so you won’t be
-too polite. This isn’t any grandstand play, you see; I’m serious for
-the first time in my life!”
-
-It was certain, at any rate, that Copeland Farm Products were sold with
-amazing ease. When it became known that Nan Farley had become Mrs.
-Copeland’s representative “on market,” there was lively competition for
-the privilege of purchasing those same “products.” Fanny complained
-ruefully that the jellies, jams, and pickles created by the young
-women in her industrial house would be exhausted before Christmas and
-that nothing would remain to sell but butter and eggs. Nan suggested
-orange marmalade and a cake-baking department to keep the girls at work
-during the winter, and on the off days she set herself to planning the
-preparation of these “specialties.” Mrs. Farley’s cooking lessons had
-not gone for naught; Nan could bake a cake in which there was no trace
-of “sadness,” and after some experiments with jumbles and sand-tarts
-she sold her first output in an hour and opened a waiting list.
-
-Mrs. Copeland told Eaton at the end of the second week that she had
-never known the real Nan till now. There was no questioning the girl’s
-sincerity; she had cut loose from her old life, relinquished all hope
-of participating in Farley’s fortune, and addressed herself zealously
-to the business of supporting herself. She became immediately the
-idol of the half-dozen young women in the old farmhouse, who thought
-her an immensely “romantic” figure and marveled at her industry and
-resourcefulness.
-
-“Splendid! Give her all the room she wants,” Eaton urged Mrs. Copeland.
-“She’s only finding herself; we’ll have the Nan she was meant to be the
-first thing we know.”
-
-“I didn’t know all these nice church-going people would come to condole
-with me, or I’d have left town,” Nan confided to Fanny. “These women
-who wouldn’t let their daughters associate with me a year ago can’t
-buy enough eggs now to show how much they sympathize with me. If they
-don’t keep away, I’m going to raise the price of their eggs, and that
-will break their hearts--and the eggs! But do you know,” she went
-on gravely, “I’ve never been so happy in my life as I am now! And I
-wouldn’t have anybody think it was out of pique, or with any unkind
-feeling toward papa,”--tears shone in her eyes as the word slipped
-from her tongue,--“but I tell you nobody ever could have made a nice,
-polite girl out of me. I was bound to get into scrapes as long as I
-hadn’t anything really to do but fill in time between manicuring and
-hair-washing dates. There’s a whole lot in that old saying about making
-a silk purse out of a sow’s ear: it can’t be did!”
-
-“If you talk that way,” Fanny laughed, “I shall turn you out of my
-house. I don’t want you to think I approve of what you’re doing. I’m
-letting you do it because I’m scared not to!”
-
-“You’d better be--for if you hadn’t taken me in, I should have gone
-on the stage,--honestly, I should,--in vaudeville, most likely, doing
-monologues right between the jugglers and the trained seals.”...
-
-On Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays Mr. Jeremiah A. Amidon found it
-convenient to visit the market-house as early as seven-thirty (in spite
-of pressing duties at the store), to make sure, he said, that Nan, and
-the farmhand who drove her in and helped arrange the stock, had safely
-passed all the railroad crossings on the way to town. Jerry was a
-consoling person and unobtrusively thoughtful and helpful. And in his
-way he was almost as keen as Eaton. Jerry did not require explanations,
-and nothing is so wholly satisfactory as a friend who understands
-without being told.
-
-“Little girl, if your eggs are guaranteed under the Pure Food Act, I’ll
-take one--the large size.”
-
-“You’ll find the hard-boiled eggs at the lunch counter in the next
-aisle, little boy,” Nan answered. “How is John Cecil?”
-
-“Working himself to death. You’ve driven him to it!”
-
-“I hope you two are not abusing me; how about it?”
-
-“No; not vocally. Cecil’s shut up in his office every night, getting
-ready to clean up those cousins of Farley’s down on the river, but he
-doesn’t say anything. Look here, Nan, we’ve got a line of cold cream
-and other toilet marvels--stuff you could handle here as a side line.
-Let us send you up a bunch to put next to that pink jelly. It’s high
-grade and we’ll make it to you at the right price.”
-
-“Not on your life, Jerry. Drugs and hand-made country butter can’t
-associate. You’d better run down to your own little shop now and go to
-work.”
-
-After his morning inspection he was likely to reappear at lunch time,
-to see her for a moment before she left for the farm; and he assisted
-in balancing her cash when she confessed that it wouldn’t “gee.” His
-pride in her was enormous; he was satisfied that there was no other
-girl to compare with her.
-
-Jerry’s admiration was so obviously genuine and supported by so deep
-an awe and reverence that no girl could have helped liking it. And
-Jerry was unfailingly amusing; his airs and graces, his attempts to
-wear a little learning lightly, were wholly transparent and invited
-the chaff he welcomed. Nan’s feeling, dating from the beginning of
-their acquaintance, that their common origin in the back streets of
-Belleville established a tie between them had grown steadily. In all
-her late perplexities and self-questioning she had found herself
-wondering constantly what Jerry would say, and he had supported her
-warmly in her rejection of the estate.
-
-He had from the first confided his ambitions to her and they were
-worthy ones. He not only meant to get on, but he meant to overcome as
-far as possible his lack of early advantages. He steadfastly spent
-an hour at his Latin every night before he went to bed, with only an
-occasional lift from the busy Eaton. “As long as I’ve tackled it, I
-might as well keep it up,” he remarked apologetically. “Cecil says my
-English is so bad, I’d better learn a few foreign languages to make me
-respectable!”
-
-One noon Nan was munching an apple while waiting for Mrs. Copeland’s
-man to carry out the empty crates and boxes, when Jerry appeared,
-looking unusually solemn.
-
-“What’s wrong with the world? You’re not out of work, are you?” she
-demanded.
-
-“I hoped you’d ask me,” he replied, with mock dejection. “The boss has
-been making a few changes at the store and I’ve got a new job.”
-
-“Better or worse?” she asked, with feigned carelessness.
-
-This was the first time he had referred to Copeland since her removal
-to the farm; and there were still vast areas of ignorance and
-uncertainty in his mind as to her feeling toward Copeland.
-
-“Better for me; I don’t know about the house,” he answered. “Hasn’t
-anybody told you everything that’s happened down our way?” He
-seated himself on the counter and clasped one knee with his gloved
-hands. “Well, we’ve reorganized; just about everything’s changed
-except the sign. Boss steady as a rock; things rather coming his way
-now. You heard about Kinney Cement? There was never any doubt about
-Cecil winning the patent cases; and now the boss has sold out his
-interest--quit cement for good and all; concentrating on drugs. I guess
-he got a good price for his cement stock, too.”
-
-He waited to see how she was affected by these confidences.
-
-“The drug business was in a bad way, wasn’t it?” she asked carelessly.
-
-“Um, well; it did look for a few minutes as though we mightn’t pull
-through.”
-
-She laughed at his lightly emphasized “we.”
-
-“What are you doing now?--counting money or running the elevator?”
-
-“Tease me some more! Say, Nan, I’m not kidding you. The boss made a new
-job for me; I’m sales manager--going to start out with a suit-case next
-week and shake hands with all our customers, just to get in touch. Not
-to interfere with our regular salesmen; oh, no! Just asking about the
-babies down the line and making the lowly retailer feel that we live
-only to please him. Do you get me?”
-
-“A gleam or two. So Mr. Copeland got out of his troubles, did he?
-Well, I’m glad to hear it. He’s too good a fellow to go to the bad.”
-
-This was spoken carelessly, but with a note of sincerity. Her world had
-turned upside-down since her last meeting with Billy. She waited for
-Jerry to enlighten her further.
-
-“He’s all right now; you can bet on that; he’s not going to fool with
-his luck any more. It’s funny”--he was finding it difficult to conceal
-his embarrassment in speaking of Copeland to Nan--“but the boss and
-Cecil are getting chummy. When the pinch came, Cecil was right there;
-walked on to the scaffold and saved him after the black cap had been
-pulled on and tied under his chin. This is marked private--I don’t
-_know_ anything--not a thing!”
-
-Nan nodded. She did not see very clearly what he was driving at, but
-she refused to ask questions.
-
-“The boss and Cecil are lunching together every day now, and they spend
-an hour together. That tickles me,” he ended softly. “I always wished
-they’d hit it off together.”
-
-He glanced at her for her approval of this new combination, which
-was hardly more surprising than his own manifestation of feeling.
-He evidently derived the deepest satisfaction from the new intimacy
-between Eaton and Copeland. The fleeting tenderness and wistfulness in
-his candid, humorous eyes touched her.
-
-“Well!” he exclaimed cheerily, as the driver announced that the
-wagon was ready, “do you fly back to the farm, or will you join me in
-refreshments at a one-arm sandwichorium? I’ve only got twenty minutes.”
-
-“I’ll fool you by accepting,” she laughed. “I have some errands to do
-and can just about catch the three o’clock interurban.”
-
-They walked to a lunch room, where he found seats and brought her the
-sandwich and coffee she insisted was all she wanted. He was observing
-her narrowly for signs of discontent, but she had never seemed happier.
-He understood perfectly that she wished her new activities to be taken
-as a matter of course, and he carefully refrained from expressing his
-great pride in her. As long as she continued to countenance him, he was
-satisfied, and she had shown in countless ways that she liked him and
-believed in him.
-
-He introduced her to a bank clerk who paused in his hurried exit to
-speak to him and incidentally to have a closer look at Nan. A girl
-nodded to him across the room; he explained that she was one of the
-smartest girls in town--“the whole show in an insurance office; the
-members of the firm don’t turn round unless she says so.”
-
-“Just think,” Nan remarked, “I might have died without knowing how it
-feels to be a poor working girl.”
-
-“Well, don’t die now that you’ve found it out! It would be mighty
-lonesome on earth without you. Have a chocolate eclair,” he added
-hastily,--“‘business girl’s special.’”
-
-“No, thanks. If I don’t turn up to-night with an appetite for dinner
-Mrs. Copeland will be scared and send for the doctor.”
-
-“By the way, I wish you’d casually mention me to that gifted lady; I’d
-like to hop off at Stop 3 some evening without being consumed by the
-dog. How about it?”
-
-“Oh, she’ll stand for it! She’ll stand for ’most anybody who shows up
-with a clean face and a kind heart. She’s an angel, Jerry. She’s the
-finest woman that ever lived!”
-
-“I’d sort o’ figured that out for myself, just passing her on the
-boulevards. I thought I’d try for a rise out of Cecil the other night
-and just mentioned her with a gentle o. k. I’d gone up to his office
-to see if I could shine his shoes or do any little thing like that for
-him, and he looked at me so long I nearly had nervous prostration,
-and then he said: ‘My dear boy, the poverty of your vocabulary is a
-constant grief to me!’--just like that. I guess he likes her all right.”
-
-“She has a good many admirers,” Nan replied noncommittally, as she
-crumpled her paper napkin. “She can’t help it.”
-
-“Well, anything Cecil wants he ought to have.”
-
-“Well, I hope--I should hate to think he couldn’t get anything he
-wanted in this world,” said Nan.
-
-Jerry had been deeply troubled at times by the fear that his adored
-Cecil might be interested in Nan, and the smile that accompanied her
-last remark was the least bit ambiguous. With all his assurance he
-was at heart a humble person, and he never ceased to marvel at Nan’s
-tolerance of him. It was not for him to question the ordinances of
-Heaven. If Cecil and Nan--
-
-Nan began drawing on her gloves. When they reached the street she
-explained that she was going to the Farley house to gather up some
-of her traps that she had left behind. Fully conscious of his sudden
-soberness and perhaps surmising the cause of it, she lightened his
-burdened spirit by asking him to come out soon to see her, and boarded
-a street car....
-
-This was her first visit “home” since she had left the house to go to
-Fanny Copeland’s. In her hurried flight she had taken only a trunk
-and a suit-case, but her summer gowns and a number of odds and ends
-remained to be packed and moved.
-
-The colored maid, who had only vaguely grasped the meaning of Nan’s
-sudden departure, admitted her with joyous exclamations.
-
-“About time yo’ ’s comin’ back, Miss Nan. Mistah Thu’ston came up heah
-and tole me and Joshua to stay right along. I guess Mistah Fa’ley’s
-been turnin’ ovah in his grave ’bout yo’ runnin’ away. He was mighty
-ca’less not to fix his will the way it ought t’ been. Yo’ ’ll find yo’
-room just the way yo’ left it. Mistah Thu’ston said fo’ me to keep
-things shined up just the way they always was.”
-
-Nan explained that she had merely come to pack her remaining things
-and asked Joshua to bring up a trunk from the cellar. She filled
-the trunk and added to the summer frocks articles from her desk and
-other personal belongings that she wished to keep for their various
-associations.
-
-When she had finished, she crossed the hall to Farley’s room, rather
-from force of habit than by intention. She ran her hand across the
-shelves that represented his steadfast literary preferences that had
-never been altered in her recollection: “Pickwick,” Artemus Ward; a
-volume of Petroleum V. Nasby’s writings; Franklin’s “Autobiography”;
-Grant’s “Memoirs”; Mark Twain, in well-worn original first editions,
-including the bulky “Innocents Abroad” and “Roughing It.” She resolved
-to take the “Life on the Mississippi,” from which she had so often
-read to him in his last year. She rummaged in the closet for an album
-containing crude old-fashioned likenesses of Mr. and Mrs. Farley and
-a series of photographs of herself that marked the swift-moving years
-from the time she became a member of their household.
-
-In a last slow survey of the room her eyes fell upon the portrait of
-Mrs. Farley that had arrested her with its kind motherly glance on
-the night of her temptation. She reflected that her right to remove
-anything from the house was questionable, but she meant to ask Thurston
-to give her the portrait when the house was finally disposed of.
-
-As she lifted the frame and shook the wire loose from the hook, a paper
-that had been thrust behind the picture slipped over the mantel-edge
-with a soft rustling and fell at her feet. She laid the portrait on the
-bed and picked up the paper.
-
-A glance sufficed to tell her that she had found another of Farley’s
-wills--possibly the last, for which Thurston had inquired so
-particularly.
-
-She opened it hurriedly and glanced at the last sheet. The spaces
-for the signatures of testator and witnesses were blank. It was
-only worthless paper, of no value to any one. It seemed a plausible
-assumption that Farley, having decided finally that he would have
-no use for the earlier wills, had begun to destroy them after first
-placing the last one behind the picture to avoid the chance of
-confusing it with the others.
-
-As Nan folded it, a name caught her attention and she began to read.
-
- I hereby give and bequeath to Frances Hillard Copeland, as trustee,
- the sum of five hundred thousand dollars, the same to be held by
- said Frances Hillard Copeland, as such trustee, with the following
- powers and for the following purposes: ... To pay to my said daughter
- upon her marriage the principal of said fund, together with all
- accretions thereto; provided, however, that the marriage of my said
- daughter shall be with the approval and express consent of said
- Frances Hillard Copeland....
-
-The room swayed as the meaning of this proviso sank into her whirling
-senses. Farley had interposed Fanny between her and Billy--Fanny,
-Billy’s former wife! The old man’s hatred of Copeland, his warm
-admiration for Fanny, had thus combined to fashion a device that was
-almost malevolent in its cunning. She followed Farley’s reasoning
-clearly. He had assumed that his own feeling toward Copeland was shared
-by Fanny, and that she would never consent to a marriage which, in
-the vague prospect, had given him so much concern. He had presumably
-promoted the friendly relations between Fanny and her with this end in
-view.
-
-As the first shock of the revelation passed, Nan laughed bitterly.
-
-“Poor papa!” she murmured.
-
-He little knew how near she had come to marrying Billy! She gasped as
-it occurred to her that Farley might have discussed the matter with
-Fanny and persuaded her to accept the trust; but she quickly decided
-against this. It was unlikely that Farley had ever spoken to her about
-it; and it was inconceivable that Fanny would have consented, when the
-purpose was so clearly to make use of her, as Billy’s divorced wife,
-to stand between Billy and Farley’s money....
-
-She told the servants she would send for her trunk and instructed them
-to wrap up Mrs. Farley’s portrait and hold it until she could ask
-Thurston’s permission to remove it. She hurried to the car, carrying
-the will with her. She must, of course, show it to Thurston, but that
-could wait a day....
-
-First she would tell Fanny! It was only fair that Mrs. Copeland
-should know. Copeland had never been mentioned in their intercourse,
-but she would now confess everything that had ever passed between
-her and Billy. She would not spare herself. She should have done it
-earlier--before Fanny threw the mantle of her kindness and generosity
-about her.
-
-For a month she had been happy in the thought that she had escaped
-from all her troubles, and that she was free of the wreckage of her
-old life. Now it was necessary to readjust herself to new conditions,
-and she resented the necessity that compelled it. Her resolution to
-tell Fanny of this last will and of all that lay back of it remained
-unshaken as the car bore her homeward. It was the only “square” thing
-to do, she repeated to herself over and over again, as she looked out
-of the car window upon the gray winter landscape.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-“I NEVER STOPPED LOVING HIM!”
-
-
-While they were still at dinner, Mrs. Copeland was called to the
-telephone. The instrument was in the living-room and Nan could not
-avoid hearing Fanny’s share in the conversation.
-
-“That’s fine--quite splendid!” And then, “I’m so glad! I never can
-thank you! Well, of course, no one knows. You’re quite sure? That’s
-good; I might have known you’d manage it just right.”
-
-There was a moment’s silence after she returned to the table. She
-dropped a lump of sugar into her coffee and watched the bubbles rise.
-Then she lifted her head with a smile.
-
-“I suppose, Nancy Farley, that God has made better men than J. C.
-Eaton--kinder and more helpful men--but I’ve never known them!”
-
-Her lips twitched and there were tears in her eyes.
-
-“I suppose it’s his nature to be kind and helpful,” Nan replied. “I’ve
-never known any one like him.”
-
-“The nice thing about him is that he does you a favor quite as though
-it were a favor to him. He’s just done something for me that no one
-else could have done; there’s no one else I could have asked to do it!”
-
-She lapsed into reverie, and Nan’s thoughts ranged far. If Fanny and
-Eaton loved each other, how perfect it would be! Their telephonic
-communications had been frequent of late; nearly every evening Eaton
-called her, as though by arrangement, at the dinner hour. From the
-character of Fanny’s responses he seemed to be reporting upon some
-matter, the nature of which was not apparent, but Fanny always came
-from these conferences in good spirits.
-
-While Fanny was studying the produce market in the afternoon newspaper,
-Nan went upstairs to get the will. She had set herself a disagreeable
-task, but she did not falter in her determination to go through with
-it. She glanced through the will again, rehearsed the story as she
-meant to tell it, and returned to the living-room, where Fanny began
-reading the day’s quotations from the sheet before her.
-
-“Nan, if eggs go much higher, we’ll be rich by spring. I’m going to
-double the poultry department next summer. They told me I couldn’t make
-it pay, and now it’s the best thing I’ve got!”
-
-Nan liked these quiet evenings. Sometimes the young women from the
-farmhouse came in for an hour of music, and Nan occasionally gave some
-of her recitations, much to their delight. At other times Fanny retired
-to her den to write letters or post her books, leaving Nan to her own
-devices.
-
-To-night Fanny produced some sewing and bade Nan tell her of her day’s
-experiences.
-
-“I hope the long winter evenings out here are not going to bore you,
-Nancy,” she remarked, noting the serious look on Nan’s face. “Gracious!
-What’s that you have there? It has an official look; we’re not being
-sued, are we?”
-
-“There’s something I have to tell you, Fanny. It’s not a pleasant
-subject, and you’ll see in a moment how hard it is for me to tell you.
-And you’ll listen, won’t you; you’ll let me tell you everything I have
-to say about it?”
-
-“Of course, Nancy!” said Fanny as Nan knelt beside her. “I should
-be sorry if you couldn’t come to me with anything! I hope nothing
-disagreeable has happened.”
-
-“Well, it isn’t pleasant. And to think I have to spoil one of our
-evenings by talking of it! We’ve had such good times here. It may be
-that you won’t let me stay any longer after you know. I should hate
-that; but I should understand it.”
-
-She touched with a light caress a fold of Mrs. Copeland’s gown, then
-withdrew her hand quickly, and began fingering the will nervously.
-
-“The sooner we get through with it the better, Nancy,” said Fanny
-kindly.
-
-“Well, when I went to the house this afternoon I found that other will,
-the last one Mr. Thurston wrote for papa. It was stuck behind mamma’s
-picture where he must have put it when he began destroying the other
-wills. It isn’t signed, but, of course, I shall have to give it to Mr.
-Thurston. Perhaps I shouldn’t have read it, but I did, and I knew right
-away that I ought to show it to you. I thought about it all the way out
-on the car, and I’m sure it’s the best thing to do.”
-
-“You poor child! I should think you’d had enough of wills, without new
-ones popping out from behind picture frames. If you’re sure you want me
-to see it, I’m ready. Let me have it.”
-
-Nan passed it to her grudgingly and rose and left the room. She waited
-in the dark dining-room, watching the headlight of a trolley car as
-it neared and passed in the highway below. The time seemed endless.
-She heard the rustle of paper as Fanny turned the pages. She was
-reading carefully, and as time passed without any sign from her, Nan
-knew that she was pondering deeply what she read. Nan remained at the
-window, pressing her forehead against the cold pane. Deep dejection
-settled upon her; she had made a mistake; it had not been necessary
-to make this revelation, which could only cause her dearest friend
-unhappiness....
-
-She felt suddenly the pressure of a warm cheek against her face.
-
-“Come, Nancy! Come back to the fire and let us talk about it,” said
-Fanny in her usual cheery tone. “Of course, I never knew of this;
-never dreamed of any such thing. It’s a strange idea; I didn’t know
-such a will could be made; but if it was done with Mr. Thurston’s
-counsel, it must be all right. I should have thought, though, that they
-would have asked me about it. The responsibility is very great--too
-great--for any one to take. But, of course, as the will isn’t signed,
-that’s the end of it.”
-
-Nan turned wonderingly, doubtful whether Fanny had grasped the full
-significance of those phrases that touched so nearly her own life.
-
-“It doesn’t say anything about my giving a bond; I might have
-stolen the money!” Fanny continued lightly. “And if I didn’t like
-your suitors, I might have played the rôle of the cruel father for
-twenty-five years! My! but you’ve had a narrow escape!”
-
-“Oh, you don’t understand; you don’t understand!” Nan moaned. “Don’t
-you see; don’t you _know_ what it all means?”
-
-“Yes; I think I do, Nancy. But we don’t need to talk of that. It’s only
-so much paper, anyhow, and we needn’t bother. The best thing to do is
-to forget all about it.”
-
-“But I can’t let it go this way! You are far too kind! I must tell you
-the rest of it--I must tell you what made papa think of this!”
-
-“But why should we talk of it, Nancy? It’s plain enough, I suppose,
-what was in Mr. Farley’s mind; but it’s all over now. It was just a
-freak--a grim bit of irony; no doubt, if he had lived, he would have
-changed his mind about it. It would have been just as well if you
-hadn’t told me; it really wasn’t necessary! I’m sorry you thought it
-might make any difference.”
-
-“Oh, but I had to tell you; I could never have looked you in the face
-again if I hadn’t! He was afraid--he had been afraid for more than a
-year that--that--”
-
-She could not say it; she could not bring herself to the point of
-putting into words the intent of Timothy Farley’s last will, that was
-to make it impossible for her to marry this woman’s divorced husband!
-The shame of it smothered her; she wondered that she had ever had the
-effrontery to eat Fanny Copeland’s bread and share her fireside. The
-very calmness with which Fanny had received the news added to her
-discomfort.
-
-Fanny began moving about the room with her light, graceful step,
-touching a book, unconsciously straightening the flowers in a vase
-on the table. Then she walked to the fire, where Nan crouched mutely
-watching her.
-
-“Nan, dear, do you want to marry Billy?” she asked, bending down and
-resting her hands lightly on Nan’s shoulders.
-
-No one would have known that this was the first time her former husband
-had been mentioned between them.
-
-“No, no! That’s what makes this so hard--so unjust!”
-
-“Were you ever--did you ever think you could?” Fanny asked in the same
-calm tone, in which there was no hint of accusation.
-
-“Yes; there was a time, there were times--”
-
-Fanny was about to resume her idle wandering about the room when Nan
-clasped her knees.
-
-“That’s what I want to tell you; I want to tell you everything from the
-very beginning. Please let me! I ought to have told you before I came
-here; but I was so eager to come I didn’t think of it; it didn’t occur
-to me at all! You see, if I don’t,--if you won’t listen,--I must go
-away; I can’t spend another night here. You must see that!”
-
-“It is like you--it is generous and kind, Nancy, to want to tell me.
-But you don’t need to; it’s all right; it’s not a thing that I should
-ever have asked; you know that.”
-
-She drew up a chair and clasped Nan’s hands.
-
-Nan told the story; told it in all its details, from the beginning of
-her acquaintance with Copeland. She took pains to fix dates, showing
-that she and Copeland were launched upon a lively flirtation and were
-meeting, usually at the Kinneys’, before there had been any hint of a
-possible divorce. It had been her fault, her most grievous sin, that
-she encouraged Billy’s attentions. They had tickled her vanity. She had
-admired “Billy”; he had been a new type of man to her. She described
-her deception of Farley as to their clandestine meetings; told of
-his wrath when he learned of her disobedience; and, coming to the
-frustrated elopement, she made it clear that it was through no fault of
-hers that she had not run away with Copeland and married him.
-
-“But it’s all over; even if it hadn’t been for this--this idea of
-papa’s to put you between us--I should never marry Billy. No, no!” she
-moaned. “I had decided that before papa died. You know, don’t you,” she
-pleaded, with the tears streaming down her cheeks, “that I wouldn’t
-have come here, I couldn’t have pretended to be your friend, if I’d
-ever meant to do that!”
-
-“You poor Nancy; you poor, dear, little girl!” Fanny murmured.
-
-There was a far-away look in her eyes as she slowly stroked the girl’s
-hair, but a smile played about her lips. She did not speak again until
-Nan’s grief had spent itself. Then she bent to the tear-wet face and
-pressed her cheek against it, whispering,--
-
-“You poor little dear; you dear little Nancy!”
-
-“You will let me stay--you will let me stay, after all that?” faltered
-Nan.
-
-“It was fine of you to tell me; you don’t know how grateful I am--and
-glad. Of course, you will stay; it would break my heart to lose you
-now!”
-
-Nan drew away and looked long into the steady, tranquil eyes. She had
-not been prepared for this. It was beyond comprehension that her story
-could be received with so much magnanimity, that forgiveness could be
-so easily won. She caught the hands that clasped her face and kissed
-them.
-
-“Oh, you don’t know!” she cried fearfully. “I haven’t made you
-understand!”
-
-“Yes, I understand it all, Nancy; I’d guessed most of it without your
-telling me. And it does make a difference; yes, it makes a very great
-difference.” And then, feeling Nan’s hands relax their tight hold,
-and seeing the fear in her face, she smiled and added, “But not the
-difference you think!”
-
-“Oh, if only you don’t send me away! It was brazen of me ever to come;
-I don’t know how you came to take me without a question, when I’d done
-you the greatest wrong one woman can do another.”
-
-“But maybe you didn’t!” said Fanny quickly, with a wistful little
-smile. “I’m going to ask you one question, Nancy,--just to be sure. But
-you needn’t answer; you won’t feel you must, will you?”
-
-“Anything--anything!” Nan faltered.
-
-Fanny turned her head, as though doubting, questioning, and her eyes
-were very grave.
-
-“Then, Nancy, tell me this--and please be very honest, and don’t
-trouble about what I may think or feel about your answer--do you--do
-you love Billy--now?”
-
-“No; no! It was never love; it was never really that! His attentions
-turned my head, and I hadn’t the sense to keep away from him. It was
-all my fault. I’m ashamed to tell you that I was very lonely after I
-came home from school--it is ungrateful to be saying it; but I have
-always felt uneasy--self-conscious among the people here. I have never
-got away from the feeling that whenever they saw me they were saying,
-‘That’s the girl the Farleys raked out of the river and did everything
-for--and just look at her!’ I couldn’t help that--the feeling that they
-knew I was just a waif, a nobody. It made me rebellious and defiant.
-Oh, I know it was unjustified and that it’s unkind to speak of it even
-to you. And that’s why--one reason, at least--I’ve enjoyed knowing
-Jerry so much. Jerry _knows_, and he doesn’t care! He knows every
-little tiny thing about me and my people, and how poor and wretched
-we were! But Billy--I haven’t any feeling about him now except--just
-friendliness--and pity!”
-
-“Then I’ll tell you something that will show you how very dear you are
-to me,” said Fanny,--speaking slowly. “I think it was this that drew
-me to you--made me want to be friends with you when Mr. Farley first
-brought us together. Oh, Nan,”--her voice sank to a whisper,--“I still
-love Billy! I never stopped loving him!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-COPELAND’S UNKNOWN BENEFACTOR
-
-
-Eaton tore March from his office calendar, crumpled it in his hand, and
-glanced out of the window as though expecting to see April’s heralds
-dancing over the roofs below. It was nearing five o’clock and his big
-desk was swept clear of the day’s encumbrances. He paced the floor
-slowly, his gaze ranging the walls with their ranks of file-cases. A
-particular box in the “C” section seemed to exert a spell upon him. He
-glanced at it several times, then opened a drawer in his desk, peered
-in, and absently closed it. He was waiting for Copeland, and as usual,
-when he expected a visitor, was planning the interview to its minutest
-details.
-
-Since the reorganization of the Copeland-Farley Company he had
-been seeing much of Copeland. The winter had wrought changes in
-Billy--changes that at first provoked cynical comment from persons
-who had no faith in his reformation. But people were now beginning to
-say that they always knew Billy had the right stuff in him. Even the
-fact--which was pretty generally known--that Billy had narrowly escaped
-disaster didn’t matter particularly. Such fellows were always lucky. If
-the decision in the Kinney patent case hadn’t come just when it did,
-he would have been down and out; but it _had_ come. Yes; he was a lucky
-devil.
-
-Eaton was breathing easier now, as days passed and Copeland seemed to
-have settled into a sober and industrious routine. He was even giving
-time to broadening the scope and effectiveness of the Bigger Business
-Club, and had accepted a place on the municipal reform committee of
-the Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Jeremiah A. Amidon pointed to his boss
-with pride. Jerry had risen to the dignity of a standing invitation to
-Sunday evening tea at Mrs. Copeland’s and was the proudest and happiest
-of Jerries.
-
-Three slight snarls of a desk buzzer, marked, to the attentive ear,
-by an interval between the second and third, spelled Copeland in the
-office code. Eaton raised his arm and pressed a button attached to a
-swinging cord over his desk. By this system acceptable visitors could
-be announced by the girl in the reception room and disposed of at long
-range. If Eaton didn’t want to be bothered, he made no response. This
-was only one of his many devices for safeguarding his time. When he
-was studying a case, he ignored the presence of his most remunerative
-clients on the theory that they were unlikely to have anything of
-importance to impart. It was a fair assumption that before he undertook
-any case he extracted from the client’s head and stored in a file-box
-all the information of which that particular client was possessed.
-Clients resented this treatment, but as Eaton was admittedly the best
-patent lawyer in three States, they were obliged to humor him.
-
-Copeland entered with a quick, springy step. Jerry had persuaded him to
-spend an hour three times a week at Gaylord’s, and as a result Copeland
-was in prime condition. He nodded to Eaton and sat down in the chair
-the lawyer pushed toward him.
-
-“The state of your desk fills me with envy; I never get mine as clean
-as that. If I turn my back, somebody throws something on it.”
-
-“Oh, my system has its disadvantages; strangers coming in think I
-haven’t any business. You wanted to speak about those notes?”
-
-“Yes; they’re due to-morrow and I’m ready to take them up. Our
-merchandise bills are cleaned up, and my personal obligations are all
-taken care of. Our credit’s A 1. The White River National is taking
-good care of us and they’re not as fussy as the Western was.”
-
-“The Western isn’t a bank,” remarked Eaton; “it’s a pawnshop with
-a third-degree attachment. About the notes,” he continued, tipping
-himself back in his chair and crossing his slender legs, “you don’t
-have to pay them to-morrow. They can be carried longer--indefinitely.
-It’s just as you say, however. It might be best to accept an extension
-of three or six months.”
-
-“No, thanks! I’ve got the money to pay, and you may be dead sure it’s
-a comfortable feeling to know I’ve got it! I hope I’ll never have to
-sweat as I did for a year or two.” He frowned, and slapped his gloves
-together. “Look here, Eaton, you’re the hardest man to thank I ever
-saw, but for God’s sake, don’t ever think I don’t appreciate all you’ve
-done for me! You saved me--hauled me out when I was going down for the
-last time! I don’t know why you did it; there was no reason why you or
-anybody else should have done it.”
-
-“It’s not I you have to thank; it’s an enlightened judiciary that
-upheld Kinney’s patents on Ivory Cement machinery.”
-
-“There may be something in that,” Copeland admitted, “but there are
-other things I want to speak of. I insist on speaking of all of them.
-In picking up that Reynolds stock as you did--”
-
-“Please stick to facts! It was our blithe gazelle Amidon who did that.
-I honestly didn’t know it was in existence till he came to me about it.
-Thank Jerry!”
-
-“Thank him! I’m going to fire him if he doesn’t quit working me so
-hard,” laughed Copeland. “But you backed him, and advanced him the
-money. The way that boy strolled in with that certificate just as
-Eichberg was jamming me into a corner is the last thing I’ll think of
-when I die.”
-
-“Strong sense of the dramatic, that Jerry!” observed Eaton musingly.
-“Great loss to the stage, his devotion to commerce.”
-
-“He can sell goods, and he knows how to hypnotize other fellows into
-doing it. I’m giving him all the rope he wants. He’s the smartest
-youngster on the street, and I’m proud of him. There’s more than that;
-I’m going to tell you, because you’ve been mighty good to me and I want
-you to know just how desperate I was last November. I want you to know
-how near bottom I’d gone. Eaton, I tried to burn the store the night
-before the Western notes came due--and I’d have done it--I’d have done
-it if Jerry hadn’t stopped me!--God!” he groaned. His frame shook with
-repulsion and abhorrence and he turned his head to avoid Eaton’s eyes.
-
-“It’s a good thing, Copeland,” said the lawyer quietly, “that we’re
-not allowed to be as bad as we want to be in this world. No man is
-ever that! That, for a lack of a better word, is my religion. Let’s go
-back to the notes. You say you prefer to pay them; but that’s wholly
-optional. It had occurred to me that you might want to keep the money
-in the business, and if you do it’s yours, quite indefinitely.”
-
-Copeland shook his head and drew out a check.
-
-“I made a big clean-up on my Cement stock and now that I’m out of it
-I’m never going to monkey on the outside again. Here you are, with
-interest!”
-
-Eaton read the check, mentally verified the interest and opened the top
-drawer of his desk.
-
-“There are four notes of twenty-five thousand each,” he remarked,
-as he bent over his desk and wrote “Paid” across the four slips of
-paper. “They were made to me--you remember? As I told you at the
-time, I wasn’t making the advance myself, and I deserve no thanks for
-negotiating the loan--none whatever. You’re entitled to the canceled
-notes, of course; but perhaps you’ll be satisfied to let me destroy
-them here in your presence. The reason for that is that I endorsed the
-notes to the person who made the advance, to protect your creditor in
-case of my death. That person is very anxious not to be known in the
-matter.”
-
-“I think I ought to know,” Copeland replied. “A debt like that can’t
-just be passed over. I’d be more comfortable if I knew.”
-
-“Perhaps--” began Eaton.
-
-Copeland shook his head and put out his hand.
-
-Eaton bent a quick, penetrating glance upon him, then gave him the
-notes. Copeland’s face went white as he read the endorsements.
-
-“Fanny!” he gasped chokingly. He bent forward and grasped Eaton’s arm.
-“This is a trick; a ghastly joke! She never would have done it; no
-human being would have done this after--after--”
-
-“No human being--no!” replied Eaton, swinging round in his chair so
-that he did not face Copeland for a moment.
-
-Copeland’s hand shook as he looked again at the endorsements.
-
-“But, Eaton, you had no right to do it! You knew I wouldn’t have taken
-her help--not--after--”
-
-“No, I knew you wouldn’t. And she knew you wouldn’t. That, of course,
-is why she did it in the way she did.”
-
-The intentness of Copeland’s thought showed in his face; he continued
-to turn over the notes in his shaking hands.
-
-“But you will tell her how beyond any thanks this is--beyond anything
-I can do or say!” He bent his head and went on brokenly. “It would be
-cruel, Eaton, if it weren’t so kind, so generous, so merciful!”
-
-“I think you have done enough already to show your appreciation,”
-replied Eaton. “I’ll say to you that you’ve done what she expected--and
-what, to be frank about it, I did not expect. At least, I wasn’t very
-sanguine. You’d gone pretty far--farther than men go and come back
-again. You’ve proved your mettle. If you go on as you are, you are
-safe. And I’m glad--happier about it than I’ve been about anything in a
-mighty long time.”
-
-“I can’t understand it. I was worse than ever you imagine. I treated
-her as a man doesn’t treat his dog!”
-
-“Yes,” Eaton acquiesced, “it was all that.”
-
-“And you can see how it leaves me,” Copeland moaned, crumpling the
-notes in his hand,--“with a debt these things don’t express; a debt
-that can’t be discharged!”
-
-“There’s something you can do, Copeland, if you will. She hasn’t asked
-it; I have no reason to think it has even occurred to her. It’s my own
-idea--absolutely--I want you to be sure of that. It strikes me as being
-only decent, only just.”
-
-“Yes, yes!” Copeland eagerly assented.
-
-“I’m going to speak plainly, Copeland. It’s about Manning. You let
-the impression get abroad that your wife had given you cause to doubt
-her loyalty. Yes; I know all about it. Manning was your friend,
-not hers. The injury was not only to her; it was to that man, too.
-Your use of him, to cast suspicion on the woman you had sworn to
-shield and protect, was infamous, dastardly! Manning, I have reason
-to believe,”--his eyes ranged the file-cases,--“is a gentleman, a
-high-minded fellow, who admired your wife only as any friend might be
-expected to admire her; but you used him--made him an excuse to hide
-your own infamy. You hadn’t the courage to bring him into court; you
-merely let some of your new-found friends whisper insinuations that
-were more damning than a direct charge of infidelity. Manning cut your
-acquaintance, I believe, when he found what you had done. You owe him
-an apology, at least. And if you want to act the part of a man, you
-will go to Mrs. Copeland and tell her the truth.”
-
-Eaton’s feelings had for once got the better of him; several times his
-voice betrayed deep emotion. He turned toward his desk as the buzzer
-sounded a cryptic message. He telegraphed a reply, and a moment later
-the sound of steps in the corridor was followed by the closing of a
-door.
-
-“I will do it--I will do it,” said Copeland. “As I began to get my
-bearings again, that thing troubled me; it has been in my mind to speak
-to you about it. God knows, I want to make reparation for all the evil
-I’ve done. I was a brute, a coarse beast. And you’re right that Manning
-is a gentleman, and a mighty fine fellow--he never was anything else!
-I’ll go to him and be glad to do it. But to see Fanny--that is not so
-easy! You can understand that, Eaton. I must have time to think it
-over.”
-
-“I think it best for you to see Mrs. Copeland first,” replied Eaton,
-“then Manning.”
-
-Copeland, pondering with knit brows, nodded a reluctant acquiescence.
-
-“Well, I will do as you say; but what if she’d refuse to see me? It’s
-going to be mighty hard,” he pleaded.
-
-“It’s conceivable that she’d refuse, of course. She never meant for you
-to know of her help, and I’ve broken faith in telling you; but I’ll
-take the responsibility of sending you to see her. And I made this
-other suggestion--about Manning--with a feeling that sooner or later it
-would occur to you. I’m glad you’ve met me in this spirit. It confirms
-my impression of you--it satisfies me that I was right in assuming that
-once you got back in the straight road you would keep to it.”
-
-“I’m not going to disappoint you, Eaton. I don’t intend to be pointed
-to as a failure in this community. The mistakes I’ve made have been
-bad ones--the very worst! God knows, I’m humble enough when I think
-of Fanny. It was like her to want to save me. That’s what makes it so
-hard--that it was like her to do it!”
-
-“Yes,” said Eaton gravely; “it was like her.”
-
-He took his overcoat from a closet and drew it on, mused a moment,
-apparently absorbed in contemplation of the interior of his hat.
-
-“Mrs. Copeland is here, waiting to see me. She came a moment ago and is
-in the next room. She had no idea, of course, that you were likely to
-be here--rest assured of that. My business with her is not so important
-as yours. Come!”
-
-Copeland, startled, irresolute, followed him to the door of a smaller
-room used for consultations. Eaton opened it and stepped back.
-
-“I shall be dining at the club later, if you care to see me,” he said,
-and vanished.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-JERRY’S DARK DAYS
-
-
-Jerry, who had never been ill in his life, was now experiencing
-disquieting sensations which he was convinced pointed to an early
-and probably a painful death. He went about his work listlessly, and
-from being the cheerfulest person in Copeland-Farley, he became so
-melancholy that his fellow employees wondered greatly and speculated
-in private as to the cause of the change. Jerry encouraged the thought
-of death and blithely visualized the funeral at which Eaton’s pastor
-(chastely surpliced and reinforced by a boy choir) would officiate.
-He chose the rector of Christ Church because that gentleman had not
-been unmindful of his occasional attendance upon services (Jerry had
-courageously repeated his first timid visit), and had even made a
-memorandum of Jerry’s name and address, with a view to calling upon
-him. This attention clearly pointed to the rector as the minister
-predestined from the beginning of things to officiate at his funeral,
-a function about which he meditated much in a spirit of loftiest
-detachment.
-
-A few people would be sorry when he died, but only a few. The boys
-at the store would contribute a wreath; they had done that for a
-drayman who had succumbed to pneumonia a short time before; and the
-people at his boarding-house would probably grace the last rites
-with their presence. Copeland would probably attend; he might even
-add dignity to the occasion by acting as pallbearer. One of the girl
-stenographers, whose lachrymose facilities had occasionally aroused
-his ire, would doubtless weep; she had cried when the drayman died,
-though her acquaintance with that person had been the most casual. Nan
-might attend the funeral, but he hoped to time his passing so that
-the funeral could be held on a market morning, thus giving her a good
-excuse for absenting herself. It would be a sad, pitiful funeral, with
-only a handful of mourners, as his only living relative was a cousin
-in Oklahoma whose exact address he had forgotten. The brief list of
-mourners included the billiard-marker at the Whitcomb. Jerry had once
-lent him five dollars, which was still carried as an open account and
-probably a permanent one; he meant to leave a memorandum of general
-forgiveness, including a release of the billiard-marker from any
-obligation to pay the five dollars. And he would bequeath him his best
-cuff-buttons to show that he had died with no hard feelings against
-him. The thought of the meager attendance and of the general gloom
-of the affair gave him the keenest satisfaction. No one would care
-particularly.
-
-Jerry’s malady was one of the oldest that afflicts the human race.
-Jerry was in love; he was in love with Nan, though he would have
-stormed indignantly at any hint of this bewildering circumstance, this
-blighting, crushing fact. His first realization that this was the cause
-of his trouble fell upon him as he sat one evening in the hotel at
-Madison listlessly talking to a dry-goods drummer. Jerry was taking
-a run over Copeland-Farley territory to “jolly” the trade, carrying
-no samples and soliciting no orders, but presenting himself as the
-personal representative of the house, bent upon strengthening social
-ties only, and only casually glancing over the shelves to see how much
-Copeland-Farley’s competitors were selling. The dry-goods man, noting
-Jerry’s unwonted gloom, frankly attributed it to a love affair; and to
-find that his condition was perceptible even to the eye of a dry-goods
-drummer, for whose powers of discernment he had only the mildest
-respect, added considerably to Jerry’s melancholy.
-
-Nan was not for him; he knew this; there had never been any doubt in
-his mind that Eaton and Nan would marry ultimately. Any speculations as
-to his own part in Nan’s life, beyond the boy-and-girl comradeship he
-had been enjoying, were vain and foolish; they were even disloyal to
-Eaton; they were an insult to Nan. Nan had intimated several times that
-Eaton was in love with Mrs. Copeland, but now that the black clouds had
-risen on his own horizon, Jerry knew the absurdity of this. Eaton had
-appeared unusually absent-minded of late, and this marked his friend
-as a man in the toils of love. Jerry knew the symptoms! Except for a
-passing attachment for a stenographer in a hardware house, who had
-jilted him for a red-haired bookkeeper, Jerry had never been in love.
-He had grieved over the hardware girl’s perfidy for two, perhaps three,
-days. But this was the real thing and a very different matter; he meant
-to win the martyr’s wreath by going to his death so heroically that no
-one would ever know how he had suffered.
-
-Returning to town Saturday evening he checked his grip at a hotel
-and went to the theater, not for pleasure, but to lose himself among
-strangers and enjoy his misery. As he moodily surveyed the assembling
-audience a cold hand gripped his heart. Eaton, followed by Mrs.
-Copeland, Nan, and a lady he did not know, filed down to the second row
-where Eaton always sat.
-
-Since Farley’s death Nan had attended no entertainments of any kind;
-she had refused to accompany Jerry to a concert only a fortnight
-earlier. Her presence at the theater with Eaton confirmed his worst
-suspicions. Their engagement would doubtless be announced in a day
-or two; he must steel himself against this and prepare to offer his
-congratulations. The comedy presented was one of the hits of the
-season, but its best lines and most amusing situations failed to evoke
-a smile from Jerry, who clutched his programme and stared at the back
-of Nan’s head. Nan was enjoying herself; from his seat on the back row
-he was satisfied of that, and he assured himself that he was glad of
-her happiness. At the end of the second act, he left and went to his
-room to spend a wretched night.
-
-Jerry found on his desk Monday morning a note from Eaton, written
-several days earlier, asking him to join his theater party and go to
-the club later for supper. His sister had come down from Cleveland to
-make him a visit, Eaton explained, and he wanted Jerry to meet her. For
-an instant the world was the pleasant, cheerful place it had been in
-the old days before love darkened his life. Eaton was still his friend;
-but only for a moment was the veil lifted. The clouds settled upon
-him again, as he grasped the motive behind Eaton’s friendly note--as
-though at any time in their intercourse there had been the ghost of a
-motive back of anything John Cecil Eaton had ever done for him except
-a perfectly transparent, generous wish to be kind to him! But the
-coming of the sister (who had never, so far as Jerry knew, visited
-Eaton before) could only mean that Eaton wished to introduce Nan to her
-as a prospective member of the family. And, proud of his logic, Jerry
-reasoned that he was to have been given an opportunity to offer his own
-congratulations.
-
-For a week Jerry kept away from the market-house; Nan knew he had
-been out of town, and, failing to see him, would assume that he was
-still away. He could not face her; it would be a merciful thing if
-he never saw her again. Eaton he would avoid; his friend must never
-know of his hopeless passion. Nan and Eaton must begin their married
-life wholly ignorant that he had ever looked upon Nan as anything more
-than a good friend. Phrases out of novels he had read assisted him in
-the definition of his attitude toward her and Eaton. “Unworthy of the
-woman he loved,” and “climbed slowly, painfully, to the sublime heights
-of a great renunciation.” He _was_ unworthy; he had known that all
-along; and he would give her up to his best friend with a beautiful
-magnanimity. The fiction with which he was familiar had not lacked in
-noble examples of just such splendid sacrifice. If death failed to
-end his misery, he would live on, sadly, but manfully, and on every
-anniversary of their meeting on the river bank, he would send her a
-rose--a single beautiful rose--always exactly the same, and it would
-puzzle her greatly and make her wonder; but she would never guess that
-it was from one who had loved her in the long ago.
-
-He had made no sign to Eaton, not even to acknowledge the theater
-invitation; and when one day he ran into the lawyer in the bank lobby
-he was about to pass him hurriedly when the familiar “Ah, Jerry!”
-arrested him. He swallowed hard; it was not easy to meet his friend
-with the air of sweet resignation and submission to inexorable fate
-that he had been cultivating.
-
-“An overdraft?” Eaton suggested in his usual tone. “Nothing else could
-account for your woeful countenance! I didn’t know you were in town.
-Just in, I suppose, from a flight into the remoter recesses of the
-Commonwealth.”
-
-“Well, I’ve been back a few days,” Jerry confessed reluctantly; “but
-I’ve been too busy to come around. I meant to call you up about that
-invitation; I didn’t get it until after the show.”
-
-“We missed you; I had wanted you to meet my sister. In fact, I’d rather
-prepared her for the meeting--led up to it, warned her of your native
-flavor. She’s still with me. You’re working yourself to death; it’s in
-your eye. Can’t you come up Tuesday night and dine with us? I’ll see
-if we can’t get Mrs. Copeland and Nan to come in. They’ve been seeing
-something of Florence. You’ve seen Nan--”
-
-“No; I haven’t seen her,” Jerry replied, a little resentfully, as
-though Eaton ought to know why Nan had become invisible so far as
-Jeremiah Amidon was concerned.
-
-“She’s another victim of overwork,” Eaton remarked carelessly, but
-behind his glasses there was a gleam of humor. “Not quarreling, I
-hope? I confess that at times Nan is a trifle provoking, but she means
-nothing by it. You must give the benefit of all doubts to a girl who is
-just emerging from a severe ordeal--settling herself into a new manner
-of life. It’s wonderful; really amazing how she’s coming on. We shall
-be dining at seven. Please don’t make it necessary for me to explain a
-second scorning of my hospitality to my sister. She’d begin to think
-you a myth, like Jupiter and the rest of the immortals.”
-
-“Thanks; I’ll be there,” Jerry answered solemnly. Then he watched
-Eaton’s retreating figure shame-facedly. He was acting abominably
-toward Eaton.
-
-The Pembrokes had gone to Florida for the spring months, and Eaton
-had taken their house that he might indulge in a round of dinners and
-a ball that proved to be the season’s smartest event. These social
-activities Jerry had taken as another sign of Eaton’s approaching
-marriage. And Jerry had resented, as an attack upon his personal
-rights, Eaton’s transfer from the rooms where he had always been so
-accessible, to the big house where visitors were received by the
-Pembrokes’ butler--a formidable person who, he fancied, regarded him
-with a hostile eye.
-
-Jerry presented himself at the hour appointed, wearing the crown of
-his martyrdom, which, if he had known it, was highly unbecoming. As he
-had walked around the block twice to prepare himself for the ordeal,
-he was late, and stood uncomfortably in the drawing-room door, quite
-unnoticed, while the sister (whose back he distrusted) finished a
-story she had been telling. But spying him, Eaton rose and greeted him
-cordially.
-
-“Florence, Mr. Amidon; my sister, Mrs. Torrington, Jerry.”
-
-Mrs. Torrington, a tall, dark woman in her early thirties, graciously
-assured him that she had delayed her departure from town until he could
-be produced for her edification.
-
-“I guess you wouldn’t ’a’ missed much,” said Jerry, hating himself
-at once for that unnecessary a, from which he had honestly believed
-himself permanently emancipated. He shook hands with Mrs. Copeland and
-then with Nan--without looking at her. The butler announced dinner, and
-he found himself moving toward the dining-room beside Mrs. Torrington.
-In her ignorance of the darkness in which he had immersed himself,
-she treated him quite as though they were in the habit of meeting
-at dinners. It was to his credit that he saw at once that she was
-a superior person, though he did not know until later that, as the
-wife of a distinguished engineer, she was known in many capitals as a
-brilliant conversationalist, with a reputation for meeting difficult
-situations. On the way down the hall she spoke of Russia--she had
-been telling a Russian story at the moment of his appearance--and her
-manner expressed a flattering assumption that he, of course, was quite
-familiar with the social life of the Russian capital.
-
-It was the most informal of dinners; Jerry found himself placed between
-Mrs. Torrington and Mrs. Copeland, which left Nan at Eaton’s right.
-This arrangement had not been premeditated, but he saw only the darkest
-significance in Nan’s juxtaposition to Eaton. She seemed unwontedly
-subdued, and averted her eyes when their gaze met.
-
-“This is the nicest party you’ve had for me, Cecil,” Mrs. Torrington
-was saying,--“cozy and comfortable so everybody can talk.”
-
-Jerry hoped they would talk! (He was watching Mrs. Torrington guardedly
-to see which fork she chose for her caviar.) Eaton was unusually grave;
-Mrs. Copeland seemed preoccupied; Jerry’s heart ached at the near
-presence of Nan. But at a hint from Fanny, Mrs. Torrington returned
-to her experiences abroad, and soon had them all interested and
-amused. Jerry quickly fell victim to her charm; he had never before
-met a woman of her distinction and poise. Even her way of speaking
-was different from anything he had been accustomed to--crisp, fluent,
-musical. Her good humor was infectious and she quickly won them all
-to self-forgetfulness. Mrs. Copeland described an encounter she had
-witnessed between a Russian and a Frenchman in a Roman _pension_ where
-she had once spent a winter--an incident that culminated in a hasty
-exchange of wine-glasses across the table.
-
-“Ah, Jerry,” remarked Eaton casually; “that leads us naturally to your
-pleasing adventures down the road. Florence, if you urge Mr. Amidon he
-will tell you of most amazing experiences he has had right here at home
-in the pursuit of food.”
-
-Mrs. Torrington’s fine eyes emphasized her appeal. They would all tell
-of the worst food they had ever eaten, she said; she had spent years
-collecting information.
-
-“You may lapse into the vernacular, Jerry,” Eaton added encouragingly;
-“we will all understand that you are falling into it merely in a spirit
-of realism.”
-
-“This is tough,” said Jerry, turning to Mrs. Torrington. “Your brother
-has told me a hundred times to cut out those stories.”
-
-“That was only after he had heard them all! And he has been boasting
-that he could persuade you to tell them to me. Please! I want to add
-them to my collection.”
-
-“Well, you understand this isn’t my fault--” he began....
-
-They were still demanding more stories after the dessert plates had
-been removed. He had so far yielded to their friendliness that he
-appealed occasionally to Nan, and finally asked her to tell one of
-Farley’s stories about the river, which he said he had forgotten. They
-remained at table for their coffee to avoid disturbing the good cheer
-that now prevailed.
-
-“Mr. Amidon is up to my highest expectations,” Mrs. Torrington remarked
-when they rose. “I’ll stay another week if you’ll give just this same
-party again!”
-
-“We’ve missed you at the farm,” said Mrs. Copeland, as Jerry seated
-himself beside her in the library. “And I was just beginning to feel
-that we were acquainted! But, of course, you’ve been away. I heard that
-from Mr. Copeland.”
-
-As she mentioned Copeland, she smiled gravely.
-
-“Well, I have been away, and we’re busier than usual just now,” he
-replied, realizing that something had happened in her relations with
-Copeland to make possible this careless reference to him. “I guess Mr.
-Copeland is working harder than any of us,” he added warmly.
-
-“Oh, we’re all happier when we’re busy,” she said lightly.
-
-“Not smoking, Jerry?” asked Eaton, proffering cigars.
-
-“I’ve quit,” Jerry replied, remembering that he had given up smoking in
-his general abandonment of the joys of life.
-
-Mrs. Copeland left him, making it necessary for him to join Nan, who
-had moved a little away from the circle they had formed before the
-fireplace.
-
-“It’s too bad you don’t tell your friends about your troubles,” she
-remarked after a moment’s silence. “So many things have happened that
-you ought to be very cheerful.”
-
-“I haven’t been feeling very well,” he answered doggedly.
-
-“You do look utterly fagged out,” she retorted. “But if I were you I
-wouldn’t cut all my friends.”
-
-“I haven’t cut anybody,” he replied. “I guess I know when to drop
-out. I want everybody to be happy,” he said plaintively, feeling his
-martyr’s crown pinching his brow.
-
-“That’s very sweet of you, Jerry. The policeman at the market asked
-Saturday what had become of you. Your absence seems to have occasioned
-remark, though I hadn’t noticed it myself.”
-
-“I didn’t suppose you would,” he said, with an effort at bitterness
-that was so tame that she laughed.
-
-“Of course, if you’ve lost interest, it’s all right. I never meant
-to bore you. And I’m not complaining. But you haven’t been kind to
-Mr. Eaton. I suppose it never occurred to you that he’s taken a good
-deal of pains to be nice to you. And just now, just now,”--she added,
-lowering her voice,--“we should all be as good to him as we can.”
-
-He frowned at this. If she and Eaton were in love with each other, he
-saw no good reason why he should be sorry for either of them.
-
-“If I had a chance I could tell you some things,” Nan continued, “but I
-suppose it’s just as well to let you read about them in the papers.”
-
-His spirits sank; he had been scanning the society columns daily
-expecting to see the announcement of her engagement.
-
-“When I’m an old, old woman and living all alone with my chickens
-somewhere, I suppose you may come to see me again and tell me about
-your troubles.”
-
-“I won’t,” he replied with a smile he meant to be grim, “because I’ll
-be dead.”
-
-She regarded him with knit brows, puzzled, slightly disdainful.
-
-“Just when things were a little hard for me, and I have been much
-troubled because one of the kindest friends either of us ever had or
-could have--”
-
-She shrugged her shoulders impatiently, and rebuke and indignation were
-mingled in the glance she bent upon him.
-
-“I guess we’re not talking about the same thing,” he said huskily. “You
-know I mean to do the square thing, Nan.”
-
-He was so pathetic that she changed her tone, sorry that she had been
-so hard on him.
-
-“I think you do--usually, Jerry.”
-
-“And I’ll be out to-morrow night if you’re going to be at home,” he
-suggested timidly, her reproach still upon him.
-
-“Well, if you’re not too tired, or ill, or anything, and can’t think of
-anything else to do, come along,” she said.
-
-Mrs. Copeland called to Nan that it was time to go. They had come in on
-the interurban, but Eaton announced his intention of taking them home
-in the Pembroke car.
-
-“There’s no use of my living in all this borrowed splendor unless I use
-it. Jerry, please keep the fire burning till I get back.”
-
-Nan’s smile as she gave him her hand conveyed an apology for her
-harshness and sent his spirits soaring.
-
-“I hope,” remarked Mrs. Torrington, as they heard the car leave the
-door, “that you know how fond my brother is of you. You’ve been a great
-resource to him; he’s mentioned you often in his letters. You know
-Cecil and I are very close, unusually so; and it breaks my heart to see
-him--” She waved her hand with a gesture that expressed the futility of
-explanations.
-
-She was taking him for granted as her brother’s friend, not a mere
-beneficiary of his big-heartedness. He was aware of something spacious
-in her nature; she would brush little things away with a sweep of her
-eloquent hands. A wonderful woman was John Cecil’s sister. She was
-addressing him as though he were a gentleman, a man of her own world,
-instead of the miserable ingrate he knew himself to be.
-
-“She’s lovely, quite adorable,” Mrs. Torrington continued, as though
-speaking of matters they had often discussed before. “I’ll say quite
-frankly that I’d been afraid to meet her after what he had written.”
-
-Jerry sat silent, wondering. Nan had left him mystified. He did not
-know what Eaton’s sister was talking about unless it was his love for
-Nan.
-
-“I shall be leaving in a few days; my husband’s business calls him
-to China. I want you to keep an eye on Cecil; don’t let him be alone
-too much,” she went on. “A man with a sorrow like that in his heart
-oughtn’t to be alone. I came here on purpose to see just how the land
-lay; I suppose you understand that.”
-
-He muttered incoherently, touched by her assumption of his sympathy,
-her direct, intimate appeal.
-
-“I felt that I could speak to you quite frankly,” Mrs. Torrington
-continued. “No one else seemed quite so accessible, no one really quite
-so close to him.”
-
-“Of course, he has a lot of friends,” said Jerry humbly, and anxious
-to respond to the demand this fascinating woman was making upon his
-generosity.
-
-“She’s going back to her husband; of course you know that.”
-
-There was a degree of indignation in her tone, as though the person of
-whom she spoke was doing an unpardonable thing.
-
-Jerry felt himself shrinking; his hands clutched the arms of his chair
-as it dawned upon him that it was Mrs. Copeland--not Nan--of whom
-Eaton’s sister was speaking. He was struck with fear lest she should
-read his thoughts as he realized how dull, how utterly selfish and
-contemptible, had been his apprehensions.
-
-“I suppose,” said Mrs. Torrington, “that a man as fine as Cecil is
-doomed to just this kind of calamity.”
-
-“I thought maybe it would be Nan,” he faltered. “I know he likes Nan,
-and he’s done a lot for her.”
-
-Mrs. Torrington had been staring musingly into the fire. She turned
-toward him absently, and then, catching his meaning, her eyes widened
-with surprise.
-
-“Nan,” she repeated slowly; and then, in her usual brisk tone, “A man
-like Cecil can’t be passed on from one affair to another so easily.
-And, besides,”--she smiled her charming, irresistible smile,--“that
-child is in love with you, you silly boy! It’s in her eyes! That’s the
-one hopeful thing about the situation--that together you two will take
-good care of him!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-“JUST HELPING; JUST BEING KIND!”
-
-
-Nan crossed a pasture, whistling. The Holsteins, nibbling the young
-grass, lifted their heads and bent their slow, meditative gaze upon
-her. She paused to pat one of them on the nose. Nan was growing wise
-in dairy lore and knew at sight the heaviest producers of the herd.
-She resumed her whistling and went on toward the house, with a pair of
-robins hopping before her. June had come and summer sounds and scents
-filled the air.
-
-As she neared the bungalow a motor swept into the driveway and
-discharged Eaton and Thurston.
-
-“A child of the pastures! The daughter of Cincinnatus tripping in from
-the fields!” observed Eaton, as he shook hands.
-
-“Just been tinkering an incubator, if you want the facts--counting
-chickens before they’re hatched,” laughed Nan, brushing a straw from
-her skirt.
-
-“We have a small business matter to discuss with you, Nan. We’ll fall
-upon it at once if you’re agreeable.”
-
-“Business!” Nan mocked. “I hoped you’d come to look at the dairy.”
-
-This was a very different Nan, Eaton reflected, from the Nan of a year
-ago. Exposure to wind and sun had already given her a becoming tan. Her
-old listlessness, the defiant air she had sometimes worn, had vanished;
-she had become alert, self-reliant, resolute. Within the bounds of her
-self-respect she meant that the world should like her. A democratic
-young person--this new Nan, on good terms with truck farmers, humble
-drivers of grocers’ wagons, motormen, and market-house policemen. In
-her short skirt and plain blue blouse, she looked less than her years
-to-day.
-
-“We can sit on the veranda if you gentlemen are not afraid of the
-country air.”
-
-“I wouldn’t dare go in after that,” remarked Thurston dryly; “Eaton
-already refers to me as his learned senior.”
-
-“Mr. Eaton is the youngest and the oldest man in the world!” Nan
-declared.
-
-“Well, Miss Farley,” Thurston began, as they gathered about a wicker
-table and he drew a formidable bundle of papers from a leathern pouch,
-“as we telephoned you yesterday, the opposition of Mr. Farley’s
-relatives has been disposed of and your adoption was upheld by the
-court. To prevent an appeal, and get rid of them for good, we’ve agreed
-on your behalf to pay the two cousins ten thousand dollars apiece. Mr.
-Eaton would have preferred to fight it clear through, but I prevailed
-on him not to make Brother Harlowe work too hard. You may not know it,
-but Eaton is a remarkably belligerent person. There’s no compromise in
-him. He’d fight to the last ditch.”
-
-He looked from Eaton to Nan over his glasses with a twinkle in his eyes.
-
-“I never saw a fellow I wanted to smash as badly as I do Harlowe,”
-Eaton remarked. “He’s the smoothest rascal I’ve ever known.”
-
-“I don’t see that you’ve been very generous,” said Nan. “How much will
-he get as a fee?”
-
-“About nine tenths of the twenty thousand,” replied Thurston grimly.
-
-“Rather less than that,” said Eaton, with one of his elusive smiles. “I
-started the secretary of the White River Trust Company down to see the
-esteemed cousins before we signed the agreement; told him to persuade
-them to confide their ill-gotten gains to the company and advised them
-to cut off Harlowe with a niggardly ten per cent for his services. I
-was afraid to tell you that, Thurston. I knew you would scold me.”
-
-“Eaton, for combined ingenuity and malevolence, you haven’t an equal!”
-declared Thurston, chuckling.
-
-“I don’t believe it,” cried Nan, glad that the interview was
-progressing so cheerfully.
-
-“Now, Miss Farley,” Thurston resumed, “if there’s anything a lawyer
-doesn’t like, it’s an ungrateful client. Mr. Eaton and I have a
-sneaking feeling that we’ve done pretty well with this case. The
-credit is chiefly his--and I take off my hat to him. We’ve come here
-in the hope that we shan’t have to argue with you, but just tell you.
-Your scruples against accepting any share in Mr. Farley’s estate,
-expressed after his death, did you credit--in a way. But now it’s all
-yours; there’s no escape. A considerable amount of income has already
-accumulated, and we can arrange payments necessary for your support
-to begin at once, though the estate can’t be closed till the year of
-administration is up. So far as your ability to earn your own living is
-concerned, you have demonstrated that. You have shown a plucky spirit,
-and I admire it. I will go further, and say that the community has
-supported you strongly, and that your attitude has made many friends
-for you. But now--now, we must have no more of this nonsense!”
-
-He waved his hand to indicate the fields, and glanced meaningfully at
-Nan’s heavy walking-shoes, which were disgracefully muddy.
-
-“But that was settled--once and for all!” Nan replied firmly. “You
-mustn’t think me ungrateful for what you’ve done; but I thought that
-all out before I came here, and I haven’t had a single regret. If it
-isn’t impolite, I’ll say that all I want is to be let alone!”
-
-“Thurston and I are not sentimentalists,” said Eaton. “We’ve given you
-free rein to indulge your whims; but now we’ve come to a point where
-we’ve got to take a hand.”
-
-“But you can’t make me, if I won’t!” laughed Nan. “Just think how
-humiliating it would be to back down now after I said I wouldn’t! Worse
-than that, think of the effect on these girls we have at work here;
-they’d lose their respect for me if they found I wasn’t really as poor
-as they are! And there are other reasons, too,” she went on soberly. “I
-don’t like to go over this again, but I never deserved anything of the
-Farleys. I’ve got my conscience to live with, and I could never get on
-with it if I allowed myself to take money which papa knew it was best
-for me not to have. I’m serious about this. He knew me better than I
-knew myself. You understand what I mean--”
-
-“I don’t understand it in the way you mean, Nan,” Eaton answered; “but
-let’s not argue it. Let’s be practical. Has it occurred to you that
-something has to be done with this property? The lawful heir can’t just
-walk off and leave an estate like this. It will be confiscated by the
-State--thrown into the treasury and spent by a lot of politicians if
-you refuse it. Take the money and buy a lot of farms with it or spend
-it on working girls as much as you like--but please don’t talk any more
-about refusing it.”
-
-Eaton had spoken lightly, but she saw that he was very much in earnest.
-The contingency he suggested had not, in fact, occurred to her. She had
-assumed from the beginning that the adoption would be nullified and
-that Farley’s money would be divided among the obscure and shadowy
-cousins; and this abrupt termination of the case brought her face to
-face with an unforeseen situation. Thurston was quick to take advantage
-of her silence.
-
-“You have to consider, Miss Farley, what your foster-father’s feelings
-would be. He was a just man, and all the wills he considered from
-time to time prove that he never had the slightest intention of
-disinheriting you. Even in the last will creating the trusteeship,
-he made you his sole heir; it was really the most generous of all!
-Oh, yes,” he exclaimed hastily, as Nan colored deeply, “there was, I
-suppose, a certain bitterness behind that. I want to say to you again
-that I did my best to dissuade him from that step. I was confident
-he would change his mind about it, as he had about so many other
-things in his varying moods and tempers; and that he would realize
-its unkindness. We have no right to assume that when he hid that will
-behind his wife’s picture, he had any intention of executing it. It’s
-an open question and it’s only fair to give him the benefit of the
-doubt.”
-
-“That’s true enough,” Nan assented; “but when I read that will and
-found how bitter he had been, I knew I had done the right thing in
-refusing to take anything!”
-
-“I don’t agree with you,” Thurston continued patiently. “You must
-be just; you must remember that that was the act of a man near his
-death--nearer than any of us imagined. He didn’t have a chance to
-change his mind again. It’s unjust to his memory to leave him in the
-wrong utterly, as you will if you persist. There has already been a
-great deal of talk about this attack on the adoption--people have been
-blaming him for not guarding against the possibility of any such thing.
-You see public sentiment is behind you! And in spite of anything you
-may say, your act would have the appearance of pique; it would be like
-slapping a dead man in the face!”
-
-“Mr. Thurston is right, Nan,” said Eaton. “There is not only Mr.
-Farley’s memory as a kind and just man to protect, but you must guard
-yourself against even the appearance of resentment. The only thing you
-have to consider is Mr. Farley’s conscientious desire to provide for
-you, which was manifest at all times. As Mr. Thurston says, that last
-will gave you absolutely everything, cutting out all the bequests he
-had made at other times to benevolence and charity. My dear Nan, your
-scruples are absurd! You haven’t any case at all! The idea of letting
-the property Timothy Farley spent a laborious lifetime accumulating go
-to the State is horrible. I can readily imagine what his feelings would
-be! Why, my dear Nan, rather than let that happen, Thurston and I will
-steal the whole thing ourselves!”
-
-She received this with a grudging smile. What they said about the
-injustice to Farley of a refusal impressed her, but her resolution was
-still unshaken. And there was a stubborn strain in her of which she had
-only lately been aware.
-
-She reached for a pencil, and Eaton pushed a pad of paper toward
-her. She began jotting down Farley’s various bequests to charity, as
-provided in the series of wills, pausing now and then to refer to
-Thurston for items she only imperfectly remembered.
-
-The total was three hundred and fifty thousand dollars. She tapped the
-paper reflectively.
-
-“Of course,” remarked Thurston anxiously, as he saw what was in her
-mind, “you are not bound by any of the legacies in those unsigned
-wills. Not one of the wills contained all those bequests, so your total
-doesn’t represent what he meant to dispose of in that way. And his last
-will is evidence that he had wholly changed his mind about them.”
-
-“We are bound to accept that last will as convincing proof of his very
-great confidence in Miss Farley,” said Eaton quickly, “rather than as
-an expression of distrust.”
-
-“We all know perfectly well what he meant by that,” Nan replied. “But I
-don’t want you to think I have any feeling about it.”
-
-They nodded gravely as she glanced at them appealingly.
-
-“I can see,” she went on hurriedly, “that my refusal to accept anything
-at all might look like resentment; that it would be in a way unjust to
-him.” She turned for a glance over the fields, as though seeking their
-counsel. “Papa really wanted to help people who hadn’t a chance; he was
-only hard on the idle and shiftless. If he hadn’t been big-hearted and
-generous, he never would have taken me up as he did. And mamma was like
-him. I feel strongly that even if he did change his mind sometimes, his
-wish to help these things--the Boys’ Club, the Home for Aged Women, and
-all the rest--should be respected.”
-
-“That can’t be done unless you take the whole,” said Eaton quickly.
-“But you needn’t decide about it now.”
-
-“Yes; you should wait a few years at least!” added Thurston, crossing
-his legs nervously.
-
-“And since I’ve been out here and have learned about the girls Mrs.
-Copeland is training to take care of themselves, I’ve thought of some
-other things that might be done,” said Nan, ignoring their manifest
-unwillingness to acquiesce in the recognition of Farley’s vacillating
-benefactions. “There ought to be, in a town like this, a home and
-training school for girls who start the wrong way, or make mistakes. We
-haven’t anything that quite fills that need, and there are a good many
-such girls. A hundred thousand dollars would provide such a place, and
-it ought to have another hundred thousand for endowment. Mrs. Copeland
-and I have talked of the need for such a school. It would be fine to
-start something like that! And you know,” she added, “I might have
-been just such a girl myself!”
-
-Thurston turned to Eaton helplessly.
-
-“It’s as plain as daylight,” Eaton remarked, amused by the despair in
-his associate’s face, “that you will soon pauperize yourself at this
-rate. It’s only fair to tell you that the estate shrank on a rigid
-appraisement of Mr. Farley’s property. The million the newspapers
-mentioned has dwindled to about eight hundred thousand. If you give
-away all that’s mentioned in those wills and start this girls’ home,
-you won’t be able to keep more than three automobiles for yourself.”
-
-“Oh, the proof of the pudding is in the eating--and I know it’s good!”
-Nan laughed. “I stuffed myself so long without thinking about my hungry
-neighbors that it won’t hurt me to pass the plate down the table!”
-
-“Well, the main thing,” said Thurston, “is to get your assurance that
-you’ll accept the estate under your rights as Mr. Farley’s adopted
-daughter. I suppose we can’t prevent your giving it away without having
-you declared insane!”
-
-“I dare you to try it!” Then, more serious than at any time during the
-interview, she said: “You’ll have to let me reason it out my own way.
-It was only a piece of luck that I wasn’t thrown into an orphan asylum
-or left to die on the river bank when the Farleys gave me a home. I
-shall never forget that--never _again_,” she added with deep feeling.
-“The least I can do is to pass my good luck on. I’ve thought all that
-out, so please don’t make me talk of it any more!”
-
-Then, as the men rose to leave, Fanny appeared, and urged them to
-remain to dinner. Thurston pleaded an engagement in town; Eaton said he
-would stay.
-
-“You’ve broken that man’s heart, Nan,” Eaton remarked, as Thurston
-rolled away in his machine.
-
-“What did you do to him, Nancy?” asked Fanny.
-
-“She scared him to death! He’s convinced that she’s headed for an
-insane asylum--that’s all,” chuckled Eaton. “Mere altruism doesn’t
-interest Thurston; he thinks it just a sign of weak character--worse
-than a weak chin.”
-
-“I’ve always thought,” said Fanny, as her arm stole around Nan, “that
-Nancy has a very nice chin.”
-
-“I might go further,” Eaton remarked daringly, “and say that the face
-in its entirety is pleasant and inspiring to look at!”
-
-“Stop teasing me!” cried Nan, “or I’ll run out to the barn and cry.”
-
-They were still talking in this strain when Copeland’s machine appeared
-in the driveway.
-
-“I didn’t tell you that we’re having a party to-night,” said Fanny.
-“Unless I’m mistaken, Mr. Amidon is driving that machine.”
-
-She walked to the veranda rail and looked expectantly toward the
-approaching car. Though Billy had lately paid a visit to the farm, Nan
-had not met him. Fanny, with her usual frankness, had warned Nan of the
-expected visit, and Nan had carefully kept out of the way. She had not
-seen Billy since the night he proposed the destruction of Farley’s will.
-
-Copeland jumped from the machine and ran up the steps, while Jerry
-disposed of the car. He shook hands with Fanny, and then turned toward
-Nan inquiringly.
-
-She was already walking toward him.
-
-“I’m glad to see you, Billy.”
-
-“I’m glad to see you, Nan,” he said, and added in a slightly lower
-tone, “I’m glad to see you _here_.”
-
-“And I’m glad to see you--here!”
-
-Both knew what was in the other’s thoughts. Copeland bowed slightly,
-and crossed to Eaton, who was gazing fixedly at the gathering glories
-of the sunset.
-
-Jerry, in a gray suit, and the very tallest collar he could buy, now
-added himself to the group. He bent over Mrs. Copeland’s hand with his
-best imitation of Eaton’s manner, and then, as he raised his head,
-looked around furtively to see whether his mentor was watching him.
-
-The laughter that greeted this had the effect of putting them all at
-ease.
-
-“I knew Jerry could do it,” said Nan, “but I didn’t suppose he would
-dare try it in his Cecil’s presence.”
-
-“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” remarked Eaton, feigning
-indignation at their treatment of his protégé. “If you’re not satisfied
-with Jeremiah’s manners, we’ll both go home.”
-
-Nan ran away to change her clothes and reappeared just as dinner was
-announced.
-
-“Please sit wherever you happen to be,” said Fanny, as they reached the
-dining-room; and then, as they sat down, she bit her lip and colored,
-finding that it fell to Copeland’s lot to sit opposite her. Eaton,
-noticing her embarrassment, immediately charged Copeland Farms with
-responsibility for the high cost of living.
-
-“You must watch Nan carefully, Mrs. Copeland. She’s grinding the face
-of the poor. I heard Mrs. Harrington complaining bitterly last night
-about the price she has to pay for such trifling necessities as eggs
-and butter. You’re going to bring a French Revolution on this country
-if you’re not careful. And there will be eggs thrown that don’t bear
-the Copeland Farm’s stamp.”
-
-“I refuse to have this suit spoiled with any other kind,” Jerry
-protested. “Speaking of eggs--”
-
-“No, you don’t!” Nan interrupted. “You can’t tell any of your
-country-hotel egg stories here. I refuse to hear them.”
-
-“All right, then; we’ll drop the eggs. I was shaking hands with old
-friends on the lower Wabash last week and struck three slabs of
-cocoanut pie in three days. I’m going to make a map of the pie habits
-of the Hoosiers and send it out as a Copeland-Farley advertisement.
-I’ve been all over the State lately, and I’ve never found cocoanut pie
-north of Logansport, and you never find it east of Seymour going south.
-Down along the Ohio you can stand on hotel porches in the peach season
-and see thousands of acres of peaches spoiling on the trees, and you go
-inside and find dried-peach pie on the programme. And you have to eat
-it or take sliced bananas or hard chunks of canned pineapple. No wonder
-traveling men go wrong! I wonder at times at my own pure life!”
-
-It was evident that they liked Jerry. They encouraged him to talk, and
-he passed lightly from Praxiteles, whom he had just discovered in a
-magazine article, to the sinfulness of the cut-price drug store, which
-he pronounced the greatest of commercial iniquities.
-
-After coffee on the veranda, Eaton quietly disappeared. Then Jerry and
-Nan went off for a stroll, leaving Copeland and Fanny together.
-
-“I guess that’s coming out all right,” remarked Jerry, indicating the
-veranda with a wave of his straw hat. “But it’s tough on Cecil. I’ve
-been wondering whether _she_ knows how it’s going to hit him.”
-
-“Oh, I hope not! But that’s something we’ll never know.”
-
-“Of course, Cecil needn’t have done all the things he did to bring them
-together again. He might have let the boss go by the board. It wasn’t
-just money that saved the boss! it was John Cecil’s strong right arm!”
-
-“And yours, too, Jerry! Oh, yes; I know more about it than you think I
-do. You helped--you did a lot to save him.”
-
-“Well, if I did,” he admitted grudgingly, “that was Cecil, too. I’d
-been busy rustling for myself--never caring a hang for the other
-fellow--till Cecil got hold of me. I’ve wondered a good deal how he did
-it--a scrub like me!”
-
-“Don’t be foolish, Jerry; it had to be in you first. But he does make
-people want to be different. He’s certainly affected me that way.”
-
-“Oh, you!” he exclaimed disdainfully.
-
-“Well, don’t you ever think I’m proud of myself, Jeremiah Amidon!” She
-paused abruptly at the edge of a brook that tinkled musically on its
-way to the river. “I’m only just beginning to try to be self-respecting
-and decent and useful; I think it’s going to be a lot of fun if I ever
-get started.”
-
-“Well, I hope to see you on the cars sometimes. I’ve got the same
-ticket, but I’m not sure it’s good on the limited. I’m likely to be
-chucked at the first tank.”
-
-They jumped the brook and followed a cow path across a broad pasture,
-talking of old times on the Ohio, and of Farley, of whom Jerry always
-spoke in highest reverence, and then of his own prospects.
-
-Both were subdued by the influences of the night. The stars hung near;
-it seemed to Jerry that they had stolen closer to earth to enfold Nan
-in their soft radiance. A new idea had possessed him of late. His heart
-throbbed with it to-night.
-
-“In a place like this,” he began slowly, “you think a lot of things
-that wouldn’t strike you anywhere else.”
-
-“It’s just the dear country lonesomeness. I come out here often in the
-evenings; used to in the winter, when the snow was deepest. I love all
-this--” She stretched out her arms with a quick gesture comprehensive
-of the star-hung fields.
-
-Jerry’s dejection increased. The more he saw of Nan the less he seemed
-to count in her affairs. A Nan who tramped snowy fields and took
-counsel of the heavens was beyond his reach--immeasurably beyond.
-
-“I don’t take hold of things the way you do, Nan. Being out here just
-makes me lonesome, that’s all. I’ve got to be where I can see electric
-signs spelling words on tall buildings. Just hearing that trolley
-tooting away over there helps some; must be because it’s going toward
-the lights.”
-
-“If you feel so terribly, maybe we’d better go back!” she said
-tauntingly and took a step downward.
-
-“Don’t do that again! If you leave me here in the dark I’ll be scared
-to death.”
-
-“That _would_ be a blow to the human race,” she mocked.
-
-“Well, I’ve had blows enough!”
-
-“You hide the scars well--I can say that!” she flung back.
-
-“Listen, Nan--”
-
-“I thought John Cecil had broken you of the ‘listen’ habit.”
-
-“Forget it! You know perfectly well what I want to tell you!”
-
-“Then, why do we linger? We really must go!”
-
-“My business is selling goods and it’s a rule of the game never to let
-a customer turn his back on you.”
-
-“All right; you go first!”
-
-“Nan”--he drew nearer and planted himself in her path--“you can’t
-go--not till I’ve promised to marry you!”
-
-This reversal of the established formula evoked a gay laugh; but she
-did not attempt to pass him.
-
-“I never meant to ask you; I was afraid you’d marry me for my money and
-I want to be loved for myself alone! And don’t think I’d be mentioning
-it now if I wasn’t so lonesome I could cry! If you’re going to take
-that money, it’s all off, anyhow. I can’t afford to have anybody
-questioning my motives. As far as loving you’s concerned, I started
-full time that first day we met on the river bank, when you pulled my
-fly out of the tree. I might just as well have told you then--and I
-wish I had!”
-
-“Well, you needn’t scold me about it now!”
-
-“I’m not scolding. I’m just telling you what you missed!”
-
-“Why don’t you give me another chance? I know I’m only a poor working
-girl--”
-
-“Nan, I wish you were that!” he cried earnestly. “But all that money’s
-coming to you now. I wouldn’t have the nerve--”
-
-“It would be the first time your nerve ever failed!” Then, fearing she
-had wounded him, she added quickly, “Of course, I didn’t mean that.”
-
-“Nan!”
-
-“Well, don’t cry, little boy!”
-
-“Nan!”
-
-“Yes, Jerry.”
-
-“I love you, Nan!” he said gently. “I wish you cared even a little bit.”
-
-“It’s a good deal more than that, Jerry.”
-
-He took her hands and kissed them. There was a great awe in his heart.
-
-“Nan, this doesn’t seem right, you being you; and you know what I am!”
-
-“I think I know what you are, Jerry,--you’re fine and loyal and good!”
-
-“I’m going to try to be,” he said humbly.
-
-“And you’ve helped me more than I could make you understand, from that
-very first day we met, when I hated myself so! You brought back the
-old days; everything that has happened since has made me think of you.
-You were the only person around here who really knew all about me--just
-what I came from, and all that. And it helped me to see how bravely you
-were fighting your own way up. I had the chance forced on me that you
-made for yourself. And I made a mess of everything! Oh, Jerry!”
-
-She clung to him, crying. As he kissed away her tears, the touch of her
-wet cheek thrilled him....
-
-“We mustn’t be so happy we can’t remember other people,” she said as
-they loitered hand in hand toward the house.
-
-“I guess that’s the only way, Nan. That’s what Cecil’s always saying.
-And I guess he’s about right about everything.”
-
-Eaton passed them, unconscious of their nearness. He walked with head
-erect, as one who has fought and won a good fight. A sense of all his
-victory had cost him was in both their hearts. There was an infinite
-pathos in his figure as he strode through the dusk, returning to the
-woman he loved and to the man he had saved and given back to her.
-
-“It’s tough on Cecil,” said Jerry chokingly. “It doesn’t seem quite
-square, some way--I mean the Copelands hitting it off again.”
-
-“Well, we may be sure he doesn’t feel that way,” Nan answered. “It’s
-all come out the way he wanted it to. He brought them together.”
-
-[Illustration: THE TOUCH OF HER WET CHEEK THRILLED HIM]
-
-“It’s funny, Nan; but I’m never dead sure I catch Cecil’s drift--the
-scheme or whatever it is he works by. I can’t find it in the books he
-gives me to read.”
-
-“It isn’t in books, Jerry; it’s in his heart--just helping; just being
-kind!”
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-The Riverside Press
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- The Proof of the Pudding, by Meredith Nicholson&mdash;A Project Gutenberg eBook
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Proof of the Pudding, by Meredith Nicholson</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Proof of the Pudding</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Meredith Nicholson</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: C. H. Taffs</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: September 20, 2021 [eBook #66354]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="50%" alt="" /></div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<h1>THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING</h1>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_0"></span>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="illoright"><i>Page <a href="#Page_160">160</a></i></p>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;NOW WE&#8217;RE IN FOR IT!&#8221; SAID NAN
-UNCOMFORTABLY</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p><span class="xxlarge">THE PROOF OF THE<br />
-PUDDING</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-<span class="xlarge">MEREDITH NICHOLSON</span></p>
-
-<p><i>With Illustrations</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>BOSTON AND NEW YORK<br />
-<span class="large">HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY</span><br />
-<span class="antiqua">The Riverside Press Cambridge</span><br />
-1916</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1915 AND 1916, BY THE RED BOOK CORPORATION<br />
-COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY MEREDITH NICHOLSON<br />
-<br />
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED<br />
-<br />
-<i>Published May 1916</i></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="bbox">
-
-<p class="ph1"><span class="antiqua">By Meredith Nicholson</span></p>
-
-
-<p><b>THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING.</b> Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p><b>THE POET.</b> Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p><b>OTHERWISE PHYLLIS.</b> With frontispiece in color.</p>
-
-<p><b>THE PROVINCIAL AMERICAN AND OTHER
-PAPERS.</b></p>
-
-<p><b>A HOOSIER CHRONICLE.</b> With illustrations.</p>
-
-<p><b>THE SIEGE OF THE SEVEN SUITORS.</b> With
-illustrations.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY<br />
-<span class="smcap">Boston and New York</span></p>
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">
-TO<br />
-<span class="large">CARLETON B. McCULLOCH</span></p></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Young Lady of Moods</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Affairs of Mrs. Copeland</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_20"> 20</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Mr. Farley becomes Explicit</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_39"> 39</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Nan and Billy&#8217;s Wife</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_57"> 57</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Collector of Facts</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_68"> 68</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">An Error of Judgment</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_87"> 87</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Welcome Callers</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_99"> 99</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s Good Fortune</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_113"> 113</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Narrow Escape</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_124"> 124</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Ambitions of Mr. Amidon</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_136"> 136</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Canoeing</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_151"> 151</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Last Wills and Testaments</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_165"> 165</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Kinney Lark and its Consequences &nbsp; &nbsp; </span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_175"> 175</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Bills Payable</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_194"> 194</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Fate and Billy Copeland</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_208"> 208</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">An Abrupt Ending</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_226"> 226</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Shadows</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_243"> 243</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Nan against Nan</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_256"> 256</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Not according to Law</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_263"> 263</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Copeland-Farley Cellar</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_275"> 275</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Solvent House</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_283"> 283</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Null and Void</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_292"> 292</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In Trust</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_301"> 301</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIV.</td><td> &#8220;<span class="smcap">I never stopped loving him!</span>&#8221;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_317"> 317</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Copeland&#8217;s Unknown Benefactor</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_327"> 327</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Jerry&#8217;s Dark Days</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_337"> 337</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVII.</td><td> &#8220;<span class="smcap">Just helping; just being kind!</span>&#8221;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_354"> 354</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">&#8220;Now we&#8217;re in for it!&#8221; said Nan uncomfortably</span></td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_0"> <i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;<span class="smcap">A very charming person&mdash;a little devilish,
-but keen and amusing</span>&#8221;</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_26"> 26</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;<span class="smcap">Oh, I had one glass; nobody had more, I
-think; there was some kind of mineral
-water besides. It was all very simple</span>&#8221; </td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_44"> 44</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Nan experienced suddenly a disturbing sense
-of her inferiority to this woman</span></td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_62"> 62</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;<span class="smcap">I&#8217;m not losing anything; and besides, I&#8217;m having
-a mighty good time</span>&#8221; </td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_66"> 66</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The furtive touch of his hand seemed to establish
-an understanding between them that
-they were spectators, not participants in
-the revel</span></td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_188"> 188</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The touch of her wet cheek thrilled him</span></td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_372"> 372</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>From drawings by C. H. Taffs</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-<p class="ph2">THE PROOF OF THE<br />
-PUDDING</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-
-<small>A YOUNG LADY OF MOODS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was three o&#8217;clock, but the luncheon the Kinneys
-were giving at the Country Club had survived
-the passing of less leisurely patrons and now dominated
-the house. The negro waiters, having served
-all the food and drink prescribed, perched on the
-railing of the veranda outside the dining-room,
-ready to offer further liquids if they should be demanded.
-Such demands had not been infrequent
-during the two hours that had intervened since the
-party sat down, as a row of empty champagne
-bottles in the club pantry testified. The negroes
-watched with discreet grins the antics of a girl of
-twenty-two who seemed to be the center of interest.
-She had been entertaining the company with
-a variety of impersonations of local characters,
-rising and moving about for the better display of
-her powers of mimicry. Hand-clapping and cries
-of &#8220;Go on!&#8221; followed each of these performances.</p>
-
-<p>She concluded an imitation of the head waiter&mdash;a
-pompous individual who had viewed this impiety
-with mixed emotions&mdash;and sank exhausted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-into her chair amid boisterous laughter. The flush
-in her cheeks was not wholly attributable to the
-heat of the June day, and the eagerness with which
-she gulped a glass of champagne one of the men
-handed her suggested a familiar acquaintance with
-that beverage.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, Nan, give us Daddy Farley. Do old
-Uncle Tim cussing the doctor&mdash;put it all in&mdash;that&#8217;s
-a good little Nan!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go to it, Nan; we&#8217;ve got to have it!&#8221; cried
-Mrs. Kinney.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think it will kill me to hear it again,&#8221; protested
-Billy Copeland, who was refilling the girl&#8217;s
-glass; &#8220;but I&#8217;d be glad to die laughing. It&#8217;s the
-funniest stunt you ever did.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The girl&#8217;s arms hung limp, and she sat, a crumpled,
-dejected figure, glancing about frowningly
-with dull eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m all in; there&#8217;s nothing doing,&#8221; she replied
-tamely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, come along, Nan. We&#8217;ll go for a spin in the
-country right afterwards,&#8221; said Mrs. Kinney&mdash;who
-had just confided to a guest from Pittsburg,
-for whom the party was given, that Nan&#8217;s imitation
-of Daddy Farley abusing his doctor was
-the killingest thing ever, and that she just must
-hear it.</p>
-
-<p>Their importunities were renewed to the accompaniment
-of much thumping of the table, and
-suddenly the girl sprang to her feet. She seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-immediately transformed as she began a minute
-representation of the gait and speech of an old
-man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You ignorant blackguard! you common, low
-piece of swine-meat! How dare you come day after
-day to torture me with your filthy nostrums!
-You&#8217;ve poured enough dope into me to float a
-battleship and given me pills enough to sink it, and
-here I am limpin&#8217; around like a spavined horse, and
-no more chance o&#8217;gettin&#8217; out o&#8217; here again than I
-have of goin&#8217; to heaven! What&#8217;s that! You got the
-cheek to offer to give up the case! Just like you to
-want to turn me over to some other pirate and keep
-me movin&#8217; till the undertaker comes along and
-hangs out the crape! There&#8217;s been a dozen o&#8217; you
-flutterin&#8217; in here like hungry sparrows lookin&#8217; for
-worms. You don&#8217;t see anything in my old carcass
-but worm-food! Hi, you! What you up to now?
-Oh, Lord, don&#8217;t leave me! Come back here; come
-back here, I say! Oh, my damned legs! How long
-you say I&#8217;d better take that poison you sent up
-here yesterday? Well, all right&#8221;&mdash;meekly&mdash;&#8220;I
-guess I&#8217;ll try it. Where&#8217;s that nurse gone? You
-better tell her again about the treatment. She forgets
-it half the time; tell her to double the dose.
-If I&#8217;ve got to die, I want to die full o&#8217; poison to
-make it easier for the embalmer. I guess you&#8217;re
-all right, doc; but you&#8217;re slow, mighty damned
-slow. Hi, Nan, you grinnin&#8217; little fool, who told you
-to come in here? Oh, Lord! Oh, my poor legs! Oh,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-for God&#8217;s sake, doctor, do something for me&mdash;do
-something for me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She tottered toward her chair, imaginably the
-bed from which the old man had risen, and glanced
-at her audience indifferently, as they broke into
-hilarious applause. The vulgarity of the exhibition
-was mitigated somewhat by her amazing success
-in sinking herself in another personality. They
-all knew that the man she was imitating was her
-foster-father and benefactor; that he had rescued
-her from obscure, hopeless poverty, educated her
-and given her his name; and that but for his benevolence
-they never would have known or heard
-of her; but this clearly was not a company that
-was fastidious in such matters. The exhibition of
-her cleverness had been highly diverting. They
-waved their napkins and demanded more.</p>
-
-<p>She continued to survey them coldly, standing by
-her chair and absently biting her lip. Then she
-turned with an air of disdain and moved among the
-tables to the nearest door with languid deliberation.
-They watched her dully, mystified. This possibly
-was a prelude to some further contribution to the
-hour&#8217;s entertainment, and they craned their necks
-to follow her, expecting that at any moment she
-would turn back.</p>
-
-<p>The screen door banged harshly upon her exit.
-She crossed the veranda, ran down the steps toward
-the canal that lay a little below the clubhouse, and
-hurried away as though anxious to escape pursuit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-or questioning. She came presently to the river,
-pressed through a tangle of briars and threw herself
-down on the bank under a majestic sycamore.</p>
-
-<p>A woodpecker drummed upon a dead limb of the
-tree, and a kingfisher looked down at her wonderingly.
-She lay perfectly quiet with her face buried
-in the grass. Hers was not a happy frame of mind.
-Torn with contrition, she yielded herself to the luxury
-of self-scorn. She had no intention of returning
-immediately to the clubhouse, and she was infinitely
-relieved that none of her late companions had followed
-her. She wished that she might never see
-them again. Then her mood changed and she sat
-up, flung aside her hat, dipped her handkerchief in
-the river and held it to her burning face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You little fool, you silly little fool!&#8221; she said,
-addressing her reflection in the water. She spoke
-as though quoting, which was indeed exactly what
-she was doing. It was just such endearing terms
-that her foster-father applied to her in his frequent
-fits of anger.</p>
-
-<p>Then she stretched herself at ease with her hands
-clasped under her head and stared at the sky. Beneath
-the cloud of loosened black hair that her various
-exertions had shaken free, her violet eyes were
-fine and expressive. Her face was slender, with dimples
-near the corners of her mouth: a sensitive face,
-still fresh and girlish. Her fairness was that of her
-type&mdash;a type markedly Irish. The wet handkerchief
-that had brought away a faint blotch of scarlet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-from her rather full lips had left them still red with
-the sufficient color of youthful health. Lying relaxed
-for half an hour, watching the lazily drifting white
-clouds, she became tranquillized. Her eyes lost
-their restlessness as she gazed dreamily at the
-heavens.</p>
-
-<p>The soft splash of oars caused her to lift her head
-guardedly and glance out upon the river. A young
-man was deftly urging a cedar skiff toward a huge
-elm that had been uprooted by a spring storm and
-lay with half its trunk submerged. He jumped out
-and tied the skiff to a convenient limb and then,
-standing on the trunk, adjusted a rod and line and
-began amusing himself by dropping a brilliant fly
-here and there on the rippling surface. It was inconceivable
-that any one should imagine that fish
-were to be wooed and won in this part of the
-stream; even Nan knew better than that. But
-failures apparently did not diminish the pleasure
-the fisherman found in his occupation.</p>
-
-<p>He was small and compactly made and wore
-white flannel trousers, canvas shoes, and a pink
-shirt with a four-in-hand to match. He moved
-about freely on the log to give variety to his experiments;
-he was indeed much nimbler with his feet
-than with his hands, for his whipping of the stream
-lacked the sophistication of skilled fly-casting. He
-lighted a cigarette without abating his efforts, and
-commented audibly upon his stupidity when a too-vigorous
-twist of the wrist sent the fly into a sapling,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-from which he extricated it with the greatest
-difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>He was not of her world, Nan reflected, peering
-at him through the fringing willows. She knew most
-of the young gentlemen who attended dances or
-played tennis and golf at the Country Club, and he
-was not of their species. Once in making a long cast
-his foot slipped, and he capered wildly while regaining
-his balance, fell astraddle of the log, and one
-shoe shipped water. He glanced about to make
-sure this misfortune had not been observed, shook
-the water out of his shoe and lighted a fresh
-cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>She admired the dexterity with which he held the
-rod under his arm, manipulated the &#8220;makings&#8221;
-and had the little cylinder burning in a jiffy and
-hanging to his lip&mdash;a fashion of carrying a cigarette
-not affected by the young gentlemen she knew.
-It was just a little rakish; but he was, she surmised,
-a rather rakish young man. A gray cap tilted over
-one ear exaggerated his youthful appearance; his
-countenance was still round and boyish, though she
-judged him to be older than herself.</p>
-
-<p>The patience and industry with which he plied
-the rod were admirable: though there was not the
-slightest probability that a fish would snap at the
-fly, he continued his futile casting with the utmost
-zeal and good humor. His sinewy arms were white&mdash;which,
-being interpreted, meant that their exposure
-to the sun had not been as constant as might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-be expected of one who was lord of his own time
-and devoted to athletics. She was wondering
-whether he intended to continue his exercise indefinitely,
-when his efforts to extricate the fly from
-a tangle of water-grass freed it unexpectedly, and
-the line described a semicircle and caught a limb of
-the sycamore under which she was lying.</p>
-
-<p>His vigorous tugs only tightened it the more, and
-she began speculating as to whether she should
-rise and loosen it or await his own solution of the
-difficulty. If it became necessary for him to leave the
-fallen tree to effect a rescue, he must find her hiding-place;
-and her dignity, she argued, would suffer
-if she allowed him to discover that she had been
-watching him. He now began moving toward the
-bank with the becoming air of determination that
-had attended his practice with the rod. She rose
-quickly, jumped up and caught the bough that
-held the fly, and tore it loose with a handful of
-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lordy!&#8221; he exclaimed, staring hard. &#8220;Did you
-buy a ticket for this show, or did you stroll in on
-a rain-check?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I was here first; but it isn&#8217;t my river!&#8221;
-she replied easily. &#8220;They don&#8217;t seem to be biting
-very well,&#8221; she added consolingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Biting? Well, I should say not! There hasn&#8217;t
-been a minnow in this river since the Indians left.
-I&#8217;m just practicing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve done a lot of it,&#8221; said Nan, looking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-about for her hat and picking it up as an earnest
-of her immediate departure.</p>
-
-<p>He dropped his rod and walked toward her
-guardedly and with an assumed carelessness, his
-hands in his pockets.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s one good thing about fly-fishing,&#8221; he observed
-detainingly; &#8220;you don&#8217;t need to bother
-about the fish so long as there&#8217;s plenty of water.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He noted the handkerchief that she had spread on
-a bush to dry, and eyed her with appreciation as
-she thrust the pins through her hat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Country Club?&#8221; he asked casually.</p>
-
-<p>She nodded affirmatively, glancing toward the
-red roof of the clubhouse, and brushed the bits of
-bark and earth from her skirt. If he meant to
-annoy her with further conversation, it might be
-just as well to make it clear that the club afforded
-an easily accessible refuge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Excuse me, but you&#8217;re Miss Farley,&mdash;yes? It&#8217;s
-kind o&#8217; funny,&#8221; he continued, still lounging toward
-her, &#8220;but I remember you away back when we were
-both kids&mdash;my name being Amidon&mdash;Jeremiah
-A., late of good old Perry County on La Belle
-Rivi&egrave;re&mdash;and I&#8217;ve seen you lots o&#8217; times downtown.
-I&#8217;m connected in a minor capacity with the
-well-known house of Copeland-Farley Company,
-drugs, wholesale only&mdash;naturally sort o&#8217; take an
-interest in the family.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was still wholly possible for her to walk away
-without replying; and yet his slangy speech amused<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-her, and his manner was deferential. She remembered
-the Amidons from her childhood at Belleville,
-on the Ohio, and she even vaguely remembered the
-boy this young man must have been. Within three
-yards of her he paused, as though to reassure her
-that he was not disposed to presume upon an acquaintance
-that rested flimsily upon knowledge
-that might have awakened unwelcome memories;
-and seeing that she hesitated, he remarked:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A good deal has happened since you sat in front
-of me in the public school down there. I guess a
-good deal has happened to both of us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was too intimate for immediate acceptance;
-but she would at least show him that whatever
-changes might have taken place in their affairs, she
-was not a snob.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are Jerry; the other Amidon boy was Obadiah.
-I remember him because the name always
-seemed so funny.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re playing safe! Obey died when he was
-ten&mdash;poor little kid! Scarlet fever. That was right
-after the flood you floated away on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She murmured her regret at the death of his
-brother. It was, however, still a delicate question
-just how much weight should be given to these slight
-ties of their common youth.</p>
-
-<p>The disagreeable connotations of his introduction&mdash;the
-southward-looking vista that led back
-to the poverty and squalor to which she was born&mdash;were
-rather rosily obscured by the atmosphere<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-of assured blitheness he exhaled. He seemed to
-imply that both had put Belleville behind them
-and that there was nothing surprising in this meeting
-under happier conditions. He was a clean-cut,
-well-knit, resolute young fellow. His brownish
-hair was combed back from his forehead with an
-onion-skin smoothness; indeed, he imparted a general
-impression of smoothness. His gray eyes expressed
-a juvenile innocence; his occasional smile
-was a slow, reluctant grin that disclosed white, even
-teeth. A self-confident young fellow, a trifle fresh,
-and yet with an unobtrusive freshness that was not
-displeasing, Nan thought, as she continued to observe
-and appraise him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I broke away from the home-plate when I was
-sixteen,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;about four years after you
-pulled out; and I&#8217;ve been engaged in commercial
-pursuits in this very town ever since. Arrived in a
-freight-car,&#8221; he amplified cheerfully, as though she
-were entitled to all the facts. &#8220;Got a job with the
-aforesaid well-known jobbing house. Began by
-sweeping out, and now I swing a sample-case down
-the lower Wabash. Oh, not vulgarly rich! but I
-manage to get my laundry out every Saturday
-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You travel for the house, do you?&#8221; she asked
-with a frown of perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s calling it by a large name; but I can&#8217;t
-deny that your words give me pleasure. They&#8217;re
-just trying me out; it&#8217;s up to me to make good.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-I&#8217;ve seen you in the office now and then; but you
-never knew me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I ever saw you, I didn&#8217;t know you, of course,&#8221;
-she said with unaffected sincerity; &#8220;if I had, I
-should have spoken to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I never worried about that! But of course
-it would be all right if you didn&#8217;t want to remember
-me. I was an ugly little one-gallus kid with a frowsy
-head and freckled face. I shouldn&#8217;t expect you to
-remember me for my youthful beauty; but you
-saved me from starvation once; I sat on your fence
-and watched you eat a large red apple, and traded
-you my only agate&mdash;it was an imitation&mdash;for the
-core.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed, declaring that she could never have
-been so grasping, and he decided that she was a
-good fellow. Her manner of ignoring the social
-chasm that yawned between members of the fashionable
-Country Club and the Little Ripple Club
-farther down the river, to which young men who
-invaded the lower Wabash with sample-cases were
-acceptable, was wholly in her favor. Her parents
-had been much poorer than his own: his father had
-been a teamster; hers had been a common day
-laborer and a poor stick at that. And recurring to
-the maternal line, her mother had without shame
-added to the uncertain family income by taking in
-washing. His mother, on the other hand, had
-canned her own fruit and been active in the affairs
-of the First M.E. Church, serving on committees<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-with the wives of men who owned stores and were
-therefore of Belleville&#8217;s aristocracy; she had even
-been invited to the parsonage to supper.</p>
-
-<p>If Nan Corrigan&#8217;s parents had not perished in an
-Ohio River flood, and if Timothy Farley, serving on
-a flood sufferers&#8217; relief committee, had not rescued
-her from a shanty that was about to topple over by
-the angry waters, Nan Farley would not be standing
-there in expensive raiment talking to Jerry Amidon.
-These facts were not to be ignored and she
-was conscious of no wish to ignore them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been fortunate, of course,&#8221; she said, as
-though condensing an answer to many questions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess there&#8217;s a good deal in luck,&#8221; he replied
-easily. &#8220;If one of our best tie-hoppers hadn&#8217;t got
-killed in a trolley smash-up, I might never have got
-a chance to try the road. I&#8217;d probably have been
-doing Old Masters with the marking-pot around
-the shipping-room to the end of time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His way of putting things amused her, and her
-smile heightened his admiration of her dimples.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose you&#8217;re going fishing when you learn
-how to manage the fly?&#8221; she asked, willing to prolong
-the talk now that they had disposed of the
-past.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You never spoke truer words! It&#8217;s this way,&#8221;
-he continued confidentially: &#8220;When I see a fellow
-doing something I don&#8217;t know how to do, my heart-action
-isn&#8217;t good till I learn the trick. It used to
-make me sick to have to watch &#8217;em marking boxes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-at the store, and I began getting down at six <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span>
-to practice, so when a chance came along I&#8217;d be
-ready to handle the brush. And camping once over
-Sunday a few miles down this romantic stretch of
-sandbars, I saw a chap hook a bass with a hand-made
-fly instead of a worm, and I&#8217;ve been waiting
-until returning prosperity gave me the price of a
-box of those toys to try it myself. And here you&#8217;ve
-caught me in the act. But don&#8217;t give me away to
-the sports up there.&#8221; He indicated the clubhouse
-with a jerk of the head. &#8220;It might injure my credit
-on the street.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;ll not give you away!&#8221; she replied in his
-own key. &#8220;But did the man you saw catch the fish
-that time ever enter more fully into your life? I
-should think he ought to have known how highly
-you approved of him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I got acquainted with him after that, and
-he&#8217;s taken quite a shine to me, if I may say it which
-shouldn&#8217;t. The name being Eaton&mdash;John Cecil&mdash;lawyer
-by trade.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her face expressed surprise; then she laughed
-merrily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s never taken a shine to me; I think he disapproves
-of me. If he doesn&#8217;t&#8221;&mdash;she frowned&mdash;&#8220;he
-ought to!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, nothing like that!&#8221; he declared with his
-peculiar slangy intonation. &#8220;He isn&#8217;t half as frosty
-as he looks; he&#8217;s the greatest ever; says he believes
-he could have made something out of me if he&#8217;d<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-caught me sooner. He works at it occasionally, anyway;
-trying to purify my grammar&mdash;a hard job;
-says my slang is picturesque and useful for commercial
-purposes, but little adapted to the politer
-demands of the drawing-room. You know how
-Cecil talks? He&#8217;s a grand talker&mdash;sort o&#8217; guys you,
-and you can&#8217;t get mad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve noticed that,&#8221; said Nan, with a rueful
-smile. &#8220;You ought to be proud that he takes an
-interest in you. I suppose it&#8217;s your sense of humor;
-he&#8217;s strong for that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This compliment, ventured cautiously, clearly
-pleased Amidon. He stooped, picked up a pebble
-and sent it skimming over the water.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He says a sense of humor is essential to one who
-gropes for the philosophy of life&mdash;his very words.
-I don&#8217;t know what it means, but he says if I&#8217;m
-good and quit opening all my remarks with &#8216;Listen,&#8217;
-he&#8217;ll elucidate some day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her curiosity was aroused. The social conjunction
-of John Cecil Eaton and Jeremiah A. Amidon
-was bewildering.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s not in the habit of wasting time on people
-he doesn&#8217;t like&mdash;me, for example,&#8221; she remarked,
-lifting her handkerchief from the bush and shaking
-it out. &#8220;I suppose you met him in a business way?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much! Politics! I room in his ward, and we
-met in the Fourth Ward Democratic Club. He
-tried to smash the Machine in the primary last
-spring, and I helped clean him up&mdash;some job, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-can tell you! But he&#8217;s a good loser, and he says it&#8217;s
-his duty to win me over to the Cause of Righteousness.
-Cecil&#8217;s a thinker, all right. He says thought
-isn&#8217;t regarded as highly nowadays as it used to be;
-says my feet are well trained now, and I ought to
-begin using my head. He always wears that solemn
-front, and you never know when to laugh. Just
-toys with his funny whiskers and never blinks.
-Says he tries his jokes on me before he springs &#8217;em
-at the University Club. I just let him string me;
-in fact, I&#8217;ve got to; he says I need his chastening
-hand. Gave me a copy of the Bible, Christmas, and
-told me to learn the Ten Commandments; said
-they were going out of fashion pretty fast, and he
-thought I could build up a reputation for being
-eccentric by living up to &#8217;em. Says if Moses had
-made eleven, he couldn&#8217;t have improved on the
-job any. Queer way of talking religion, but Cecil&#8217;s
-different, any way you look at him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>These revelations as to John Cecil Eaton&#8217;s admiration
-for the Ten Commandments, coming from
-Amidon, were surprising, but not so puzzling as the
-evident fact that Eaton found Copeland-Farley&#8217;s
-young commercial traveler worth cultivating.
-Amidon was quick to see that he rose in Nan&#8217;s estimation
-by reason of Eaton&#8217;s friendly interest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I never get on with him,&#8221; she confessed,
-willing to sacrifice herself that Amidon might plume
-himself the more upon Eaton&#8217;s partiality.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lord, I don&#8217;t <i>understand</i> him!&#8221; Amidon protested.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-&#8220;If I was smart enough to do that, I
-wouldn&#8217;t be working for eighteen per. I guess he
-just gets lonesome sometimes and looks me up
-to have somebody to talk to&mdash;not that <i>anybody</i>
-wouldn&#8217;t be tickled to hear him, but he says he
-finds in me a certain raciness and tang of the
-Hoosier soil&mdash;whatever that means. He took me
-over to the Art Institute last Sunday and gave me
-a lecture on the pictures, and me not understanding
-any more than if he&#8217;d been talking Chinese. Introduced
-me to a Frenchman fresh from Paris and
-told him my ideals were distinctly post-impressionistic.
-Then we bumped into a college professor, and
-he made me talk so the guy could note the mellow
-flavor of my idiom. Can you beat that? Cecil says
-the hostility of the social classes to each other is
-preposterous. Got me to take him to a dance the
-freight-handlers were throwing. It was funny, but
-they all warmed to him like flies to a leaky sugar-barrel.
-Wore his evening clothes, white vest and
-all, and he was the only guy there in an ironed
-shirt! I thought they&#8217;d sure kill him; but not on
-your life!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The John Cecil Eaton thus limned was not the
-austere person Nan knew. Her Eaton was a sedate
-gentleman who made cryptic remarks to her at
-parties and was known to be exceedingly conservative
-in social matters. Amidon, she surmised, was
-far too keen to subject himself unwillingly to
-Eaton&#8217;s caustic humor, nor was Eaton a man to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-trouble himself with any one unless he received an
-adequate return.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must be going back,&#8221; she said, glancing at her
-watch. Her casual manner of consulting the pretty
-trinket on her wrist charmed him. He was pleased
-with himself that he had been able to carry through
-an interview with so superior a person.</p>
-
-<p>He had never been more at ease in his most brilliant
-conversations with the prettiest stenographer
-in the drug house, whose sole aim in life seemed to
-be to &#8220;call him down&#8221; for his freshness. Lunch-counter
-girls, shop-girls, attractive motion-picture
-cashiers, were an alluring target for his wit, and the
-more cruelly they snubbed him the more intensely
-he admired them. But the stimulus of these adventures
-was not comparable to the exaltation he experienced
-from this encounter with Nan Farley. If
-she had pretended not to remember him he would
-have hated her cordially; as it was, he liked her immensely.
-Though she lacked the pert &#8220;come-back&#8221;
-of girls behind desks and counters, he felt, nevertheless,
-that she would give a good account of herself
-in like positions if exposed to the bold raillery of
-commercial travelers. He was humble before her
-kindness. She turned away, hesitated an instant,
-then took a step toward him and put out her hand.
-There was something of appeal in the look she gave
-him as their hands touched&mdash;the vaguest hint of an
-appeal. Her eyes narrowed for an instant with the
-intentness of her gaze as she searched his face for&mdash;sympathy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-understanding, confidence. Then she
-withdrew her hand quickly, aware that his admiration
-was expressing itself with disconcerting frankness
-in his friendly gray eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s been nice to see you again,&#8221; she said
-softly. &#8220;Good luck!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good luck to you, Miss Farley; I hope to meet
-you again sometime.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you; I hope so too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded brightly and moved off along the
-path toward the clubhouse. He felt absently for his
-book of cigarette-papers as he reviewed what she
-had said and what he had said.</p>
-
-<p>He did not resume his whipping of the river, but
-restored his rod to its case and turned slowly downstream,
-not neglecting to lift his eyes to the clubhouse
-as he drifted by.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-
-<small>THE AFFAIRS OF MRS. COPELAND</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> a quiet corner of the club veranda Fanny
-Copeland and John Cecil Eaton had been conscious
-of the noisy gayety of Mrs. Kinney&#8217;s party, and
-they observed Nan Farley&#8217;s hurried exit and disappearance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan doesn&#8217;t seem to be responding to encores,&#8221;
-Eaton remarked. &#8220;She&#8217;s gone off to sulk&mdash;bored,
-probably; prefers to be alone, poor kid! It&#8217;s outrageous
-the way those people use her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They have to be amused,&#8221; replied Mrs. Copeland,
-&#8220;and I&#8217;ve heard that Nan can be very funny.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are all kinds of fun,&#8221; Eaton assented
-dryly. &#8220;She&#8217;s been taking off Uncle Tim again. I
-don&#8217;t see that he&#8217;s getting anything for his money&mdash;that
-is, assuming that she gets his money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If she doesn&#8217;t,&#8221; said Mrs. Copeland quickly,
-&#8220;she won&#8217;t be the only person that&#8217;s disappointed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton lifted his eyes toward a stretch of woodland
-beyond the river and regarded it fixedly. Then
-his gaze reverted to her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think Billy wants to get back the money
-he paid Farley for the drug business?&#8221; he asked, in
-a colorless, indifferent tone that was habitual.</p>
-
-<p>John Cecil Eaton was nearing the end of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-thirties&mdash;tall, lean, with a closely trimmed black
-beard. He was dressed for the links, and his waiting
-caddy was guarding his bag in the distance and
-incidentally experimenting at clock golf. Eaton&#8217;s
-long fingers were clasped round his head in such
-manner as to set his cap awry. One was conscious
-of the deliberate gaze of his eyes; his drawling
-voice and dry humor suggested a man of leisurely
-habits. He specialized in patent law&mdash;that is to
-say, having a small but certain income, he was able
-to discriminate in his choice of cases, and he accepted
-only those that particularly interested him.
-He had been educated as a mechanical engineer,
-and the law was an afterthought. His years at Exeter
-and the Tech, prolonged by his law course at
-Harvard, had quickened his speech and modified
-its Hoosier flavor. He passed for an Eastern man
-with strangers. He was the fourth of his name in
-the community, and it was a name, distinguished
-in war and peace, that was well sprinkled through
-the pages of Indiana history. Though the Eatons
-had rendered public service in conspicuous instances
-they had never been money-makers, and
-when John heard of the high prices attained by
-Washington Street property in the early years of
-the twentieth century he reflected that if his father
-and grandfather had been a little more sanguine as
-to the city&#8217;s future he might have been the richest
-man in town.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton&#8217;s interests were not all confined to his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-profession. He read prodigiously in many fields;
-he observed politics closely and was president of a
-club that debated economic and social questions;
-he was the best fly-fisherman in the State. His
-occasional efforts to improve the tone of local politics
-greatly amused his friends, who could not see
-why a man who might have been pardoned for
-looking enviously upon a seat in the United States
-Senate should subject himself to the indignity of a
-defeat for the city council. To the men he lunched
-with daily at the University Club his interest in
-municipal affairs was only another of his eccentricities.
-He had never married, but was still carried
-hopefully on the list of eligibles. By general consent
-he was the best dinner man in town&mdash;a guest who
-could be relied upon to keep the talk going and
-make a favorable impression on pilgrims from
-abroad.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s ironic smile at his last remark
-had lingered. Their eyes met glancingly; then the
-gaze of both fell upon the distant treetops. Theirs
-was an old friendship that rendered unnecessary the
-filling in of gaps. Eaton was thinking less concretely
-of her reference to Billy Copeland&#8217;s designs upon
-the Farley money than of the abstract fact that a
-divorced woman might sit upon a club veranda and
-hear her former spouse&#8217;s voice raised in joyous exclamation
-within, and even revert without visible
-emotion to the possibility of his remarrying.</p>
-
-<p>Times and standards had changed. This was no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-longer the sober capital it had been, where every
-one went to church, and particular merit might be
-acquired by attending prayer-meeting. It was a
-very different place from what it had been in days
-well within Eaton&#8217;s recollection, before the bobtail
-mule cars yielded to the trolley, or the automobile
-drove out the sober-going pha&euml;tons and
-station-wagons that had satisfied the native longing
-for grandeur. The roster of the Country Club
-bore testimony of the passing of the old order. The
-membership committee no longer concerned itself
-with the ancestry or reputation for sobriety of
-applicants, or their place of worship, or whether
-their grandfathers had come to town before the
-burning of the Morrison Opera House, or even
-the later conflagration that consumed the Academy
-of Music. You might speak of late arrivals like the
-Kinneys with all the scorn you pleased, but they
-had been recognized by everybody but a few ultra-conservatives;
-and if Bob Kinney was something of
-a sport or his wife&#8217;s New York clothes were a trifle
-daring for the local taste, such criticisms did not
-weigh heavily as against the handsome villa in
-which these same Kinneys had established themselves
-in the new residential area on the river bluff.
-Curiosity is a stern foe of snobbishness; and when
-Mrs. Kinney seemed so &#8220;sweet&#8221; and had given a
-thousand dollars to the new Girls&#8217; Club, besides
-endowing a children&#8217;s room in the Presbyterian
-Hospital, many very proper and dignified matrons<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-felt fully justified in crossing the Rubicon (otherwise
-White River) for an inspection of Mrs.
-Kinney&#8217;s new house. Eaton had accepted such
-things in a philosophic spirit, just as he accepted
-Kinney&#8217;s retainer to safeguard the patents on the
-devices that made Kinney&#8217;s cement the best on the
-market and the only brand that would take the
-finish and tint of tile or marble.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It seems to be understood that they&#8217;re waiting
-for Farley to die so they can be married comfortably,&#8221;
-Eaton remarked. &#8220;But Farley&#8217;s a tough
-old hickory knot. He&#8217;s capable of hanging on just
-to spite them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He was always very kind to me. I saw a good
-deal of him and his wife after I came here. He was
-proud of the business and anxious that Billy should
-carry it on and keep developing it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I always liked the steamboating period of Farley&#8217;s life,&#8221;
-said Eaton, ignoring this frank reference
-to her former husband, in which he thought he detected
-a trace of wistfulness; &#8220;and he&#8217;s told me a
-good deal about it at times. It was much more
-picturesque than his wholesale-drugging. He never
-quite got over his river days&mdash;he&#8217;s always been
-the second mate, bullying the roustabouts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He never forgot how to swear,&#8221; Mrs. Copeland
-laughed. &#8220;He does it adorably.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There was never anything like him when he&#8217;s
-well heated,&#8221; Eaton continued. &#8220;He never means
-anything&mdash;it&#8217;s just his natural way of talking.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-His customers rather liked it on the whole&mdash;expected
-him to commit them to the fiery pit every
-time they came to town and dropped in to see him.
-When he got stung in a trade&mdash;which wasn&#8217;t
-often&mdash;he&#8217;d go into his room and lock the door
-and curse himself for an hour or two and then go
-out and raise somebody&#8217;s wages. A character&mdash;a
-real person, old Uncle Tim!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The thought of the retired merchant seemed to
-give Eaton pleasure; a smile played furtively about
-his lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then it must have been his wife who used to
-lure him to church every Sunday morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not a bit of it! It was the old man himself. He
-had a superstitious feeling that business would go
-badly if he cut church. He never swore on Sundays,
-but made up for it Monday mornings. He&#8217;s always
-been a generous backer of foreign missionaries
-on the theory that by Christianizing the heathen
-we&#8217;re widening the market for American commerce.
-We&#8217;ve had worse men than Farley. I suppose he
-never told a lie or did an underhanded thing through
-all the years he was in business. And all he has to
-leave behind him is his half million or more&mdash;and
-Nan.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And Nan,&#8221; Mrs. Copeland repeated with a
-shrug of her shoulders. &#8220;I suppose Mr. Farley
-knows what&#8217;s up. He&#8217;s too shrewd not to know.
-Clever as Nan is, she could hardly pull the wool
-over his eyes.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>&#8220;She&#8217;s much too clever not to know she can&#8217;t
-fool him; but he&#8217;s immensely fond of her, just as
-his wife was. And we&#8217;ve got to admit that Nan is a
-very charming person&mdash;a little devilish, but keen
-and amusing. She&#8217;s too good for that crowd she&#8217;s
-running with&mdash;no doubt of that! If Uncle Tim
-thought she meant to marry Billy, he would take
-pains to see that she didn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean he wouldn&#8217;t leave her the money?&#8221;
-she asked in a lower tone. &#8220;I suppose he&#8217;d have
-to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s under no obligation to give it all to Nan.
-If he thought there was any chance of her marrying
-Billy&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s been led to believe that it would all be
-hers. The Farleys educated her and brought her up
-in a way to encourage the belief. It would be cruel
-to disappoint her; he wouldn&#8217;t have any right to
-cut her off,&#8221; Mrs. Copeland concluded with feeling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It might be less cruel to cut her off than to let
-her have it all and go on the way she&#8217;s started. She
-came about ten years too late upon the scene. It&#8217;s
-only within a few years that a party like we&#8217;ve listened
-to in there would have been possible in this
-town. If Nan had reached her twentieth year a
-decade ago, she&#8217;d have been the demurest of little
-girls, and there would have been no question of her
-marrying a man who had divorced his wife merely
-to be free to appropriate her.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_026.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;A VERY CHARMING PERSON&mdash;A LITTLE DEVILISH,<br />
-BUT KEEN AND AMUSING&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>Mrs. Copeland opened and closed her eyes
-quickly several times. No other man of her acquaintance
-would have dared to speak of her personal
-affairs in this blunt fashion. Eaton had referred to
-the divorce that had severed her ties with Copeland
-quite as though she were not an interested
-party to that transaction. He now went a step
-further, and the color deepened in her face as he
-said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand why you didn&#8217;t resist his
-suit. I&#8217;ve never said this to you before, and it&#8217;s
-too late to be proffering advice, but you oughtn&#8217;t
-to have let it go as you did. Billy&#8217;s whole conduct
-was perfectly contemptible.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There was no sense in making a fight if he
-wanted to quit. The law couldn&#8217;t widen the breach;
-it was there anyhow, from the first moment I knew
-what was in his mind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He acted like a scoundrel,&#8221; persisted Eaton in
-his cool, even tones; &#8220;it was base, rotten, damnable!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you mean&#8221;&mdash;she hesitated and frowned&mdash;&#8220;if
-you mean that he let the impression get abroad
-that I was at fault&mdash;that it was I who had become
-interested elsewhere&mdash;it&#8217;s only just to say that I
-never thought Billy did that. I don&#8217;t believe now
-that he did it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was aware that he had ventured far toward
-the red lamps of danger. This matter of her personal
-honor was too delicate for veranda discussion;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-in fact, it was not a matter that he had any right
-to refer to even remotely at any time or place.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, unpleasant things were said,&#8221; she
-added. &#8220;I suppose they&#8217;re always bound to be.
-Manning was his friend, not mine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton received this impassively, which was his
-way of receiving most things.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By keeping out of the way, that gentleman
-proved that he couldn&#8217;t have been any friend of
-yours. If he&#8217;d been a gentleman or even a man&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She broke in upon him quietly, bending toward
-him with tense eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He offered to: I have never told that to any one,
-but I don&#8217;t want you to be unfair even to him. My
-mistake was that I meekly followed Billy when he
-began running with the new crowd. I knew I was
-boring him, and I thought if I took up with the
-Kinneys and the people they were training with,
-he might get tired of them after a while and we
-could go on as we had begun. But I hadn&#8217;t reckoned
-with Nan. I allowed myself to be put in competition
-with a girl of twenty&mdash;which is a foolish
-thing for a woman of thirty-five to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She carried lightly the thirty-five years to which
-she confessed, but sometimes, in unguarded moments,
-a startled, pained look stole into her brown
-eyes, as though at the remembrance of a blow that
-might repeat itself. There was a patch of white in
-her hair just at one side of her forehead. Its effect
-was to contribute to her natural air of distinction.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-She was of medium height and her trim figure retained
-its girlish lines. Her face and hands were
-tanned brown, and the color was becoming. She
-wore to-day a blue skirt and a plain blouse, with a
-soft collar opened at the throat. She had walked
-to the clubhouse from her home, a mile distant, and
-her meeting with Eaton had been purely incidental.
-After her divorce she had established herself as a
-dairy farmer on twenty acres of land that she had
-inherited from her father, a banker in one of the
-smaller county seats, who had been specially interested
-in dairying and had encouraged her interest
-in the diversion he made profitable. To please
-him she had taken a course in dairying at the State
-Agricultural School and knew the business in all its
-practical aspects. Copeland had first seen her at a
-winter resort in Florida where she had gone with
-her father in his last illness, and their common ties
-with Indiana had made it easily possible for him
-to cultivate her better acquaintance later at home.
-Billy Copeland was an attractive young fellow with
-good prospects; his social experience was much
-ampler than hers, and the marriage seemed to her
-friends an advantageous one. When after ten years
-she found herself free, she rose from the ruins of her
-domestic happiness determined to live her life in
-the way that pleased her best. She shrank from adjusting
-herself to a new groove in town; the plight
-of the divorced woman was still, in this community,
-not wholly comfortable. There was little consolation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-in the sympathy of friends&mdash;though she had
-many; and even the general attitude, that Copeland&#8217;s
-conduct was utterly indefensible, did not
-help greatly. She realized perfectly that in following
-Copeland&#8217;s lead unprotestingly when he caught
-step with the quicker social pace set by the Kinneys,&mdash;a
-name that stood as a synonym for noiser functions
-and heavier libations than the community had
-tolerated,&mdash;she had estranged many who were
-affronted by the violence with which the town was
-becoming kinneyized.</p>
-
-<p>Two years had passed and her broken wings
-again beat the air with something of their early
-rhythm. The pathos of her isolation was more apparent
-to her old friends in town than to herself.
-Whether she had dropped out of the Kinney crowd,
-or whether it was more properly an ejectment, there
-was all the more reason why women who had regarded
-the intrusions of that set with horror should
-manifest their confidence in her. If she had been
-poor, a <i>divorc&eacute;e</i> lodged in a boarding-house and in
-need of practical aid, she might have suffered from
-neglect; but having an assured small income which
-her investment in the dairy farm in no wise jeopardized,
-it was rather the thing to look in on her
-occasionally. Young girls in particular thought her
-handsome and interesting-looking, and risked their
-mothers&#8217; displeasure by going to see her. And there
-were women who sought her out merely to emphasize
-their disapproval of Copeland and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-scandal of his divorce, which they felt to be an affront
-to the community&#8217;s dignity in a man whose father
-had been of the old order of decent, law-abiding,
-home-keeping, church-going citizens. They admired
-the courage and dignity with which she met
-misfortune and addressed herself uncomplainingly
-to the business of fashioning a new life.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been keeping you from your game,&#8221; she
-said, rising abruptly; &#8220;and I must be getting home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They walked down the veranda toward the entrance
-and reached the door at a moment when
-Copeland, who had been keeping company with a
-tall glass in the rathskeller below, waiting impatiently
-for Nan&#8217;s return, lounged out.</p>
-
-<p>He stopped short with a slightly challenging air.
-Eaton bowed and tugged at the visor of his cap.
-Copeland lifted his straw hat and muttered a good-afternoon
-that was intended for one or both as they
-chose to take it. Mrs. Copeland glanced at him
-without making any sign; she did not speak to
-Eaton again, but as they parted near the first tee
-and she started across the links toward the highway,
-she nodded quickly and smiled a forlorn little
-smile that haunted him for some time afterward.</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later, standing erect after successfully
-negotiating a difficult putt, he said, under his breath:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By George! She&#8217;s still in love with him!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He glanced around to make sure no one had overheard
-him, and crossed to the next tee with a look
-of deep perplexity on his face.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>Nan, having returned to the clubhouse, sauntered
-down the veranda toward Copeland, wearing a demure
-air she had practiced for his benefit. Her
-indifference to his annoyance at her long absence
-added to his vexation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what have you been up to?&#8221; he demanded
-irritably. &#8220;The others skipped long ago.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I was tired and went down to the river to
-rest. I&#8217;m going home now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t go home; Grace expects us to stop
-at her house; they&#8217;ll all be there in half an hour.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sorry, but I must skip. You run along like a
-good boy, and I&#8217;ll hop on the trolley. I must be
-home by five, and I&#8217;ll just about make it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s not treating Grace right, to say nothing
-of me!&#8221; he expostulated. &#8220;I&#8217;m getting sick of all
-this dodging and ducking. I&#8217;m coming up to the
-house to-morrow and have it out with Farley.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re a nice boy, Billy, but you&#8217;re not going
-to do anything foolish,&#8221; she replied.</p>
-
-<p>He found the kindness of this&mdash;even its note of
-fondness&mdash;unsatisfying. He read into it a skepticism
-that was not flattering.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve been fooling long enough about this;
-we&#8217;ve got to announce our engagement and be
-done with it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, Billy, we&#8217;re not engaged! We&#8217;re just the
-best of friends. Why should we stir up a big fuss
-by getting engaged?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s got into you, anyhow!&#8221; he exclaimed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-eyeing her angrily. &#8220;This talk about not being
-engaged doesn&#8217;t go! I&#8217;m getting tired of all this
-nonsense&mdash;being kicked about and held off when
-I&#8217;ve staked everything I&#8217;ve got on you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean,&#8221; she said steadily, &#8220;that you divorced
-your wife, thinking I would marry you; and
-now you&#8217;re angry because I&#8217;m not in a hurry about
-it, and don&#8217;t want to trouble papa, who has been
-kinder to me than anybody else ever was&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For God&#8217;s sake, don&#8217;t cry here! We&#8217;ve been
-talked about enough; I don&#8217;t understand what&#8217;s
-got into you to-day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I just mean to be sensible, that&#8217;s all. We&#8217;ve
-had some mighty fine times, and you&#8217;ve been nice
-to me; but there&#8217;s no hurry about getting married&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No hurry!&#8221; He stared at her, unable in his
-impotent rage to deal with the situation as he
-thought it deserved. &#8220;Look here, Nan, I can stand
-a lot of this Irish temperament of yours, but you&#8217;re
-playing it a little too far.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My Irish temperament!&#8221; she repeated poutingly.
-&#8220;Well, I guess the Irish is there all right; I
-don&#8217;t know about the temperamental part of it.
-A good many people call it something very different.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When am I going to see you again?&#8221; he demanded
-roughly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How should I know! You see me now and you
-don&#8217;t like me. You&#8217;d better go downtown and do<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-some work, Billy; that&#8217;s what I should prescribe
-for you. And you&#8217;ve got to cut out the drink; it&#8217;s
-getting too big a hold on you. I&#8217;m going to quit,
-too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Standing near the entrance, they had been
-obliged to acknowledge the greetings of a number of
-new arrivals. It was manifestly no place for a prolonged
-serious discussion of their future. Mrs.
-Harrington, whose husband&#8217;s bank, the Ph&#339;nix
-National, was the soundest in the State, climbed
-the steps from her motor without seeing Nan and
-her companion. Until Farley retired, the Copeland-Farley
-account was carried by the Ph&#339;nix; when
-Billy Copeland took the helm he transferred it to
-the Western, as likely to grant a more generous
-credit.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland flushed angrily at the slight; Nan bit
-her lip.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m off!&#8221; she said. &#8220;Be a good boy. I&#8217;ll see
-you again in a day or two. And for Heaven&#8217;s sake,
-don&#8217;t call me on the telephone; papa has an extension
-in his room, you know, and hears everything.
-Tell Grace I&#8217;m sorry&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let me run you into town; I can set you down
-somewhere near home. The trolleys are hot and
-dusty. Besides, I want to talk to you; I&#8217;ve got a
-lot to say to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not to-day, Billy. Good-bye!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton found Nan waiting for him at the fourth
-green.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>&#8220;I was praying for a mascot, and here you are,&#8221;
-he remarked affably. &#8220;I can&#8217;t fail to turn in a good
-card. Glad to see you&#8217;ve taken up walking; there&#8217;s
-nothing like it&mdash;particularly on a humid afternoon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sorry to disappoint you, but I hope to catch the
-four-thirty for town. What are my chances?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Excellent, if you don&#8217;t waste more than ten
-minutes on me. You&#8217;ve never given me more than
-five up to date. How is Mr. Farley?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s been very comfortable for a week; really
-quite like himself. You&#8217;d better come and see
-him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I meant to drop in often all winter, but was
-afraid of boring him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re one of the few that couldn&#8217;t do that.
-He likes to talk to you. You don&#8217;t bother him with
-questions about his health&mdash;a sure way of pleasing
-him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A rare man, Farley. Wiser than serpents, and
-stimulating. I&#8217;ve learned a good deal from him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They reached his ball, that had accommodatingly
-effected a good lie, and after viewing it with approval
-he glanced at Nan and remarked:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d better urge me to come to see you, too.
-It&#8217;s just occurred to me that it might be well for us
-to know each other better. I may flatter myself;
-but&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the nicest thing I&#8217;ve heard to-day!
-Please come soon.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>&#8220;Thank you, Nan; I shall certainly do that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I met a friend of yours a while ago,&#8221; she said,
-&#8220;who pronounced you the greatest living man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah! A gentleman, of course; I identify him at
-once; he&#8217;s the only person alive I fool to that extent&mdash;Jeremiah
-A. Amidon! I can&#8217;t imagine why he
-hasn&#8217;t mentioned his acquaintance with you. I
-shall chide him for this.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He viewed her in his quizzical fashion through
-the thick-lensed spectacles he used for golfing. In
-his ordinary occupations these gave place to eyeglasses
-that twinkled with a sharp, hard brightness,
-as though bent upon obscuring the kindness that
-lay behind them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hadn&#8217;t seen him lately&mdash;not since I was a
-child. We used to be neighbors when we were children,
-and he was a very, very naughty boy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I dare say he was,&#8221; Eaton remarked, with his
-air of thinking of something else. &#8220;I suppose you
-didn&#8217;t find him at all backward in bringing himself
-to your notice. Shyness isn&#8217;t his dominant
-trait.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the other hand, he was rather diffident and
-wholly polite. I thought his manners did you
-credit&mdash;for he said you had been coaching him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He must be chidden; his use of my name in that
-connection is utterly unwarranted. He was one of
-Mrs. Kinney&#8217;s party, I suppose,&mdash;very interesting.
-I&#8217;m glad they have taken him up!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was watching, with the quick eagerness that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-made him so disconcerting a companion, the passing
-of a motor toward the clubhouse, but she understood
-perfectly that this utterance had been with
-ironic intent. She laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How funny you are! I wish I weren&#8217;t afraid
-of you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve made a careful study of the phobias, and
-there is nothing in the best authorities to justify a
-fear of me. I&#8217;m as tame as buttered toast.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it&#8217;s clear Mr. Amidon isn&#8217;t afraid of
-you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m relieved&mdash;infinitely; I&#8217;m in mortal terror
-of <i>him</i>. He&#8217;s fixed standards of conduct for me that
-make me nervous. I&#8217;m afraid the young scoundrel
-will catch me with my visor down some day; then
-smash goes his poor idol. I&#8217;m glad you spoke of
-him; if he wasn&#8217;t at your luncheon&mdash;a guess
-you scorned to notice&mdash;I suppose you met by
-chance, the usual way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was just like that,&#8221; she laughed. &#8220;Very
-much so!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;H&#8217;m! I warn you against accepting the attentions
-of just any young man who strolls up the
-river. A girl of your years must be discreet. Your
-early knowledge of Mr. Amidon in the loved spots
-your infancy knew won&#8217;t save you. You&#8217;d better
-refer all such matters to me. Pleasant as this is,
-you&#8217;re going to miss your car if you don&#8217;t rustle.
-And Harrington&#8217;s bawling his head off trying to
-fore me away. Good-bye!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>With a neat stroke he landed his ball on the
-green and ran after it to raise the blockade. When
-Nan had halted the car and climbed into the vestibule,
-she waved her hand, a salute which he returned
-gallantly with a sweep of his cap.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-
-<small>MR. FARLEY BECOMES EXPLICIT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Farleys had lived for twenty years in an old-fashioned
-square brick house surrounded by maples.
-The lower floor comprised a parlor, sitting-room,
-and dining-room, with a library on the side. The
-library had been Farley&#8217;s den, where he smoked his
-pipe and read his newspapers. The bookcases that
-lined the walls had rarely been opened; they contained
-the &#8220;Waverley Novels,&#8221; Dickens&#8217;s &#8220;Works&#8221;
-complete, and a wide range of miscellaneous fiction,
-including &#8220;Uncle Tom&#8217;s Cabin,&#8221; most of Mark
-Twain, Tourg&eacute;e&#8217;s novel of Reconstruction, &#8220;A
-Fool&#8217;s Errand,&#8221; Helen Hunt Jackson&#8217;s &#8220;Ramona,&#8221;
-and a number of Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney&#8217;s stories
-for girls&mdash;these latter reminiscent of Nan&#8217;s girlhood.
-The brown volumes of &#8220;Messages and
-Papers of the Presidents&#8221; were massed on the bottom
-shelves invincibly with half a dozen &#8220;Reports&#8221;
-of the State Geological Survey. The doors of the
-black-walnut bookcases were warped so that the
-contents were accessible only after patient tugging.
-Half the books were upside-down&mdash;and had been
-since the last house-cleaning. The room presented
-an inhospitable front to literature, and the other
-arts fared no better elsewhere in the house. A steel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-engraving of the Parthenon on the dining-room wall
-confronted a crude print of the <span class="smcap">Jane E. Newcomb</span>,
-an Ohio River packet on which Farley had been
-second mate&mdash;and an efficient one&mdash;in &#8217;69-&#8217;70.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Farley had established in her household
-the Southwestern custom of abating the heat by
-keeping the outer shutters closed through the
-middle of the day, and the negro servants who still
-continued in charge had not changed her system in
-this or in any other important particular. Nan had
-not lacked instruction in the domestic arts; in her
-school vacations she had been thoroughly drilled
-by Mrs. Farley. Cleanliness in its traditional relationship
-to godliness had been deeply impressed
-upon her; and she had been taught to sew, knit,
-and crochet. She knew how to cook after the plain
-fashion to which Mrs. Farley&#8217;s tastes and experience
-limited her; she had belonged to an embroidery
-class formed to give occupation to one of Mrs.
-Farley&#8217;s friends who had fallen upon evil times;
-and Nan had been the aptest of pupils.</p>
-
-<p>But Nan had never been equal to the task of
-initiating changes in the Farley household, with its
-regular order of sweepings, scrubbings, and dustings;
-its special days for baking, its inexorable rotation
-in meats and vegetables for the table. And if
-she had needed justification she would have given
-as her excuse Farley&#8217;s long acceptance of his wife&#8217;s
-domestic routine, and the fear of displeasing him
-by altering it. The colored cook&#8217;s husband did the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-heavier indoor cleaning and maintained the yard;
-and the dining-room and the upper floor were cared
-for by a colored woman. Hardly any one employed
-a black second girl, and Nan would have changed
-the color scheme in this particular and substituted a
-neatly capped and aproned white girl of the type
-that opened the door of her friends&#8217; houses, but the
-present incumbent was a niece of the cook and not
-to be eliminated without rending the entire domestic
-fabric.</p>
-
-<p>Nan reached home a few minutes after five.
-She ran upstairs and found Farley in his room,
-bending over a table by the window playing solitaire.
-The trained nurse who had been in the
-house for a year appeared at the door and withdrew.
-Nan crossed the room and laid a hand on
-Farley&#8217;s shoulder. He had nearly finished the
-game, and she remained quietly watching his tremulous
-hands shifting the cards until he leaned back
-with a little grunt of satisfaction at the end. He
-put up his hand to hers and drew her round so that
-he could look at her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Still wearing that fool hat! Take it off and sit
-down here and talk to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His small, round head was thickly covered with
-stiff white hair, though his square-cut beard had
-whitened unevenly and still showed traces of brown.
-While he lay in the chair with a pathetic inertness,
-his eyes moved about restlessly, and his bleached,
-gnarled fingers were never wholly quiet.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>&#8220;Let&#8217;s see what you&#8217;ve been up to to-day?&#8221; he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mamie Pembroke&#8217;s; she was having a luncheon
-for her cousin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just girls, I suppose?&#8221; he asked indifferently.
-&#8220;You must have had a lot to eat to be gone all
-this time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, we went for a motor run afterward and
-stopped at the Country Club on the way back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;More to eat, I suppose. My God! everybody
-seems able to eat but me! I told that fool doctor
-awhile ago I was goin&#8217; to shoot him if he didn&#8217;t cut
-off this gruel he&#8217;s feedin&#8217; me. You can lay in corn&#8217;
-beef and cabbage for to-morrow; I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to eat a
-barrel of it, too. If I can get hold of some real food
-for a week, I&#8217;ll get out of this. I understand they&#8217;ve
-got Bill Harrington playin&#8217; golf. My God! he&#8217;s two
-years older than I am and sits on his job every day.
-If I&#8217;d never knuckled under to the doctors, I&#8217;d be
-a well man!&#8221; The wind rustling the maple by the
-nearest window attracted his attention. &#8220;Open
-that blind, and let the air in. Things have come to
-a nice pass when a man with my constitution can
-be shut up in a dark room without air enough to
-keep him alive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was necessary to lift the wire screen before the
-shutters could be opened, and he watched her intently
-as she obeyed him quickly and quietly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Been to luncheon, have you?&#8221; he remarked as
-she sat down. &#8220;Well, eatin&#8217; your meals outside<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-doesn&#8217;t save me any money. Those damned niggers
-cook just as much as if they had a regiment in
-the house. What did they give you to eat at the
-Pembrokes&#8217;&mdash;the usual bird-food rubbish?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Before his illness he had scrupulously reserved his
-profanity for business uses; and it was only when
-his pain grew intolerable or the slow action of his
-doctor&#8217;s remedies roused him to fury that he had
-recourse to strong language. He allowed her to
-change the position of his footstool, which had
-slipped away from him, and grunted his appreciation
-as he stretched his long, bony figure more comfortably.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, go on and tell me what you had to eat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It seemed best to meet this demand in a spirit of
-lightness. Having lied once, it might be well to
-vary her recital by resorting to the truth, and she
-counted off on her fingers, with the mockery that
-he had always seemed to like, the items of food that
-had really constituted Mrs. Kinney&#8217;s luncheon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Grape-fruit, broiled chicken, asparagus, potatoes
-baked in their jackets and sprinkled with red
-pepper, the way you like them; romaine salad, ice-cream
-and cake&mdash;just plain sponge cake&mdash;coffee.
-Nothing so very sumptuous about that, papa.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It had always been &#8220;papa&#8221; and &#8220;mamma&#8221; since
-her adoption. When she came home from a boarding-school
-near Philadelphia where she had spent
-two years, her attempts to change the provincial
-&#8220;poppa&#8221; and &#8220;momma&#8221; to the French pronunciation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-had been promptly thwarted. Farley hated
-anything that seemed &#8220;high-falutin&#8217;&#8221;; and having
-grown used to being called &#8220;poppa,&#8221; his heart was
-as flint against the impious substitution.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course there were no cocktails or champagne.
-Not at the Pembrokes&#8217;! If all the women around
-here were like Mrs. Pembroke, we wouldn&#8217;t have
-nice little girls like you swillin&#8217; liquor; nor these sap-headed
-boys that trot with you girls stewin&#8217; their
-worthless little brains in gin. What do you think
-these cigarette-smokin&#8217; swine are goin&#8217; to do! Do
-you hear of &#8217;em doin&#8217; any work? Is there one of &#8217;em
-that&#8217;s worth a dollar a week? My God! between
-you girls runnin&#8217; around half-naked and these
-worthless young cubs plantin&#8217; their weak, wobbly
-little chins against cocktails all night, things have
-come to a nice pass. Well, why don&#8217;t you go on and
-tell me who was at your party? Here I am, lyin&#8217;
-here waitin&#8217; for the pallbearers to carry me out,
-and never hearin&#8217; a thing, and you sit there deaf and
-dumb! Who was at that party?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, poppa, there were just seven girls, counting
-me: Mary Waterman, Minnie Briskett, Marian
-Doane, and Libby Davis, and Mamie and her
-guest&mdash;a cousin from Louisville. Of course, there
-was nothing to drink but claret cup, with sprigs of
-mint in the glasses.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_044.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;OH, I HAD ONE GLASS; NOBODY HAD MORE, I THINK; THERE WAS SOME<br />
-KIND OF MINERAL WATER BESIDES. IT WAS ALL VERY SIMPLE&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>&#8220;So the Pembrokes are comin&#8217; to it, are they?
-They&#8217;ve got to have something that looks like
-liquor&mdash;well, they&#8217;ll be passin&#8217; the cocktails before
-long. Claret cup dressed up like juleps; and
-how much did you get of it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I had one glass; nobody had more, I think;
-there was some kind of mineral water besides. It
-was all very simple.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just a simple little luncheon, was it? Well, I
-suppose it&#8217;s not too simple to get into the newspapers.
-Nobody can put an extra plate on the
-table now without the papers have to print it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had never quizzed her like this, and his reference
-to the newspaper alarmed her. His usual custom
-was to ask her what she had been doing and
-whom she had seen and then change the subject in
-the midst of her answer. If he had laid a trap for
-her she had gone too far to retreat; and while she
-had lied to him before, she had managed it more
-discreetly. She had escaped detection so long that
-she believed herself immune from discovery.</p>
-
-<p>He began tugging at a newspaper that had been
-hidden under his wrapper, and her heart throbbed
-violently as he opened it and thrust it toward her.
-It was the afternoon paper, folded back to the personal
-and society items.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just read that aloud to me, will you? I may
-have been mistaken. Maybe I didn&#8217;t get it straight.
-Go ahead, now, and read it&mdash;read it slow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She knew without looking what it was; the reading
-was exacted merely to add to her discomfiture.
-The newspaper was delivered punctually at four
-o&#8217;clock every afternoon, so that before she left the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-Country Club he had known just where she had
-been and the names of her companions. She read
-in a low, monotonous tone:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Mrs. Robert Smiley Kinney entertained at
-luncheon at the Country Club to-day for Mrs.
-Ridgeley P. Farwell, of Pittsburg, who is her house
-guest. The decorations were in pink. Those who
-enjoyed Mrs. Kinney&#8217;s hospitality were Mr. and
-Mrs. Frederic Towlesley, Miss Nancy Farley, Miss
-Edith Saxby, Mr. George K. Pickard, and Mr.
-William B. Copeland.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She refolded the paper and placed it on the table
-beside him. Instead of the violent lashing for which
-she had steeled herself, he spoke her name very
-kindly and gently, with even a lingering caress.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I lied to you papa,&#8221; she faltered; &#8220;but I didn&#8217;t
-mean to see him again. I&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s be square about this,&#8221; he said, bending
-forward and clasping his fingers over his knees.
-&#8220;You promised me a year ago that you&#8217;d not
-meet or see Copeland; I didn&#8217;t ask you to drop
-Mrs. Kinney, for I don&#8217;t think she&#8217;s a particularly
-bad woman; she&#8217;s only a fool, and we&#8217;ve got to be
-charitable in dealin&#8217; with fools. You can&#8217;t ever tell
-when you&#8217;re not one yourself; that means me as
-well as you, Nan. Now, about that worthless
-whelp, Copeland! I want the whole truth&mdash;no
-more little lies or big ones. You know that piece of
-carrion wouldn&#8217;t dare come to this house, and yet
-you sneak away and meet him and leave me to find<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-it out by accident! Now, I want the God&#8217;s truth;
-just what does all this mean?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His quiet tone was weighted with the dignity, the
-simple righteousness, that lay in him. She could
-have met more courageously a violent tirade than
-his subdued demand. She was conscious that he
-had controlled himself with difficulty; throughout
-the interview his wrath had flashed like heat-lightning
-on far horizons, but he had kept himself
-well in hand. He was outraged, but he was hurt,
-troubled, perplexed by her conduct. The adoption
-of Nan had marked a high altitude in the married
-life of the Farleys, and they had lavished upon her
-the pent love of their childlessness. The very manner
-in which she had been flung upon their protection
-made her advent in their household something
-of an adventure, broadening their narrowing vistas
-and bringing a welcome cheer to their monotonous
-existence. They had felt it to be a duty, but one that
-would repay them a thousand-fold in happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Farley patiently awaited her explanation&mdash;an
-explanation she dared not make. She must satisfy
-him, if at all, by evasions and further lies.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Kinney made a point of my coming; she
-was always very nice to me, and I haven&#8217;t been
-seeing her,&mdash;honestly I haven&#8217;t,&mdash;and I was
-afraid she&#8217;d be offended if I refused to go. And I
-didn&#8217;t know Mr. Copeland would be there. The
-luncheon was in the big dining-room, where everybody
-could see us. I didn&#8217;t see any more of him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-than of anybody else. In fact, I got tired and ran
-away&mdash;down to the river and was there by myself
-for an hour before I came home on the trolley.
-When I got back to the clubhouse, they had all
-gone motoring and I didn&#8217;t see them again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Left you there, did they? Well, Copeland
-waited for you, didn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she admitted quickly. &#8220;But I saw him
-only a minute on the veranda and told him I was
-coming home. He understands perfectly that you
-don&#8217;t want me to see him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;H&#8217;m! I should hope he did! All that crowd
-understand it, don&#8217;t they? They&#8217;ve been puttin&#8217;
-you in his way, haven&#8217;t they,&mdash;tryin&#8217; to fix up
-something between you and that loafer! Look here,
-Nan, I&#8217;m not dead yet! I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to live a long
-time, and if these fool doctors have been tellin&#8217; you
-I&#8217;m done for, they&#8217;ve lied. And if Copeland thinks
-my money&#8217;s goin&#8217; to drop into his lap, he&#8217;s waitin&#8217;
-under the wrong tree. Never a cent! What you
-got to say to that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think he ever thought of it; it&#8217;s only
-because you don&#8217;t like him that you imagine he
-wants to marry me. I tell you now that I have
-never had any idea of marrying him. And as for
-your money&mdash;it isn&#8217;t my fault that you brought
-me here! You don&#8217;t have to give me a cent; I don&#8217;t
-want it; I won&#8217;t take it! I was only a poor, ignorant
-little nobody, anyhow, and you&#8217;ve been disappointed
-in me from the start. I&#8217;ve never pleased<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-you, no matter how hard I&#8217;ve tried. But I&#8217;ve done
-the best I could, and I&#8217;m sorry if I&#8217;ve hurt you.
-I never told you an untruth before,&#8221; she ran on
-glibly; &#8220;and I wouldn&#8217;t to-day if I hadn&#8217;t guessed
-that you knew where I&#8217;d been and were trying to
-trick me into lying. You don&#8217;t love me any more,
-papa; I know that; and I&#8217;m going away&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her histrionic talents, employed so successfully
-in imitating him in his fury, for the pleasure of Mrs.
-Kinney&#8217;s guests, were diverted now to self-martyrization
-to the accompaniment of tears. She had been
-closer to him than to his wife: what Mrs. Farley
-denied in the way of indulgences he had usually
-yielded. He had liked her liveliness, her keen wit,
-the amusing cajoleries with which she played upon
-him. The remote Irish in his blood had been responsive
-to the fresher strain in her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For God&#8217;s sake, stop bawlin&#8217;!&#8221; he growled.
-&#8220;So you admit you lied, do you? Thought I had
-laid a trap for you, eh?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was difficult for him to realize that she was
-twenty-two and quite old enough to be held accountable
-for her sins. Her appeal to tears had
-always found him weak, but her declaration that
-she had suspected a trap when he began to quiz her
-was a trifle too daring to pass unchallenged. He
-repeated his demand that she sit up and stop
-crying.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We may as well go through with this, Nan. I
-want to know what kind of an arrangement you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-have with Copeland. Are you in love with that
-fellow?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you promised to marry him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then why are you goin&#8217; places where you expect
-to see him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve explained that, papa,&#8221; she replied with
-more assurance, finding that he did not debate her
-answers. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t like to refuse Mrs. Kinney
-when I&#8217;d been refusing so many of her invitations.
-She asked me a while ago to come to her house to
-spend a week; and a little before that she wanted
-me to go on a trip with them, but you were sick and
-I knew you didn&#8217;t like her, anyhow, so I refused.
-You&#8217;ve got the wrong idea about her, papa,&#8221; she
-continued ingratiatingly. &#8220;She&#8217;s really very nice.
-The fact that she hasn&#8217;t been here long is against
-her with some of the older women, but that&#8217;s just
-snobbishness. I always thought you hated the
-snobbishness of some of these people who have lived
-here always and are snippy to anybody else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was conscious that she was eluding him, and
-he gripped his hands with a sudden resolution not
-to be thwarted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t care a damn about the Kinneys; I&#8217;m
-talkin&#8217; about you and Copeland,&#8221; he rasped impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well, papa; I&#8217;ve told you all there is to
-know about that&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>&#8220;I don&#8217;t care what you say &#8216;about that,&#8217;&#8221; he
-mocked; &#8220;that worthless scoundrel seems to have
-an evil fascination for you. I don&#8217;t understand it; a
-decent young girl like you and a whiskey-soaked,
-loafin&#8217;, gamblin&#8217; degenerate, who shook his wife&mdash;a
-fine woman&mdash;to be free to trail after you! That
-slimy wharf-rat has the fool idea that I took advantage
-of him when I sold him my interest in
-the store&mdash;and just to show you what a fool he
-is I&#8217;ll tell you that I sold him my interest at a
-tenth less than I could have got from three other
-people&mdash;did it, so help me God, out of sheer
-good feelin&#8217;, because he&#8217;s the son of a father
-who&#8217;d given me a hand up, and I thought because
-he was a fool I wouldn&#8217;t be just fair with him&mdash;I&#8217;d
-be generous! I did that for Sam Copeland&#8217;s
-sake.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was four years ago, and I hadn&#8217;t much
-idea then that he&#8217;d make good. He&#8217;s already
-cashed in everything Sam left him but the store.
-And I&#8217;ve still got his notes for twenty-five thousand
-dollars&mdash;twenty-five thousand, mind you!&mdash;that
-he&#8217;d like damned well to cancel by marryin&#8217; you.
-A man nearly forty years old, who gambles and
-soaks himself in cocktails and runs after a feather-head
-like you while the business his father and I
-made the best in the State goes plumb to hell!
-Now, you listen to what I&#8217;m sayin&#8217;: if you want to
-marry him, you do it,&mdash;you go ahead and do it
-now, for if you wait for me to die, you&#8217;ll find he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-won&#8217;t be so anxious; there ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to be anything
-to marry you <i>for</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His voice that had been firm and strong at the
-beginning of this long speech sank to a hoarse
-whisper, but he cleared his throat and uttered his
-last words with sharp distinctness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never meant to; I never had any idea of
-marrying him,&#8221; she said. &#8220;And I&#8217;ve never thought
-of the money. You can do what you like with it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, a man can&#8217;t take his money with him to
-the graveyard, but he can tie a pretty long string
-to it; and it&#8217;s my duty to protect you as long as I
-can. I&#8217;d hoped you&#8217;d be married and settled before
-I went. Your mamma and I used to talk of that;
-you&#8217;d got a pretty tight grip on us; it couldn&#8217;t
-have been stronger if you&#8217;d been our own; and I
-don&#8217;t want anything to spoil this, Nan. I want you
-to be a good woman&mdash;not one of these high-flyin&#8217;,
-drinkin&#8217; kind, that heads for the divorce court, but
-decent and steady. Now, I guess that&#8217;s about all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She stood beside him for a moment, smoothing
-his hair. Then she knelt, as though from an accession
-of feeling, and took his hands.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m so sorry, papa! I never mean to hurt you;
-but I know I do; I know I must have troubled
-mamma, too, a very great deal. And you&#8217;ve both
-been so good to me! And I want to show you I appreciate
-it. And please don&#8217;t talk of the money
-any more or of my marrying anybody. I don&#8217;t
-want the money; I&#8217;m not going to marry: I want<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-us to live on just as we have been. You&#8217;ve been
-cooped up too long, but you&#8217;re so much better now
-you&#8217;ll soon be able to travel.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; there&#8217;s no more travel for me; I&#8217;ll be glad
-to hang on as I am. There&#8217;s nothing in this change
-idea. About a year more&#8217;s all I count on, and then
-you can throw me on the scrap-heap.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She protested that there were many more comfortable
-years ahead of him; the doctors had said so. At
-the mention of doctors his anger flared again, but
-for an instant only. It was a question whether he
-had been mollified by her assurances or whether the
-peace that now reigned was attributable to his satisfaction
-with the plans he had devised to protect
-her from fortune-hunters.</p>
-
-<p>She hated scenes and trouble of any kind, and
-peace or even a truce was worth having at any
-price. She had grown so accustomed to the bright,
-smooth surfaces of life as to be impatient of the
-rough, unburnished edges. It was not wholly Nan&#8217;s
-fault that she had reached womanhood selfish and
-willful. In their ignorance and anxiety to do as
-well by her as their neighbors did by their daughters,
-there had been no bounds to the Farleys&#8217; indulgence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to have dinner up here with you,&#8221;
-she said cheerfully, after an interval. &#8220;I&#8217;m tired of
-eating alone downstairs with Miss Rankin; her
-white cap gets on my nerves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She satisfied herself that this plan pleased him,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-and ran downstairs whistling&mdash;then was up again
-in her room, where he heard her quick step, the
-opening and closing of drawers.</p>
-
-<p>She faced him across the small table in the plainest
-of white frocks, with her hair arranged in a
-simple fashion he had once commended. She told
-stories&mdash;anecdotes she had gathered while dressing,
-from the back pages of &#8220;Life.&#8221; He was himself
-a capital story-teller, though at the age when a
-man repeats, and she listened to tales of his steamboating
-days that she had heard for years and
-could have told better herself.</p>
-
-<p>Soon a thunder-shower cooled the air, and made
-necessary the closing of windows, with a resulting
-domestic intimacy. The atmosphere was redolent
-of forgiveness on his part, of a wish to please on hers.</p>
-
-<p>At nine o&#8217;clock, when she had finished reading
-some chapters from &#8220;Life on the Mississippi,&#8221;&mdash;a
-book that he kept in his room,&mdash;and Miss Rankin
-appeared to put him to bed, he begged half an
-hour more. He hadn&#8217;t felt so well for a year, he
-declared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look here, Nan,&#8221; he remarked, when the nurse
-had retired after a grudging acquiescence, &#8220;I don&#8217;t
-want you to feel I&#8217;m hard on you. I guess I talk
-pretty rough sometimes, but I don&#8217;t mean to. But
-I worry about you&mdash;what&#8217;s goin&#8217; to happen to you
-after I&#8217;m gone. I wish I&#8217;d gone first, so mamma
-could have looked after you. You know we set a
-lot by you. If I&#8217;m hard on you, I don&#8217;t mean&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>She flung herself down beside him and clasped
-his face in her hands.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You dear old fraud!&mdash;there can&#8217;t be any
-trouble between you and me, and as for your leaving
-me&mdash;why, that&#8217;s a long, long time ahead.
-And you can&#8217;t tell! I might go first&mdash;I have all
-kinds of queer symptoms&mdash;honestly, I do! And
-the doctor made me stop dancing last winter because
-my heart was going jigglety. Please let&#8217;s be
-good friends and cheerful as we always have been,
-and I&#8217;ll never, never tell you any fibs any more!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She saw that her nearness, the touch of her hands,
-her supple young body pressed against his worn
-knees, were freeing the remotest springs of affection
-in his tired heart.</p>
-
-<p>Nan wanted to be good&mdash;&#8220;good&#8221; in the sense
-of the word that had expressed the simple piety of
-her foster-mother. She had the conscience of her
-temperament and from childhood had often been
-miserable over the smallest infractions of discipline.
-Her last words with Copeland on the club veranda
-had not left her happy. It had been in her mind for
-some time that she must break with Billy. She had
-never been able to convince herself that she loved
-him. She had liked his admiration, and had over-valued
-it as coming from a man much older than
-herself; one who, moreover, stood to her as a protagonist
-of the gay world. No one but Billy Copeland
-gave suppers for visiting actors and actresses or
-chartered a fleet of canoes for a thousand-dollar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-picnic up the river. It was because he was different
-and amusing and made love to her with an ardor
-her nature craved that she had so readily lent herself
-to the efforts of the Kinneys to throw them
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Being loved by Copeland, a divorced man rated
-&#8220;fast,&#8221; had all the more piquancy for Nan as affording
-a relief from the life of the staid, colorless household
-in which she had been reared. There were
-those who, without being snobs, looked down just
-a little upon a girl who was merely an adopted child
-to whom her foster-parents gave only a shadowy
-background. The Farleys were substantial and respectable,
-but they were not an &#8220;old family.&#8221; She
-was conscious of this, and the knowledge had made
-her the least bit rebellious and the more ready to
-surrender to the blandishments of the Kinneys, who
-were even more under the ban.</p>
-
-<p>As she undressed and crept wearily into bed, she
-pondered these things, and the thought of them
-did not increase her happiness.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-
-<small>NAN AND BILLY&#8217;S WIFE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Farley</span> improved as the summer gained headway.
-He became astonishingly better, and his doctor
-prescribed an automobile in the hope that a
-daily airing would exercise a beneficent effect upon
-his temper. Farley detested automobiles and had
-told Nan frequently that they were used only by
-fools and bankrupts. A neighbor who failed in
-business that spring had been one of the first men
-in town to fall a victim to the motor craze, and
-Farley had noted with grim delight that three
-automobiles were named among the bankrupt&#8217;s
-assets.</p>
-
-<p>When the idea of investing in a machine took
-hold of him, he went into the subject with his
-characteristic thoroughness. He had Nan buy all
-the magazines and cut from them the automobile
-advertisements and he sent for his friends to pump
-them as to their knowledge of various cars. Then
-he commissioned a mechanical engineer to buy him
-a machine that could climb any hill in the State,
-and that was free of the frailties and imperfections
-of which his friends complained.</p>
-
-<p>Farley manifested a childlike joy in his new
-plaything; he declared that he would have a negro<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-chauffeur. It would be like old steamboat times, he
-said, to go &#8220;sailin&#8217; around with a nigger to cuss.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan or the nurse went out with him daily&mdash;preferably
-Nan, who was immensely relieved to
-find that they were now on better terms than for
-several years. Life hadn&#8217;t been a gay promenade
-since she ceased to share the festivities of the Kinneys
-and their friends. Copeland she had dismissed
-finally, and the rest of them wearied of calling her
-on the telephone only to be told that it was impossible
-for her to make engagements. It may have
-been that Farley realized that she was trying to
-meet his wishes; at any rate, she had no cause to
-complain of his kindness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This would have tickled mamma,&#8221; he would
-say, as they rolled through the country in the machine.
-&#8220;She was always afraid of horses; these
-things don&#8217;t seem half as risky when you get used
-to &#8217;em. If I keep on feelin&#8217; better, we&#8217;ll take some
-long trips this fall. There&#8217;s a lot o&#8217; places I&#8217;d like
-to see again. I&#8217;d like to go down and take another
-look at the Ohio.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He spoke much of his wife, and at least once
-every week drove to the cemetery, and watched
-Nan place flowers on her foster-mother&#8217;s grave.</p>
-
-<p>After one of these visits he ordered the chauffeur
-to drive north. He had read in the papers of the
-sale of a farm at what he said was a record price for
-land in that neighborhood, and he wanted to take a
-look at the property. After they had inspected the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-farm and were running toward home, Nan suggested
-that they stop at the Country Club for a
-cool drink.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s drive to Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s place,&#8221; he remarked
-casually. &#8220;I&#8217;ve always meant to look at her
-farm.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He watched her sharply, as though expecting her
-to object. Possibly he had some purpose in this; or
-the suggestion might be due to malevolence; but
-she dismissed any such idea. He was always curious
-about people, and there was, to be sure, no
-reason why he should not call on Mrs. Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly; I shall be very glad to go, papa,&#8221;
-she answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan,&#8221; he said, laying his hand on her wrist,
-&#8220;there was never any trouble between you and that
-woman about Copeland, was there? If it&#8217;s goin&#8217; to
-make you uncomfortable to stop at her house, why,
-we won&#8217;t do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course not, papa. I hope she understood
-that I couldn&#8217;t help the gossip. It wasn&#8217;t my
-fault.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it was nasty, anyhow,&#8221; he remarked.
-&#8220;And as you&#8217;ve got rid of Copeland, it wouldn&#8217;t
-be a bad idea to let her know it. I guess it won&#8217;t
-be long before that worthless scamp goes to the
-dump. I&#8217;ve got a pretty good line on him and the
-store. If I was ten years younger, I&#8217;d go down
-there and kick him out and put the house on its feet
-again.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>He had frequently told her that Copeland-Farley
-was doing badly, but she supposed this to be only
-the wail of a retired pilot who thinks his old ship
-is doomed to disaster without his hand at the wheel.
-No communications had passed between her and
-Billy since the day of Grace Kinney&#8217;s party. She
-persuaded herself that she could face Billy Copeland&#8217;s
-former wife with a good conscience.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That hound,&#8221; began Farley after an interval of
-silence, &#8220;had the brass to try to put her in the
-wrong&mdash;didn&#8217;t dare go into court with it, but let
-it be whispered on the outside to save his own face!
-There was a man somewhere used to visit here, a
-friend of his. I guess nobody took any stock in that
-scandal.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, nobody would believe it of her,&#8221;
-said Nan. &#8220;I hardly&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had begun to say that it was incredible that
-Billy would have done such a thing, but she caught
-herself in time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What?&#8221; demanded Farley sharply. &#8220;Well, I
-guess nobody but the lowest cur would have
-done it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s brown bungalow was set upon
-the highest point on her farm, and from her veranda
-and windows she could view every part of it. The
-veranda was made to be lived upon; there was a
-table with books and periodicals; a work-basket
-lay in a swing seat as though some one had just
-put it down; there were wall-pockets filled with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-fresh flowers. Along the veranda rail nasturtiums
-bloomed luxuriantly.</p>
-
-<p>As Nan waited for an answer to her ring, the
-lower floor of the house lay plainly in view through
-the screen door: a large raftered living-room with a
-broad fireplace and a dining-room beyond. Here at
-least were comfort and peace. Perhaps Billy Copeland&#8217;s
-wife hadn&#8217;t fared so ill after all!</p>
-
-<p>The maid said Mrs. Copeland was out on the
-farm, and an observation from the veranda discovered
-her in the barn lot.</p>
-
-<p>Nan had counted on Farley&#8217;s presence to ease
-the shock of the meeting, and she did not wholly
-relish being sent off alone to meet a woman who
-might be pardoned for wishing to avoid her. Farley
-said he would wait in the car, and Nan left him contentedly
-studying the house and its encompassing
-landscape.</p>
-
-<p>When Mrs. Copeland saw Nan approaching, she
-started across the lot to meet her. A handsome
-collie trotted beside her. She had not yet identified
-her visitor, and was flinging back an injunction to
-a workman as she moved toward the gate. She
-wore a dark skirt, blue waist, and heavy shoes, and
-a boy&#8217;s round felt hat. A pair of shabby tan driving-gloves
-covered her hands.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good-afternoon!&#8221; said Nan. &#8220;Papa and I were
-passing, and he thought he&#8217;d like to see your place.
-If you&#8217;re busy, please don&#8217;t bother.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m glad so see you, Miss Farley; I was just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-coming to the house. My pump works badly and
-we are planning some changes. I&#8217;m glad Mr.
-Farley is able to be out again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She set the pace with a quick, eager step. Several
-times she turned smilingly toward Nan; the girl
-saw no trace of hostility. To all appearances Fanny
-Copeland was a happy, contented woman. The tempests
-might vent their spite on her, but she would still
-hold her head high. Nan, little given to humility,
-experienced suddenly a disturbing sense of her inferiority
-to this woman whose husband she had allowed
-to make love to her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I get a great deal of fun out of the farm,&#8221;
-Mrs. Copeland was saying. &#8220;I don&#8217;t have any
-time to be lonesome; when there&#8217;s nothing else to
-do, I can fuss around the garden. And now that I&#8217;ve
-taken up poultry there&#8217;s more to do than ever!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I believe I&#8217;d get on better with chickens than
-with cows,&#8221; said Nan. &#8220;They wouldn&#8217;t scare me
-so much.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, cows are adorable! Aren&#8217;t these in this
-pasture beauties!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A calf thrust its head through the bars of the
-fence, and Fanny patted its nose. Nan asked if
-they all had names and Mrs. Copeland declared
-that naming the calves was the hardest part of her
-work.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think it&#8217;s a mistake for a girl to grow up
-without knowing how to earn her own living, and I
-don&#8217;t know a thing!&#8221; said Nan impulsively.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_062.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">NAN EXPERIENCED SUDDENLY A DISTURBING SENSE<br />
-OF HER INFERIORITY TO THIS WOMAN</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>Fanny looked at her quickly. If it was in her
-mind that the obvious and expected thing for Nan
-to do was to marry Billy Copeland, she made no
-sign. Nan was amazed to find that she was anxious
-to appear to advantage before this woman who had
-every reason for disliking and distrusting her, and
-she was conscious that she had never seemed so
-stupid. Her modish gown, her dainty slippers with
-their silver buckles, contrasted oddly with Fanny&#8217;s
-simple workaday apparel. She was self-conscious,
-uncomfortable. And yet Fanny was wholly at
-ease, talking light-heartedly as though no shadow
-had ever darkened her life.</p>
-
-<p>They reached the house and found that Farley
-had braved the steps and established himself on the
-veranda. The maid had brought him a glass of
-milk which he was sipping contentedly while he
-ran his eye over a farm paper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Copeland, what will you take for your
-place?&#8221; he demanded. &#8220;If I&#8217;d moved into the
-country when I quit business, the doctors wouldn&#8217;t
-be doggin&#8217; me to death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But Miss Farley tells me you are almost well
-again! It&#8217;s fine that you&#8217;ve taken up motoring&mdash;a
-new world to conquer every morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I got tired o&#8217; bein&#8217; hitched to the bedpost; that&#8217;s
-all. But I want to talk farm. It&#8217;s a great thing for
-a woman to run a place like this and I want you
-to tell me all about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He examined and cross-examined her as to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-joys and sorrows of dairying. She replied good-naturedly
-to most of his questions and parried the
-others.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, I&#8217;m not going to tell you how much I
-lose a year! Please keep it a dark secret, but I&#8217;m
-not losing anything; and besides, I&#8217;m having a
-mighty good time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he warned her, &#8220;don&#8217;t let it put you
-in a hole. The place may be a leetle too fancy.
-You don&#8217;t want to make your butter too good;
-your customers won&#8217;t appreciate it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You preach what you never practiced,&#8221; laughed
-Nan. &#8220;Your rule at the store was to give full
-measure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I guess I held trade when I got it,&#8221; he
-admitted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been adding another department to the
-farm,&#8221; said Mrs. Copeland. &#8220;I started it early in
-the summer in the old farmhouse back there that
-was on the place when father bought it. Real
-homemade canned fruit, pickles, and so on. I&#8217;ve
-set up four girls who&#8217;d found life a hard business,
-and they&#8217;re doing the work with a farmer&#8217;s wife to
-boss them. It&#8217;s my business to sell their products.
-I&#8217;ve interested some of the farmers&#8217; daughters, and
-they come over and help the regulars on busy days.
-We&#8217;re having a lot of fun out of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Farley was immensely interested. Nan had not
-in a long time heard him talk so much or so amiably;
-he praised and continued to praise Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-enterprise and success; for he had satisfied
-himself fully that she was successful. He clearly
-liked her; her quiet humor, her grace and prettiness.
-In his blunt way he told her she was getting handsomer
-all the time. She knew how to talk to men of
-his type and met him on his own ground.</p>
-
-<p>He began telling stories and referred to Old Sam
-Copeland half a dozen times, quite unconscious
-that the sometime daughter-in-law of Old Sam was
-sitting before him. Nan grew nervous, but Mrs.
-Copeland met the situation with perfect composure.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, when they were about to leave, Eaton
-appeared. He had walked over from the Country
-Club merely, he protested, to refresh himself at
-Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s buttermilk fountains. He addressed
-himself cordially to Farley, whose liking
-for him was manifest in a brightening of the old
-man&#8217;s eyes. It was plain that Eaton and Mrs.
-Copeland were on the friendliest terms; they called
-each other by their first names without mincing or
-sidling.</p>
-
-<p>Nan suspected that Eaton had come by arrangement
-and that in all likelihood he meant to stay for
-dinner; but already the lawyer was saying, as he
-saw Farley taking out his watch:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to beg a lift into town from you
-plutocrats. I thought I could stay me with flagons
-of buttermilk and catch the interurban that gallops
-by at five fifty; but I made a miscalculation and
-have already missed the car.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>&#8220;I can send you in,&#8221; said Mrs. Copeland, &#8220;if it
-isn&#8217;t perfectly convenient for Mr. Farley.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course Eaton will go with us,&#8221; said Farley
-cordially. &#8220;It&#8217;s time to move, Nan.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>While Eaton helped him down the steps, Mrs.
-Copeland detained Nan for glimpses of the landscape
-from various points on the veranda.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was nice of you to stop; I think we ought to
-know each other better,&#8221; said Fanny.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you!&#8221; said Nan, surprised and pleased.
-&#8220;It won&#8217;t be my fault if we don&#8217;t!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As they crossed the veranda their hands touched
-idly, and Mrs. Copeland caught Nan&#8217;s fingers and
-held them till they reached the steps. This trifling
-girlish act exercised a curious, bewildering effect
-upon Nan. She might have argued from it that
-Mrs. Copeland didn&#8217;t <i>know</i>&mdash;didn&#8217;t know that
-she was touching the hand of the woman who was
-accused of stealing her husband&#8217;s affections.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see many people,&#8221; Mrs. Copeland was
-saying; &#8220;and sometimes I get lonesome. You must
-bring your father out again, very soon. He can ride
-to the barn in his machine and see my whole plant.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He would like that; he&#8217;s one of your warmest
-admirers, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We always did seem to understand each other,&#8221;
-she laughed; &#8220;probably because I always talk back
-to him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_066.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;I&#8217;M NOT LOSING ANYTHING; AND BESIDES, I&#8217;M<br />
-HAVING A MIGHTY GOOD TIME&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s much gentler than he looks or talks; and
-he means to be kind and just,&#8221; replied Nan, knowing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-in her heart that she had frequently questioned
-both his kindness and his justice. &#8220;I hope you will
-stop and see us, very soon. Papa&#8217;s getting too
-much of my company; it would cheer him a lot to
-see you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never make calls, you know,&#8221; said Mrs. Copeland,
-smiling, &#8220;but I&#8217;m going to accept your invitation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bitterness and resentment, traces of which Nan
-had sought in this cheery, alert little woman, were
-not apparent. Her kindness and sweetness and
-tolerance, as of the fields themselves, impressed
-Nan deeply.</p>
-
-<p>In saying good-bye Nan impulsively put out both
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish we could be good friends!&#8221; she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>Her face flushed scarlet the moment she had
-spoken, but Fanny&#8217;s manner betrayed no agitation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s consider that we&#8217;re already old friends,&#8221;
-she responded, smiling into the girl&#8217;s eyes.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-
-<small>A COLLECTOR OF FACTS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Jerry came in &#8220;off the road&#8221; Saturday, he
-found a note from Eaton asking him to call at his
-office that evening. To comply with this request,
-Jerry was obliged to forego the delights of a dance
-at the Little Ripple Club to which he had looked
-forward with the liveliest anticipations all the week.
-But Eaton was not, in Amidon&#8217;s estimation, a person
-to whom one telephoned regrets with impunity,
-and at eight o&#8217;clock he knocked at Eaton&#8217;s door on
-the fifteenth floor of the White River Trust Building
-and was admitted by the lawyer in person.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton&#8217;s office always exerted a curious spell on
-Jerry&#8217;s imagination. This was attributable in some
-measure to the presence of cabinets filled with models
-of patentable and unpatentable devices&mdash;queer
-contrivances with each its story of some inventor&#8217;s
-success or failure. The most perfect order was
-everywhere apparent. Books from the ample library
-were never strewn about in the manner of most
-law offices, and Eaton&#8217;s flat-top desk in the last
-room of the suite was usually clear; or if papers
-were permitted to lie upon it, they were piled evenly
-and weighted with a smooth stone that was never
-visible unless in use. The file-cases (of the newest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-and most approved type) contained not only
-letters, legal papers, and receipts, but, known to
-no one but the girl who cared for them, newspaper
-clippings and typewritten memoranda on a thousand
-and one subjects that bore no apparent relation
-to the practice of law.</p>
-
-<p>Facts were Eaton&#8217;s passion; with facts, one
-might, he believed, conquer the world; indeed, he
-was capable of demonstrating that all the battles
-in history were lost or won by the facts carried into
-the contest by the respective commanders. He had
-so often disturbed the office of the Commissioner of
-Patents with his facts that the public servants in
-charge of that department were little disposed to
-risk a brush with him on points that involved facts,
-facts that seemed, in his use of them, to glitter like
-the lenses of his eyeglasses.</p>
-
-<p>He seated himself in his office chair&mdash;a leathern
-affair with a high back&mdash;and bade Amidon shed his
-coat and be comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Smoke?&#8221; he suggested, opening a drawer containing
-cigars and cigarettes. Jerry hated ready-made
-cigarettes, but he was afraid to produce the
-&#8220;makings&#8221; before Eaton, who had once complained
-that the odor of the tobacco he affected was suggestive
-of burning jimson weed. Eaton produced a
-glass ash-tray, and filled a pipe with the deliberation
-he brought to every act.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Business is bad, I suppose, as usual,&#8221; he remarked
-leadingly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>&#8220;Rotten! The shark that runs the credits has
-cut off one or two of my easiest marks; but I
-managed to end last month with a ten-per-cent
-advance over last year&#8217;s business, and that helps
-some.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have spoken well, Amidon. I suppose you
-were received with joyous acclaim by the boss, and
-urged to accept a raise in wages?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Stop kidding me! I&#8217;m sensitive about my
-wages. They still pretend they&#8217;re just trying me
-out&mdash;not sure I&#8217;ll make good and that sort of
-piffle!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That sort of piffle&#8221; was a phrase he had taken
-over bodily from Eaton&#8217;s familiar discourse. So
-sensitive was he to Eaton&#8217;s influence that he imitated,
-with fair success, the unruffled ease that was
-second nature to the lawyer. He was also practicing
-Eaton&#8217;s trick of blinking before uttering a sentence,
-and then letting it slip with a casual, indifferent
-air. Eaton had used this in the cross-examination
-of witnesses to good purpose. Amidon had
-exercised it so constantly in commercial and social
-conversation that he had to be on guard lest Eaton,
-whose discernment seemed to him to partake of the
-supernatural, should catch him at it and detect its
-spuriousness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Won a case somewhat in your line the other
-day; defended a trade-mark of the Pomona Velvet
-Complexion Cream, warranted to remove whole
-constellations of freckles in one night. Seductive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-label, showing a lovely maiden unfreckling herself
-before a mirror; bottle of Pomona in her hand.
-Basely and clumsily imitated by a concern in
-Kansas that&#8217;s been feloniously uttering a Romona
-Complexion Cream. The only original Pomona
-girl held the bottle in her right hand; label on Romona
-nostrum showed it clenched in her left.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hard luck!&#8221; said Amidon, deeply interested.
-&#8220;We&#8217;ve been pushing that Kansas beautifier&mdash;a
-larger discount for the jobber than the Pomona.
-Reckon we&#8217;ll have to chuck it now. I suppose the
-judge didn&#8217;t know Pomona removes the cuticle&mdash;hasn&#8217;t
-the real soothing effect of the Romona.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll mention that to the district attorney and he
-can pass it on to the government inspectors. I&#8217;m
-annoyed by your revelation. Shock to my conscience&mdash;defending
-a company that poisons the
-young and beautiful of the republic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now that you know what a swindle you defended,
-I suppose you&#8217;ll turn back your fee&mdash;if
-you&#8217;ve got it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Retainer of a thousand dollars,&#8221; Eaton replied
-easily; &#8220;it would be immoral to return it, thus increasing
-the dividends of such an unscrupulous corporation.
-However, I&#8217;ll consider giving half of it
-to the Children&#8217;s Aid Society.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was pleasant in any circumstances to sit in
-Eaton&#8217;s presence, to enjoy his confidence; and yet
-nothing so far disclosed justified Jerry&#8217;s relinquishment
-of the Little Ripple Club dance.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>&#8220;Which of our noble streams did you follow this
-trip&mdash;the Pan-haunted Wabash or the mighty
-Ohio, sacred to the muses nine?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Allusions of this sort, to which Eaton was prone,
-were Jerry&#8217;s despair. He felt that it would be worth
-subjecting one&#8217;s self to the discomforts of a college
-education to be able to talk like this, easily and
-naturally. But he was aware that Eaton was driving
-at something; and while it was the lawyer&#8217;s way
-to lead conversations into blind alleys, he always
-arrived somewhere and fitted a key into the lock
-that had been his aim from the start.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shook hands with the trade along the Ohio
-this trip. I can tell you it&#8217;s lonesome at night in
-those river burgs; the folks just sit and wait for the
-spring flood&mdash;and even <i>it</i> fails sometimes. They
-turn the reel once daily in the movies, and the whole
-town&#8217;s asleep at nine-thirty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A virtuous and home-loving people, but crime
-occasionally disturbs the peace. Murders should
-always occur along navigable streams, so the victim
-can be sent cruising at once toward New Orleans
-and the still-vexed Bermoothes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Amidon thought he caught a gleam; but experience
-had taught him the unwisdom of anticipating
-the unfolding of Eaton&#8217;s purposes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, there&#8217;s always a lot of crooks loafing along
-the river; they keep their skins filled with whiskey
-and they fish and shoot muskrats and do a little
-murdering on the side.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>&#8220;Interesting type,&#8221; said Eaton musingly. &#8220;If
-you were at Belleville this week, you must have
-heard of a murder down there&mdash;man found stabbed
-to death in a house-boat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry grinned, pleased with his own perspicacity in
-having surmised the object of the interview. Murder
-was not, Amidon would have said, within the range
-of Mr. John Cecil Eaton&#8217;s interests; and yet this
-was not the first time that the lawyer&#8217;s inquiries
-had touched affairs that seemed wholly foreign to
-his proper orbit.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was there the day after they found the body.
-They had already arrested the wrong man and
-turned him loose&mdash;as usual. They always do that;
-and they&#8217;ll probably pick up some tramp who was
-visiting old college friends in New York when the
-murder was committed and indict him so the prosecuting
-attorney can show he&#8217;s on the job.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You shouldn&#8217;t speak in that manner of sworn
-officers of the law,&#8221; Eaton admonished. &#8220;Better
-that forty innocent men should be hanged than that
-one guilty man escape.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry fidgeted nervously as Eaton&#8217;s glasses were
-turned for a full minute upon the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A Cincinnati paper printed an item yesterday
-about that murder case, mentioning the arrest of
-a suspect at Henderson on the Kentucky shore.&#8221;
-Eaton hesitated. &#8220;The suspect&#8217;s name was Corrigan.
-You have known Corrigans, perhaps?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was a faint tinkle in the remote recesses<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-of Jerry&#8217;s consciousness as the shot, so carelessly
-fired, reached the target.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The name&#8217;s common enough; I&#8217;ve known a
-number of Corrigans.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But,&#8221; the lawyer continued, &#8220;there have been
-instances of Corrigans ceasing to be Corrigans and
-becoming something else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean,&#8221; Amidon replied, meeting Eaton&#8217;s
-eyes as they were bent suddenly upon him, &#8220;that
-a Corrigan might become a Farley. Am I right?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite right. I was just wondering whether you
-had picked up anything about this particular case
-down along the river. I have no interest in it whatever&mdash;only
-the idlest curiosity. I happened to recall
-that Miss Farley had been a Corrigan; I have a
-note of that somewhere.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He swung his chair round and surveyed the file-cases
-back of him. His gaze fell upon a drawer
-marked <i>F</i>, as though he were reading the contents
-through the label&mdash;a feat which Amidon thought
-not beyond Eaton&#8217;s powers.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry resented the idea that Nan Farley might
-still be affected by the lawless deeds of any of her
-kinsfolk; he became increasingly uncomfortable the
-more he reflected that the lawyer, with all his indifference,
-would not be discussing this subject unless
-he had some reason for doing so.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was stated that this particular Corrigan had
-wealthy connections&mdash;that always sounds well in
-such news items, as though rich relations were a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-mitigating circumstance likely to arouse public sympathy.
-Mere snobbishness, Amidon; and snobbishness
-is always detestable. If that particular
-Corrigan hopes to obtain help from a sister now
-known as Farley, it occurred to me that I ought to
-possess myself of the fact. You understand that
-what we&#8217;re saying to each other is entirely <i>sub rosa</i>.
-We&#8217;ve never happened to speak of Miss Farley; but
-having been connected with the Copeland-Farley
-Company before Farley retired, you probably have
-heard of her. A very interesting girl&mdash;slightly
-spoiled by prosperity, but really refreshingly original.
-Do you mind telling me whether you have any
-reason for believing that the particular Corrigan
-arrested down there as a suspect, and with those
-wealthy connections so discreetly suggested in the
-newspaper, is related in any way to Nan Farley?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, there was a Corrigan boy, considerably
-older than I am&mdash;probably about thirty now, and
-not much to brag of. I&#8217;ve asked about him now
-and then when I dropped off at Belleville, and I
-never heard any good of him&mdash;just about the kind
-of scamp that would mix up in a cutting scrape and
-get pinched.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And who, having been pinched,&mdash;what we
-may call a pinchee, one who has been pinched,&mdash;might
-perhaps remember that he had a prosperous
-sister somewhere and appeal to her for help? Such
-things have happened; it would be very annoying
-for a young woman who had emerged&mdash;risen&mdash;climbed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-away from her state of Corriganism, so to
-speak, to have her relationship with such a person
-printed in the newspapers of her own city. I merely
-wish to be prepared for any emergency that may
-arise. Not, of course, that this is any of my business;
-but it&#8217;s remarkable how other people&#8217;s
-affairs become in a way our own. Somebody has
-remarked that life is altogether a matter of our
-reciprocal obligations. There&#8217;s much truth in that,
-Amidon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry did not wholly grasp this, but he confirmed
-it with a nod. Now that Nan Farley had been mentioned,
-he hoped Eaton would drop life&#8217;s reciprocal
-obligations and talk of her; and he began describing
-his meeting with her, in such manner as to present
-his quondam schoolmate in the most favorable light.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton listened to this recital with as much interest
-as he ever exhibited in anything that was said
-to him. He smiled at the young fellow&#8217;s frank acknowledgment
-that it was in a spirit of the most
-servile imitation that he had gone forth with his fly-box.
-The ways in which Amidon aped him amused
-Eaton. He addressed him as &#8220;Amidon,&#8221; or as &#8220;my
-dear Amidon,&#8221; or &#8220;my dear fellow,&#8221; and talked to
-him exactly as he talked to his cronies at the University
-Club; for while he was looked upon as an
-aristocrat,&mdash;the last of an old family that dated
-back to the beginnings of the town,&mdash;at heart he
-was the soundest of democrats. Jerry&#8217;s meeting
-with Nan on the river bank seemed to him the most<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-delightful of confrontations, and he sought by characteristic
-means to extract every detail of it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, sir, after she had been so nice and turned
-to go, she swung round and came back&mdash;actually
-came back to shake hands! I call that pretty fine;
-and me just a little scrub that was only a bunch of
-freckles and as tough a little mutt as ever lived
-when she used to know me. Why, if she&#8217;d said she
-never heard of me, she&#8217;d have put it over and I
-couldn&#8217;t have said a word!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She mentioned the meeting to me a little later,&#8221;
-observed Eaton carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Like thunder she did!&#8221; exploded Jerry. &#8220;So
-you knew all about it and let me go ahead just to
-kid me! Well, I like that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Merely to get as much light on the subject as
-possible. We stumble too much in darkness; the
-truth helps a good deal, Amidon. Miss Farley
-spoke of you in terms that would not have displeased
-you. I assure you that she had enjoyed
-the interview; her description of it was flattering
-to your tact, your intuitive sense of social values.
-But it was all very sketchy&mdash;you&#8217;ve filled in important
-omissions. For instance, the giving of her
-hand, as an afterthought, was not mentioned; but
-I visualize it perfectly from your narrative. We
-may read into that act good-fellowship, graciousness,
-and all that sort of thing. She&#8217;s a graceful
-person, and I can quite see her extending a perfectly
-gloved hand&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>&#8220;Wrong for once; she hadn&#8217;t on any gloves! But
-she had a handkerchief. It was drying on a bush.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah! That is very important. Tears, perhaps?
-Her presence alone on the shore rather calls for an
-explanation. If she had gone down there by herself
-to cry, it is imaginable that life hadn&#8217;t been
-wholly to her taste earlier in the afternoon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She didn&#8217;t look as though she had ever cried a
-tear in her life, and why should she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Irish,&#8221; replied Eaton reflectively, &#8220;are a
-temperamental race. I had knowledge of her&mdash;remote
-but sufficient&mdash;before she sought the cool,
-umbrageous shore. Her companions were the gayest,
-and they doubtless bored her until a mood of
-introspection seized her&mdash;sorrow, regret, a resolve
-to do quite differently. Very likely you were a
-humble instrument of Providence to win her back
-to a good opinion of herself. So she seemed quite
-jolly and radiant? Conceivably your appearance
-caused her to think of her blessings&mdash;of her far
-flight from those scenes your presence summoned
-from the past.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, she&#8217;s a fine girl all right,&#8221; Amidon commented
-to cover his embarrassment at being unable
-to follow Eaton in his excursion into the realm of
-psychology. &#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t have thought that
-girl, born in a shack with as good-for-nothing folks
-as anybody ever had, would grow up to be about
-the finest living girl! I guess you&#8217;d hunt pretty
-hard before you&#8217;d find a girl to touch her.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>&#8220;I&#8217;ve thought of that myself, though not in quite
-your felicitous phrases.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t rub it in!&#8221; Amidon protested. &#8220;I guess
-the less I think about a girl like that the better for
-me. And I guess there&#8217;s plenty of fellows got their
-eye on her. I&#8217;ve heard some talk at the store about
-her and the boss.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She doesn&#8217;t lack admirers, of course. When
-you say &#8216;boss,&#8217; you refer, I assume, to Mr. Copeland?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton looked up from the polishing of his
-glasses&mdash;a rite performed with scrupulous care.
-The vague stare of his near-sighted eyes, unprotected
-by his glasses, added to a disinterestedness
-expressed otherwise by his careless tone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Amidon began, defensively, &#8220;Copeland
-is the boss, all right,&mdash;that is, when he&#8217;s on the
-job at all. He&#8217;s some sport, but when he calls me
-into his pen and goes over my orders, he knows
-whether I&#8217;m on the right side of the average. Only
-he doesn&#8217;t do that with any of the boys more than
-once in two months. He doesn&#8217;t quite get the
-habit; just seems to think of it occasionally.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Capacity without application! Unfortunate,
-but not incurable. To be sure, an old business like
-Copeland-Farley is hard to kill. Billy Copeland&#8217;s
-father had the constructive genius, and Farley had
-the driving power. It&#8217;s up to Billy not to let the
-house die on his hands. Trouble is, the iron diminishes
-in the blood of a new generation: too easy a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-time of it, soft-handed, loss of moral force, and that
-sort of thing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess Copeland travels a pretty lively clip, all
-right,&#8221; ventured Amidon, not without a tinge of
-pride in his boss. &#8220;He and Kinney are pace-setters;
-they&#8217;ve got plenty of gasoline in the buggy and like
-to burn it. The boss may be a sport, but he&#8217;s a
-good fellow, anyhow. I guess if he wants to marry
-Miss Farley he&#8217;s got a right to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He uttered this tamely, doubtful as to how his
-guide and mentor might receive it, but anxious to
-evoke an expression.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A trifle weak, but well-meaning,&#8221; remarked
-Eaton, as though he had been searching some time
-for a phrase that expressed his true appraisement
-of Copeland. &#8220;It&#8217;s deplorable that fellows like that&mdash;who
-really have some capacity, but who are
-weak-sinewed morally&mdash;can&#8217;t be protected from
-their own folly; saved, perhaps. Our religion, Amidon,
-is deficient in its practical application. A hand
-on your boss&#8217;s shoulder at the right moment, a
-word of friendly admonition, might&mdash;er&mdash;save
-him from a too-wasteful expenditure of gasoline. If
-I had the gift of literary expression, I should like to
-write a treatise on man&#8217;s duty to man. It&#8217;s odd,
-Amidon,&#8221; he went on, refilling his pipe, &#8220;that we
-must sit by&mdash;chaps like you and me&mdash;and see
-our brothers skidding into the ditch and never feel
-any responsibility about them. Doubtless you and
-I are known to many of our friends as weak mortals,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-in dire need of help,&mdash;or, perhaps, only a word of
-warning that the bridges are down ahead of us
-would suffice,&mdash;and yet how rarely do we feel
-that hand on the shoulder? We should be annoyed,
-displeased, hot clean through, if anybody&mdash;even
-an old and valued friend&mdash;should beg us to slow
-down. It&#8217;s queer, Amidon, how reluctant we are to
-extend the saving hand. Timidity, fear of offending
-and that sort of thing holds us back. It becomes
-necessary to perform our Christian duty in the dark,
-by the most indirect and hidden methods.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Amidon frowned, not sure that he understood;
-and he hated himself when he did not understand
-Eaton. Not to grasp his friend&#8217;s ideas convicted
-him of stupidity and ignorance. Religion in Amidon&#8217;s
-experience meant going to church and being
-bored. He remembered that the last time he had
-visited a church he had gone to hear a girl acquaintance
-sing a solo. She sang very badly, indeed, and
-he had been depressed by the knowledge that she
-was spending for music lessons wages earned as a
-clerk at the soap and perfumery counter in a department
-store. Eaton&#8217;s occasional monologues on what,
-for a better name, he called his friend&#8217;s religion,
-struck him as fantastic; he was never sure that
-Eaton wasn&#8217;t kidding him; and the suspicion that
-you are being kidded by a man at whose feet you
-sit in adoration is not agreeable. But Eaton had become
-intelligible again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve sometimes wondered whether Copeland<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-shouldn&#8217;t be saved&mdash;a good subject for experiment,
-at least. To demonstrate that we have the
-courage of our convictions we must take a hard nut
-to crack. Queer thing, that religious effort, as we
-now see it, is directed solely to the poor and needy&mdash;the
-down-and-outers. Take a man of the day
-laborer type, the sort that casually beats his wife
-for recreation: gets clear down in the gutter, and
-the Salvation Army tackles his case&mdash;sets him up
-again; good work! Great institution&mdash;the Army.
-But you take the men who belong to clubs and eat
-course dinners; they don&#8217;t beat their wives&mdash;only
-say unpleasant things to them when the bills run
-too high; when such fellows get restless, absorb too
-much drink, neglect business, begin seeing their
-bankers in the back room&mdash;where&#8217;s your man,
-society, agency, to put the necessary hand on that
-particular shoulder? What we do, Amidon, when
-we see such a chap turning up Monday morning
-with a hang-over from Saturday night, is to remark,
-&#8216;Too bad about Tom&#8217;&mdash;or &#8216;Dick&#8217; or &#8216;Harry&#8217;&mdash;and
-then go to the club and order a cocktail. That&#8217;s
-how we meet our reciprocal obligations!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There seemed nothing that Amidon could add to
-this; but plainly it was &#8220;Billy&#8221; Copeland, who was
-in Eaton&#8217;s mind, and no imaginary Tom, Dick, or
-Harry; so he ventured to remark:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I guess the boss hasn&#8217;t let go yet; he&#8217;ll
-pull up. He&#8217;s the best man on the street to work
-for&mdash;when you can feel you <i>are</i> working for him.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>&#8220;Pleasanter to work for a boss than the boss&#8217;s
-creditors, of course. And minor stockholders
-sometimes get anxious and cause trouble.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>These utterances were like important memoranda
-jotted down on the margin of a page whose text is
-of little value in itself. Amidon stared blankly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I don&#8217;t know about that; I guess the
-house has always made money. We do more business
-than any other drug house in the State.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An excellent business, of course. And we&#8217;d
-imagine that a man falling heir to it would take
-pride in holding on to it. But if he doesn&#8217;t, somebody
-else will take the job. I&#8217;ve seen the signs
-change on a good many business houses in my day.
-Your boss has taken several little flyers on the outside
-since his father died; he&#8217;s rather fascinated
-with the idea of being vice-president of new concerns:
-minor trust companies, doubtful manufacturing
-schemes, and that sort of thing. All this is
-entirely in confidence; I&#8217;m using you as an incentive
-to thought. Kindly consider that my reflections
-are all <i>inter nos</i>. That murder business got
-us started&mdash;but of course, it hasn&#8217;t anything to
-do with your boss. It had occurred to me, though,
-that both you and I may have certain reciprocal
-obligations in some of these matters we have
-touched on. One never can tell where the opportunity
-to serve&mdash;to lay that friendly hand on a
-particular shoulder&mdash;may present itself!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>During a rather long silence Amidon pondered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-this, wholly mystified as to just what he or John
-Cecil Eaton had to do with the affairs of William
-B. Copeland, a gentleman whose shoulder did not,
-on the instant, seem to present itself as a likely object
-for the laying on of hands. But Eaton was
-saying:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Coming to the matter of outside investments,
-there&#8217;s Kinney&#8217;s ivory cement. The Kinney Manufacturing
-Company&#8217;s a client of mine, and it
-wouldn&#8217;t be proper for me to express an opinion
-even to you, Amidon, on the stability of its
-patents.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Amidon, &#8220;everybody thinks Kinney&#8217;s
-making all the money there is; he&#8217;d have to,
-to put as much jam on his bread as he&#8217;s spreading.
-I meet his road men now and then, and they
-sob because they can&#8217;t fill orders. They&#8217;re not
-looking for new business; they&#8217;re shaking hands
-with the customers they&#8217;ve already got and telling
-&#8217;em to sit at the freight house until the factory
-catches up with orders. And before he hit that
-cement, Kinney was bookkeeper in a brickyard!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have a care, Amidon! You must be careful of
-your facts even in social conversation. Mr. Kinney
-had a small interest in a brickyard, which is very
-different. By the way, your opportunities for cultivating
-Mr. Copeland&#8217;s acquaintance are rather
-restricted? Except on those rare occasions when he
-summons you to make sure your orders cover your
-expense account, you don&#8217;t see much of him?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>&#8220;Oh, he used to give me a jolly occasionally before
-I went on the road&mdash;ask me why our ball
-team was glued to the tail of the league and things
-like that. Once he asked me to look up a good
-chauffeur for him&mdash;and I got him a chap who&#8217;d
-been a professional racer. I guess that made a hit
-with him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An assumption not wholly unwarranted. I hope
-he finds the chauffeur satisfactory?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess he does; he must like him, for he bails
-him out about once a week when he gets pinched
-for speeding.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather unfortunate that you&#8217;re not an inside
-man, so you could observe the boss more closely;
-not, of course, to the extent of exercising an espionage&mdash;but
-it might be possible&mdash;er&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I can have an inside job if I want it. My
-being on the road was just a try-out, and I&#8217;m not
-so keen about hopping ties with the sample-cases.
-If I&#8217;m going to tackle the reading you&#8217;ve laid out
-for me, I&#8217;ll have to change my job. The head
-stock-man&#8217;s quitting to go into heavy chemicals on
-his own hook; I guess I could get his place.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t refuse it without full consideration. My
-attitude toward you thus far has been wholly
-critical; I&#8217;ve refrained from compliments; but it
-would interest me to&mdash;er&mdash;see what you can do
-with your brains. I suggest that you learn everything
-there is about the business outside and in:
-become indispensable, be tolerant of stupidity,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-forbearing amid jealousy, and indifferent to contumely;
-zealous, watchful, polite, without, let us
-say, sissiness. Manners, my dear boy, are appraised
-far too low in our commercial life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The grin occasioned by these injunctions died on
-Amidon&#8217;s face as he realized that the lawyer was in
-earnest; but he was very much at sea. Eaton was
-a busy man, as his generous office space and the
-variety of his paraphernalia testified; just why he
-had sought an interview, for the sole reason, apparently,
-of extracting a little information and giving
-a little advice, caused Amidon to wonder. He was
-still wondering when Eaton rose and glanced at the
-tiniest of watches, which he carried like a coin in his
-trousers pocket and always looked at as though
-surprised to find he had it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Time for me to be off; arguing a case in Pittsburg
-Monday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He opened a bag that lay beside him on the floor,
-pulled a packet from a drawer and dropped it in,
-and told Jerry he might, if he had nothing better to
-do, accompany him to the station.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-
-<small>AN ERROR OF JUDGMENT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nan</span> stood at her window watching a man turn
-out of the walk that led from the front door to the
-street. Her eyes followed him until the hedge hid
-him from sight, and then she sat huddled in the
-window-seat, breathing hard from her run upstairs.
-She went to her desk and glanced at a page of the
-pass-book of a trust company that showed the withdrawal
-on June 29 of one thousand dollars from her
-savings account. There remained a balance of sixteen
-hundred, and she verified the subtraction before
-thrusting the book into the bottom of a drawer
-under a mass of invitations she meant at some time
-to file in a book she kept as a record of her social
-activities.</p>
-
-<p>She knew that she had made a mistake, and she
-was considering the chances of discovery with a
-wildly beating heart. The man she had just closed
-the door upon had paid two calls on successive
-days. He had represented himself as the attorney
-for her brother, held on a charge of murder at
-Belleville. He had plausibly persuaded her that it
-was only fair for her to help her brother in his distress;
-that he was the victim of unfortunate circumstances,
-but that an investment of one thousand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-dollars for his defense would save her the
-humiliation of having one of her own flesh and
-blood convicted of a murder for which he was in no
-wise responsible. It had been intimated in discreet
-terms that her relationship to the prisoner could be
-hidden; it would even be denied if necessary.</p>
-
-<p>She knew now that she should not have yielded;
-that in all fairness to her foster-father she should
-have reported this demand to him. In secretly giving
-money that represented Christmas and birthday
-gifts through half a dozen years, for the defense of
-a man she had not heard of since the beginning of
-her life with the Farleys, she justified herself with
-the thought that it was kinder to her foster-father,
-in his invalid condition, to keep the matter from
-him. She experienced a sudden revulsion of feeling
-the moment the money passed from her hands in
-the ten one-hundred-dollar bills the man had
-specified.</p>
-
-<p>Farley had been seeing much of his lawyer since
-the row over the Kinney luncheon. While his
-wrath at her duplicity seemed to pass, she assumed
-that he had not forgotten his threat to disinherit
-her if she married Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>She was unwontedly attentive, spending much
-time reading to him or playing cards. She knew
-that he liked having young people about, and she
-asked to his room some of the girls and young men
-who called on her. She exercised all her arts, which
-were many, to keep him cheerful, and if he realized<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-that the change had been abrupt, and that it dated
-from his outburst against Copeland, he made no
-sign. She mustn&#8217;t stay in too much, he said; he
-didn&#8217;t want to be a burden to her.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton had called shortly after his talk with her
-on the golf links, but on a night when Farley was
-receiving the attentions of his masseur. He had
-spent the evening and had been at pains to make
-himself agreeable. Now that Copeland had been
-thrust into the background, it occurred to her that
-Eaton was worth cultivating. We all maintain more
-or less consciously a mental list of people on whom
-we feel that we may rely in difficulties; it had occurred
-to Nan that in a pinch Eaton would be a
-friend worth having.</p>
-
-<p>While it was wholly unlikely that Farley would
-ever learn of her transaction with the stranger, it
-was nevertheless a possibility that would hang over
-her as long as he lived. She sought comfort in the
-reflection that the amount was small, and that
-Farley had never stinted her; moreover, that it was
-her own money, subject to her personal check; but
-there was little consolation to be had from such
-reasoning. She must talk to some one, and before
-dinner she telephoned Eaton and asked him to
-come up.</p>
-
-<p>Farley had spent two hours with his lawyer that
-day, and from the fact that two of his old friends
-had arrived hurriedly in answer to telephonic
-summons, she judged that he had been making<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-a new will and that these men had been called to
-witness it.</p>
-
-<p>He ate his prescribed supper, grumbling at its
-slightness, and watched her consume her ampler
-meal with his usual expressions of envy at her
-appetite.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I could eat like that, I&#8217;d be well in a week;
-it&#8217;s all rubbish, this infernal diet!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But we tried disobeying the doctor the other
-night when the nurse was out, and you didn&#8217;t sleep
-a wink. You&#8217;ll have to be good until the doctor
-discharges you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be silly!&#8221; he snapped. &#8220;They know
-mighty well they can&#8217;t cure me; they&#8217;re just
-hangin&#8217; on to me as long as they can for what they
-get out of it. But I may fool &#8217;em yet! My grandfather
-lived to be ninety and died then from bein&#8217;
-kicked by a horse; and my own father got up to
-seventy-eight, and that gives me eight years more,&#8221;
-he ended defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you worked harder than they did, papa;
-you never used to come home to dinner until
-seven.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course I didn&#8217;t!&#8221; he flared. &#8220;These young
-fellows that think four hours make a day&#8217;s work
-are fools; you won&#8217;t see them gettin&#8217; very far in the
-world, spendin&#8217; their time flyin&#8217; around in automobiles
-and playin&#8217; golf all day!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, of course, some of the young men don&#8217;t
-amount to much,&#8221; she admitted conciliatingly;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-&#8220;but there are others who work like nailers. I
-suppose Mr. Eaton works as hard as any man in
-town; and he doesn&#8217;t need to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Doesn&#8217;t need to?&#8221; Farley caught her up.
-&#8220;Every honest man works; a man who doesn&#8217;t
-work&#8217;s a loafer and very likely a blackguard. John
-Eaton works because he has the brains to work
-with! He&#8217;s a rare man, John Eaton. There ain&#8217;t
-many men like John, brought up as he was, with
-everything easy; but he&#8217;s bucklin&#8217; down to hard
-work just the same, like the man he is. You say he&#8217;s
-comin&#8217; up? Well, we&#8217;ll let him do the talkin&#8217;.
-Maybe he can get a laugh out o&#8217; me; he says some
-mighty funny things&mdash;and they&#8217;re mostly true.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He began feeling about for the evening paper that
-he had dropped at his side when his tray was
-brought in.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just find the market page and read through the
-local stock-list. I noticed they&#8217;ve put a new figure
-on White River Trust; I used to be a director in
-that company. What&#8217;s that? Two hundred eighty-five?
-Let me see, that&#8217;s fifteen dollars more than it
-was last January when I bought fifty shares at two-seventy.
-She&#8217;ll go three hundred in five years. It&#8217;s
-the safest buy in town.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His long conference with his lawyer had left him
-tired and irritable. His doctor had repeatedly
-counseled Nan and the nurse to keep him quiet.
-As they seemed to be on perfectly safe ground, she
-began reading the financial comment preceding the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-general stock and bond list, and finding that he was
-interested, she followed it with the letter of a firm
-of brokers that buoyantly prophesied a strong upward
-movement in the immediate future. She
-thought he was listening attentively when he began
-murmuring half to himself:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two-eighty-five; she&#8217;s bound to go to three
-hundred. Hey? What&#8217;s that rubbish you&#8217;re
-readin&#8217;? Wall Street letter? What do I care what
-a lot of infernal gamblers say about a better tone
-in the market! Those fellows down there don&#8217;t
-produce anything; it&#8217;s the boys out here that grow
-the corn and feed the pigs that put value in the
-paper those fellows down there gamble in! Put
-that paper down; I want to talk a little business.
-How much money you got?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The question was like a blow in the face. Her
-wits danced nimbly in her effort to find an answer,
-to decide just how to meet the issue.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you mean the housekeeping money?&#8221; she
-asked faintly.</p>
-
-<p>Since Mrs. Farley&#8217;s death she had paid the household
-bills from a sum deposited to her credit the
-first of every month. Beyond asking occasionally
-how the bills were running, Farley had never questioned
-her as to her expenditures. There was a
-special allowance and a generous one for her clothing,
-and when she asked for additions to the household
-money to renew linen or pay for repairs, it was
-always readily forthcoming.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>&#8220;No, no!&#8221; he ejaculated impatiently. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
-mean the house money. How much you got in the
-trust company&mdash;the savings you&#8217;ve been gettin&#8217;
-three per cent on? You must have over two thousand
-dollars there. I been meanin&#8217; to ask you about
-that; you&#8217;ve got too much to keep at three per
-cent, and we ought to put it into securities of some
-kind. Run along and get your pass-book. If you
-haven&#8217;t got enough to buy ten shares of White
-River Trust stock, I&#8217;ll bring it up a little so you can
-have an even number.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was absorbed in mental calculations and did
-not notice the reluctance with which she rose and
-walked toward her room. The trust company required
-that books be presented when withdrawals
-were made, and she remembered the appearance
-of the teller&#8217;s notation. Farley had never looked at
-her pass-book since the day she brought it home
-and proudly displayed it. It was the unkindest fate
-that had turned his mind upon it at this juncture,
-and she canvassed all possible explanations: necessary
-expenditures in excess of her household and
-personal accounts; unusual repairs which she might
-pretend she had not wanted to trouble him with in
-his illness; or benevolences&mdash;the latter, she fancied,
-more likely to appease than the others in view of
-his own generosity to causes that appealed to him.
-She decided that a frank confession followed by an
-appeal to sentiment was the likeliest means of staying
-his anger.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>She waited twisting her hands nervously, while
-he examined the book.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s this? What&#8217;s this mean, Nan? You
-took out a thousand dollars in one lump&mdash;to-day!
-My God, what does this mean? What kind of investments
-you makin&#8217;, Nan? Yesterday you had
-with interest&mdash;lemme see&mdash;twenty-six hundred
-dollars, and now you&#8217;ve cut it down to sixteen
-hundred! What you spendin&#8217; that money for,
-girl?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, papa,&#8221; she began with the best air of
-frankness she could summon, &#8220;something very
-strange and sad has happened. I meant to tell you
-all about it just as soon as you were stronger, but
-I&#8217;m glad to tell you now, for I know you will understand
-and sympathize&mdash;as you&#8217;ve always done
-whenever I&#8217;ve had my little troubles&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He seemed to be taking this in good part until
-&#8220;troubles&#8221; caused him to sniff.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Troubles! What troubles you ever had? I
-guess there ain&#8217;t a girl in town that&#8217;s had less
-trouble than you have!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, I didn&#8217;t mean it that way, papa; I
-mean only the little things, little mistakes and slips
-I&#8217;ve made that you and mamma have always been
-kind about. No girl was ever treated as kindly as
-you have treated me. And I mean always to be
-perfectly frank with you; and I&#8217;m going to be
-now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said impatiently.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>She felt that her contemplated explanation had
-been well chosen, but she must be adroit, risking no
-word that might spoil the effect of her disclosure.</p>
-
-<p>She knelt beside him and began in a tone that
-was eloquent of humility, yet with a confidence
-that she hoped would not be lost upon him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see, papa, when you brought me home
-with you, and you and mamma began caring for
-me, I was just a poor little waif, ready for an orphan
-asylum. My father and mother would never have
-been able to do anything for me if they had lived;
-and if it hadn&#8217;t been for you and mamma, I&#8217;d never
-have known any of the things I&#8217;ve learned through
-you. I might have been a dining-room girl right
-now in some cheap hotel if you hadn&#8217;t opened your
-doors and your hearts to me. And that has made
-me appreciate my blessings&mdash;all the comforts and
-luxuries you have given me. And it has made me
-feel, more than you may imagine, for people not so
-lucky as I am&mdash;the under dog that gets kicked by
-everybody. And even when people are wicked and
-do evil things, I think we ought to think kindly of
-them and help them when we can. I know you
-and mamma always practiced that. And I&#8217;ve tried
-to; I really have!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her eyes and there were tears in them,
-that seemed to be born of a deep compassion, a
-yearning toward all the poor and erring among
-mankind. Farley was not unmoved by this demonstration;
-he shifted his legs uneasily under the light<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-pressure of her arms. Her spell upon him had never
-been more complete; she felt that she might risk
-much in the mood to which she had brought him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you know, papa, I have thought a great
-deal about my brother&mdash;who drifted away with
-the flood. I haven&#8217;t seen him since father and
-mother died. Tom is much older than I am, and the
-poor boy never had any chance. I hadn&#8217;t even
-heard of him since you brought me away until the
-other day. And he&#8217;s in trouble, very deep, serious
-trouble, papa; he&#8217;s been arrested&mdash;I&#8217;m sure not
-for anything he really did; but being poor and without
-friends it was perfectly natural for him to ask
-me to help him. I think you will agree to that.
-And he sent his lawyer to ask me for money to use
-in defending him. I meant to tell you all about it
-when you were well; I felt sure I was doing right
-and that you&#8217;d be glad to have me help him; and
-it&#8217;s all so horrible&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She felt his form grow rigid, felt his hands
-roughly push her away, as he blurted hoarsely:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Blackmail! My God, it&#8217;s blackmail&mdash;or else
-you&#8217;re lyin&#8217; to me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She rose and faced him tearfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the truth!&#8221; she declared. &#8220;He&#8217;s my
-brother&mdash;the only one of my family that&#8217;s left.
-You wouldn&#8217;t have me refuse to help&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Help him! Turn a thousand dollars of your
-savings over to a worthless whelp that&#8217;s got into
-jail! How do you know he&#8217;s your brother?&mdash;a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-man that waits all these years before he shows
-himself and then plumps down on you for a
-thousand dollars! I tell you it&#8217;s blackmail, blackmail!
-And you hide all this from me just as though
-I hadn&#8217;t any right to know what kind o&#8217; trouble
-you get mixed up in! Ain&#8217;t you got sense enough to
-know you&#8217;re touchin&#8217; bottom when you give up
-money that way? What&#8217;s he threatened you with?
-You tell me everything there is to know about this,
-and I&#8217;ll find out mighty quick whether a contemptible
-scoundrel can come to my house and
-carry away a thousand dollars!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Farley glared at her unpityingly while she told
-her story, which seemed preposterously weak when
-reduced to plain terms. She sobbingly admitted
-her fear of newspaper notoriety, her wish to shield
-him from the shame of her connection with a man
-awaiting trial for murder. There was no mercy in
-his eyes; he was outraged that she had again deceived
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Afraid o&#8217; havin&#8217; your name in the papers, were
-you? Just as though blackmailers didn&#8217;t always
-use that club on the fools they rob! And how many
-times do you think a man like that will come back,
-now he knows you&#8217;re easy&mdash;now you&#8217;ve gone into
-business with him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The maid knocked at the door and announced
-Eaton, but Farley gave no heed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Payin&#8217; blackmail! You&#8217;ve got yourself into a
-nice mess! And after all I&#8217;ve done to protect you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-and make a decent woman of you, you&#8217;re scared to
-death of havin&#8217; some of your relations go to jail&mdash;just
-as though you hadn&#8217;t turned your back on the
-whole set when we brought you here and gave you
-our name. That <i>ought</i> to have made you respectable,
-if it didn&#8217;t! Afraid of newspapers, afraid of
-jackleg lawyers! It&#8217;s the rottenest case of blackmail
-I ever heard! And here I&#8217;ve been proud to
-think that we&#8217;d pulled you out of the river mud
-and made a high-minded woman of you, that could
-stand up with any girl anywhere!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She waited listening to his deep breaths, watching
-his tremulous hands; and then without attempting
-to answer his indictment, she said
-meekly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, it was a mistake, papa. I ought to
-have told you about it; but it&#8217;s my trouble&mdash;you
-must remember that! The shame of the exposure
-would be something I&#8217;d have to bear alone; that
-was the way I looked at it; and I didn&#8217;t want you
-to have the worry of it when you were just beginning
-to get well.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His thoughts had wandered away from her,
-playing about her offense in its practical and legal
-aspects. When she ventured to remind him of
-Eaton&#8217;s presence in the house, he made no reply.
-The silence became intolerable and she stole from
-the room.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-
-<small>WELCOME CALLERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nan</span> decided to explain to Eaton that Farley&#8217;s
-illness had taken a turn for the worse and that he
-had been abusing her as a relief from his suffering.
-She was surprised to find two men in the parlor,
-the second of whom she did not at once recognize as
-Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve taken the liberty,&#8221; Eaton began, &#8220;of
-bringing Mr. Amidon along. Thought you wouldn&#8217;t
-mind, particularly as I couldn&#8217;t have come myself
-without him. He dropped in just as I was
-leaving and seemed greatly depressed; I hadn&#8217;t the
-heart to leave him. Depression is his normal state&mdash;no
-serenity, no hope, no vision!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Amidon grinned during this explanation, realizing
-that its lack of veracity was, in the circumstances,
-peculiarly Eatonesque and attributable to
-his friend&#8217;s wish to relieve Nan of embarrassment.
-They had been uncomfortable from the moment
-the maid admitted them and they became conscious
-of the discord above. Words and phrases of
-Farley&#8217;s furious arraignment had reached them and
-there was no escaping the conclusion that she had
-been the object of the castigation. Jerry, acting
-on his own impulses, would have grabbed his hat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-and bolted. It was only the demeanor of his idol,
-placidly staring at the wall, that held him back.
-The call had been suggested by Eaton as a gay social
-adventure, but it was disconcerting to find a
-girl whose good fortune had seemed so enviable
-with tears in her eyes, nervously fingering a moist
-handkerchief, and Jerry&#8217;s wits were severely taxed
-by his efforts to meet a situation without precedent
-in his experience. Once he had called on a girl whose
-father came home drunk and manifested an ambition
-to destroy the furniture and use the pieces in
-the chastisement of his daughter, and Amidon had
-enjoyed a brief, decisive engagement with the inebriated
-parent and had then put him to bed. But
-there was nothing in that incident that bore in the
-slightest degree upon the difficulties of people who
-lived in the best street in town, where, he had always
-assumed, the prosperous householders dwelt in
-peace and harmony with their fortunate families.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad to see you, both of you,&#8221; she said,
-with all the assurance she could muster. &#8220;Papa&#8217;s
-been having a bad time; you must have heard him
-talking. He&#8217;s very angry. I wish you&#8217;d go up,
-Mr. Eaton, and see if you can&#8217;t talk him into a
-better humor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you think it&#8217;s all right&mdash;&#8221; Eaton began
-dubiously; but he was amused at Nan&#8217;s cheerful
-willingness to turn her angry foster-parent over to
-him for pacification. It was like Nan!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, he&#8217;d been looking forward to seeing you,&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-she answered quite honestly. &#8220;These spells don&#8217;t
-last long; the very sight of you will cheer him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did not, however, offer to accompany him to
-Farley&#8217;s room, but discreetly left him to test the
-atmosphere for himself.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Jerry remarked, when he was alone with
-Nan, &#8220;Pittsburg put it over on New York to-day.
-Three to nothing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He gave the score with a jubilant turn to the
-&#8220;nothing,&#8221; as though Pittsburg&#8217;s success called for
-universal rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p>Nan, intent upon catching some hint of the nature
-of Eaton&#8217;s reception, merely murmured her
-mild pleasure in this news. She was satisfied, from
-the calm that reigned above, that Eaton had begun
-well, and that under the spell of his presence Farley
-would soon be restored to tranquillity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sorry Mr. Farley is having a bad time,&#8221; Jerry
-went on, thinking the invalid&#8217;s outbreak required
-at least a passing reference. &#8220;You know down at
-the store the boys still talk about him. Somebody&#8217;s
-always telling how he used to do things, and the
-funny things he used to say. When I first struck
-the plant, he used to scare me to death, sticking
-his nose in the shipping-room without notice and
-catching the boys larking. Once I had gone to the
-mat with a plumber that was looking for a gas-leak,
-and the boss came in and got us both by the
-collar and threw us down the stairs like a pair of
-old shoes. I thought I was a goner for sure when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-sent for me to come to the office that night and
-asked me who started the trouble. I told him the
-plumber said whenever he found gas-leaks in jobbing
-houses he always reckoned somebody was getting
-ready to collect the insurance. Uncle Tim&mdash;that&#8217;s
-what the boys call him&mdash;asked me if I&#8217;d hit
-him hard, and I told him I guess he&#8217;d have considerable
-business with the dentist, all right. Just for
-that he raised my wages a dollar a week! Say, can
-you beat it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He snapped his fingers and shook his head impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t that rank&mdash;just after Cecil lectured me
-all the way up here about cutting out slang! I
-promised him solemnly before we started that I
-wouldn&#8217;t say <i>say</i>; and here I&#8217;ve already done it!
-How do you learn to talk like white folks, anyhow?
-I suppose you got to be born to it; it must be like
-swimming or rowing a boat, that you learn once and
-always catch the stroke right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I shouldn&#8217;t worry about that,&#8221; replied
-Nan consolingly. &#8220;I use a good deal of slang
-myself; and at school my English teacher said
-it wasn&#8217;t such a sin if we used it as though we
-were quoting&mdash;we girls held up two fingers&mdash;so!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That sounds reasonable, all right; I must tell
-my noble knight about that. It seems sometimes
-as though I just couldn&#8217;t get a ball over the plate&mdash;there
-I go again! And Cecil warned me specially<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-against talking like a bleacher hoodlum when we
-got here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s not worth bothering about. I&#8217;m so
-glad to see you that I could cry for joy. If you
-hadn&#8217;t come when you did, I don&#8217;t know what
-might have happened.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had been trying to direct the talk into other
-channels, and her remark puzzled him. That this
-wholly charming, delightful Nan could have given
-her benefactor cause for the objurgations he had
-heard poured out upon her was unbelievable. Still,
-it was rather pleasant than otherwise to find that
-she was human, capable of tears, and it was not
-less than flattering that she should invite his
-sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he began cautiously, &#8220;I guess we all have
-our troubles. Life ain&#8217;t such an easy game. You
-think you&#8217;re sailing along all right, and suddenly
-something goes wrong and you&#8217;ve got to climb out
-and study astronomy through the bottom of the
-machine. Why,&#8221; he continued expansively, finding
-that he had her attention, &#8220;when I first went on the
-road I used to get hot when I struck some mutt
-who pulled lower prices on me or said he was over-stocked.
-But you don&#8217;t sell any goods by getting
-mad. I picked up one of these &#8216;Keep Smiling&#8217;
-cards somewhere, and when I got blue I used to
-take a sneaking look at it and put on a grin and tell
-the stony-hearted merchant the funniest story I
-could think of and prove that our figures f.o.b.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-Peanutville were cheaper, when you figured in the
-freight, than Chicago or Cincinnati prices. I&#8217;ve
-made a study of freight tariffs; I can tell you the
-freight on white elephants all the way from Siam to
-Keokuk and back to Bangkok. I&#8217;ve heard the old
-boys down at the store talk about Farley till I know
-all his curves. Farley&#8217;s all right; there&#8217;s nothing
-the matter with Uncle Tim; only&mdash;you don&#8217;t want
-to shift gears on him too quick. You&#8217;ve got to do
-it gentle-like.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan smiled forlornly, but Amidon was glad that
-he could evoke any sort of smile from her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was all my fault,&#8221; she said. And then with
-a frankness that surprised her she added: &#8220;I had
-deceived him about something and he caught me
-at it. He gave me a big blowing-up, and I deserved
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I wouldn&#8217;t say <i>that</i>; but, of course,
-playing the game straight was always a big card
-with him. I guess Cecil will smooth him down.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was surprised to find herself talking to him
-so freely; his eagerness to take her mind away from
-the unpleasant episode with Farley gave her a comforting
-sense of his native kindliness. Her heart
-warmed with liking for him as she reappraised his
-good looks, his well-scrubbed appearance of a boy
-turned out for his first party by a doting mother;
-his general air of wholesomeness and good humor.
-He had known hard knocks, she did not question,
-but the bruises were well hidden. With all his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-slanginess and volubility there was a certain high-mindedness
-about him to which, in her hunger for
-sympathy, she gave fullest value.</p>
-
-<p>He was afraid of her further confidences; afraid
-that she would disclose something she would regret
-later, and this he foresaw might embarrass their
-subsequent relations. She had been humiliated by
-Farley&#8217;s abuse, and it was not fair, he argued, to
-take advantage of her present state of mind by
-allowing her to tell more of the trouble. But he
-was not able at once to change the current of her
-thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know,&#8221; she said, sitting up straight and
-folding her hands on her knees, &#8220;I&#8217;ve been thinking
-a lot of things since I saw you out there by the river&mdash;about
-old times, and wondering whether it was
-good or bad luck that took me away from Belleville
-and brought me up here. I&#8217;d have been better off if
-I&#8217;d stayed there. I&#8217;d probably have been washing
-dishes in the Belleville hotel if the Farleys hadn&#8217;t
-picked me up, a dirty little beggar, and tried to
-make something decent out of me! I&#8217;m saying
-that to you because you know all about me. You&#8217;ve
-made your own way, and you&#8217;re a lot happier than
-I am, and you&#8217;re not under obligations to anybody;
-and here I am trying to climb a ladder my feet
-weren&#8217;t made for!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cut all that out!&#8221; he expostulated. &#8220;Just because
-Uncle Tim&#8217;s been a little fretful, you needn&#8217;t
-think everything&#8217;s gone to the bow-wows. And as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-for staying in Belleville, why, the thought of it
-gives me shivers! There ain&#8217;t any use talking about
-that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her face expressed relief at the vigor with which
-he sprang to her defense, and he plunged ahead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say, speaking of dining-room girls, there was a
-girl at that Belleville hotel that was some girl for
-sure. She was fruit to the passing eye, and a mutt
-carrying samples for a confectionery house called
-her Gladys one day, her real name being Sarah, and
-asked her how she&#8217;d like going to the movies with
-him after she got the dishes washed; and she
-landed one order of poached cold-storage eggs on
-his bosom the neatest you ever saw. Some men
-never learn how to size up character, and any fool
-could &#8217;a&#8217; told that that girl wasn&#8217;t open to a jolly
-from a sweet-goods peddler who&#8217;d never passed
-that way before. Sarah&#8217;s mother owns the hotel,
-and Sarah only helps in the dining-room Saturday
-nights to let the regular crockery-smasher off to
-punch the ivories for the Methodist choir practice.
-I was sitting next that chap and he thought he&#8217;d
-show me what a winner he was. I&#8217;m not justifying
-Sarah&#8217;s conduct, and about a half-portion of the
-golden side of that order caught me on the ear. I
-merely mention it to show you that you had better
-not think much of the life of the dining-room girl,
-which ain&#8217;t all the handbills make out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope,&#8221; remarked Nan, &#8220;that she didn&#8217;t break
-the plate!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>&#8220;No more,&#8221; he came back promptly, &#8220;than you
-could break a ten-dollar bill at a charity fair.
-That&#8217;s another thing I learned from Cecil. He got
-me to take a stroll with him through a charity
-bazaar last winter&mdash;just to protect him from the
-snares of the huntress, he said. He started in with
-ten tens and had to borrow five I was hiding from
-my creditors before we got back to the door. And
-all we carried out of the place was a pink party-bag
-Cecil handed a tramp we found freezing to death
-outside and hoping a little charity would ooze
-through the windows.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was at the fancy-work counter at the fair,&#8221;
-said Nan, &#8220;and I remember that Mr. Eaton bought
-something. I didn&#8217;t see you, though.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I noticed that you didn&#8217;t; I was plumb scared
-you might! There I go again! <i>Plumb scared!</i> Oh,
-Cecil, if you had heard me then!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was wondering just how he happened to be
-sitting in a parlor on a fashionable street, talking to
-the only girl he had ever known whose name figured
-in the society columns, quite as jauntily as he talked
-with any of the stenographers or salesgirls he knew.
-He was confident that parlor conversation among
-the favored of heaven was not of the sort he had, in
-his own phrase, been &#8220;handing out.&#8221; This thought
-gave him pause. He shook his cuffs from under the
-sleeves of his blue serge coat with a gesture he had
-caught from Eaton, and felt nervously of the knot
-of his four-in-hand.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>Nan was asking herself whether the fact that a
-young fellow of Amidon&#8217;s deficiencies could interest
-and amuse her wasn&#8217;t pretty substantial proof
-that he was the kind of young man the gods had
-designed for her companions. A year ago she would
-have resented his appearance in the house; to-night
-she had a feeling that his right to be there was as
-sound as her own. A different fling of the dice, and
-it might have been he whom the Farleys rescued
-from poverty and obscurity.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his absurdities, she was conscious of
-definite manly qualities in him. Several times she
-caught him scrutinizing her sharply, as though
-something about her puzzled him and gave him concern.
-His manners were very good&mdash;thanks, perhaps,
-to his adored Eaton; and she liked his clean,
-fresh look and good humor. After her talk with
-Eaton on the golf links, she had wondered whether
-the lawyer wasn&#8217;t making a butt of him; but she
-dismissed this now as unjust to Eaton, and as appraising
-Amidon&#8217;s intelligence at too low a figure.
-During this reverie he waited patiently for her to
-speak, imagining that her mind was still upon her
-troubles, and when the silence became prolonged
-he rallied for a fresh attack.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you&#8217;d rather read,&#8221; he remarked, &#8220;we&#8217;ll
-hang up the silence sign the way they have it in the
-library reading-room and I&#8217;ll say prayers till Cecil
-comes down.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, pardon me!&#8221; she laughed contritely. &#8220;You<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-see I am treating you as an old friend. Why don&#8217;t
-you go on and talk. You&#8217;ve had ever so many interesting
-adventures, and I need to be amused.
-Please don&#8217;t think I&#8217;m always like this; I hope
-you&#8217;ll see me some time when I&#8217;m not in the
-dumps.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should be afraid to,&#8221; he retorted boldly; and
-then feeling that Eaton would have spurned such
-banality, ejaculated: &#8220;Oh, rot! Let me scratch that
-out and say something decent. Just for instance,&#8221;&mdash;and
-his face sobered,&mdash;&#8220;I think you&#8217;re nice!
-You were perfectly grand to me that day down on
-the river. I told Cecil about that, and I could see
-it made a hit with him; it set me up with him&mdash;that
-a girl like you would be polite to a scrub
-like me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be foolish,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I&#8217;m not proud of
-myself: I&#8217;m a failure, a pretty sad fizzle, at that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She ignored his rapid phrases of protest and
-asked him how much time he spent in town.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;m likely to spend a good deal, from now
-on. The boss has been shaking things up again, and
-he called me in by telephone yesterday and changed
-my job. That&#8217;s the way with him; he won&#8217;t show
-up sometimes for six weeks, and then he gets down
-early some morning and scares everybody to death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought I was settled on the road for the rest
-of my life, and now he&#8217;s made a job for me to help
-the credit man&mdash;who doesn&#8217;t want me&mdash;and
-take country customers out to lunch. A new job<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-made just for my benefit. And all because of a
-necktie Cecil gave me. The boss saw me sporting
-it one day and asked me where I got it. I had to
-make a show-down, and he thought I was kidding
-him. You see Cecil&#8217;s about the last man he&#8217;d ever
-think of giving me presents. If I&#8217;d laid that necktie
-on any other living human being, it wouldn&#8217;t
-have cut a bit of ice; but when I said, as fresh as
-paint, &#8216;John Cecil Eaton picked that up in New
-York for me,&#8217; he laughed right out loud. &#8216;What&#8217;s
-the joke?&#8217; I asked him; and he says, &#8216;Oh, Eaton
-never gave me any haberdashery, and I&#8217;ve known
-him all my life.&#8217; And like the silly young zebra I
-am, I came back with, &#8216;Well, maybe that&#8217;s the
-reason!&#8217; You&#8217;d have thought he&#8217;d fire me for that;
-but it seemed to sort o&#8217; make us better acquainted.
-He&#8217;s the prince, all right!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had been trying, more or less honestly, to
-put Copeland out of her mind. Her knowledge of
-him as a business man had been the haziest; one
-never thought of Billy Copeland as a person preoccupied
-with business. She was startled when
-Amidon asked abruptly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, you know the boss?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was possible that Amidon had heard the gossip
-that connected her name with his employer&#8217;s, and
-she answered carelessly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes; I know Mr. Copeland.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess everybody knows William B.,&#8221; said
-Amidon. &#8220;He&#8217;s got the pep&mdash;unadulterated cayenne;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-he isn&#8217;t one of these corpses that are holding
-the town back. He&#8217;s a live wire, all right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then, realizing that he had ventured upon thin
-ice in mentioning Copeland, he came back to shore
-at once.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cecil said that this being my first call, about
-thirty minutes would do for me, so I guess it&#8217;s time
-for me to skid. He must be handing out a pretty
-good line of talk on the upper deck.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She begged him not to leave her alone, saying
-that Farley lived by rules fixed by his doctor and
-that the nurse was likely to interrupt the call at
-any minute. As he stood uncertain whether to go
-or wait for Eaton, they heard the lawyer saying
-good-bye, and in a moment he came down.</p>
-
-<p>Nan looked at him quickly, but was able to read
-nothing in his impassive face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope you two have been getting better acquainted,&#8221;
-Eaton remarked. &#8220;Mr. Farley and I
-have had a splendid talk; I never found him more
-amusing. One of the most interesting men I ever
-knew! What have you been talking about? The
-silence down here has been ominously painful!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Amidon has been telling me of the egg-throwing
-habits of the waitresses in my native town.
-Life here in the city is nothing to what it is down
-on the river. He&#8217;s almost made me homesick!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear Amidon,&#8221; said Eaton severely, &#8220;have
-you been telling that story&mdash;in a private house?
-I thought when I brought you here you&#8217;d be on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-your good behavior. I&#8217;m sorry, Nan; I apologize
-for him. Of course, he mustn&#8217;t come back; I&#8217;ll see
-to it that he doesn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be cruel!&#8221; laughed Nan. &#8220;We got on
-beautifully!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They heard Farley&#8217;s groans and mutterings as
-the nurse put him to bed, and it seemed necessary
-to refer to him again before the men left.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You won&#8217;t mind, Nan,&#8221; said Eaton, &#8220;if I say
-that Mr. Farley told me the cause of your little
-difficulty; I know the whole story. I think he probably
-won&#8217;t mention it to you again. I asked him
-not to. Just go on as though nothing had happened.
-It was unfortunate, of course; but I&#8217;ve persuaded
-him that your conduct is pardonable&mdash;really quite
-admirable from your standpoint. If anything
-further arises in regard to it, I wish you&#8217;d communicate
-with me, immediately.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Ignoring her murmurs of gratitude, he turned to
-Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Amidon, at this point we shake hands and
-move rapidly up the street. And, Nan, you needn&#8217;t
-be troubled because Mr. Amidon heard the last
-echoes of your difficulty. He&#8217;s perfectly safe,&mdash;discreet,
-wise,&mdash;though you&#8217;d never guess it. You
-may safely assume that he heard nothing. We must
-have some golf, you and I. My game&#8217;s coming up!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She went with them to the street door, where
-Amidon, in executing a final bow, nearly fell backward
-down the steps.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-
-<small>MRS. COPELAND&#8217;S GOOD FORTUNE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Now</span> that they had the car, Farley insisted that
-Nan should go to market. His wife, like all the
-thrifty housewives of the capital, had always gone
-to market, and he thought the discipline would be
-good for Nan. He liked to accompany her and
-watch the crowd while she was doing her errands.</p>
-
-<p>One Saturday, as Nan returned to the machine,
-with the chauffeur following with the basket, she
-found Fanny Copeland seated in the car beside
-Farley.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look here, Nan; I&#8217;ve picked up a surprise for
-you! We&#8217;re goin&#8217; to take Mrs. Copeland home to
-lunch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know whether you are or not,&#8221; said
-Mrs. Copeland. &#8220;This is my busiest day and I&#8217;ve
-got to catch the twelve-o&#8217;clock interurban for the
-farm.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t worry about that; we&#8217;ll send you home
-all right,&#8221; said Farley.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I&#8217;m not going to have anything to say
-about it at all!&#8221; laughed Mrs. Copeland. &#8220;All right;
-if my cows die of thirst, I&#8217;ll send you the bill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You do that, and it will be paid,&#8221; Farley assented
-cheerfully.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>&#8220;But I&#8217;ve got to stop at the bank a moment&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose,&#8221; said Nan, &#8220;you want to get rid of
-the money I just paid at your stand for two yellow-legged
-chickens&mdash;you can see the legs sticking out
-of the basket.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Copeland had failed to act upon Nan&#8217;s invitation
-to call upon her&mdash;a delinquency to which
-she referred now.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I really meant to come, but I&#8217;ve been unusually
-busy. I carry on just enough general farming to be
-a nuisance; and dairying requires eternal vigilance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s because you&#8217;ve got a standard,&#8221; said
-Farley, with his blunt praise. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got the best
-dairy in Indiana. The state inspectors have put it
-strong.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; said Mrs. Copeland lightly, &#8220;they gave
-me a better report than I deserve just for being a
-poor, lone woman!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Farley&#8217;s admiration for Mrs. Copeland was perfectly
-transparent. It was Fanny&#8217;s efficiency, her
-general competence, Nan reflected, quite as much
-as her good looks and cheerfulness, that attracted
-her foster-father. Several times lately he had
-quoted what Bill Harrington, the banker, had said
-of her&mdash;that she was the best business man in
-town. And there was also Farley&#8217;s contempt for
-Copeland, which clearly accentuated his liking for
-Billy&#8217;s former wife.</p>
-
-<p>At the bank door Farley remembered that he had
-a check to cash and asked Nan to attend to it for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-him. As Mrs. Copeland and Nan mounted the bank
-steps together, they ran into Billy Copeland emerging
-in deep preoccupation. The juxtaposition of
-the two women plainly startled him. He took off
-his hat, mumbled something, and stood staring
-after them. Then his gaze fell upon Farley, bending
-forward in the touring-car and watching him
-with his small, sharp eyes. He instantly put on his
-hat and crossed the walk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good-morning, Mr. Farley,&#8221; he said cordially,
-offering his hand. &#8220;I&#8217;m glad to see you out again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m not dead yet,&#8221; growled Farley. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-decided to hang on till spring anyhow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His tone did not encourage conversation. His
-face was twisted into a disagreeable smile that
-Copeland remembered of old, and there was a hard,
-ironic glitter in the gray eyes. Farley had witnessed
-the meeting on the bank steps with relish, and was
-glad of this opportunity to prolong his enjoyment
-of his former associate&#8217;s discomfiture.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure you&#8217;ll see many more springs, Mr.
-Farley. That&#8217;s a good machine you&#8217;ve got there.
-The fact that you&#8217;ve taken up motoring has given
-a real boost to the auto business. The agents are
-saying that if you&#8217;ve got in line there&#8217;s no reason
-for anybody to hold back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old man grunted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I had to have air; I knew all the time that was
-what I needed; these damned doctors only keep
-people in bed so they can bulldoze &#8217;em easier.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>Copeland was attempting to be friendly, but
-Farley was in no humor to meet his advances.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That last payment on the sale of my stock is
-due September first. I won&#8217;t renew it,&#8221; he said
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hadn&#8217;t asked for an extension,&#8221; Copeland
-replied coldly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right, then; that will be the end of <i>that</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Farley&#8217;s tone implied that there might be other
-matters between them that this final payment would
-still leave open.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland&#8217;s ready promise that the twenty-five
-thousand would be paid irritated Farley, who saw
-one excuse for his animosity vanishing. He leaned
-forward and pointed his finger at Copeland, who
-was backing away, anxious to be gone before his
-former wife reappeared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re ruinin&#8217; the house! You&#8217;re lettin&#8217; it go to
-hell&mdash;the business your father and I made the best
-jobbin&#8217; house in this State! You&#8217;re a drunkard and
-a gambler, but, damn your fool soul, there&#8217;s one
-thing you can&#8217;t do&mdash;you can&#8217;t marry that little
-girl o&#8217; mine! If you&#8217;ve got that up your sleeve, be
-sure there&#8217;s no money goes with her for you to
-squander! Remember that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was the busiest hour of the day and the street
-was thronged. Pedestrians turned and stared curiously.
-Copeland raged inwardly at his stupidity
-in giving Farley a chance to abuse him publicly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re very unjust to me,&#8221; he said hotly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve known Nan ever since she was a child and
-never had any but a friendly feeling for her. I
-haven&#8217;t seen her for weeks. Now that I know how
-you feel toward me, I have no intention of seeing
-her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess you won&#8217;t see her!&#8221; Farley snorted.
-&#8220;Not unless you mean to make her pay for it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Copeland and Nan appeared at the bank
-entrance at this moment and witnessed the end of
-the colloquy. Copeland lifted his hat to Farley and
-walked rapidly away without glancing at them.</p>
-
-<p>Farley became cheerful immediately, as he usually
-did after an explosion. This opportunity for
-laying the lash across Billy Copeland&#8217;s shoulders
-had afforded him a welcome diversion; and the fact
-that Copeland had seen his former wife in Nan&#8217;s
-company tickled his sardonic humor. He made no
-reference to Copeland, but began speaking of a
-new office building farther down the street. It was
-apparent that neither Nan nor Fanny shared his
-joy in the encounter and they attacked the architecture
-of the new building to hide their discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>Nan appeared the more self-conscious. She was
-thinking of Billy. He had turned away from the
-machine with a crestfallen air which told her quite
-plainly that Farley had been giving him a piece
-of his mind. And Nan resented this; Farley had
-no right to abuse Billy on her account.</p>
-
-<p>When they reached the house she took Fanny<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-upstairs. If the glimpse of Copeland on the bank
-steps had troubled Mrs. Copeland she made no
-sign. Her deft touches with the comb and brush,
-as she glanced in the mirror, her despairing comments
-upon the state of her complexion, which, she
-averred, the summer suns had ruined; her enthusiasm
-over Nan&#8217;s silk waist, which was just the
-thing she had sought without avail in all the shops
-in town,&mdash;all served to stamp her as wholly
-human.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But clothes! I hardly have time to think of
-them; they&#8217;re an enormous bother. And I wear
-the shoes of a peasant woman when I come to town,
-for I have to cut across the fields when I leave the
-interurban and I can&#8217;t do that in pumps! You
-see&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The shoes really were very neat ones, though a
-trifle heavy for indoors. Nan instantly brought her
-shiniest pumps, dropped upon the floor and substituted
-them for Fanny&#8217;s walking-shoes. It flashed
-through her mind that Fanny Copeland inspired
-just such acts.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have the slim foot of the aristocrat,&#8221; observed
-Fanny. And then with a wistful smile she
-leaned toward the girl and asked, &#8220;Do you mind
-if I call you Nan?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan was touched by the tone and manner of
-her request. Of course there was no objection!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I always knew I should like you,&#8221; said Fanny.
-&#8220;Of course, I haven&#8217;t seen much of you lately, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-I hear of you from a very ardent admirer: John
-Eaton talks of you eloquently, and to interest John
-Eaton is a real achievement! I&#8217;m afraid I bore him
-to death!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t believe it; he never lets himself be
-bored; but like everybody else, I&#8217;m never quite sure
-I understand him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I tell him that&#8217;s one of his poses&mdash;baffling
-people. He surrounds himself with mystery, but
-pretends that he doesn&#8217;t. If he were a gossip
-he&#8217;d be horrible, for he knows everything about
-everybody&mdash;and knows it first!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s the kindest of mortals,&#8221; Nan observed.
-&#8220;He&#8217;s always doing nice things for people, but he
-has to do them in his own peculiar way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, John has the spirit of the true philanthropist;
-his right hand never knows, you know&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s a puzzle to the people he&#8217;s kindest to,
-sometimes, I imagine,&#8221; said Nan.</p>
-
-<p>She laughed as she thought of Amidon, and Fanny
-appealed for illumination as to what amused her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I was thinking of his prot&eacute;g&eacute;&mdash;a young
-man named Amidon. He and I were kids together,
-back in my prehistoric days. He never had any advantages&mdash;if
-you can say that of a boy who&#8217;s
-born with a keen wit and a sense of humor. He
-does something at the Copeland-Farley store&mdash;went
-in as errand boy before papa left. They had
-him on the road for a while, but he&#8217;s in the office
-now. Mr. Eaton has taken a great shine to him and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-Jerry imitates him killingly. That fine abstracted
-air of Mr. Eaton&#8217;s he&#8217;s got nearly perfect; and he
-does the mysterious pretty well, too. But he&#8217;s
-most delicious when he forgets to Eatonize himself
-and is just natural. He&#8217;s quite short&mdash;which
-makes him all the funnier&mdash;and he wears tall,
-white-wing collars <i>&agrave; la</i> Eaton.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me more!&#8221; said Fanny. &#8220;How old is the
-paragon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About twenty-five, I should say, figuring with
-my own age as a basis. He looked like a big boy
-to me in my river days. Mr. Eaton has undertaken
-his social and mental rehabilitation and the effects
-are amazing. They came to the house together to
-call, and I&#8217;ve rarely been more entertained than by
-Jerry while his good angel was upstairs talking to
-papa. He&#8217;s trying to avoid any show of emotion
-just like his noble example, but once in a while he
-forgets himself and grins deliciously. After a round
-of high-brow talk, he drops into reminiscence and
-tells the most killing stories of the odd characters
-he&#8217;s met in his travels with the sample-case. It
-can&#8217;t be possible that Mr. Eaton hasn&#8217;t introduced
-him to you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He hasn&#8217;t, and I&#8217;m going to complain about
-it bitterly,&#8221; said Mrs. Copeland, amused by Nan&#8217;s
-enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You should, for Jerry is a nice boy, and very
-wise and kind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The only one of his benefactions he ever confided<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-to me was the case of a girl&mdash;the daughter of
-an old friend who had fallen on evil times. He
-wanted to send her to college, and I became the
-visible instrument, so he needn&#8217;t appear in the
-matter himself. The girl graduated last year and,
-like a fraud, I had to go down to Vassar and pose
-as her good angel. She&#8217;s a great success and is to
-teach somewhere, I think. But&mdash;I shouldn&#8217;t be
-telling you this!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s quite safe! I value his friendship too
-much to do anything to displease him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, things like that ought to be told,&#8221; remarked
-Fanny reflectively; &#8220;particularly when
-some people think John Eaton cold and selfish.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Luncheon interrupted these confidences. Farley
-had not been to the dining-room for several months
-and he made much of the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is a celebration for me, too,&#8221; said Fanny.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve just had a piece of good fortune. Nobody
-knows of it yet; you&#8217;re the first people I&#8217;ve told!
-You know I haven&#8217;t many friends to confide in.
-An aunt of mine has just died and left me some
-money. In fact, there&#8217;s a great deal of it; I&#8217;m
-richer than I ever expected to be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good! Good!&#8221; Farley ejaculated, interested
-and pleased.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s fine,&#8221; said Nan; &#8220;and it&#8217;s nice of you to
-tell us about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan was afraid that Farley would demand the
-amount of the legacy, but evidently Fanny knew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-he would be curious as to all the details, and she
-went on to explain that it was her mother&#8217;s sister,
-the last of the family, who had died recently in
-Ohio and left her all her property.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have visited her every year or two since I
-was a child and knew her very well, but I never had
-any idea she meant to do this. It will take some
-time to settle it up, but there&#8217;s as much as two
-hundred thousand dollars in sight&mdash;maybe fifty
-more. She was a dear old woman; I&#8217;m so ashamed
-of myself that I wasn&#8217;t kinder to her, but she was
-difficult to handle&mdash;hadn&#8217;t left home for years,
-though she used to write to me two or three times
-a year. So there! That&#8217;s why I&#8217;m running into the
-bank these days, to ask Mr. Harrington about
-investments.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you take his advice,&#8221; said Farley emphatically,
-&#8220;you&#8217;ll never lose any of that money!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then what&#8217;s to become of the farm?&#8221; asked
-Nan.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I shall run it just the same. I&#8217;d rather lose
-that legacy than give it up. An unattached woman
-like me must have something to amuse herself
-with.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a lot o&#8217; money; a whole lot o&#8217; money,&#8221;
-said Farley; &#8220;and I&#8217;m mighty glad you&#8217;ve got it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan saw a gleam in his eye and a covert smile
-playing about his lips. He chuckled softly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two hundred; two hundred fifty; that&#8217;s a
-whole lot o&#8217; money; and you don&#8217;t want to let any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-of these sharks around here get it away from you;
-they&#8217;ll be after you all right. But I guess you&#8217;ll
-know how to handle &#8217;em,&#8221; he added with satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>When Fanny was ready to go he called for his
-car and he and Nan drove home with her.</p>
-
-<p>That night, after the nurse had put him to bed,
-Nan heard an unusual sound from his room. She
-crossed the hall and stood in the doorway a moment.
-He was muttering to himself and chuckling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Picked up two hundred and fifty thousand
-dollars, just like findin&#8217; it! Turned her out; got rid
-of her! Well, that&#8217;s a hell of a joke on you, Billy
-Copeland!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-
-<small>A NARROW ESCAPE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> a rainy evening in mid-September, a salesman
-for an Eastern chemical firm invited Amidon
-to join him in a game of billiards at the Whitcomb
-House. As Russell Kirby was one of the stars of
-the traveling fraternity, Jerry was greatly honored
-by this attention. Moreover, when he hung up
-his coat in the billiard room and rolled up the
-sleeves of his silk shirt, the traveler&#8217;s arms proved to
-be thoroughly tanned&mdash;and this impressed Jerry
-as indicating that Kirby indulged in the aristocratic
-game of golf and did not allow the cares of business
-to interfere with his lawful amusements. Kirby
-played very good billiards, and did not twist his
-cigar into the corner of his mouth when he made
-his shots, as most of Jerry&#8217;s friends did.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The lid&#8217;s on a little looser in your town than
-it was last winter,&#8221; remarked the envied one,
-sipping a ricky. &#8220;I suppose by following our noses
-we could strike a pretty stiff game without going
-out into the wet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, there&#8217;s always more or less poker around
-here,&#8221; replied Jerry, unwilling to appear ignorant
-of the moral conditions of his own city.</p>
-
-<p>He chalked his cue and watched Kirby achieve
-a difficult shot. Billiards afforded Jerry a fine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-exercise for his philosophic temper, steady hand,
-and calculating eye. He had developed a high degree
-of proficiency with the cue in the Criterion
-Billiard Parlors. It was a grief to him that in trying
-to live up to Eaton he had felt called upon to
-desert the Criterion, where the admiration of lesser
-lights had been dear to his soul.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Big Rodney Sykes is here,&#8221; Kirby remarked
-carelessly. &#8220;They chased him out of Chicago that
-last time they had a moral upheaval.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry was chagrined that he knew nothing of
-Big Rodney Sykes, presumably a gambler of
-established reputation. To be a high-salaried
-traveler, with a flexible expense account, was to be
-in touch with the inner life of all great cities.
-Jerry&#8217;s envy deepened; it availed nothing that he
-could beat this sophisticated being at billiards.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather tough about that boss of yours,&#8221; Kirby
-continued. &#8220;It&#8217;s fellows of his size that Big Rodney
-goes after. A gentleman&#8217;s game and no stopping
-payment of checks the next morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, the boss is no squab; I guess he&#8217;s sat in
-with as keen sharps as Sykes and got out with
-carfare home,&#8221; replied Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course; but on a hot night like this many a
-good man feels the need of a little relaxation. It
-just happened&#8221;&mdash;he prolonged the deliberation
-of his aim to intensify Jerry&#8217;s curiosity&mdash;&#8220;happened
-I saw Copeland wandering toward Sykes&#8217;s
-room as I was coming down.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>&#8220;I guess the boss knows a thing or two,&#8221; replied
-Jerry easily, in a tone that implied unlimited
-confidence in Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>He was consumed with indignation that Kirby
-should be able to tell him anything about Copeland.
-It had been done, too, with a neatness of insinuation
-that was galling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I guess,&#8221; persisted Kirby, &#8220;you miss old
-Uncle Tim at the store. I used to have many a
-jolly row with Uncle Tim; he was one man it
-never paid to fool with; but he was all right&mdash;just
-about as clean-cut and straight a man as I
-ever fought discounts with. Uncle Tim was a merchant,&#8221;
-he ended impressively as he bent over the
-table.</p>
-
-<p>In calling Farley a merchant with this air of
-finality he implied very clearly that William B.
-Copeland was something quite different, and Jerry
-resented this imputation as a slur upon his house.
-Much as he admired Kirby&#8217;s clothes and metropolitan
-ways, he hated him cordially for thus speaking
-of Copeland, who was one of Kirby&#8217;s important
-customers. Mere defeat was no adequate punishment
-for Kirby; Jerry proceeded to make a &#8220;run&#8221;
-that attracted the admiring attention of players
-at neighboring tables and precluded further discussion
-of Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>At midnight Kirby said he had had all the billiards
-he wanted and invited Jerry to his room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I always like to tell people about their own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-town and I&#8217;ll show you where they&#8217;re piling up
-the chips,&#8221; he remarked.</p>
-
-<p>His room was opposite the elevator on the
-seventh floor, and having unlocked his door he
-piloted Jerry round a corner and indicated three
-rooms which he said were given over to gambling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you give the right number of taps that first
-door will open,&#8221; said Kirby, &#8220;but as an old friend
-I warn you to keep out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As they were turning away a telephone tinkled
-faintly in one of the rooms and they heard voices
-raised excitedly, accompanied by the bang of over-turned
-furniture.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ve got a tip the cops are coming or there&#8217;s
-a fight,&#8221; said Kirby. &#8220;Here&#8217;s where we fade!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He led the way quickly back to his room, dragged
-Jerry in, and shut the door.</p>
-
-<p>While the sounds of hasty flight continued, the
-elevator discharged half a dozen men and they
-heard the hotel manager protesting to the police
-that it was an outrage; that the rooms they were
-raiding had been taken by strangers, and that if
-there was anything wrong he wasn&#8217;t responsible.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later the return of the prisoners
-to the elevator announced the success of the raid.
-Several of them were protesting loudly against
-riding to the police station in a patrol wagon; others
-were taking the whole matter as a joke. Above the
-confusion Copeland&#8217;s voice rose drunkenly in denunciation
-of his arrest.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>Kirby, anxious not to be identified even remotely
-with the sinners who had been caught in
-their transgressions, had taken off his coat and
-was lighting a cigar.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Try one of these, Amidon. We&#8217;d better sit tight
-until the cops get out of the building. Nice town
-this! Gambling in respectable hotels. No doubt
-all those fellows are leading citizens, including&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this instant the electric lights were extinguished.
-The darkness continued and Jerry opened
-the door and stuck his head out. Half the prisoners
-had been sent down and the remainder were waiting
-for the elevator to return. They growled dismally
-and somebody said it was a good chance to give the
-cops the slip.</p>
-
-<p>One of the policemen struck a match and held it
-up to light the entrance to the car. Jerry&#8217;s eyes
-ran quickly over the group facing the shaft, but
-he recognized none of the men. As the match died
-out a prolonged, weary sigh near at hand caused
-him to start. Some one was leaning against the
-wall close beside him. He reached out, caught the
-man by the arm, drew him into the room and softly
-closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>Kirby demanded to know what Amidon had
-done, and during the whispered explanation the
-globes began to brighten. Jerry jumped for the
-switch and snapped off the lights. He climbed on a
-chair and surveyed the hall through the transom.
-The last officer was stepping into the elevator, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-some one demanded to know what had become of
-Billy Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, he went down in the first load,&#8221; replied
-another voice.</p>
-
-<p>Then the door clanged and the hall was quiet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Turn on the lights,&#8221; commanded Kirby.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland sat on the bed, staring at them foolishly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wherenell am I?&#8221; he asked blinking. &#8220;Thiss
-jail or somebody&#8217;s parlor?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your nerve, young man,&#8221; Kirby remarked to
-Jerry, &#8220;leaves nothing to be desired. I suppose
-it didn&#8217;t occur to you that this is my room?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that will be all right. If the cops ain&#8217;t back
-here in ten minutes, they&#8217;ll probably think he&#8217;s
-skipped; and they won&#8217;t waste time looking for
-him; they know they can pick him up to-morrow,
-easy enough.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Zhat you, Kirby, good old boy; right off Broadway!
-Kind of you, &#8217;m sure. Good boy, Amidon;
-wouldn&#8217;t let your boss get hauled off in patrol wagon.
-Raise wages for that; &#8217;preciate it; mos&#8217; grateful!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; but please stop talking,&#8221; Jerry admonished.
-&#8220;We&#8217;ll all get pinched if the cops find
-out you&#8217;re here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Los&#8217; five thous; five thou-sand dollars; hons&#8217;
-to God I did!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland&#8217;s face was aflame from drink and the
-heat, and unable to comprehend what had happened
-to him he tumbled over on the bed. Kirby<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-eyed him contemptuously and turned upon Amidon
-angrily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is a nice mess of cats! Would you mind
-telling me what you&#8217;re going to do with our fallen
-brother? Please remember that reputation&#8217;s my
-only asset, and if I get arrested my house might
-not pass it off as a little joke!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, cheer up and be a good sport! I know the
-boys at the desk downstairs and I&#8217;m going to tell
-&#8217;em you&#8217;ve cleared out to make way for an old
-comrade of the Army of the Potomac. I&#8217;ll have
-you moved, and then I&#8217;ll put the boss to bed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anything to please you,&#8221; said Kirby ironically,
-as Copeland began to snore. &#8220;Your boss is lying on
-my coat and I hope you&#8217;ll have the decency to pay
-for pressing it!&#8221;...</p>
-
-<p>At ten the next morning Amidon called at the
-Whitcomb and found Copeland half dressed. He
-had telephoned to his house for toilet articles and
-clean linen and presented the fresh and chastened
-appearance with which he always emerged from his
-sprees.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought I&#8217;d drop in,&#8221; said Jerry, seating himself
-in the window.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Been to the store?&#8221; asked Copeland from before
-the mirror where he was sticking a gold safety pin
-through the ends of a silk collar.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I took a look in.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Any genial policeman lying in wait for me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing doing! Everything&#8217;s all fixed.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>&#8220;Fixed? How fixed?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I know the way around the pump at the
-police court, and I had a bum lawyer who hangs
-out there make the right sign to the judge. You
-owe me forty-seven dollars&mdash;that includes ten
-for the lawyer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cheap at the price,&#8221; remarked Copeland. He
-had taken a check book from the table and was
-frowningly inspecting the last stub.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t come to collect,&#8221; said Jerry. &#8220;Any
-old time will do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did the rest of the boys come out?&#8221; asked
-Copeland, throwing the book down impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, the big sneeze from Chicago got a heavy
-soaking. The judge took it out on him for the rest
-of you. Wouldn&#8217;t do, of course, to send prominent
-business men to the work-house. All fined under
-assumed names.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather expensive evening for me. Much
-obliged to you just the same for saving me a ride
-in the wagon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that was easy,&#8221; said Jerry. &#8220;By the way,
-I guess we&#8217;d better slip my lawyer friend another
-ten. He dug this up for you&mdash;no questions, no
-fuss; all on the dead quiet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He drew from his trousers pocket a crumpled bit
-of paper and handed it to Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry was not without his sense of the dramatic.
-He rolled a cigarette and watched Copeland out of
-the corner of his eye.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>&#8220;See here, Jerry,&#8221; said Copeland quickly, &#8220;I don&#8217;t
-know about this. If I gave that check, and I know
-I did, I&#8217;ve got to stand by it. It&#8217;s not square&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I wouldn&#8217;t burst out crying about that!&#8221;
-remarked Jerry easily. &#8220;Five thousand is some
-money, and the Chicago shark was glad enough to
-have the check disappear from the police safe.
-You were stewed when you wrote the check; and
-besides, it was a crooked game. Forget it; that&#8217;s
-all!&#8221; He stretched himself and yawned. &#8220;Can I
-do anything for you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It seems to me,&#8221; said Copeland, &#8220;that you&#8217;ve
-done about enough for me for one day,&mdash;kept
-me out of jail and then saved me five thousand
-dollars!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We do what we can,&#8221; replied Jerry. &#8220;Keep us
-posted and when in doubt make the high sign.
-You&#8217;d better keep mum about the check. The
-deputy prosecutor&#8217;s a friend of mine and I don&#8217;t
-want to get him into trouble.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It makes me feel a little better about that check
-to know that it wasn&#8217;t good when I gave it,&#8221;
-remarked Copeland dryly. &#8220;I&#8217;ve only got about
-a hundred in bank according to my stubs.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was just thinking,&#8221; said Jerry, playing with
-the curtain cord, &#8220;as I came down from the police
-court, that five thousand per night swells the overhead
-considerable. This isn&#8217;t a kick; I just mention
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland paused in the act of drawing on his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-coat to bestow a searching glance upon his employee.
-He shook himself into the coat and rested
-his hand on the brass bedpost.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the odds?&#8221; he asked harshly. &#8220;I&#8217;m
-undoubtedly going to hell and a thousand or two,
-here and there&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why are you going?&#8221; asked Jerry, tying a loop
-in the curtain cord.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland was not prepared for this; he didn&#8217;t at
-once correlate Amidon&#8217;s question with his own
-remark that had inspired it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, the devil!&#8221; he ejaculated impatiently; and
-then he smiled ruefully as he realized that there
-was a certain appositeness in his rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p>The relations of employer and employee had
-been modified by the incidents of the night and
-morning. Copeland imagined that he was something
-of a hero to his employees, and that Jerry
-probably viewed the night&#8217;s escapade as one of the
-privileges enjoyed by the more favored social class.
-Possibly in his own way Amidon was guilty of
-reprehensible dissipations and therefore disposed
-to be tolerant of other men&#8217;s shortcomings. At
-any rate, the young fellow had got him out of a bad
-scrape, and he meant to do something for him to
-show his gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, a man&#8217;s got to let loose occasionally,&#8221; he
-said, as he began collecting his toilet articles.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose he has,&#8221; Amidon admitted without
-enthusiasm.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>&#8220;I guess I ought to cut out these midnight
-parties and get down to business,&#8221; said Copeland,
-as though recent history called for some such declaration
-of his intentions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it&#8217;s up to you,&#8221; Jerry replied. &#8220;You can
-let &#8217;er slide if you want to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean that the house is sliding already?&#8221;
-Copeland asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s almost worse than a slide, if you want to
-know. But I didn&#8217;t come here to talk about that.
-There&#8217;s plenty of others can tell you more about
-the business than I can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But they don&#8217;t,&#8221; said Copeland, frowning; &#8220;I
-suppose&mdash;I suppose maybe they&#8217;re afraid to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess that&#8217;s right, too,&#8221; Jerry affirmed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;re in a position to learn what&#8217;s going
-on. I want to push you ahead. I hope you understand
-that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you treat me all right,&#8221; said Jerry, but in a
-tone that Copeland didn&#8217;t find cheering.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I mean to treat everybody right at the store,&#8221;
-declared Copeland virtuously. &#8220;If any of the boys
-have a kick I want them to come straight to me
-with it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry laid his hand on the door ready for flight
-and regarded Copeland soberly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The only kick&#8217;s on you, if you can bear to hear
-it. Everybody around the place knows you&#8217;re not
-on the job; every drayman in the district knows
-you&#8217;re out with a paintbrush every night, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-solid men around town are saying it&#8217;s only a matter
-of time till you go broke. And the men down
-at the store are sore about it; it means that one of
-these mornings there&#8217;ll be a new shift and they&#8217;re
-likely to be out of a job. Some of them have been
-there a long time, and they don&#8217;t like to see the
-old business breaking down. And some of them, I
-guess, sort o&#8217; like you and hate to see you slipping
-over the edge.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>During this speech Copeland stood with his
-cigarette-case half opened in his hand, looking
-hard at the top button on Amidon&#8217;s coat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said, thrusting a cigarette into his
-mouth and tilting it upwards with his lips while he
-felt for a match, &#8220;go on and hand me the rest of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess that&#8217;s about all from me,&#8221; replied Jerry,
-&#8220;except if you want to bounce me right now, go
-ahead, only&mdash;let&#8217;s don&#8217;t have any hard feeling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland made no reply, and Jerry went out
-and closed the door. Then in a moment he opened
-it, saw Copeland staring out across the roofs in
-deep preoccupation, and remarked, deferentially:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll carry your bag down, sir. Shall I order a
-taxi?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind,&#8221; said Copeland, with affected
-carelessness; &#8220;I&#8217;ll attend to it. I&#8217;m going to the
-store.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-
-<small>THE AMBITIONS OF MR. AMIDON</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">No</span> other branch of commerce is as fascinating
-as the wholesale drug business. A drug stock embraces
-ten thousand small items, and the remote
-fastnesses of the earth are raked to supply its necessities.
-The warehouses are redolent of countless
-scents that pique a healthy curiosity; poppy and
-mandragora and all the drowsy sirups of the world
-are enlisted in its catalogue. How superior to the
-handling of the grosser commodities of the wholesale
-grocery line! How infinitely more delightful
-than distributing clanging hardware or scattering
-broadcast the unresponsive units of the dry-goods
-trade!</p>
-
-<p>Such, at least, were Jerry Amidon&#8217;s opinions.
-Jerry knew his way around the store&mdash;literally.
-He could find the asaf&#339;tida without sniffing his
-way to it. He had acquired a working knowledge
-of the pharmacop&#339;ia, and under Eaton&#8217;s guidance
-he purchased a Latin grammar and a dictionary,
-over which he labored diligently in the midnight
-hours. His curiosity was insatiable; he wanted to
-know things!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Assistant to the President&#8221; was the title bestowed
-upon him by his fellow employees. By imperceptible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-degrees he had grown into a confidential
-relationship with Copeland that puzzled the whole
-establishment. The latest shifts had been unusually
-productive of friction, and Amidon had found
-his new position under the credit man wholly uncomfortable.
-Having asserted his authority, Copeland
-gave no heed to the results. The credit man
-was an old employee, very jealous of his prerogatives,
-and he had told Jerry in blunt terms that he
-had nothing for him to do. The auditor thereupon
-pounced upon him and set him to work checking
-invoices.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry wrote a good hand and proved apt, and as
-a result of this contact with the office he absorbed
-a vast amount of information pertaining to the
-business to which, strictly speaking, he was not
-entitled. Copeland, seeing him perched on a stool
-in the counting-room, asked him what he was doing
-there, and when Jerry replied that he was just
-helping out for a day or two, Copeland remarked
-ironically that he guessed he&#8217;d better stay there;
-that he&#8217;d been thinking for some time that fresh
-blood was needed in that department.</p>
-
-<p>No one else entered Copeland&#8217;s office with so
-much assurance. If Jerry hadn&#8217;t been so amiable,
-so willing to help any one who called for his assistance,
-he would have been cordially hated; but
-Jerry was a likable fellow. He prided himself on
-keeping cheerful on blue Mondays when everybody
-else about the place was in the doldrums.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>The auditor sent him to the bank frequently,
-and he experienced a pleasurable sensation in walking
-briskly across the lobby of the Western National.
-He knew many of the clerks he saw immured
-in the cages; some of them were members
-of the Little Ripple Club, and he made a point of
-finding out just what they did, and incidentally the
-amount of their salaries, which seemed disgracefully
-inadequate; he was doing quite as well himself.
-He liked to linger in the bank lobby and talk
-to people. He had hit on the happy expedient of
-speaking to men whether he knew them or not; he
-argued that in time they would ask who he was,
-which was a surer way of impressing himself upon
-them than through formal introductions.</p>
-
-<p>Ambition stirred in the bosom of Jeremiah A.
-Amidon. He lavished his admiration upon the
-&#8220;big&#8221; men of the &#8220;street&#8221;&mdash;in the main they
-were hard workers, and he was pretty well persuaded
-of the virtue and reward of industry.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly all the leading manufacturers and merchants
-were stockholders in banks. The fact that
-Copeland enjoyed no such distinction troubled
-Jerry. He studied the stock-list, hoping to see
-something some day that he could buy.</p>
-
-<p>The local stock exchange consisted of three gentlemen
-calling themselves brokers. Whenever they
-met by chance on the steps of the Western National
-or in a trolley going home, the exchange was
-in session. The &#8220;list&#8221; must be kept active, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-when there were no transfers the brokers could
-trade a few shares with one another to establish a
-price. These agitations of the local bourse would
-be duly reported on the market page of the newspapers&mdash;all
-but the number of shares changing
-hands! &#8220;A better tone prevailing&#8221;; &#8220;brisk demand
-for tractions&#8221;; &#8220;lively trading in industrials&#8221;
-would soberly greet the eye of students of
-local financial conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Foreman, one of the brokers, who had been
-haunting the store for several days looking for
-Copeland, accosted Jerry in the bank one afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your boss doesn&#8217;t sit on his job much,&#8221; Foreman
-remarked. &#8220;I&#8217;m getting tired chasing him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s off motoring with Kinney&mdash;they&#8217;re
-looking for a place to start another cement mill.
-Why don&#8217;t you call for me when you honor the
-house?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, my business with Copeland is too trifling
-to trouble you about,&#8221; the broker remarked ironically.
-&#8220;You haven&#8217;t any money, have you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry bent his ear to catch the jingle of coin inside
-the cages.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, if you want to borrow, Copeland-Farley
-ain&#8217;t a pawnshop.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess C-F doesn&#8217;t <i>lend</i> much; it&#8217;s the biggest
-borrower on the street,&#8221; said Foreman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Every big jobber is a heavy borrower. It&#8217;s a
-part of the game,&#8221; Jerry replied. Foreman&#8217;s anxiety<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-to find Copeland had piqued his curiosity. &#8220;Of
-course, if your business with the boss can wait&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a trifling matter, that will probably annoy
-him when I mention it. I&#8217;ve got twenty shares of
-Copeland-Farley for sale. I thought he might want
-to pick &#8217;em up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Must be a mistake,&#8221; replied Jerry indifferently;
-&#8220;there&#8217;s never any of our stock for sale.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I suppose you&#8217;ve got most of it yourself
-downstairs in the safety vault!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come through and pour the dope!&#8221; said Jerry,
-grinning cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve got &#8217;em all right. An old party named
-Reynolds up at Fort Wayne had twenty shares
-and his executors wrote me that Copeland ought to
-have a chance to buy &#8217;em. I&#8217;ve worn myself out
-trying to find your boss. I don&#8217;t know who&#8217;d buy
-if he didn&#8217;t. The things you hear about your house
-are a little bit scary: trade falling off; head of the
-company drinking, gambling, monkeying with outside
-things, like Kinney cement&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, well!&#8221; Jerry chirruped; &#8220;you&#8217;re just
-chuck full of sad tidings.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, you know it all; but maybe you
-don&#8217;t know that Corbin &amp; Eichberg are cutting into
-your business. There will be an involuntary consolidation
-one of these days and Copeland-Farley
-will be painted off the sign.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re the best little booster I&#8217;ve heard sing
-this week! What&#8217;ll you take for the stock?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>&#8220;Par.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sold! Bring your papers here to-morrow at two
-and I&#8217;ll give you the money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry had heard some one say that it was what
-you can do without money that proves your mettle
-in business. He had one thousand dollars, that represented
-the savings of his lifetime. The second
-thousand necessary to complete the purchase he
-borrowed of Eaton&mdash;who made the advance not
-without much questioning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very careless on Copeland&#8217;s part, but to be
-expected of a man who takes only a fitful interest
-in his business. You have about one thousand
-dollars! All right; I&#8217;ll lend you what you need to
-buy the stock. But keep this to yourself; don&#8217;t
-turn in the old certificate for a new one&mdash;not at
-present. Wait and see what happens. Copeland
-needs discipline, and he will probably get it. Kinney
-and Copeland seeing much of each other?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, they&#8217;re off on a business trip together.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I mean social affairs. They haven&#8217;t been driving
-peaceful citizens away from the Country Club
-by their cork-popping quite so much, have they?
-I thought not; that&#8217;s good. The general reform
-wave may hit them yet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the dead, I think Copeland&#8217;s trying to cut
-out the early morning parties,&#8221; said Jerry earnestly.
-&#8220;He&#8217;s taken a brace.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If he doesn&#8217;t want to die in the poorhouse at
-the early age of fifty, he&#8217;d better!&#8221; Eaton brushed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-an imaginary speck off his cuff as he asked, &#8220;How
-much did your boss give you of the five thousand
-you got back for him out of that poker game?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Amidon fidgeted and colored deeply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just another of these fairy stories!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your attempt to feign ignorance is laudable,
-Amidon. But my information is exact. Rather
-neat, particularly lifting him right out of the patrol
-wagon, so to speak. And recovering the check;
-creditable to your tact&mdash;highly so!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry grinned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, it was dead easy! You see, after helping the
-gang lick you in the primaries last May, they
-couldn&#8217;t go back on me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you turned your influence to nobler use,
-this would be a very different world! Let us go
-back to that Corrigan matter&mdash;you remember?&#8221;
-asked Eaton, filling his pipe. &#8220;You probably noticed
-that the gentleman who was arrested for
-murder down there was duly convicted. His lawyer
-didn&#8217;t do him much good. No wonder! I never saw
-a case more miserably handled&mdash;stupid beyond
-words.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You wasn&#8217;t down there!&#8221; exclaimed Jerry,
-sitting up straight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Were</i>, not <i>was</i>, Amidon! I should think you&#8217;d
-know I&#8217;d been in the wilderness from my emaciated
-appearance. Believe I did say I was going
-to Pittsburg, but I took the wrong train. Met some
-nice chaps while I was down there,&mdash;one or two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-friends of yours, road agents, pirates, commercial
-travelers, drummers,&mdash;I beg your pardon!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry was moved to despair. He would never
-be able to surround himself with the mystery or
-practice the secrecy that he found so fascinating
-in Eaton. He had not imagined that the lawyer
-would bother himself further about Corrigan. He
-had read of the conviction without emotion, but it
-would never have occurred to him that a man so
-busy as Eaton or so devoted to the comforts of life
-would spend three days in Belleville merely to
-watch the trial of a man in whom he had only the
-remotest interest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They soaked him for manslaughter. I guess he
-got off easy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He did, indeed,&#8221; replied Eaton. &#8220;When did
-you see Nan last?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been there once since you took me, and the
-old man sent down word he wanted to see me. He
-was feeling good and lit into me about the store.
-Wanted to know about everything. Some of the
-fellows Copeland has kicked out have been up crying
-on Farley&#8217;s doorstep and he asked me how the
-boss came to let them go. He sent Nan out of the
-room so he could cuss better. He&#8217;s sure some
-cusser!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Amidon!&#8221; Eaton beat his knuckles on the desk
-sharply, &#8220;remember you are speaking English!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d better give me up,&#8221; moaned Jerry, crestfallen.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>&#8220;You are doing well. With patience and care
-you will improve the quality of your diction. No
-reference to the Corrigan matter, I suppose,&mdash;either
-by Farley or Nan?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not a word. It was the night I read about the
-end of the trial, but nothing was said about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She needn&#8217;t have worried,&#8221; Eaton remarked.
-&#8220;She was a very foolish little girl to have drawn
-her money out of the bank to hand over to a
-crooked lawyer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose you coaxed the money back&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly not! It might have been amusing to
-gather Harlowe in for blackmail; but you can
-see that it would have involved no end of newspaper
-notoriety; most disagreeable. I had the best
-opportunities for observing that fellow in his conduct
-of the case; in fact, I had a letter to the judge
-and he asked me to sit with him on the bench.
-There&#8217;s little in the life or public services of Jason
-E. Harlowe that I don&#8217;t know.&#8221; He lifted his eyes
-to the solid wall of file-boxes. &#8220;H-66 is filled with
-data. Jason E. Harlowe,&#8221; he repeated musingly.
-&#8220;If I should die to-night, kindly direct my executor
-to observe that box particularly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve heard of him; he ran for the legislature
-last year and got licked.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By two hundred and sixteen votes,&#8221; added
-Eaton.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s your guess about that thousand bucks?
-Corrigan must have put Harlowe up to it.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>&#8220;He did not,&#8221; replied Eaton, peering for a moment
-into the bowl of his pipe. &#8220;It was Mr. Harlowe&#8217;s
-idea&mdash;strictly so. And I&#8217;m ready for him
-in case he shows his hand again. Farley has some
-relations down that way, a couple of cousins at
-Lawrenceburg. Do you follow me? Harlowe may
-have something bigger up his sleeve. He ranges
-the whole Indiana shore of the Ohio; business
-mostly criminal. The more I&#8217;ve thought of that
-thousand-dollar episode, the less I&#8217;ve liked it. I
-take a good deal of interest in Nan, you know.
-She&#8217;s a little brash and needs a helping hand occasionally.
-Not that I&#8217;m called upon to stand <i>in
-loco parentis</i>, but there&#8217;s something mighty appealing
-in her. For fear you may misunderstand me, I
-assure you that I am not in love with her, or in
-danger of being; but her position is difficult and
-made the more so by her impulsive, warm-hearted
-nature. And it has told against her a little that
-the Farleys were never quite admitted to the inner
-circle here. This is a peculiar town, you know,
-Amidon, and there&#8217;s a good deal of caste feeling&mdash;deplorable
-but true! You and I are sturdy democrats
-and above such prejudices, but there are a
-few people amongst us who never forget what you
-may call their position. Unfortunate, but it&#8217;s here
-and to be reckoned with.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I guess Nan&#8217;s as good as any of them,&#8221;
-said Amidon doggedly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She is! But it&#8217;s the elemental strain in her that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-makes her interesting. She&#8217;s of the race that believes
-in fairies; we have to take that into account.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Amidon nodded soberly. He had seen nothing in
-Nan to support this proposition that she believed
-in fairies, but the idea pleased him.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton&#8217;s way of speaking of women was another
-thing that impressed Jerry. It was always with
-profound respect, and this was unfamiliar enough
-in Jerry&#8217;s previous existence; but combined with
-this reverential attitude was a chivalrous anxiety
-to serve or protect them. The girls Jerry had
-known, or the ones he particularly admired, were
-those endowed with a special genius for taking
-care of themselves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan,&#8221; Eaton was saying, &#8220;needs plenty of air.
-She has suffered from claustrophobia in her life
-with the Farleys. Oh, yes; claustrophobia&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He paused to explain the meaning of the word,
-which Jerry scribbled on an envelope that he might
-remember it and use it somewhere when opportunity
-offered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad Farley talked to you. You will find
-that he will ask to see you again, but be careful
-what you say to him about the store. He&#8217;ll be
-anxious to worm information out of you, but he&#8217;s
-the sort to distrust you if you seemed anxious to
-talk against the house or the head of it, much as he
-may dislike him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess that&#8217;s right,&#8221; said Jerry. &#8220;He asked
-about the customers on the route I worked last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-year and seemed to know them all&mdash;even to the
-number of children in the family.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve been back once since we called together?
-Anybody else around&mdash;any signs that
-Nan is receiving social attentions?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t see any. She&#8217;d been reading &#8216;Huck
-Finn&#8217; to the old gent when I dropped in.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isolated life; not wholesome. A girl like that
-needs to have people about her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Jerry ejaculated, &#8220;she doesn&#8217;t need a
-scrub like me! I felt ashamed of myself for going;
-and had to walk around the block about seven
-times before I got my nerve up to go in. It&#8217;s
-awful, going into a house like that, and waiting for
-the coon to go off to see whether the folks want to
-see you or not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The trepidation you indicate is creditable to
-you, Amidon. Your social instincts are crude but
-sound. Should you say, as a student of mankind
-and an observer of life, that Nan is pining away with
-a broken heart?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, hardly; she was a lot cheerfuler than she
-was that first time, when you went with me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thanks for the compliment! Of course, you
-get on better without me. &#8217;Twas always thus!
-Well, that first time was hardly a fair example of
-my effect upon womankind. The air was surcharged
-with electricity; Nan had made a trifling
-error of judgment and had been brought promptly
-to book. I&#8217;ve always rather admired people who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-follow their impulses; it&#8217;s my disposition to examine
-my own under the microscope. Don&#8217;t check
-yourself too much: I find your spontaneity refreshing,
-particularly now that your verbs and nouns
-are more nearly in agreement. You say Copeland
-and Kinney are off motoring, to look at a new
-factory?&#8221; He lifted his eyes to one of the file-boxes
-absently. &#8220;I wish they&#8217;d wait till we get rid
-of that suit over Kinney&#8217;s patents before they
-spread out. The case ought to be decided soon and
-there are times&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He rose quickly, walked to the shelves and drew
-down a volume in which he instantly became absorbed.
-Then he went back to his desk and refilled
-his pipe deliberately.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; he remarked, &#8220;that we shall win the
-case; but you never can tell. By the way, what is
-your impartial judgment of the merits of Corbin
-&amp; Eichberg&mdash;rather wide-awake fellows, aren&#8217;t
-they?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As Jerry began to express scorn by a contemptuous
-curl of the lip and an outward gesture of his
-stiffened palm, Eaton reprimanded him sharply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Speak judicially; no bluster; none of this whang
-about their handling inferior goods. The fact is they
-are almost offensively prosperous and carry more
-traveling men after ten years&#8217; business than Copeland-Farley
-with thirty years behind them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; Jerry replied meekly, &#8220;I guess they
-are cutting in a little; Eichberg had made a lot of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-money before he went into drugs and they&#8217;ve got
-more capital than C-F.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That increases the danger of the competition.
-Eichberg is a pretty solid citizen. For example, he&#8217;s
-a director in the Western National.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess that won&#8217;t help him sell any drugs,&#8221;
-said Amidon, who resented this indirect praise of
-Corbin &amp; Eichberg.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not directly; no.&#8221; And Eaton dropped the
-subject with a finality Jerry felt bound to accept.</p>
-
-<p>Foreman had intimated that in due course Copeland-Farley
-would be absorbed by Corbin &amp; Eichberg;
-possibly the same calamity was foreshadowed
-in Eaton&#8217;s speculations.</p>
-
-<p>Before he returned to his boarding-house Jerry
-strolled into the jobbing district and stood for
-some time on the sidewalk opposite Copeland-Farley&#8217;s
-store. His twenty shares of stock gave
-him an exalted sense of proprietorship. He was
-making progress; he was a stockholder in a corporation.
-But it was a corporation that was undoubtedly
-going to the bad.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite true that Corbin &amp; Eichberg were
-making heavy inroads upon Copeland-Farley trade.
-They were broadening the field of their operations
-and developing territory beyond the farthest limits
-to which Copeland-Farley had extended local drug
-jobbing. It was not a debatable matter that if
-Copeland persisted in his evil courses the business
-would go by the board.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>Copeland hadn&#8217;t been brought up to work; that
-was his trouble, Jerry philosophized. And yet
-Copeland was doing better. As Jerry thought of
-him his attitude became paternal. He grinned as
-he became conscious of his dreams of attempting&mdash;he,
-Jeremiah Amidon&mdash;to pull Billy Copeland
-back from the pit for which he seemed destined,
-and save the house of Copeland-Farley from ruin.</p>
-
-<p>He crossed the street, found the private watchman
-sitting in the open door half asleep, roused him,
-and gave him a cigar he had purchased for the
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Then he walked away whistling cheerfully and
-beating the walk with his stick.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-
-<small>CANOEING</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Life</span> began to move more briskly for Nan. She
-was not aware that certain invitations that reached
-her were due to a few words carefully spoken in
-safe quarters by Eaton.</p>
-
-<p>One of the first large functions of the dawning
-season was a tea given by Mrs. Harrington for a
-visitor. Mrs. Harrington not only asked Nan to
-assist, but she extended the invitation personally
-in the Farley parlor, much to Nan&#8217;s astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>One or two young gentlemen who had paid Nan
-attentions when she first came home from school
-looked her up again. John Cecil Eaton was highly
-regarded by the younger men he met at the University
-Club, and was not without influence. A
-reference to Nan as an unusual person; some saying
-of hers, quoted carelessly at the round table, was
-instrumental in directing attention anew to her as
-a girl worth knowing. If any one said, &#8220;How&#8217;s her
-affair with Copeland going?&#8221; Eaton would retort,
-icily, that it wasn&#8217;t going; that there never had
-been anything in it but shameless gossip.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry now reserved his Thursday evenings for
-Nan: not for any particular reason except that
-Eaton had taken him to the Farleys on a Thursday<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-and from sentimental considerations he consecrated
-the day to repetitions of the visit. Nan
-was immensely kind to him; it was incredible that
-a girl so separated from him by immeasurable distances
-should be so cordial, so responsive to his
-overtures of friendship. Once she sent him a note&mdash;the
-frankest, friendliest imaginable note&mdash;to say
-that on a particular Thursday evening she could
-not see him. His disappointment was as nothing
-when weighed against his joy that she recognized
-his claim upon that particular evening and took the
-trouble to explain that the nurse would be out and
-that she would be too busy with Farley to see him.
-He replied with flowers&mdash;which brought him another
-note.</p>
-
-<p>He had laid before her all his plans for self-improvement
-and her encouragement was even more
-stimulating than Eaton&#8217;s. She fell at times into
-a maternal attitude toward him, scolding and lecturing
-him, and he was meek under her criticism.</p>
-
-<p>Nan felt more at home with him than with any
-other young man who called on her. With some of
-these, whose mothers and sisters had been treating
-her coldly, she felt herself to be playing a part&mdash;trying
-to assume a dignity that was not naturally
-hers in order that they might give a good account
-of her at home. With Jerry she could be herself
-without dissimulation. When it came to mothers,
-he remembered her mother perfectly and she remembered
-his. In a sense she and Jerry were allies,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-engaged in accommodating themselves to a somewhat
-questioning if not hostile atmosphere. In all
-her acquaintance he was the one person who could
-make the necessary allowances for her, who was
-able to give her full credit for her good intentions.</p>
-
-<p>On his seventh call he summoned courage to
-ask her to join him on a Saturday afternoon excursion
-on the river.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The foliage is unusually beautiful this year,&#8221;
-he suggested with his air of quoting, &#8220;and it&#8217;ll be
-too cold for canoeing pretty soon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid&mdash;&#8221; Nan began.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I knew you&#8217;d say that; but you&#8217;re as safe in
-my boat as in your own rocking-chair.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wasn&#8217;t going to say that,&#8221; laughed Nan. &#8220;I
-was going to say that I was afraid you wouldn&#8217;t
-enjoy the foliage so much if I were along.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He saw that she was laughing at him. Nan and
-Eaton were the only persons whose mirth he suffered
-without resentment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll have to ask papa about it; or maybe you&#8217;ll
-ask him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve already asked him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When did you ask him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About ten minutes ago, just before I came downstairs.
-I told him two good stories and then shot
-it in quick. He said he thought it would do you
-good!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I like your nerve! Why didn&#8217;t you ask me
-first?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>&#8220;Because it was much more proper for me to
-open negotiations with the man higher up. I hope
-you appreciate my delicacy,&#8221; he added, in Eaton&#8217;s
-familiar, half-mocking tone, which he had caught
-perfectly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re so thoughtful I suppose you&#8217;ve also
-arranged for a chaperone?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The canoe,&#8221; he replied, &#8220;is more comfortable
-for two.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two have been in it rather often, I suppose.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; but that was last summer. I&#8217;ve seen
-everything different this season. I practiced casting
-on a day in June and met with an experience that
-has changed the whole current of my life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope it changed your luck with the rod! You
-got snagged on everything that would hold a hook,
-but I must say that you bore your troubles in a
-sweet spirit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I learned that early in the game. Even if you
-refused my invitation I&#8217;d try to bear up under it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think I&#8217;ll decline, then, just to see how you
-take it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it&#8217;s only polite to say it would be a blow.
-I have a pocketful of strychnine and it might be
-unpleasant to have me die on the doorstep.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I could stand that probably better than the
-neighbors could. You&#8217;d better try a poison that&#8217;s
-warranted not to kill on the premises.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry tortured himself with speculations as to
-whether he should hire a taxi to transport them to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-the Little Ripple Club, but finally decided against
-it as an unwarranted extravagance, calculated to
-arouse suspicion in the mind of Farley. However,
-when he reached the house at two o&#8217;clock on Saturday,
-Nan announced that the nurse was taking her
-place as Farley&#8217;s companion for his regular drive
-and that they would carry them to the club. This
-arrangement caused his breast to swell.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That will give my credit a big boost; you&#8217;ll see
-a lot of the boys drop dead when we roll up with
-Uncle Tim.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Farley alighted to inspect the clubhouse and the
-fleet of canoes that bobbed at the landing. It was
-a great day for Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s something nice about a river,&#8221; said
-Nan, as Jerry sent his maroon-colored craft far
-out into the stream. &#8220;Ever since I came away I&#8217;ve
-missed the old river at Belleville.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was one of the things he liked about Nan.
-She referred often to her childhood, and it even
-seemed that she spoke of it with a certain wistfulness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The last girl I had out here,&#8221; Jerry said as he
-plied his blade, &#8220;was Katie McCarthy, who works
-in the County Treasurer&#8217;s office&mdash;mighty responsible
-job. I used to know Katie when she stenogged
-at four per for a punk lawyer, but I knew she
-was better than that, so I pulled a few wires and
-got her into the court-house. Katie could be
-cashier in a bank&mdash;she&#8217;s that smart! No; not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-much to look at. I studied Katie&#8217;s case a good
-deal, and she&#8217;d never make any headway in
-offices where they&#8217;d rather have a yellow-haired
-girl who overdresses the part and is always slipping
-out for a retouch with the chamois. It&#8217;s hard to find
-a job for girls like Katie; their only chance is some
-place where they&#8217;ve got to have a girl with brains.
-These perfumed office darlings, that&#8217;s just got to
-go to vaudeville every Monday night so they can
-talk about it the rest of the week, never get anywhere.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My heart warms to Katie. I wonder,&#8221; murmured
-Nan lazily, as Jerry neatly negotiated a
-shallow passage between two sandbars, &#8220;if I had
-to do it&mdash;I wonder how much I could earn a
-week.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I guess you&#8217;d make good all right. You&#8217;ve
-got brains and I&#8217;ve never caught you touching up
-your complexion.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Which isn&#8217;t any sign I don&#8217;t,&#8221; she laughed.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve all the necessary articles right here in my
-sweater pocket.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, somebody has to use the talcum; we
-handle it in carload lots. It&#8217;s one of the Copeland-Farley
-specialties I used to brag about easiest when
-I bore the weighty sample-case down the line. It
-was a good stunt to ask the druggist to introduce
-me to some of the girls that&#8217;s always loafing round
-the soda-counter in country-town drug stores, and
-I&#8217;d hand &#8217;em out a box and ask &#8217;em to try it on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-right there. It cheered up the druggist and the girls
-would help me pull a bigger order than I&#8217;d get on
-my own hook. A party like that on a sleepy afternoon
-in a pill-shop would lift the sky-line considerable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, if you saw me in a drug store wrestling
-with a chocolate sundae and had your sample-case
-open and were trying to coax an order out of a
-druggist, just how would you approach me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t!&#8221; he responded readily. &#8220;I&#8217;d get
-your number on the quiet and walk past your house
-when your mother was sitting on the porch all alone,
-darning socks, and I&#8217;d beg her pardon and say that,
-having heard that her daughter was the most beautiful
-girl in town, Copeland-Farley had sent me all
-the way from the capital to ask her please to accept,
-with the house&#8217;s compliments, a gross of our Faultless
-Talcum. If mother didn&#8217;t ask me to supper,
-it would be a sign that I hadn&#8217;t put it over.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But if father appeared with a shotgun&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d tell him it was the closed season for drummers,
-and invite him down to the hotel for a game
-of billiards.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think you always have the answer, don&#8217;t
-you?&#8221; she taunted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think it; I&#8217;ve got to know it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I haven&#8217;t seen you miss fire yet. My
-trouble is,&#8221; she deliberated, touching the water
-lightly with her hand, &#8220;that I don&#8217;t have the answer
-most of the time.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>&#8220;I&#8217;ve noticed it sometimes,&#8221; replied Jerry, looking
-at her quickly.</p>
-
-<p>It was unseasonably warm, and he drove the
-canoe on to a sandy shore in the shade of the
-bank. He had confessed to himself that at times,
-even in their juvenile badgering, Nan baffled him.
-From the beginning of their acquaintance he had
-noted abrupt changes of mood that puzzled him.
-Occasionally, in the midst of the aimless banter in
-which they engaged, she would cease to respond
-and a far-away look would come into her violet
-eyes. One of these moods was upon her now.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you remember the shanty-boat people down
-along the river? I used to think it would be fun to
-live like that. I still feel that way sometimes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; he answered indulgently, &#8220;I guess everybody
-has a spell of that now and then, when you
-just want to sort of loaf along, and fish a little when
-you&#8217;re hungry, and trust to luck for a handout at
-some back door when you&#8217;re too lazy to bait the
-hook. That feeling gets hold of me lots of times;
-but I shake it off pretty soon. You don&#8217;t get anywhere
-loafing; the people that get along have got to
-hustle. Cecil says we can&#8217;t just mark time in this
-world. We either go ahead or slide back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;m a slider&mdash;if you can slide without
-ever getting up very far!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look here,&#8221; he said, drawing in the paddle and
-fixing his eyes upon her intently, &#8220;you said something
-like that the first night Cecil took me up to see<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-you, and you&#8217;ve got a touch of it again; but it&#8217;s the
-wrong talk. I&#8217;m going to hand it to you straight,
-because I guess I&#8217;ve got more nerve than anybody
-else you know: you haven&#8217;t got a kick coming, and
-you want to cut all that talk. Uncle Tim gets cross
-sometimes, but you don&#8217;t want to worry about that
-too much. He used to be meaner than fleas at the
-store sometimes, but the boys never worried about
-it. He&#8217;s all sound inside, and if he riles you the best
-thing to do is to forget it. You can&#8217;t please him
-all the time, but you can most of the time, and it&#8217;s
-up to you to do it. Now, tell me to jump in the
-river if you want to, but it was in my system and
-I had to get it out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I know I ought to be grateful; but I&#8217;m
-wrong some way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re all right,&#8221; he declared. &#8220;Your trouble
-is you don&#8217;t have enough to do. You ought to get
-interested in something&mdash;something that would
-keep you busy and whistling all the time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I <i>don&#8217;t</i> have enough to do; I know that,&#8221; she
-assented.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you ought to go in good and strong for
-something; that&#8217;s the only ticket. Let&#8217;s get out
-and climb the bank and walk awhile.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had lost her bearings on the river, but when
-they had clambered to the top of the bank she found
-that they were near the Kinneys&#8217;. The road was
-a much-frequented highway, and she was sorry now
-that they had left the canoe; but Jerry, leading the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-way along a rough path that clung close to the river,
-continued to philosophize, wholly unconscious of
-the neighborhood&#8217;s associations for Nan.</p>
-
-<p>Where the margin between the river and the
-road widened they sat on a log while Jerry amplified
-his views of life, with discreet applications to
-Nan&#8217;s case as he understood it. He was a cheery
-and hopeful soul, and in the light of her knowledge
-of him she marveled at his clear understanding of
-things. He confided to her that he meant to get on;
-he wanted to be somebody. She was wholly sympathetic
-and told him that he had already done a
-great deal; he had done a lot better than she had;
-and it counted for more because no one had helped
-him.</p>
-
-<p>As they passed the Kinneys&#8217; on their way back
-to the canoe, a roadster whizzed out of the gate and
-turned toward town. They both recognized Copeland.
-As he passed, his eyes fell upon them carelessly;
-then he glanced back and slowed down.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now we&#8217;re in for it!&#8221; said Nan uncomfortably.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess I&#8217;m the one that&#8217;s in for it,&#8221; returned
-Jerry ruefully.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland left his car at the roadside and walked
-rapidly toward them. He nodded affably to Jerry
-and extended his hand eagerly to Nan.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is great good luck! Grace is at home; why
-didn&#8217;t you come in?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Mr. Amidon is showing me the river; we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-just left the canoe to come up for a view from the
-bank.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not come back to Kinneys&#8217;; I want to see
-you; and this is a fine chance to have a talk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry walked away and began throwing pebbles
-into the river.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t do that. And I can&#8217;t talk to you here.
-Papa drove me out and he&#8217;s likely to come back
-this way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You seem to be pretty chummy with that clerk
-of mine,&#8221; Copeland remarked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am; it began about sixteen years ago,&#8221; she
-answered, with a laugh. &#8220;We rose from the same
-ash-dump.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He frowned, not comprehending. She was about
-to turn away when he began speaking rapidly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve got to hear me, Nan! I haven&#8217;t bothered
-you for a long time; you&#8217;ve treated me pretty
-shabbily after all there&#8217;s been between us; but you
-can square all that now. I&#8217;m in the deepest kind of
-trouble. Farley deliberately planned to ruin me and
-he&#8217;s about done it! I&#8217;ve paid him off, but I had to
-pledge half my stock in the store with the Western
-National to raise the money, and now my notes are
-due there and they&#8217;re going to pinch me. Eichberg
-is a director in the bank and he means to buy in
-that stock&mdash;you can see the game. Corbin &amp; Eichberg
-are scheming to wipe me out and combine the
-two houses. And Farley&#8217;s put them up to it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His face twisted nervously as he talked. He was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-thinner than when she saw him last, but he bore no
-marks of hard living. His story was plausible; Farley
-had told her a month ago that he had got his
-money out of Copeland, but it hadn&#8217;t occurred to
-her that the loan might have been paid with money
-borrowed elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, you won&#8217;t lose the business, Billy.
-It wouldn&#8217;t be square to treat you that way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Square! I tell you it was all framed up, and I&#8217;ve
-reason to know that Farley stands in with them.
-It&#8217;s a fine revenge he&#8217;s taking on me for daring to
-love you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head and drew further away from
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, Billy, none of that! That&#8217;s all over.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; it isn&#8217;t over! You know it isn&#8217;t, Nan! I&#8217;ve
-missed you; it cut me deep when you dropped me.
-You let Farley tell you I was all bad and going to
-the dogs and you didn&#8217;t even give me a chance to
-defend myself. I tell you I&#8217;ve suffered hell&#8217;s torments
-since I saw you last. But now I want you to
-tell me you do care. Please, dear&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His voice broke plaintively. She shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course we were good friends, Billy; but you
-knew we had to quit. It was wrong all the time&mdash;you
-knew that as well as I do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see what was wrong about it! It can&#8217;t
-be wrong for a man to love a woman as I love you!
-If you hadn&#8217;t cared, it would be a different story,
-but you did, Nan! And you&#8217;re not the girl I know<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-you to be if you&#8217;ve changed in these few weeks.
-I&#8217;ve got a big fight on and I want you to stand by
-me. Kinney&#8217;s in all kinds of trouble with the cement
-business. If he goes down, I&#8217;m ruined. But even
-at that you can help me make a new start. It will
-mean everything to have your love and help.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He saw that his appeal had touched her. She was
-silent a moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This won&#8217;t do, Billy; I can&#8217;t stand here talking
-to you; but I&#8217;m sorry for your troubles. I can&#8217;t
-believe you&#8217;re right about papa trying to injure
-you; he&#8217;s too fond of the old business for that. But
-we were good pals&mdash;you and I. I&#8217;ll try to think
-of some way to help.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He caught her hands roughly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I need you; you know I love you! Farley&#8217;s told
-you I want to marry you for his money; but you
-can&#8217;t tell anything about him. Very likely he&#8217;ll
-cut you out, anyhow; he&#8217;s likely to do that very
-thing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her head and defiance shone for an
-instant in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll let you hear from me within a week; I must
-have time&mdash; But keep up your spirits, Billy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The distant honking of a motor caused her to
-turn away quickly. Amidon had settled himself
-halfway down the bank and she called to him and
-began the descent....</p>
-
-<p>If Jerry had expressed his feelings he would have
-said that Copeland&#8217;s appearance had given him a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-hard jar. It was annoying, just when you have
-reached the highest aim of your life, to have your
-feet knocked from under you. To have your boss
-spoil your afternoon with the prettiest girl in town
-was not only disagreeable, but it roused countless
-apprehensions.</p>
-
-<p>For the afternoon <i>was</i> spoiled. Nan&#8217;s efforts to
-act as though nothing had happened were badly
-simulated, and finding that she lapsed frequently
-into long reveries, Jerry paddled doggedly back
-to the clubhouse.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-
-<small>LAST WILLS AND TESTAMENTS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> the beginning of his infirmities Farley&#8217;s
-experiments in will-writing had taxed the patience
-of Thurston, his lawyer. Within two years he had
-made a dozen wills, and he kept them for comparison
-in a secret drawer of Mrs. Farley&#8217;s old sewing-table
-in his room. He penciled cryptic marks on
-the various envelopes for ease of identification,
-and he was influenced often by the most trivial
-circumstances in his revisions. If Nan irritated him,
-he cut down her legacy; when things went happily,
-he increased it. He was importuned to make bequests
-to great numbers of institutions, by men and
-women he knew well, and his attitude toward these
-changed frequently. There was hardly a phase of
-the laws of descent that Thurston had not explained
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>A few days after her river excursion, the colored
-man-of-all-work handed Nan an envelope that
-had dropped from Farley&#8217;s dressing-gown as it hung
-on a clothes-line in the backyard for its periodical
-sunning. The envelope was unsealed. In the upper
-left-hand corner was the name and address of
-Thurston and in the center were four small crosses
-in pencil. Nan thrust it into a bureau drawer,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-intending to restore it to the dressing-gown pocket
-when she could do so without attracting Farley&#8217;s
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes fell upon it that night as she was preparing
-for bed. She laid it on her dressing-table
-and studied the queer little crosses as she brushed
-her hair.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland had complained of Farley&#8217;s hardness,
-and if Billy had told the truth about the plight to
-which he had been reduced by Farley&#8217;s refusal to
-renew the last notes for the purchase money, the
-complaint was just. She crouched on a low stool
-before the table and gazed into the reflection of
-her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>She played idly with the envelope, resisting an
-impulse to open it for a glance at the paper that
-crinkled in her fingers. She had been very &#8220;good&#8221;
-lately, and to pry into affairs that Farley had sedulously
-kept from her was repugnant to her better
-nature.... Farley&#8217;s abuse of her on the day of the
-luncheon, and his rage over her payment of the
-thousand dollars for the defense of her brother
-came back to her vividly. He had threatened to
-make it impossible for Billy to profit by marrying
-her.... She had a right to know what provision
-Farley meant to make for her. If in the end he intended
-to throw her upon her own resources or to
-provide for her in ways that curtailed her liberty,
-there was every reason why she should prepare to
-meet the situation.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>The paper slipped from the envelope and she
-pressed it open.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I, Timothy Farley, being of sound mind,&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>She had never seen a will before, and the unfamiliar
-phraseology fascinated her.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>... in trust for my daughter, Nancy Corrigan
-Farley, for a period of twenty years from my decease,
-or until the death of said Nancy Corrigan
-Farley, should said death occur prior to the expiration
-of said twenty years, the sum of one hundred
-thousand dollars. The income from said sum shall
-be paid to the said Nancy Corrigan Farley on the
-first day of each calendar month....</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Two hundred thousand dollars he gave outright
-to the Boys&#8217; Club Association; fifty thousand to the
-Children&#8217;s Hospital; and ten thousand each to five
-other charitable organizations....</p>
-
-<p>One hundred thousand dollars in trust! An income
-of five or six thousand&mdash;less than half the
-cost of maintaining the Farley establishment, exclusive
-of her personal allowance for clothes! And
-this was Farley&#8217;s idea of providing for her. She had
-always heard that the act of adoption conferred
-all the rights inherent in a child of the blood; it
-was inconceivable that Farley would deal in so
-miserly a fashion with his own daughter.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>The will was dated June 17, a week after the
-row over Copeland. She had heard that Farley&#8217;s
-property approximated a million, and on that basis
-she was to pay dearly for that day at the Country
-Club!</p>
-
-<p>The trusteeship,&mdash;in itself an insult, an advertisement
-of Farley&#8217;s lack of confidence in her,&mdash;was
-to continue for what might be all the years of
-her life, restricting her freedom, fastening hateful
-bonds upon her. In case she married and died
-leaving children, the trusteeship was continued
-until they attained their majority. A paltry hundred
-thousand, and Farley&#8217;s lean hand clutched
-even that!</p>
-
-<p>Two hundred thousand for the Boys&#8217; Club&mdash;just
-twice what he gave her&mdash;and without restrictions!
-The Farleys&#8217; love for her was now reduced
-to exact figures. Her foster-father meant to
-humiliate her in the eyes of the world by a niggardly
-bequest. And he had been protesting his love for
-her and permitting her to sacrifice herself for him!</p>
-
-<p>The revelations of the will reinforced Copeland&#8217;s
-arraignment of Farley as a harsh and vindictive
-man, who drove hard bargains and delighted in
-vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>She lay awake for hours, torturing herself into
-the belief that she was the most abused of beings.
-Then her better nature asserted itself. She reviewed
-the generosity and kindness of her foster-parents,
-who had given her a place in the world to which she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-felt, humbly, that she was not entitled. A hundred
-thousand dollars was more money than she had any
-right to expect; and the trusteeship was only a part
-of Farley&#8217;s kindness&mdash;a device for safeguarding
-and protecting her.</p>
-
-<p>Then she flew to the other extreme. He had
-brought her up as his own child, encouraging a
-belief that she would inherit his whole fortune, and
-now he was cutting her off with something like a
-tenth and contemptuously bidding her beg for alms
-at the door of a trust company!</p>
-
-<p>She stared into the dark until the light crept
-through her blinds. Then she slept until the nurse
-called her at eight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Farley&#8217;s waiting for you to have breakfast
-with him; how soon can you be ready?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t he so well?&#8221; Nan asked quickly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing unusual; but he seemed tired after his
-ride yesterday and had a bad night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan, sitting up in bed, thrust her hand under her
-pillow and touched the will guiltily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose,&#8221; she said, as the nurse crossed to the
-windows and threw up the shades, &#8220;that he may
-have a relapse at any time. The doctor prepared
-me for that. Please order breakfast sent up and
-tell papa I&#8217;ll be ready in five minutes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In her broodings of the night she had dramatized
-herself as confronting him in all manner of situations,
-but she was reluctant to face him now. She
-jumped out of bed, fortified herself for the day with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-a cold shower, and presented herself to him in a
-flowered kimono as the maid was laying the cloth
-on the stand by his bed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Nan,&#8221; he said wearily, &#8220;I hope you had
-a better night than I did.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t need much sleep,&#8221; she answered.
-&#8220;Edison says we all sleep too much, anyhow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a fool idea. The doctor&#8217;s got to give me
-the dope again if I have another such night. I guess
-there wasn&#8217;t anything I didn&#8217;t think of. Lyin&#8217;
-awake is about as near hell as I care to go.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The querulousness manifest in the worst period
-of his illness had returned. He grumbled at the
-nurse&#8217;s arrangement of his pillows and asked for a
-tray in bed, saying he didn&#8217;t feel equal to sitting
-at the table.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You sit there where I can look at you, Nan.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was aglow from her bath and showed no
-trace of her sleepless night. It was pathetically
-evident that her presence brought him pleasure
-and relief. He had been very happy of late, accepting
-fully her assurance that everything was over
-between her and Copeland. Her recent social
-activities and the fact that some of the &#8220;nice
-people&#8221; were showing a renewed interest in her
-added to his satisfaction. He bade her talk as he
-nibbled his toast and sipped his milk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I read the newspaper an hour ago clear through
-the births and deaths and didn&#8217;t see anything
-very cheerful. You been followin&#8217; that Reid will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-case up at Cleveland? I guess you don&#8217;t read the
-papers much. You never did; but you ought to
-keep posted. Well, that&#8217;s a mighty interestin&#8217; case.
-I guess the lawyers are goin&#8217; to get all the money.
-I knew old Reid, and he was as sane a man as ever
-lived. There ain&#8217;t much use in a man tryin&#8217; to
-make a will when they&#8217;re sure to tear it to pieces.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan looked at him quickly. It was possible that
-he had missed the will and was speaking of wills
-in general as a prelude to pouncing upon her with
-a question as to whether she had seen it. But he
-was not in a belligerent humor. He went on to
-explain the legal points involved in the Reid case.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If a lot o&#8217; rascally lawyers get hold o&#8217; my property,
-I won&#8217;t just turn over in my grave; I&#8217;ll keep
-revolvin&#8217;! Reid tried to fix things so his children
-wouldn&#8217;t squander his money. His daughters
-married fools and he wanted to try and protect
-&#8217;em. And just for that they&#8217;ve had the will set
-aside on the ground that Reid was crazy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan acquiesced in his view of this as an outrage.
-And she really believed that it was, as Farley spoke
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I sometimes wonder whether it ain&#8217;t better just
-to let things go,&#8221; he continued. &#8220;I been over this
-will business with Thurston a thousand times, and
-I&#8217;m never sure he knows what he&#8217;s talkin&#8217; about.
-Wills made by the best lawyers in the country
-seem to break down; there ain&#8217;t nothin&#8217; sure
-about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>&#8220;Well, I wouldn&#8217;t worry about that, papa. Mr.
-Thurston ought to know about those things if
-anybody does.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Ordinarily he would have combated this, as he
-combated most emphatic statements; but his willingness
-to let it pass unchallenged convinced her
-that there had been a sharp change for the worse in
-his condition.</p>
-
-<p>It was the way of her contradictory nature to
-be moved to pity for him in his weakness, and a
-wave of tenderness swept her. After all, if he
-wished to cut her off with a hundred thousand
-dollars and give the rest to charity he had a right
-to do it.</p>
-
-<p>She took the tray from the bed, smoothed the
-covers and passed her cool hand over his hot forehead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please, papa,&#8221; she said, &#8220;don&#8217;t bother about
-business to-day. Miss Rankin says it&#8217;s only a cold,
-but she&#8217;ll have to report it to the doctor. I&#8217;m going
-to telephone him to drop in this morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He demurred, but not with his usual venomous
-tirade against the whole breed of doctors.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right, Nan,&#8221; he said, clinging to her hand.
-&#8220;And I wish you&#8217;d tell Thurston to come in this
-afternoon. I want to talk to him about some
-matters.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, we&#8217;ll see the doctor first, papa. We can
-have Mr. Thurston in any time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She knelt impulsively beside the bed.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>&#8220;I want you to know, papa, about wills and
-things like that, that I don&#8217;t want you to bother
-about me. I hope we&#8217;re going to live on together
-for long, long years. And anything you mean to do
-for me is all right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She hardly knew herself as she said this. It was
-an involuntary utterance; something she could
-not have imagined herself saying a few hours earlier
-as she lay in bed hating him for his meanness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, dear, I want to do the right thing by you.
-It&#8217;s worried me a lot, tryin&#8217; to decide the best way.
-I don&#8217;t want to leave any trouble behind me for
-you to settle. And I don&#8217;t want to do anything
-that&#8217;ll make you think hard o&#8217; me. I want to be
-sure you never come to want: that&#8217;s what&#8217;s worried
-me. I want you to be happy and comfortable,
-little girl.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know you do, papa,&#8221; she replied. &#8220;But don&#8217;t
-bother about those things now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The nurse came in to take his temperature. Nan
-went to her room for the will and, feigning to be
-straightening some of the things in his closet, she
-thrust the paper into the dressing-gown pocket.</p>
-
-<p>An hour later the Kinney&#8217;s chauffeur left a note
-from Grace:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Come out this afternoon at any hour you can.
-Telephone me where to meet you downtown and
-I&#8217;ll bring you out in the car. I needn&#8217;t explain
-why, but after Saturday you&#8217;ll understand.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>The doctor found nothing alarming in Farley&#8217;s
-condition, but ordered him to remain in bed for a
-few days. He said he must have sleep and prescribed
-an opiate.</p>
-
-<p>At three o&#8217;clock Nan left the house.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-
-<small>A KINNEY LARK AND ITS CONSEQUENCES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">It&#8217;s</span> certainly good to see you again!&#8221; Mrs.
-Kinney exclaimed as Nan met her by arrangement
-at a confectioner&#8217;s. &#8220;How much time are you
-going to give me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I haven&#8217;t any,&#8221; laughed Nan. &#8220;I&#8217;ve run
-away. Papa isn&#8217;t so well to-day and couldn&#8217;t take
-his drive as usual, so I&#8217;m truanting&mdash;and very
-naughty. I must be back in the house before five.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, when I got your message I telephoned
-Billy to come to the house and he&#8217;ll be there as
-soon as we are. He&#8217;s been in the depths for weeks.
-You know you had got a mighty strong hold on
-dear old Billy, and when you dropped him it hurt.
-And we&#8217;ve all missed you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Kinneys and their friends had missed her;
-they had missed her dash, her antics&mdash;the Nan she
-had resolved to be no more. But it was pleasant
-to be in Mrs. Kinney&#8217;s company again. She was a
-simple, friendly soul who liked clothes and a good
-time; her capacity for enjoying anything serious
-was wholly negligible.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I knew, of course, that Billy was back of your
-invitation. I saw him Saturday&mdash;quite accidentally,
-and he was bluer than indigo.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>&#8220;He spent Sunday with us and told us all about
-meeting you. He was perfectly furious because you
-were out skylarking with one of his clerks! But he
-got to laughing about it,&mdash;told us some funny
-stories about your new suitor,&mdash;Jerry, is that the
-name?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Jeremiah Amidon, please,&#8221; laughed Nan.
-&#8220;It was killing that Billy should find me out canoeing
-with him. Jerry and I were kids together, and
-he&#8217;s grown to be a great consolation to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He must be a consolation to Billy, too; he says
-the youngster&#8217;s trying to reform him!&#8221; Grace
-suddenly clasped Nan&#8217;s hand. &#8220;You ought to take
-charge of Billy! He&#8217;s awfully in love with you,
-Nan. He&#8217;s going to urge you to marry him&mdash;at
-once. That&#8217;s why&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No! No! I&#8217;ll never do it,&#8221; cried Nan despairingly.</p>
-
-<p>It was another of her mistakes, this yielding to
-Copeland&#8217;s demand for an interview that could
-have but one purpose. She was thoroughly angry
-at herself, half angry at Mrs. Kinney for acting as
-Copeland&#8217;s intermediary.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland was pacing the veranda smoking a
-cigarette when they reached the house.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s mighty nice of you to come, Nan,&#8221; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve heard, Billy, that the haughty John Eaton&#8217;s
-rather attentive to the late Mrs. Copeland,&#8221; said
-Grace, when they had gathered about the tea-table.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-&#8220;She was among those present at a little
-dinner he gave at the University Club the other
-night in honor of that English novelist who&#8217;s visiting
-here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re bitter because he left you out,&#8221; said
-Copeland indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, my bitterness won&#8217;t hurt Fanny. I suppose
-you&#8217;ve heard that she&#8217;s come into a nice bunch of
-money&mdash;something like a quarter of a million!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland&#8217;s surprise was evident.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That sounds like a fairy story; but I hope it&#8217;s
-true.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know it&#8217;s true,&#8221; said Nan quietly. &#8220;Mrs.
-Copeland told me herself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Kinney had risen to leave them and Copeland
-had crossed the room to open the door for her.
-They were arrested by Nan&#8217;s surprising confirmation
-of this report that Mrs. Copeland had come
-into an unexpected inheritance. Nan vouchsafed
-nothing more; and at a glance from Copeland Grace
-left them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know you and Fanny were seeing each
-other these days,&#8221; he remarked as he sat down beside
-her. &#8220;Something new, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, papa always admired her and he took me
-out to see her a little while ago, and then that day
-you saw her with us at the bank he insisted on taking
-her home for luncheon. She told us then about
-the money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland smiled grimly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>&#8220;Of course, you know what it means&mdash;Farley&#8217;s
-sudden affection for Fanny?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, he used to see a good deal of her, didn&#8217;t
-he, when you were first married?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Farley and Fanny exchanged a few calls
-and we were there for dinner once, while you were
-still away at school. But this is different; he&#8217;s
-throwing you with her for a purpose, as you ought
-to see. It does credit to the old man&#8217;s cunning. He
-thinks that if you become good friends with Fanny,
-he can be sure you&#8217;ve dropped me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rubbish! Papa has always liked her; he likes
-the kind of woman who can run a farm and make
-money out of it; he thinks she&#8217;s a good example
-for me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t let him fool you about that!&#8221; he said
-petulantly. &#8220;He&#8217;s an old Shylock and he&#8217;s about
-taken the last ounce out of me. Paying him that
-last twenty-five thousand has put me in a bad hole.
-And it&#8217;s pure vengeance. If he wasn&#8217;t afraid you
-were going to marry me, he would never have driven
-me so hard. He thinks if he can ruin me financially
-you&#8217;ll quit me for good. It was understood when
-I bought him out that he&#8217;d be easy about the payments.
-There&#8217;s a frame-up between him and Corbin
-&amp; Eichberg to force me out of business. And
-he&#8217;s been calling some of the old employees up
-to see him, and encouraging Amidon to trot up
-there so he can worm things out of him. I don&#8217;t
-think he gets anything out of Jerry,&#8221; he added,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-taking warning of a resentful gleam in Nan&#8217;s eyes.
-&#8220;I think the boy&#8217;s loyal to me; in fact&#8221;&mdash;he
-grinned ruefully&mdash;&#8220;he&#8217;s full of an ambition to
-make a man of me! But you must see that it&#8217;s all
-a game to draw you away from me. Farley&#8217;s not
-the sort of man to waste time on a youngster like
-Amidon for nothing, and this throwing you in
-Fanny&#8217;s way is about as smooth a piece of work as
-I ever knew him to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re exaggerating, Billy; and as far as Jerry
-is concerned, papa likes him; he always takes an
-interest in poor boys. And the fact that Jerry
-came from down there on the river where he had
-his own early struggles probably makes him a little
-more sympathetic with him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The old gentleman&#8217;s sympathies,&#8221; said Copeland,
-bending forward and meeting her gaze with
-a significant look, &#8220;are likely to cost you a whole
-lot of money, Nan.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just how do you make that out, Billy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All the hospitals and charitable concerns in
-town have been working on Farley to do something
-for them in his will, and I heard yesterday that he&#8217;s
-promised to do something big for the Boys&#8217; Club
-people. You&#8217;ve probably seen Trumbull at the
-house a good deal&mdash;he&#8217;s the kind of fellow who&#8217;d
-make an impression on Farley. I got this from
-Kinney. He gave them some money last year and
-they put him on the board of directors. They&#8217;re
-all counting on something handsome from the old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-man. I assume he hasn&#8217;t told you anything
-about it; it wouldn&#8217;t be like him to! He means
-to die and let you find out just what his affection
-for you comes down to in dollars.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, he has a right to do what he likes with
-his money,&#8221; Nan replied slowly, repeating the
-phrase with which she had sought to console herself
-since the will fell into her hands. &#8220;I suppose
-he thinks he&#8217;s done enough for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The phrases of the will danced before her eyes:
-Copeland&#8217;s intimations squared with the facts as
-she knew them to be; she had seen tangible proof
-of their accuracy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have to admit that he&#8217;s been kind to you,
-but he hasn&#8217;t any right to bring you up as his
-daughter and then cut you off. You stand in law as
-his own child, and if he should die without making
-a will, you&#8217;d inherit everything.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, the law hasn&#8217;t made me his own child,&#8221;
-said Nan bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing her resentment, and feeling that he was
-gaining ground, he proceeded cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose he&#8217;s likely to have a sudden call one
-of these days?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; or he may live several years, so the doctor
-told me. But I don&#8217;t want to think of that. And I
-don&#8217;t like to think of what he may do or not do for
-me,&#8221; she added earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course you don&#8217;t!&#8221; he assented. &#8220;But he
-hasn&#8217;t any right to stand between you and your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-happiness. If he had the right feeling about you,
-he&#8217;d want to see you married and settled before he
-dies. I suppose he&#8217;s never told you what he meant
-to do for you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. But he&#8217;s told me what he wouldn&#8217;t do
-if I married you; he laid that down in the plainest
-English!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t doubt it; but no man has a right to do
-any such thing. Just why he hates me so I don&#8217;t
-understand. It oughtn&#8217;t to be a crime to love
-you, Nan.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His hand touched hers, then clasped it tightly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why we should be talking of these
-things at all,&#8221; he went on. &#8220;I love you; and I believe
-that deep down in your heart you love me.
-You&#8217;re not going to say you don&#8217;t, Nan?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know I&#8217;ve always liked you a lot, Billy,&#8221;
-she answered evasively.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Before Farley got the idea that I wanted to
-marry you for his money and abused me and made
-you unhappy, you cared; you can&#8217;t deny that. And
-I don&#8217;t believe his hatred of me really made any
-difference.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was the wiser course not to abuse Farley. He
-felt that he was winning her to a yielding mood,
-and his hopes rose.</p>
-
-<p>She withdrew her hand suddenly and bent her
-eyes upon him with disconcerting intentness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please tell me, Billy, the real truth about your
-trouble with Fanny?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>The abruptness of her question startled him. The
-color deepened in his face and he blinked under her
-searching gaze. She had never before spoken of
-his trouble with his former wife.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That,&#8221; he said rallying quickly, &#8220;is all over
-and done. It hasn&#8217;t anything to do with you
-and me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, Billy; I think it has! If you&#8217;re really
-serious in wanting to marry me, I think I ought
-to know about that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see how you could doubt my seriousness;
-you&#8217;ve been the one serious thing in my whole life!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But Fanny&mdash;&#8221; she persisted, gently touching
-his hands that were loosely clasped on his knee.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, the trouble was that we were never suited
-to each other. She&#8217;s quiet, domestic&mdash;a country-town
-girl, and never fitted into things here. She
-wanted to sit at home every evening and sew and
-expected me to wait around for her to drop a spool
-so I could get excitement out of scrambling for it.
-And she didn&#8217;t like my friends, or doing the things
-I like. Her idea of having a gay time was to go to
-the state fair once a year and look at live stock!
-I think she hated me toward the end.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But that other story about her&mdash;about another
-man; she doesn&#8217;t look like that sort of
-woman, Billy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He shrugged his shoulders impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That wasn&#8217;t in the case at all. The divorce
-was given for incompatibility. Whatever else there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-may have been didn&#8217;t figure. I made it as easy for
-her as possible, of course. And I&#8217;ve no doubt she
-was as glad to quit as I was!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you didn&#8217;t think&mdash;you didn&#8217;t honestly
-believe&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I thought she was interested in Manning;
-and we had some trouble about that. He used to
-come here a good deal. He was an old friend of
-mine and his business brought him to town pretty
-often for a couple of years. He&#8217;s a fellow of quiet
-tastes&mdash;just her sort&mdash;and I hoped when I got
-out of the way she&#8217;d marry him. I want you to be
-satisfied about everything, Nan. I tell you everything&#8217;s
-over between Fanny and me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She rose and took a turn across the room, paused
-at the window, glanced out upon the lawn and the
-strip of woodland beyond. He became impatient
-as the minutes passed. Then she faced him suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s no use, Billy,&#8221; she said.</p>
-
-<p>He was eagerly protesting when Mrs. Kinney
-appeared at the door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What are you two looking so glum about? You
-need cheering up and I&#8217;ve got a fine surprise for
-you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must go,&#8221; said Nan, relieved at the interruption.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much, you&#8217;re not! Bob has just telephoned
-that the Burleys of Chicago are in town and
-they&#8217;re coming out for dinner. And I&#8217;ve telephoned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-the Liggetts and the Martins and George Pickard
-and Edith Saxby and the Andrews. It will be like
-old times to have the old crowd together once
-more!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, Nan will stay! She&#8217;s been making
-me miserable lately and that will help her square
-herself,&#8221; said Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must go, really,&#8221; Nan reiterated, suspecting
-that the party had been arranged in advance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t!&#8221; cried Copeland. &#8220;You can telephone
-home that you&#8217;ve been delayed&mdash;you can
-arrange it someway.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When I went downtown on an errand! I don&#8217;t
-see it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dinner&#8217;s at six; the Burleys have to go into
-town early,&#8221; said Mrs. Kinney.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, let her go!&#8221; exclaimed Copeland. &#8220;Our
-Nan isn&#8217;t the good sport she used to be, and she
-doesn&#8217;t love any of us any more. She&#8217;s gone back
-on all her old friends.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no, she hasn&#8217;t. I never knew her to take
-a dare! I don&#8217;t believe she&#8217;s going to do it now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan surveyed them defiantly and looked at her
-watch.</p>
-
-<p>She felt that she had finally dismissed Billy, and
-her last word to him had left her elated. It might
-be worth while to wait, at any hazard, to ease his
-discomfiture, and to show the Kinneys and their
-friends that she had not cut them; and, moreover,
-she was unwilling to have them know how greatly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-her old freedom was curtailed. The time had passed
-quickly and she could not reach home before seven
-even if she left immediately. Miss Rankin had
-covered up her absences before and might do so
-again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let me telephone and I&#8217;ll see how things are
-going.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The nurse&#8217;s report was reassuring. Farley, who
-had rested badly for several nights, was sleeping.
-He might not waken for an hour&mdash;perhaps not for
-several hours. Miss Rankin volunteered to explain
-Nan&#8217;s absence if he should call for her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right, Grace, you may a lay a plate for me!&#8221;
-she announced cheerfully. &#8220;But I must be on my
-way right after dinner. You understand that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s great to see you on the good old cocktail
-route again, Nan!&#8221; declared Pickard. &#8220;We heard
-you&#8217;d taken the veil!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The cocktails were passed before they went to the
-table; there were quarts for everybody, Grace assured
-them. The men had already fortified themselves
-downtown against any lack of an appetizer
-at the house. Mocking exclamations of surprise
-and alarm followed Nan&#8217;s rejection of her glass.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s not fair, Nan!&#8221; they chorused, gathering
-about her. &#8220;You used to swallow six without
-blinking an eye.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s joined the crape-hangers for sure! I
-didn&#8217;t think it of our Nan!&#8221; mourned Pickard.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>&#8220;Oh, anything to stop your crying!&#8221; Nan took
-the glass Kinney had been holding for her. &#8220;There!
-I hope you&#8217;re satisfied. It&#8217;s silly to make so much
-fuss about a mere cocktail. No, thanks; not another!
-There&#8217;s no point in taking the same dare
-twice!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At the table the talk at once became animated.
-Nan had been away from them so long that she had
-half forgotten their range of interests. Burley&#8217;s
-expensive new machine, in which he had motored
-down from Chicago; &#8220;shows&#8221; they had seen; a
-business scheme&mdash;biggest thing afoot, Burley
-threw in parenthetically, with a promise to tell
-Kinney more about it later; George Pickard&#8217;s attentions
-to the soubrette in a musical comedy, and
-references to flirtations which the married men
-present had been engaging in&mdash;these things were
-flung upon the table to be pecked at and dismissed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You people are the only real sports in this dismal
-swamp of a town! I don&#8217;t know how you live
-here among so many dead ones!&#8221; said Burley.</p>
-
-<p>Kinney declared that he intended to move to
-New York as soon as he got rid of his patent suits;
-he was tired of living in a one-horse town. This
-suggested a discussion of the merits of New York
-hotels&mdash;a subject which the Kinneys everywhere
-west of Manhattan Island find endlessly exciting.</p>
-
-<p>When champagne was served, Burley rose with
-elaborate dignity and invited the other men to join<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-in a toast to the ladies; they were the best girls in
-America; he defied anybody to gainsay him. He
-wished they might all travel about together all the
-time hitting only the high places; and he extended
-a general invitation to the company to meet him at
-Palm Beach the next winter for what he promised
-should be a grand time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;d make it Japan if he&#8217;d only had a few more
-drinks,&#8221; his wife remarked to Nan.</p>
-
-<p>By the time salad was served George Pickard
-thought it well to justify his reputation as a &#8220;cut-up.&#8221;
-His father, a successful lawyer, had left him
-a comfortable fortune which George was rapidly
-distributing. George had rebelled against the
-tame social life of the town in which he was born;
-he was bored by respectability, and found the freedom
-of the Kinneys&#8217; establishment wholly to his
-liking. He went to the living-room for the victrola
-and wheeled it in, playing the newest tango, to a
-point just behind Nan&#8217;s chair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Got to have music; got the habit and can&#8217;t eat
-without music!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was accepted as a joke until Copeland protested
-that he couldn&#8217;t stand the noise and began
-struggling with Pickard, who bitterly resented his
-effort to push the machine out of the room. The
-music was hushed presently and Pickard resumed
-his seat with the understanding that he might play
-all he pleased after dinner.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And we&#8217;ll have a dance&mdash;I haven&#8217;t danced a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-step in ages!&#8221; cried Nan, entering into the spirit of
-the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>She had always excused their vulgarity on the
-ground that they were at least cheerful, and that
-probably they were just as good as the people
-who frowned upon them. Their admiration was evident
-from the frequency with which they invited
-her opinion on the questions under discussion;
-and it was a relief to escape from the invalid air of
-home and from what she had convinced herself was
-Farley&#8217;s hostility.</p>
-
-<p>Several times her fingers touched the stem of her
-wineglass, only to be withdrawn quickly. Copeland,
-sitting beside her, noticed her indecision and
-drew the glass toward her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just one, for old times&#8217; sake, Nan?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right, Billy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She emptied her glass, and then, turning to Copeland,
-laid her fingers lightly across the rim.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all; not another drop!&#8221; she said in a low
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed and held up his glass for inspection;
-he had barely touched his lips to it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I had only one cocktail and I haven&#8217;t taken any
-of this stuff,&#8221; he said with a glance that invited
-approval. &#8220;I can do it; you see I can do it! I can
-do anything for you, Nan!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The furtive touch of his hand seemed to establish
-an understanding between them that they were
-spectators, not participants in the revel.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_088.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">THE FURTIVE TOUCH OF HIS HAND SEEMED TO ESTABLISH AN UNDERSTANDING<br />
-BETWEEN THEM THAT THEY WERE SPECTATORS, NOT PARTICIPANTS<br />
-IN THE REVEL</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>&#8220;I know you can, and you must, Billy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The noise and confusion increased. Edith Saxby
-had begun to cry&mdash;Nan remembered that Edith
-usually cried when she was tipsy. She was bewailing
-the loss of her salted almonds which she charged
-Andrews with appropriating. Andrews thereupon
-went to the sideboard and brought the serving-dish
-of almonds and poured the contents upon the
-girl&#8217;s head.</p>
-
-<p>Pickard leaned across the table to wipe away
-her tears with his napkin. In attempting this feat
-he upset the wine-glasses of his immediate neighbors,
-causing a wild scamper to escape the resulting
-deluge. Liggett and Burley retaliated by pushing
-him upon the table, where he crowned himself with
-the floral centerpiece. Boisterous expressions of
-delight greeted this masterstroke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is getting too rotten!&#8221; shouted Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>He seized Pickard and dragged him from the table
-amid general protests.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Biggest joke of all,&#8221; cried Kinney, pointing at
-Copeland, &#8220;that Billy&#8217;s sober. Everybody else
-drunk, but Billy sober&#8217;s a judge!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Liggett, a stout blonde, shrilly resenting this
-as an imputation upon her character, attempted
-to retaliate by slapping Kinney, who began running
-round the table to escape her. This continued with
-the others cheering them on until she tripped and
-fell headlong amid screams of consternation from
-the women and roars of delight from the men.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>&#8220;This is what I call a real ball!&#8221; declared Burley.</p>
-
-<p>After Mrs. Liggett had been carried to a divan
-in the hall to recuperate, they decided that the
-possibilities of the table had been exhausted and
-returned to the living-room where the victrola was
-again set going.</p>
-
-<p>Nan, lingering in the hall, found Andrews beside
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Always meant to tell you I loved you, Nan;
-now&#8217;s a good time,&#8221; he blurted. &#8220;No girl like you,
-Nancy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His wife appeared suddenly at the door and
-screamed at him to behave himself, while the others
-laughed loudly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rules all suspended to-night; nobody going to
-be jealous!&#8221; cried Burley encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Got to kiss me, Nan,&#8221; Andrews resumed; &#8220;kiss
-everybody else but you never&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She pushed him away in disgust. Kinney entertainments,
-viewed soberly, clearly lacked the zest
-she had found in them when exhilarated. She
-looked at her watch. She must leave immediately.
-Copeland beckoned to her and she turned to him
-with relief.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s half-past eight, Nan; how soon must you
-go?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At once; I shouldn&#8217;t have stayed in the first
-place.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll be glad enough to shake this bunch!
-Get your things and I&#8217;ll go for the car.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>He had been a very different Billy to-night. It
-was clear that he meant to be kind and considerate.
-The butler passed them bearing a jingling tray to
-answer a demand for high-balls from the living-room.
-Billy was the only sober man in the company,
-and she gave him full credit for his abstemiousness.
-They were calling her insistently to come
-and do some of the &#8220;stunts&#8221; that she had always
-contributed to their parties.</p>
-
-<p>She walked to the open door and laughed at them
-mockingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m all in, dead tired! Billy&#8217;s going to take
-me home!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The sight of them, flushed, rumpled, maudlin,
-increased her desire to escape as quickly as possible.
-She bade them good-night amid their loud
-reproaches, went for her hat and coat, and was
-soon in Copeland&#8217;s white roadster spinning toward
-town.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Nan, this is fine. We can go on with our
-talk now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But we finished that, Billy. We can&#8217;t go back
-to it again!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes, we can; there&#8217;s only one way to end
-it! That sort of thing&#8221;&mdash;he jerked his head toward
-the Kinneys&#8217;&mdash;&#8220;isn&#8217;t for you and me. I&#8217;ve cut
-it out; passed it up for good. I&#8217;m going to live
-straight and try to get back all I&#8217;ve lost: I know
-everybody&#8217;s down on me&mdash;waiting to see me
-take the count. But with you everything will be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-different. You know that; you understand it,
-Nan!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan&#8217;s thoughts were sober ones. She did like
-Billy; his good conduct at the party was encouraging;
-he could be a man if he would. He was a boy&mdash;a
-big, foolish boy, kind of heart, and generous,
-with a substratum of real character. The actual
-difference in years did not matter greatly; he was
-as slim and trim as a youngster just out of college.
-From the beginning of their acquaintance they had
-got on amazingly well together. And he loved her;
-she was honestly convinced of this. Like many young
-girls she had found the adoration of an older man
-flattering. A Farley had been cruelly unjust to
-her; there was always that justification. Even after
-she had given him her solemn assurances that she
-would not marry Billy, he had deliberately planned
-to give the bulk of his fortune to charity.</p>
-
-<p>After the scenes at the Kinneys&#8217; she found infinite
-relief and comfort in the rush of the cool
-night air, and in the bright shield of stars above.
-Billy was the only person in all the world who
-cared, who understood! In her anxiety to be just,
-she gave to his good conduct during the evening an
-exaggerated importance and assured herself that
-there was a manliness in him that she had never
-appreciated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear old Billy!&#8221; she said softly, and laid her
-hand lightly on his arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Nan!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>With a happy laugh he brought the machine to
-an abrupt stop.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear little girl! Dear little Nan!&#8221; he murmured,
-his arms clasping her. &#8220;You belong to me
-now; nobody&#8217;s ever going to take you away from
-me. I love you; you&#8217;re dearer to me than all the
-world; and I&#8217;m so happy and proud!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They talked for a time in subdued tones of the
-future. Yes; she had made the great decision. It
-seemed, now that she had given her word, that it
-had been inevitable from the beginning. There
-would be no more uncertainty, no more unhappiness.
-His arms were a happy refuge. No one had
-ever been as kind to her as he had been. She no
-longer questioned his good faith, or doubted his
-love.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Billy, we must hurry! I&#8217;m in for a bad
-time, if I&#8217;m caught.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When she reached the house the nurse let her
-in. Farley had wakened once and asked for her,
-Miss Rankin said, but he had been satisfied with
-an explanation that Nan had gone early to bed.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-
-<small>BILLS PAYABLE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">At</span> six o&#8217;clock every morning Mr. Jeremiah Amidon&#8217;s
-alarm-clock sent him trotting down the hall
-of his boarding-house to the bathroom for an immersion
-in cold water. When he had carefully
-dressed himself, he pulled weights for ten minutes,
-and thus refreshed and strengthened was able to
-wring a smile from the saddest boarder at the breakfast
-table.</p>
-
-<p>He now opened the office mail. No one knew
-who had conferred this responsibility upon him;
-all that any one knew about the matter was that
-Jerry got down first and had the job done usually
-by eight o&#8217;clock. He did it well; there was no denying
-that. It was the only way, he told Copeland,
-that you could keep track of the business. He assumed
-also the task of replying to complaints of
-protesting customers, and carried the replies to
-Copeland to sign. The errors, omissions, and delays
-complained of became, under Jerry&#8217;s hand, a matter
-of chagrin and personal grief to the head of the
-house. These literary performances were in a key
-of cheerful raillery, made possible by his knowledge
-of the domestic affairs or social habits of the kicking
-customer. Where there was real ground for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-complaint and the patron was a valued one, Jerry
-telegraphed an apology. Copeland demurred at
-this.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What if that fellow does get a damaged shipment
-occasionally?&#8221; said Copeland, frowning over
-one of these messages; &#8220;he&#8217;s one of the slowest
-customers on our list. It wouldn&#8217;t be any great
-calamity if we lost him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s slow all right,&#8221; Jerry admitted, &#8220;but he&#8217;s
-dead sure; and he has an old uncle who owns about
-a section of the fattest bottom land on the Wabash.
-When the old gent dies, Sam&#8217;s going to put up a
-building for himself and build a drug store that
-will be more beautiful than Solomon in full evening
-dress.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;These old uncles never die,&#8221; observed Copeland
-dryly, handing back the telegram.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sam&#8217;s will. He&#8217;s mostly paralyzed now and it
-won&#8217;t be long till we get an order for a new stock.
-Sam was in town last week and talked over the
-fittings for his new store. You&#8217;ll find seven dollars
-in my expense account that covers victuals and
-drink I threw into Samuel; but I paid for the tickets
-to the Creole Queens Burlesque out of my own pocket
-so&#8217;s to bring down my average.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; let &#8217;er go,&#8221; laughed Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>No one else in the establishment ever joked with
-Copeland. His father had been a melancholy dyspeptic;
-and the tradition of Farley&#8217;s bad temper
-and profanity still caused the old employees to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-walk softly. Copeland found Jerry&#8217;s freshness and
-cheek diverting. Jerry, by imperceptible degrees,
-was infusing snap into the organization. And Copeland
-knew that the house needed snap.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About telegrams: I guess we do more telegraphing
-than any house on the street!&#8221; Jerry informed
-him. &#8220;You can send a jolly by lightning anywhere
-in Indiana for a quarter; and nothing tickles one of
-these country fellows like getting a telegram.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve got to consider the dignity of the house
-just a little bit; try to remember that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Our game,&#8221; replied Jerry confidently, &#8220;is to
-hold the business we&#8217;ve got and get more. The old
-system&#8217;s played out. This isn&#8217;t the only house that
-feels it,&#8221; he added consolingly. &#8220;Everybody&#8217;s got
-to rustle these days. We&#8217;re conservative, of course,
-and deliver the goods straight every time, but we
-must keep shooting pep into the organization.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry had gone to the private office with one of
-his sugar letters, as he called his propitiatory masterpieces,
-on the day after Copeland&#8217;s meeting with
-Nan at the Kinneys&#8217;.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By the way, Jerry,&#8221; said Copeland, as Amidon
-turned to go, &#8220;what&#8217;s this joke you&#8217;ve put over in
-the Bigger Business Club? I didn&#8217;t tell anybody
-I wanted to be president. I was never in the club-rooms
-but once and that was to look at that billiard
-table I gave the boys.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry ran his finger round the inside of his collar
-and blinked innocently.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>&#8220;It was just an uprising of the people, Mr. Copeland.
-The boys had to have you. You got two
-hundred votes, and Sears, of the Thornwood Furniture
-Company, was the next man with only sixty-two.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You did that, you young scoundrel,&#8221; said Copeland
-good humoredly, &#8220;and I suppose you gave
-&#8216;The News&#8217; my picture to print in their account of
-the hotly contested election!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, sir; I only told the reporter where I thought
-he would find one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Bigger Business Club was an organization
-of clerks and traveling men, that offered luncheon
-and billiards and trade journals in a suite of rooms
-in the Board of Trade Building. It took itself very
-seriously, and was highly resolved to exercise its
-best endeavors in widening the city&#8217;s markets. Incidentally
-the luncheon served at thirty cents was
-the cheapest in town, and every other Saturday night
-during the winter there was a smoker where such
-subjects as &#8220;Selling Propositions,&#8221; &#8220;The Square
-Deal&#8221; and &#8220;Efficiency&#8221; were debated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, now that you&#8217;ve wished it on me, what
-am I going to do about it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your election scores one for the house and, of
-course, you&#8217;re going to take the job. The directors
-meet once a month, and you&#8217;ll have to attend some
-of the meetings; and you ought to turn out at a few
-of the smokers, anyhow. It will help the boys a lot
-to have you show an interest.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>Copeland&#8217;s face became serious. He swung round
-in his chair and stared at the wall for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think I might do those young fellows some
-good, do you?&#8221; he demanded bitterly. &#8220;Well, you
-seem to have a better opinion of me than most
-people. I&#8217;m much obliged to you, Jerry. If you&#8217;re
-going up there for lunch to-day I&#8217;ll go along.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland had ceased to be amused by Jerry&#8217;s
-personal devotion; there was something the least
-bit pathetic in it. If any one else had taken the
-trouble to make him president of a club of clerks
-and drummers he would have scorned it,&mdash;but
-no one else would have taken the trouble! He was
-satisfied of that.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland was at last thoroughly sobered by his
-financial situation. For two years the drug business
-had been losing steadily. Farley&#8217;s strong hand was
-missed; in spite of his animosity toward Farley,
-Copeland realized that his father&#8217;s old partner had
-been the real genius of the business.</p>
-
-<p>His original subscription of fifty thousand dollars
-for Kinney&#8217;s cement stock had been increased from
-time to time in response to the importunities of the
-sanguine and pushing Kinney until he now had
-three hundred thousand dollars invested. The bank
-had declined to accept his cement stock as collateral
-for the loan he was obliged to ask to take up Farley&#8217;s
-notes and had insisted that he put up Copeland-Farley
-stock, a demand with which he had
-reluctantly complied.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>One hundred thousand dollars of paper in the
-Western National matured on the 1st of November,
-only five days distant. Copeland was pondering a
-formidable list of maturing obligations that afternoon
-when Eaton appeared at the door of his private
-office. Copeland had never had any business
-with Eaton. Though Eaton was defending Kinney&#8217;s
-patents, Copeland had never attended any of their
-conferences and the lawyer&#8217;s attenuated figure
-and serious countenance gave him a distinct shock.</p>
-
-<p>It was possible, if not likely, that Farley had got
-wind of Nan&#8217;s interview with him and had sent the
-lawyer with a warning that Nan must be let alone.
-Eaton would be a likely choice for such an errand&mdash;likelier
-than Thurston. Copeland had always
-found Eaton&#8217;s gravity disconcerting; and to-day
-the lawyer seemed unusually sedate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hope I haven&#8217;t chosen an unfortunate hour
-for my visit? I don&#8217;t have much business down this
-way and I&#8217;m never sure when you men on the street
-are busy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Glad to see you at any time,&#8221; Copeland replied
-with a cordiality he did not feel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We don&#8217;t seem to meet very often,&#8221; remarked
-Eaton. &#8220;I used to see you at the University Club
-in old times, but you&#8217;ve been cutting us out lately.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t get there very often. The Hamilton is
-nearer the store and it&#8217;s a little more convenient
-place to meet anybody you want to see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall have to quit the University myself if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-the members don&#8217;t stop napping in the library after
-luncheon,&#8221; remarked Eaton musingly. &#8220;Rather a
-dim room, you remember? Only a few afternoons
-ago a fellow was sprawled out on a divan sleeping
-sweetly and I sat down on him&mdash;very annoying.
-The idea of gorging yourself so in the middle of the
-day that you&#8217;ve got to sleep it off is depressing. I
-suppose we can be undisturbed here for a few minutes?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; we&#8217;re all right here,&#8221; Copeland assented
-with misgivings. He thrust the list of accounts payable
-into a drawer, and waited for Eaton to unfold
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I come on a delicate matter, Copeland; business
-that is rather out of my line.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hoped you&#8217;d come to tell me we&#8217;d got a decision
-in the cement case. It would cheer us a good
-deal to know that Kinney&#8217;s patents have been sustained.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry we haven&#8217;t got a decision yet. But
-I&#8217;m reasonably sure of success there. If I hadn&#8217;t
-had faith in Kinney&#8217;s patents I shouldn&#8217;t have
-undertaken to defend them. We ought to have a
-decision now very shortly; any day, in fact.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Kinney isn&#8217;t worrying; he&#8217;s been going
-ahead just as though his rights were founded on
-rock.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think they are. It might have been better
-policy not to extend the business until we had
-clearance papers from the highest court, but Kinney<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-thought he ought to push on while the going&#8217;s good.
-He&#8217;s an ambitious fellow, and the stuff he makes
-is in demand; but you know more about that than
-I do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To be frank about it, I&#8217;d be glad to clear out
-of it,&#8221; said Copeland. &#8220;But I can&#8217;t desert him
-while his patents are in question&mdash;the stock&#8217;s
-unsalable now, of course.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There was a time when we might have compromised
-those suits on fairly good terms; but I
-advised Kinney against it. The responsibility of
-making the fight is mine. And,&#8221; Eaton added with
-one of his rare smiles, &#8220;I shall owe you all an
-apology if I get whipped.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland shrugged his shoulders. His uncertainty
-as to the nature of Eaton&#8217;s errand caused him to
-fidget nervously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As I said before,&#8221; Eaton resumed, &#8220;my purpose
-in coming to see you is wholly out of my line. In
-fact, I shan&#8217;t be surprised if you call it sheer impudence;
-but I wish to assure you that I come in the
-best spirit in the world. I hope you will understand
-that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland was confident now that Eaton brought
-some message from Farley. There was no other
-imaginable explanation of the visit. He was thinking
-hard, and to gain time he opened his top drawer
-and extended a box of cigars.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, thanks,&#8221; said Eaton, staring absently at
-the cigars. &#8220;To repeat, Copeland, my errand isn&#8217;t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-an agreeable one, and I apologize for my presumption
-in undertaking it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland chose a cigar carefully and slammed the
-drawer on the box. Perhaps Farley had chosen
-Eaton as a proper person to marry Nan; she liked
-him; Eaton had always had an unaccountable fascination
-for women. He became impatient for the
-lawyer to continue; but Eaton had never been more
-maddeningly deliberate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;May I assume, for a moment, Copeland, that
-you have obligations outstanding that cause you,
-we will say, temporary embarrassment? Just a moment,
-please!&#8221; Copeland had moved forward suddenly
-in his chair with resentment burning hot in
-his face. &#8220;The assumption may be unwarranted,&#8221;
-Eaton continued; &#8220;if so, I apologize.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland thrust his cigar into his mouth and
-bit it savagely. Farley had undoubtedly taken
-over the maturing notes at the Western National
-and had sent Eaton to taunt him with the change
-of ownership. Eaton removed his eyeglasses and
-polished them with the whitest of handkerchiefs.
-His eyes, unobscured by the thick lenses, told
-Copeland nothing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I may have misled you into thinking that my
-errand is purely social. I shall touch upon business;
-but I am not personally concerned in it in any way
-whatever. You might naturally conclude that I
-represent some corporation, bank, or trust company.
-I assure you that I do not. It may occur<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-to you that Mr. Farley sent me, but he has not
-mentioned you to me in this, or in any other connection
-remotely bearing upon my errand. You
-may possibly suspect that some one near you&mdash;some
-one in your office, for example&mdash;has been
-telling tales out of school. I will say explicitly that
-young Amidon, while a friend of mine, and a boy
-I particularly like, has given me no hint&mdash;not even
-the remotest idea&mdash;of any such state of things. I
-hope you are satisfied on those points?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Many persons at different times in John Cecil
-Eaton&#8217;s life, enraged by his cool, unruffled demeanor,
-had been moved to tell him to go to the devil; but
-no one had ever done so. Copeland did not do so
-now, though he was strongly impelled to violent
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will go the length of saying that you are in
-considerable danger right now,&#8221; Eaton went on as
-Copeland continued to watch him impassively.
-&#8220;If the Western National should foreclose on your
-stock, you would be pretty nearly wiped out of this
-old concern, that was founded and conducted for
-years by your father and is still identified with his
-name. I am in a position to pay those notes and
-carry them&mdash;carry renewals until you can take
-them up. I will say frankly that I don&#8217;t consider
-them a good investment, and I have said so to the
-person I represent; but to repeat again, I am not
-here as a lawyer or business man. My purpose is
-wholly friendly, and quite disinterested. I should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-merely go to the bank and take up the notes&mdash;thus
-destroying the hopes of certain gentlemen&mdash;your
-competitors in business&mdash;who entertain the
-cheerful idea of buying in your stock and putting
-you out of business. That would be a calamity&mdash;for
-you; and it would be deplorable to have an
-old house like Copeland-Farley lose its identity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland was still silent. He had caught at one
-motive for this visit after another, but Eaton had
-disposed of all of them. Eaton&#8217;s reputation as a
-man of strict&mdash;of rather quixotic&mdash;honor did not
-encourage the belief that he would deliberately lie.
-But there was a trap concealed somewhere, Copeland
-reflected; he resolved not to be caught. If he
-effected an immediate marriage with Nan, Farley
-would, he believed, do something handsome for
-her. He would storm and bluster in his usual way;
-but he would hardly dare go the length of cutting
-her off entirely. It was conceivable that he might
-advance money to save Copeland-Farley from
-catastrophe. There was a vein of sentiment in
-Timothy Farley; brought face to face with the idea
-of having the business he had done so much to
-establish eliminated, it was wholly possible that he
-would come down handsomely if Nan were introduced
-into the situation as a factor.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland was irritated by Eaton&#8217;s cocksure
-manner&mdash;a manner well calculated to cause irritation.
-Men did not make such offers from purely
-philanthropic motives. Eaton, moreover, was no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-friend of his; they hardly spoke the same language.
-Nan, he still suspected, was somehow the
-object and aim of these overtures. His mind
-worked quickly. He meant to marry Nan at once,
-within a few days if his plans succeeded, and
-he was not to be frustrated by any scheme for
-placing himself at the mercy of a new and concealed
-creditor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m much obliged to you, Eaton,&#8221; he answered
-steadily; &#8220;but I&#8217;m not quite all in yet. I can&#8217;t
-imagine where you got that idea. If I didn&#8217;t
-know you were a gentleman I should be pretty
-hot. Things have been a little tight with me, I
-confess; but that&#8217;s largely due to cutting down my
-capital in the drug business to back up what I had
-invested with Kinney. I&#8217;m working out satisfactorily
-and don&#8217;t need help; but I&#8217;m obliged to you
-just the same.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton nodded reflectively; his face betrayed no
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It might be possible, of course, for me to buy
-those maturing notes without your knowledge or
-consent. But I thought it would look better&mdash;help
-your credit, in other words&mdash;if you took them
-up yourself. You can see that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland had already thought of this; the idea
-did not add to his comfort. The mystery that enveloped
-Eaton enraged him; business was not done
-in this way. If anybody wanted to put one hundred
-thousand dollars into the drug house, there were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-direct businesslike ways of suggesting it. He
-tipped himself back in his chair and pointed the
-unlighted cigar he had been fumbling at a calendar
-that hung on the wall over his desk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My paper in the Western National isn&#8217;t due
-for five days: I dare them to sell it&mdash;to you or
-anybody else! As you know perfectly well, it would
-be bad banking ethics for a bank to sell the paper
-of an old customer. It isn&#8217;t done! I&#8217;ve about
-made up my mind to quit the Western, anyhow.
-Those fellows over there think they&#8217;ve got the right
-to sweat every customer they&#8217;ve got. They&#8217;re not
-bankers; they&#8217;ve got the souls of pawnbrokers and
-ought to be making loans on household goods at
-forty per cent a month.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That,&#8221; replied Eaton calmly, &#8220;has nothing to
-do with the matter in hand. I understand that you
-decline my offer, which is to take up the Western&#8217;s
-notes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re right, mighty right! You wouldn&#8217;t
-accept such an offer yourself, Eaton. If I were to
-come to you with a mysterious offer to advance
-you money, you&#8217;d turn me out of your office.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very likely,&#8221; Eaton assented. &#8220;And I don&#8217;t
-undertake to defend the idea; I confess that it&#8217;s
-indefensible. As I understand you, you&#8217;ve passed
-on the matter finally.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have,&#8221; replied Copeland sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton rose. He bent his gaze with an absent air
-upon the calendar, as though surprised to find it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-there. Then, seeming to recall that he had finished
-his errand, he walked to the door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you very much, Copeland,&#8221; he said;
-and passed out.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry Amidon paused in the act of shaking hands
-with a country customer to stare at the departing
-figure, but Eaton stalked austerely into the street
-quite unmindful of him.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-
-<small>FATE AND BILLY COPELAND</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Nan left Copeland the night of the Kinney
-party she promised to call him the next day. As
-telephoning from home was hazardous, she made
-an excuse for going downtown and called from a
-department store. Copeland was not in, and she
-repeated her call several times without reaching
-him. Copeland, if she had known it, was in the
-directors&#8217; room at the Western National, discussing
-his affairs with the president.</p>
-
-<p>She had a superstitious awe of petty frustrations
-of her plans and hopes. The Celt in her was alert
-for signs and miraculous interventions. It occurred
-to her that perhaps the angels of light or darkness
-were bent upon interfering; the idea kindled her
-imagination.</p>
-
-<p>In the street she ran into Fanny Copeland. To
-meet Billy&#8217;s former wife, just when she was trying
-to perfect plans for marrying Billy, was altogether
-dismaying.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You dear child, I&#8217;m so glad to see you!&#8221; cried
-Fanny, taking both Nan&#8217;s hands. &#8220;I was just
-wondering whether I had time to run up to the
-house. How is Mr. Farley?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Papa hasn&#8217;t been quite so well,&#8221; Nan answered;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>
-&#8220;but it&#8217;s only a slight cold. I had to come downtown
-on an errand,&#8221; she explained.</p>
-
-<p>She experienced once more a feeling of self-consciousness,
-of unreality, in meeting Fanny face to
-face: within a day or two she might be another
-Mrs. Copeland! And yet Billy had once loved this
-woman, undeniably; and she had loved him&mdash;she
-might, for all Nan knew, still love him. She
-envied the little woman her equanimity, her poise,
-her good cheer. If she were only like that, instead
-of the wobbly weather-vane she knew herself to be!
-Why hadn&#8217;t she a firm grip on life instead of a
-succession of fatuous clutches at nothing! Nan
-wished, as she had wished a thousand times, that
-troublesome problems would not rise up to vex
-her.</p>
-
-<p>The Farley chauffeur had run his machine to the
-sidewalk to pick her up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope your father will be better soon,&#8221; said
-Fanny. &#8220;Give him my love, won&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan&#8217;s eyes followed her as the car got under way.</p>
-
-<p>When she reached home she met a special delivery
-messenger at the door. Her heart jumped; it was
-a note from Billy, who had risked sending her a
-message that might very easily have fallen under
-her foster-father&#8217;s eye. She thrust it into her pocket
-unopened and ran upstairs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;re back again, are you?&#8221; Farley said
-harshly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, papa; I had an errand I couldn&#8217;t put off.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>&#8220;It&#8217;s always been a mystery to me,&#8221; he grumbled,
-&#8220;what women find to trot downtown for so much.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pins!&#8221; she replied lightly. &#8220;We always need
-little things. I met Mrs. Copeland&mdash;looking for
-pins, too; so you see I&#8217;m not the only one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You saw <i>her</i>, did you?&#8221; he asked with a show
-of eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I met her as I was coming out of Sterling&#8217;s.
-She was just starting home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d been hoping she&#8217;d stop in to see me, but
-she&#8217;s a busy woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She has a lot to do, of course. If you&#8217;d like
-to see her I&#8217;ll telephone her to come in for luncheon
-to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He appeared to be pondering this and his
-hands opened and shut several times before he
-answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; never mind. She&#8217;s busy and it really
-doesn&#8217;t matter.&#8221; He stared vacantly at the ceiling
-for a moment. &#8220;I guess that&#8217;s all fixed now,&#8221;
-he added musingly, apparently forgetting her.</p>
-
-<p>She was anxious to be off to her room to read
-Billy&#8217;s note; but she lingered, curious as to what
-further he might have to say about Fanny.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You like that woman, don&#8217;t you, Nan? You
-and she get on&mdash;you haven&#8217;t found any traces
-of ill-feeling toward you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His small gray eyes were bent upon her with an
-odd expression of mingled hostility and kindness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course I like her, papa; and I believe she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-likes me. There&#8217;s no reason why she shouldn&#8217;t
-like me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No reason!&#8221; he caught her up contemptuously.</p>
-
-<p>She knew that he was thinking of Billy. His
-face twitched as a wave of anger seized him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That man is a scoundrel!&#8221; he blurted. &#8220;If he
-hadn&#8217;t been he&#8217;d never have treated that woman
-as he did!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It doesn&#8217;t seem to worry her much!&#8221; she
-flashed back at him. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know a happier
-woman anywhere!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She realized instantly that the remark was unfortunate.
-He pointed a shaking finger at her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That woman,&#8221; he said, pronouncing the words
-with ominous deliberation, &#8220;ought to get down on
-her knees every night and thank God that she&#8217;s
-rid of him! That great bully, that worthless loafer!
-But I&#8217;ll show him a few things! If that blackguard
-thinks he can put anything over on me he&#8217;ll find
-that I&#8217;m smarter than he thinks I am! You remember
-that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must be quiet, Mr. Farley,&#8221; admonished
-Miss Rankin, who had been standing by the window;
-&#8220;the doctor said you weren&#8217;t to excite yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not excited,&#8221; he flared. &#8220;Doctors and lawyers
-make a nice mess of this world. They don&#8217;t
-any of &#8217;em know anything!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He gave himself an impatient twitch and several
-documents slipped from under his pillow. He
-clutched them nervously and thrust them back.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>Nan was jubilant for a moment in the knowledge
-that she knew what those documents contained&mdash;devices
-for humiliating her after he was
-gone. If only he knew how little she cared! He
-thought of nothing but his money and means of
-keeping it from her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go away; I want to think,&#8221; he said gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>Nan was grateful for this dismissal, and a moment
-later had softly closed her door and was
-eagerly reading Copeland&#8217;s message. It covered
-three letter-sheets and the daring of its contents
-caused her heart to beat wildly.</p>
-
-<p>What he proposed was immediate marriage.
-There was to be a military wedding that night at
-the church in the next block. Nan, he assumed,
-would attend. At the end of the ceremony she had
-merely to pass out of the church and his machine
-would be waiting around the corner. She could
-pack a suit-case, ostensibly filled with articles for
-the cleaner&#8217;s, and he would have a messenger call
-for it. They would run up to Lafayette, where he
-had a married cousin who would have a minister
-ready to marry them; then take a train for Chicago
-and return the next day and have it out with
-Farley.</p>
-
-<p>Nan had never shared Copeland&#8217;s faith in the
-idea that once they were married they might safely
-rely on Farley&#8217;s forgiveness. Farley&#8217;s passionate
-outbreaks at the mere mention of Copeland pretty
-effectually disposed of that hope. But that was not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-so important, for, in spite of Farley&#8217;s unfavorable
-opinion of Copeland&#8217;s business capacity and Billy&#8217;s
-own complaint of hard times, she had an idea that
-Copeland was well off, if not rich. To outward appearances,
-the drug business was as flourishing
-now as in the days when Farley was still active in
-its affairs. It was the way of business men to &#8220;talk
-poor&#8221; even when they were most prosperous; this
-had, at least, always been Farley&#8217;s way.</p>
-
-<p>The gaunt figure in the room across the hall rose
-wraithlike before her, giving her pause. Yes, the
-Farleys had been kind to her; they had caught her
-away from the world&#8217;s rough hand and had done
-all that it was in their power to do to make a decent,
-self-respecting woman of her. Her advantages had
-been equal to those enjoyed by most of the girls
-she knew. Many people&mdash;the town&#8217;s &#8220;old stock,&#8221;
-Farley&#8217;s substantial neighbors&mdash;would see nothing
-romantic or amusing in her flight with Copeland.
-They would call her the basest ingrate; she
-could fancy them saying that blood will tell; that
-after all she was a nobody, a girl without background
-or antecedents, whom the Farleys had
-picked up, out of the kindness of their simple
-hearts, and that she had taken the first chance to
-slap them in the face.</p>
-
-<p>Then she remembered the will that had given her
-the key to Farley&#8217;s intentions. Possibly the new
-will, which Thurston had brought to the house that
-day, cut her expectations to an even lower figure....</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>It pleased her to think that she was studying the
-matter dispassionately, arguing with herself both
-for and against Billy&#8217;s plan. It was more honest to
-marry Copeland now and be done with it than to
-wait and marry him after Farley&#8217;s death. This she
-found a particularly satisfying argument in favor of
-marrying him at once. Her histrionic sense responded
-to the suggestion of an elopement; it would
-be a great lark, besides bringing her deliverance
-from the iron hand of Farley. Yes; she would do it!
-Her pulses tingled as she visualized herself as the
-chief figure in an event that would stir the town. It
-was now four o&#8217;clock. Copeland had written that
-at five a messenger would call for her suit-case,
-and all she had to do was to step into his car when
-she came out of the church.</p>
-
-<p>She was downstairs listening for the bell when
-the messenger rang. As she handed him the suit-case
-she felt herself already launched upon a great
-adventure. While she was at the door the afternoon
-paper arrived and she carried it up to Farley and
-read him the headlines.</p>
-
-<p>She had her dinner with him in his room. There
-was a pathos in his lean frame, his deep-furrowed
-brow, in the restless, gnarled hands. She was not
-so happy over her plans as she had expected to be.
-She kept saying to herself that it wasn&#8217;t quite
-fair&mdash;not an honest return for all the kindnesses
-of her foster-parents&mdash;to run away and leave this
-broken old man. As she thought of it, every unkind<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-word he had said to her had been merited; she had
-lied to him, disobeyed him, and tricked him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the matter with your appetite, Nan?&#8221;
-he asked suddenly. &#8220;Seems to me you&#8217;ve looked
-a little peaked lately. Maybe you don&#8217;t get enough
-exercise now we&#8217;ve got the machine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m perfectly well,&#8221; she replied hastily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve been cooped up here all summer.
-You&#8217;d better take a trip this winter. We&#8217;ll keep a
-lookout for somebody that&#8217;s goin&#8217; South and get
-&#8217;em to take you along.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that isn&#8217;t necessary, papa. I never felt
-better in my life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t this the night for that Parish girl&#8217;s
-wedding?&#8221; he asked later.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I thought I&#8217;d go,&#8221; she answered carelessly.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s at the Congregational Church, and I
-can go alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; you be sure to go. You never saw an
-army wedding? I guess &#8217;most everybody will be
-there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When he reminded her that it was time to dress
-she answered indifferently that she didn&#8217;t care
-to go to the reception, and that the gown she had
-on would be perfectly suitable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll just watch the show from a back seat, papa;
-you can see a wedding better from the rear, anyhow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, don&#8217;t hurry back on my account.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had been afraid that he would raise some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-objection to her going without an escort; but he
-made no comment.</p>
-
-<p>She ran her eyes over the things in her room&mdash;photographs
-of girls she had known at boarding-school,
-trifles for the toilet-table that had been
-given her on birthdays and holidays. It was a
-big comfortable room, the largest bedroom in the
-house, with a window-seat that had been built
-specially for her when she came home from school.
-She glanced over the trinkets that littered the
-mantel, and took from its leathern case a medal
-she had won in school for excellence in recitations.
-On the wall hung a photograph of herself as Rosalind,
-a part she had played in an out-of-doors presentation
-of &#8220;As You Like It.&#8221;...</p>
-
-<p>She must leave some explanation of her absence&mdash;so
-she sat down at her desk and wrote:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>
-<i>Dear Papa</i>:&mdash;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Please don&#8217;t be hard on me, but I&#8217;ve run away
-to marry Mr. Copeland. We are going to Lafayette
-to his cousin&#8217;s and shall be married at her house
-to-night. I hope you won&#8217;t be hard on me; I shall
-explain everything to you when I see you and I
-think you will understand. We shall be back very
-soon and I will let you know where I shall be.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>She hesitated a moment and then closed with
-&#8220;Your loving daughter, Nan.&#8221; She thrust this
-into an envelope, addressed it in a bold hand to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
-Timothy Farley, Esq., and placed it under a small
-silver box on the mantel.</p>
-
-<p>She stood a moment at the door, then closed it
-softly and went in to say good-night to Farley. He
-took the hand on which she had half-drawn her
-glove and held it while his eyes slowly surveyed
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know whether you&#8217;d wear a hat to
-an evening wedding. I never know about those
-things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, this is such a foolish little thing, papa;
-you&#8217;d hardly call it a hat,&#8221; she laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, don&#8217;t let one of those army officers pick
-you up and carry you off. I want to hold on to you
-a little longer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As she bent to kiss him tears sprang to her eyes.
-Face to face with it, there was nothing heroic,
-nothing romantic in abandoning the kindest friend
-she was ever likely to know, and in a fashion so
-shamelessly abrupt and cruel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good-night, papa!&#8221; she cried bravely and
-tripped downstairs, humming to keep up her
-courage.</p>
-
-<p>She absently took her latch-key from a bowl on
-the hall table and did not remember until she had
-thrust it into her glove as she went down the steps
-that she would have no use for it. It was the finest
-of autumn nights and many were walking to the
-church; there was a flutter of white raiment, and
-a festal gayety marked the street. She waited for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-those immediately in sight to pass before leaving
-the yard and then walked toward the church.</p>
-
-<p>She eluded an officer resplendent in military
-dress who started toward her and stole into the
-nearest seat. The subdued happiness that seemed
-to thrill the atmosphere, the organist&#8217;s preludings,
-the air of expectancy intensified her sense of detachment
-and remoteness.</p>
-
-<p>The notes of the &#8220;Lohengrin&#8221; march roused her
-from her reverie and she craned her neck for a first
-sight of the attendants and the bride.</p>
-
-<p>Just before the benediction she left, and was soon
-in the side street where Billy was to leave his car.
-She had expected him to be in readiness, but he
-had evidently waited for the end of the ceremony&mdash;which
-seemed absurd when they were so soon to
-have a wedding of their own! It was inconsiderate
-of him to keep her waiting. The street began to fill
-and she loitered, ill at ease, while the organ trumpeted
-joyfully.</p>
-
-<p>Then she saw the familiar white roadster, with
-Billy in the chauffeur&#8217;s seat, turning into the side
-street where several policemen were already directing
-the movements of the parked carriages and
-motors toward the church entrance. His overcoat
-was flung open and the light of the lamp at the intersecting
-streets smote upon his shirt bosom. It was
-ridiculous for him to have put on evening clothes
-and a silk hat when he had a long drive before him!
-The policemen bawled to him not to interfere with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-the traffic. Ignoring their signals he drove his car
-forward. Nan watched with mounting anger the
-disturbance he was creating. The crowd that had
-assembled in the hope of catching a glimpse of the
-bride now found Copeland and his altercation with
-the police much more diverting.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Billy Copeland&#8217;s drunk again,&#8221; some one behind
-Nan remarked contemptuously.</p>
-
-<p>The white car suddenly darted forward and
-crashed into a motor that was advancing in line
-toward the corner, causing a stampede among the
-waiting vehicles.</p>
-
-<p>While the police were separating the two cars,
-Nan caught sight of Eaton, who seemed to be trying
-to persuade the policemen of Copeland&#8217;s good intentions.
-Billy&#8217;s voice was perfectly audible to the
-spectators as he demanded to be let alone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They haven&#8217;t got any right to block this street;
-it&#8217;s against the law to shut up a street that way!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The policemen dragged him from the seat and a
-chauffeur from one of the waiting cars jumped in
-and backed the machine out of the way. Nan
-waited uncertainly to see what disposition the
-police were making of Billy; but having lifted the
-blockade they left him to his own devices. He had
-been drinking; that was the only imaginable explanation
-of his conduct, and her newly established
-confidence in him was gone. However, it
-would be best to wait and attempt to speak to
-him, as he might mingle in the crowd and make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-inquiries for her that would publish the fact that
-they had planned flight.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she heard her name spoken, and turned
-to find Eaton beside her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Too bad about Copeland,&#8221; he remarked in his
-usual careless fashion; &#8220;but one of those policemen
-promised to see that he went home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was bewildered by his sudden appearance.
-Eaton never missed anything; he would certainly
-make note of her gown and hat as not proper for
-occasions of highest ceremony. Nor was it likely
-that he had overlooked the two suitcases strapped
-to the rear of Billy&#8217;s car.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Looked for you all over the church, and had
-given you up,&#8221; Eaton was saying. &#8220;You can&#8217;t say
-no&mdash;simply got to have you! Stupid to be pulling
-off a wedding the night we&#8217;re dedicating the new
-swimming-pool at the Wright Settlement House.
-Programme all shot to pieces, but Mamie Pembroke&#8217;s
-going to sing and you&#8217;ve got to do a recitation.
-Favor to an old friend! They dumped the
-full responsibility on me at six o&#8217;clock&mdash;six, mind
-you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan bewildered, uncertain, suffered him to pilot
-her round the corner, wondering how much he
-knew, and trying to adjust herself to this new situation.
-A car that she recognized as the Pembrokes&#8217;
-stood at the curb.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, come right along, Nan; there&#8217;s no use saying
-you won&#8217;t!&#8221; cried Mamie Pembroke.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>The Pembrokes were among those who had
-dropped her after she became identified with the
-Kinneys, and her rage at Copeland was mitigated
-by their cordiality.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hello, Mamie! What on earth do you want
-with me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s a lark; one of this crazy Eaton man&#8217;s
-ideas.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan knew that she had been recognized by many
-people, and that even if Copeland had not made
-a fool of himself the elopement was now out of the
-question. She felt giddy and leaned heavily on
-Eaton&#8217;s arm as he helped her into the car.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You were alone, weren&#8217;t you, Nan?&#8221; Eaton
-asked as the machine started.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she faltered, settling back into a seat
-beside Mrs. Pembroke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then we&#8217;d better stop at your house so Mr.
-Farley won&#8217;t be troubled about you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As she had not meant to return at all, it seemed
-absurd to go back now to say that she was going
-to a settlement house entertainment and would be
-home in an hour or so. The telltale letter could
-hardly have been found yet and she must dispose
-of it immediately. The car whirled round to the
-Farleys&#8217; and Nan let herself in with her key.</p>
-
-<p>Farley was awake, reading a magazine article
-on &#8220;The Ohio in the Civil War.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Back already! Getting married doesn&#8217;t take
-long, does it?&mdash;not as long as getting out of it!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>&#8220;Oh, the wedding was stunning!&#8221; she cried
-breathlessly. &#8220;I never saw so much gold braid in
-my life. I&#8217;m going with the Pembrokes and Mr.
-Eaton down to dedicate a swimming-pool at the
-Wright Settlement House. I just stopped to tell
-you, so you wouldn&#8217;t worry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tom Pembroke going down there?&#8221; he growled.
-&#8220;I thought that tank was for poor boys. What&#8217;s
-Eaton got to do with it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She explained that Eaton was substituting for
-the president of the Settlement House Association,
-who had been called from town, and that he had
-asked her to recite something.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, &#8216;The Ole Swimmin&#8217; Hole&#8217; will come in
-handy. I always like the way you do that. Run
-along now!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She darted into her room and found the letter
-just as she had left it on the mantel. She tore it
-into strips and threw them into her beribboned
-waste-paper basket. Her revulsion of feeling was
-complete. It was like waking from a nightmare to
-find herself secure amid familiar surroundings. She
-turned to Farley&#8217;s room again and impulsively
-bent and kissed him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t you gone yet?&#8221; he demanded, with the
-gruffness that often concealed his pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m off for sure this time,&#8221; she called back.
-&#8220;Thanks for suggesting &#8216;The Ole Swimmin&#8217; Hole&#8217;&mdash;that&#8217;s
-just the thing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They found the hall packed with an impatient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-crowd. Eaton led the way to the platform and
-opened the exercises without formality. The superintendent
-of the house dealt in statistics as to the
-service rendered by the Settlement. Mamie Pembroke
-sang &#8220;The Rosary&#8221; and responded to an
-encore.</p>
-
-<p>Nan had not faced so large an audience since her
-appearance as Rosalind at school. She drew off her
-gloves before her name was announced, and as she
-stood up put aside her hat. At least half a dozen
-nationalities were represented in the auditorium;
-and she resolved to try first a sketch in which an
-Irishman, an Italian and a German debated in brisk
-dialogue the ownership of a sum of money. She had
-heard it done in vaudeville by a comedian of reputation
-and had mastered it for dinner-table uses. She
-had added to it, recast, and improved it, and she
-now gave it with all the spirit and nice differentiation
-of which she was capable. Eaton, who had
-heard her several times before, was surprised at her
-success; she had taken pains; and how often Eaton,
-in thinking of Nan, had wished she would take
-pains!</p>
-
-<p>There was no ignoring the demand for more, and
-she gave another comic piece and added &#8220;The Ole
-Swimmin&#8217; Hole&#8221; for good measure. She received
-her applause graciously and sat down wondering
-at her own happiness. Mrs. Pembroke patted her
-hand; she heard somebody saying, &#8220;Yes, Farley&#8217;s
-daughter,&mdash;adopted her when she was a child!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>Eaton was announcing the close of the programme.
-It was his pleasant office, he said, to deliver
-the natatorium that had been added to the
-Settlement House into the keeping of the people of
-the neighborhood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Many lives go to the making of a city like this.
-Most of you know little of the men who have built
-this city, but you profit by their care and labor as
-much as though you and your fathers had been
-born here. It is the hope of all of us who come
-here to meet you and to help you, if we can, that
-you may be builders yourselves, adding to the dignity
-and honor and prosperity of the community.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, only one man besides myself knows who
-gave the money for the building of the swimming-pool.
-The other man is the donor himself. He is
-one of the old merchants of this city, a man known
-for his honesty and fair dealing. He told me not
-to mention his name; and I&#8217;m not going to do it.
-But I think that if some one who is very dear to
-him&mdash;the person who is the dearest of all in the
-world to him&mdash;should hand the keys to the superintendent,
-I should not be telling&mdash;and yet, you
-would understand who this kind friend is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He crossed the platform and handed Nan a bunch
-of keys.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure,&#8221; he said, turning to the interested
-spectators, &#8220;that you will be glad to know that the
-keys to the bathhouse have come to you through
-Miss Farley.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>Tears sprang to Nan&#8217;s eyes as she rose and handed
-the keys to the superintendent amid cheers and
-applause. She was profoundly moved by the demonstration.
-They did not know&mdash;those simple
-foreign folk who lifted their faces in gratitude and
-admiration&mdash;that an hour earlier it had been in
-her heart to commit an act of grossest ingratitude
-against their benefactor. She turned away with
-infinite relief that the exercises were over, and
-followed the rest of the visitors to inspect the house.
-It was like Farley not to tell any one of his gift;
-and she felt like a fraud and a cheat to stand in his
-place, receiving praise that was intended for him.</p>
-
-<p>On the way home she was very quiet. The many
-emotions of the day had so wearied her that she had
-no spirit to project herself into the future. And it
-seemed futile to attempt to forecast a day&#8217;s events,
-when she had, apparently, so little control of her
-own destiny.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hope Mr. Farley won&#8217;t abuse me for giving
-him away?&#8221; Eaton remarked, as he left her at the
-door. &#8220;But the temptation was too strong&mdash;couldn&#8217;t
-resist putting you into the picture. Your
-recitations made a big hit; and those people are
-real critics!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She lay in the window-seat till daybreak, dreaming,
-staring at the stars.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-
-<small>AN ABRUPT ENDING</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nan</span> sang as she dressed the next morning. The
-gods had ordained that she shouldn&#8217;t marry Billy,
-and after her uncertainties on that point she was
-relieved to find that the higher powers had taken
-the troublesome business out of her hands. She
-was surprised at her light-hearted acceptance of the
-situation. She hadn&#8217;t married Billy and she sang
-in the joy of her freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Just as she was ready to leave her room the maid
-brought up a special delivery letter from Copeland.
-It had been posted at six o&#8217;clock. She tore open
-the envelope and read frowningly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>
-<i>Dear Nan</i>:&mdash;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Sorry about the row at the church last night.
-Never occurred to me that there&#8217;d be such a jam.
-I hung around the neighborhood as long as I could,
-hoping to find you. But it will be nicer, after all, to
-make the run by daylight. Telephone me where we
-can meet this morning, say at ten. I shall be at the
-office early and shall expect to hear from you by
-nine-thirty. For God&#8217;s sake, don&#8217;t fail me, Nan!</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was scrawled in pencil on Hamilton Club
-paper. She propped it against her dressing-table<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-mirror and stared at it wonderingly. It did not
-seem possible that she had ever contemplated running
-away with Billy. The remembrance of him as
-he sat in his car, quarreling with the police, with the
-eyes of a hundred people upon him, sickened her.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Either you love me, Nan, or you don&#8217;t; you
-either have been fooling me all along or you mean
-to stand by me now and make me the happiest man
-alive....</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>She smiled at Billy&#8217;s efforts to be pathetic&mdash;a
-quizzical little smile. The paper smelt odiously of
-tobacco smoke. She tore the note to pieces and let
-them slip slowly from her hand into her waste-basket.
-No; she did not love Billy. Only a few
-hours earlier she had been ready to run away with
-him; but that was all over now. She was sorry for
-Billy, but she did not love him. How could she
-have ever been foolish enough to think she did!
-But why, she wondered, was she forever yielding to
-impulses from which a kind fate might not always
-protect her? &#8220;You little fool!&#8221; she ejaculated.
-A moment later she stood smiling in Farley&#8217;s door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan, look here what they say about you in the
-paper!&#8221; he said, glancing at her over his spectacles.
-&#8220;I told Eaton not to blab about that swimmin&#8217;-tank
-business and here they&#8217;ve got us all in the
-paper!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, if only you could have been there, papa!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>She saw that he was pleased. He bade her ring
-for the maid to bring up their breakfast; he wanted
-to know all about the exercises at the Settlement
-House.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess you made a hit all right,&#8221; he said
-proudly, after making her read the account aloud.
-&#8220;I never liked your sayin&#8217; pieces in public; but I
-guess if you can tickle a crowd like that I ain&#8217;t got
-any right to kick.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The reporter had built his story around her;
-and had done full justice to her part in the surprise
-of the evening. Her recitations were praised extravagantly
-as worthy of a professional; &#8220;it is unfortunate,&#8221;
-ran the article, &#8220;that Miss Farley&#8217;s
-elocutionary talents are so rarely displayed in
-public.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was compensation for much greater catastrophes
-than the loss of Billy Copeland to find
-Farley so pleased.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s kind o&#8217; nice to do things like that&mdash;to do
-things for people,&#8221; Farley remarked wistfully, after
-subjecting Nan to a prolonged cross-examination.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry now I didn&#8217;t tell you about that swimmin&#8217; pool.
-You&#8217;ve got a mighty kind heart, Nan.
-I used to think I wouldn&#8217;t make any will, but let
-what I&#8217;ve got go to you, and leave it to you to
-help some of these schemes for the poor. You
-know you&#8217;ve worried me sometimes&mdash;we won&#8217;t
-talk about that any more; I guess it&#8217;s all over
-now.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>The questioning look he bent upon her gave her
-conscience a twinge. If Billy hadn&#8217;t become embroiled
-with the police she would not be listening
-to Farley&#8217;s praise!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, papa; it&#8217;s all over,&#8221; she replied softly, and
-bent down and kissed him.</p>
-
-<p>When later she called Copeland on the telephone
-it was to laugh at their misadventure&mdash;it seemed
-safer to make light of it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please forget all about it, Billy. It wasn&#8217;t my
-fault or yours either; it was all wrong any way.
-No&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was talking from his desk at the store and
-as he began to argue she dismissed him firmly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t be cross, Billy. You ought to be
-as glad as I am that we didn&#8217;t do it. No; never
-again! Cheer up; that&#8217;s a nice boy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She hung up on his angry reply.</p>
-
-<p>Nan spent all day at home virtuously addressing
-herself to household affairs, much to the surprise
-of the cook and maid.</p>
-
-<p>Mamie Pembroke stopped to leave a huge bunch
-of chrysanthemums for Mr. Farley. He sent for
-her to come to his room and asked her all about
-the evening at the Settlement House. Mamie&#8217;s
-appearance added to his happiness. He had been
-deeply grieved when Mamie and the Harrington
-girls dropped Nan; it was a good sign that they
-were beginning to evince a renewed interest in her.
-He attributed the change in their attitude to Nan&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-abandonment of Copeland and the Kinneys, never
-dreaming in his innocence of the quiet missionary
-work that Eaton had been doing with the cautious
-mothers of these young women.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d better give Nan some work to do on some
-of your charity schemes, Mamie. She&#8217;s been shut
-up here with me so much she hasn&#8217;t got around with
-the rest of you girls as I want her to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t think I do so much! Mamma does
-it for the whole family. I&#8217;m sure Nan does as much
-as any of the girls.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thanks for your kind words, Mamie; you know
-perfectly well they dropped me from the Kindergarten
-Board for cutting all the meetings. But I
-think we all ought to help in these things. It certainly
-opened my eyes to see that crowd down there
-last night; I had no idea the Settlement had grown
-so big.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish you and Mamie would go down and look
-at the Boys&#8217; Club sometime. They&#8217;ve only got a
-tumble-down house, but they&#8217;re talkin&#8217; of doin&#8217;
-something better. A poor boy has a mighty hard
-time. When I was a boy down on the Ohio&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The story was a familiar one to Nan, and as he
-talked her thoughts reverted to the will in which
-his provisions for the Boys&#8217; Club had so angered
-her.</p>
-
-<p>All day she marveled at her happiness, her newly-awakened
-unselfishness. In her gratitude for what
-she sincerely believed to have been a providential<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-deliverance from Copeland she voluntarily gave
-the nurse the night off.</p>
-
-<p>Her good cheer had communicated itself to Farley.
-The nurse was a nuisance, he said, and he
-would soon be well enough to dispense with her
-altogether. Over the supper they ate together in
-his room she exerted herself to amuse him and he
-proved unusually amiable. The afternoon paper&#8217;s
-account of his gift of the swimming-pool revived
-this as a topic of conversation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t done as much as I ought to for the
-poor and unlucky. I expect they&#8217;ve called me a
-pretty hard specimen; and I&#8217;ve turned down lots
-of these people that&#8217;s always chasin&#8217; round with
-subscription papers. But I always had an idea I&#8217;d
-like to do something that would count. I&#8217;m sorry
-now I didn&#8217;t give those Boys&#8217; Club folks a boost
-while I could see the money spent myself. I&#8217;ve
-tried makin&#8217; wills and ain&#8217;t sure about any of &#8217;em.
-I got a good mind to burn &#8217;em all, Nan, and leave it
-up to you to give away what you think&#8217;s right. Only
-I wouldn&#8217;t want you to feel bound to do it. These
-things don&#8217;t count for much unless you feel in
-your heart you want to do &#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She tried to divert his thoughts to other channels,
-but he persisted in discussing ways and means
-of helping the poor and unfortunate. She was surprised
-at his intimate knowledge of local philanthropic
-organizations; for a number of them he
-expressed the greatest contempt, as impractical and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-likely to do harm. Others he commended warmly
-and urged her to acquaint herself with their methods
-and needs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We ought to do those things ourselves, while
-we&#8217;re alive. You can&#8217;t tell what they&#8217;ll do
-with your money after you&#8217;re dead,&#8221; he kept
-repeating.</p>
-
-<p>She wondered whether he regretted now having
-made the will that had caused her so much anguish.
-Perhaps.... But her resentment had vanished.
-His solicitude for friendless boys, based upon his
-own forlorn youth, impressed her deeply. It was
-out of the same spirit that he had lifted her from
-poverty&mdash;she had even greater cause for gratitude
-and generosity than he, and she said so in terms
-that touched him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t think of those things any more,
-papa,&#8221; she said finally. &#8220;If you have a bad night,
-Miss Rankin will give me a scolding. I&#8217;m going to
-read you something.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; he acquiesced. &#8220;To-morrow I&#8217;ll
-talk to you some more about my will. It&#8217;s worried
-me a whole lot; I want to do the right thing, Nan;
-I want you to know that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course I know that, papa; I&#8217;d be a mighty
-stupid girl if I didn&#8217;t; so don&#8217;t waste your strength
-arguing with me. You&#8217;ve been talking too much;
-what shall I read?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t read me any of this new-fangled stuff.
-Take down &#8216;Huck Finn&#8217; and read that chapter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-about the two crooks Huck meets on the river.
-You ain&#8217;t read me that lately.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He lay very quiet until she had finished the
-chapter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Much obliged,&#8221; he said absently. &#8220;You run
-along now. I&#8217;ll be all right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the hall she met the maid coming to announce
-a caller.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry, chastely attired in a new fall suit, greeted
-her with the ambassadorial dignity that he assumed
-for social occasions, with apologies to J. C. E.
-He could bow and shake hands like his idol and
-mentor, and though his manner of speech was still
-his own, he had greatly subdued its original violences.
-The area of collar and cuff that could be sustained
-on a salary lately increased to eighty dollars
-a month might provoke smiles; but Jerry was not
-troubled. By discreetly soliciting custom for a
-tailor who made a twenty-five dollar suit which
-only the most sophisticated sartorial critic could
-distinguish from a sixty-dollar creation, he got his
-clothes at a discount. While he had not yet acquired
-a dress-suit or a silk hat, he boasted a dinner-coat
-and a cutaway. He had dedicated the latter by
-wearing it boldly to Christ Church, where he was
-ushered to the third pew from the chancel and placed
-beside a lady whose kneelings and risings he imitated
-sedulously. This was Eaton&#8217;s church, and
-while that gentleman was not present on that
-particular morning, a tablet commemorating his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-father&#8217;s virtues (twenty years warden and vestry-man)
-gave Jerry a thrill of pride and a sense
-of perspective. His mother had been a Campbellite,
-and a vested clergy and choir, sprung
-upon him suddenly, had awed him to a mood of
-humility.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d been wondering as I came up what I&#8217;d do
-if you were out: I couldn&#8217;t decide whether to jump
-in the river or lie down in the middle of the street
-and be killed by a large, fat auto. Nan,&#8221;&mdash;he held
-her hand and gazed into her face with tragic intensity,&mdash;&#8220;Nan,
-you have saved my life!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She met him promptly on his own ground.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should have worn mourning for you, Jerry;
-you may be sure of that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The thought seems to give you pleasure. But
-I like you best in blue&mdash;that suit you had on the
-day we paddled up the river still haunts me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that was a last year&#8217;s bird-nest. I have a
-lot better clothes than that, but I don&#8217;t wear them
-to picnics.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d be dazzling in anything; I&#8217;m dead sure
-of that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He ran on in his usual key for some time, and
-then rose abruptly and walked toward her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are we quite alone?&#8221; he whispered tragically.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are,&#8221; she replied, imitating his tone. &#8220;I
-hope you don&#8217;t mean to rob the house.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he replied; &#8220;I didn&#8217;t come to steal; I&#8217;ve
-brought you a large beautiful present.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>This she assumed to be the preliminary to a joke
-of some kind.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I left it behind that big rosebush in the yard
-and I&#8217;ll bring it in&mdash;nobody likely to come&mdash;no?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; the nurse is out and I just now heard the
-maid climbing the back stairs to her room.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A smothered &#8220;Oh!&#8221; greeted him as he reappeared
-bearing the suit-case she had entrusted to Copeland&#8217;s
-messenger the day before. He placed it
-quietly by the door, a little shame-facedly, in spite
-of his efforts to pass the matter off lightly. Nan
-flushed, staring at him defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I saw this down at the works and I just thought
-I&#8217;d bring it up. Maybe,&#8221; he said reflectively, &#8220;it
-ain&#8217;t yours; but I thought I&#8217;d take a chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;N. F.&#8221; neatly printed on the end of the bag
-advertised its ownership to any observant eye.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You and I are good friends, I hope,&#8221; she said
-uneasily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be silly, Nan; if we&#8217;re not, what are we?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was not a question she cared to debate; the
-immediate matter was the narrowness of her escape
-from a marriage with Copeland and just what she
-should tell Jerry about it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you know about&mdash;<i>that</i>&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I make it my business never to know anything!
-I don&#8217;t want to know anything about that bag. So
-we&#8217;ll just forget it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that her eyes rested nervously on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-suit-case, he carried it into the hall out of range of
-any chance caller&#8217;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; she said absently as he came back.
-He began speaking volubly of the delights of
-&#8220;Ivanhoe&#8221; which Eaton had lately given him to
-read.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How many people know about&mdash;<i>that</i>?&#8221; she
-demanded, breaking in sharply upon his praise of
-Scott.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, the bag? Not a soul; I told you not to
-worry about that. I found it behind the door in his
-private office. Purely accidental&mdash;honest, it was!
-He wasn&#8217;t feeling well to-day,&#8221; he added. &#8220;He
-hung around the store all morning looking pretty
-glum and didn&#8217;t show up at all this afternoon. I
-went to the club and fished him out about six o&#8217;clock
-and took him home in a taxi. That&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Reduced to terms, Billy had characteristically
-celebrated the failure of the elopement by continuing
-the drunk he had begun the night before.
-Her good luck had not deserted her if no one but
-Jerry knew that her suit-case, packed for flight,
-had stood all day in Copeland&#8217;s office. Jerry&#8217;s intuitions
-were too keen for her to attempt dissimulation.
-It would be better to confess and assure
-herself of his secrecy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t need to worry about that little
-matter, Nan,&#8221; Jerry continued reassuringly. &#8220;Nobody&#8217;s
-going to know anything about it. Nobody
-<i>does</i> know anything about it&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>&#8220;Mr. Eaton?&#8221; she suggested faintly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t seen Cecil for two days. I&#8217;ve told
-you all there is to tell. I don&#8217;t know any more
-and I don&#8217;t want to know. Now, forget it!
-Only&#8221;&mdash;he deliberated a moment and then added
-brokenly&mdash;&#8220;only, for God&#8217;s sake, don&#8217;t ever try
-it again!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It flashed upon her suddenly that the presence
-of her suit-case in Copeland&#8217;s office was susceptible
-of grave misconstruction.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to tell you the whole story, Jerry;
-I think I&#8217;ll feel happier if I do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you don&#8217;t have to tell me anything;
-remember that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Maybe not, Jerry. But I feel that having
-known me away back in the old times, you&#8217;ll understand
-better than anybody else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was an appeal in this that filled his heart
-with pride. He was struck with humility that a
-girl like Nan should confide in him. He had not yet
-recovered from his surprise that she tolerated him
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t think I was going to do anything
-wrong, Jerry,&#8221; she said pleadingly; &#8220;we were to
-have been married last night; it wasn&#8217;t&mdash;it wasn&#8217;t
-anything worse!&#8221; she faltered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan!&#8221; he gasped; &#8220;don&#8217;t say things like <i>that</i>!
-I wouldn&#8217;t think it&mdash;I hadn&#8217;t thought it of him!
-And you&mdash;!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you might have thought it,&#8221; she said,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-with a despairing note; &#8220;but you didn&#8217;t because
-you&#8217;re my good friend and a gentleman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was so astounded by her unsparing self-condemnation
-that he almost missed this heart-warming
-praise. She hurried on with the story, tears
-filling her eyes. It was an undreamed-of thing that
-he should see his divinity weep. For the first time
-in his life he felt that he, too, was capable of tears.
-But he must restore her equanimity, and before
-she concluded he had decided to pass the whole
-thing off as a joke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Forget it, Nan! You never really meant to do
-it, anyhow. If Cecil hadn&#8217;t turned up, it&#8217;s a safe
-bet you&#8217;d have weakened before you got into the
-boss&#8217;s machine. It was a good joke&mdash;on the boss;
-that&#8217;s all I see in it. Come on, now, and give a
-merry ha-ha. The only sad thing about it is that
-it put the boss on the blink all day. If he&#8217;d been
-a real sport he wouldn&#8217;t have let you escape so easy;
-looks as though he wasn&#8217;t exactly crazy about it
-himself!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you think he wasn&#8217;t!&#8221; she flared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought I&#8217;d get a rise out of you with that!
-Take it from me, if I&#8217;d framed up a thing like that
-I&#8217;d &#8217;ve pulled up large shade trees and upset tall
-buildings putting it over. But all you&#8217;ve got to
-do is to charge it up to profit and loss. Hereafter
-you&#8217;d better not make any engagements without
-seeing me,&#8221; he concluded daringly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There may be something in that,&#8221; she laughed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-&#8220;I&#8217;m glad I told you, Jerry. It helps a lot to tell
-your troubles to some one&mdash;and you don&#8217;t think
-much worse of me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, too much sympathy wouldn&#8217;t be good for
-you!&#8221; he said, looking at her fixedly. &#8220;Your trouble
-is, Nan, if you will take it from an old friend, that
-you&#8217;ve had too soft a time. You need a jar or two
-to make you watch the corners. So do I; so does
-everybody! When things come easy for me I get
-nervous. I&#8217;ve got to have something to fight; but
-I don&#8217;t mean punching heads; not any more. Cecil
-says his great aim in life is to teach me to fight with
-my brains instead of my fists and feet. But it&#8217;s
-hard work, considering the number of heads there
-are that need punching.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was touched by his anxiety to serve her, to
-see her always in the best possible light. He was
-a comforting person, this Jerry. His philosophy was
-much sounder than her own; he was infinitely wiser.
-He had done much better with his life than she had
-with hers, and the advantages had been so immensely
-in her favor! There was no one else in the
-world, she reflected, to whom she could confide
-as in him. She marveled that she trusted him so
-implicitly&mdash;and he knew how little she merited
-trust! A sudden impulse carried her across the
-room to where he stood fingering a book.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are very good to me, Jerry!&#8221; she said with
-deep feeling.</p>
-
-<p>Her hand touched his&mdash;a light, caressing stroke;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-then she sprang away from him, abashed. The
-color mounted to his face, and he thrust the hand
-awkwardly into his pocket. The touch of her hand
-had thrilled him; a wave of tenderness swept
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want to be good to you; I want to help you
-if I can,&#8221; he said simply.</p>
-
-<p>But he was afraid of Nan in tears, and there
-were tears in the eyes with which she now regarded
-him. She turned away, slipping her handkerchief
-from her sleeve. This would never do. He waited
-a moment, then began talking, as though nothing
-had happened, of old times on the river, of steamboat
-men and their ways, in the hope of restoring
-her tranquillity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess I had my share of fun down there; if I
-could be a kid again I&#8217;d want to be born right down
-there on the old Ohio. I remember once&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A muffled crash in the room above sent her flying
-into the hall and upstairs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Papa!&#8221; she called, standing in the doorway of
-Farley&#8217;s room and fumbling for the electric button.</p>
-
-<p>As the ceiling lights flooded the room she called
-loudly to Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>Farley lay on the floor in a crumpled heap. The
-crash that had accompanied his collapse had been
-due to the overturning of the electric table lamp,
-at which he had caught as he felt himself falling.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry was already on his knees beside the prone
-figure.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>Nan snatched the receiver of the telephone from
-its bracket and called the regular physician; and
-then, remembering another doctor who lived just
-around the corner, she summoned him also. Amidon
-lifted Farley and placed him on the bed. While
-waiting for her numbers she told him where to find
-a restorative the doctor had provided for emergencies,
-and before she finished telephoning he had
-tried vainly to force a spoonful of the liquid between
-Farley&#8217;s lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s no use,&#8221; said Jerry, placing his hand over
-the stricken man&#8217;s heart.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No! No! It can&#8217;t be possible!&#8221; Nan moaned.
-&#8220;He&#8217;d been so well to-day!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes both physicians were in the
-room. They made a hurried examination, asked
-a few questions, and said there was nothing to be
-done.</p>
-
-<p>The indomitable spirit of Timothy Farley had
-escaped from its prison-house; what was mortal
-of him remained strangely white and still. Nan,
-kneeling beside the bed, wept softly. Her foster-mother
-had died after a brief illness and she had
-experienced no such shock as now numbed her.
-She had, after all, been closer to Farley than to his
-wife. Mrs. Farley, with all her gentleness and
-sweetness, had lacked the positive traits that made
-Timothy Farley an interesting, masterful character.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There will be things to do,&#8221; Amidon was saying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-gently. &#8220;Do you mind if I tell Mr. Eaton? He&#8217;d
-want to know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I should like him to come,&#8221; she replied.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry went below with the physicians and called
-Eaton on the telephone in the lower hall.</p>
-
-<p>Nan rose and began straightening the room.
-Farley had evidently drawn on his dressing-gown
-with a view to remaining up some time, and had
-walked to the quaint little table that had so long
-stood near the window. Nan saw now what had
-escaped her when she rushed into the room. The
-oblong top of the table had been so turned that it
-disclosed a compartment back of the trio of drawers
-in which Mrs. Farley had kept her sewing articles.
-Four long envelopes lay on the lid; two others had
-fallen to the floor and lay among the debris of the
-lamp. At a glance she saw that these were similar
-to the ones she had seen Farley hiding on several
-occasions, and the counterpart of the envelope
-containing the will she had read with so much concern.
-One of the envelopes was torn twice across,
-as though he had intended disposing of it finally.
-The others were intact.</p>
-
-<p>She gathered them all together and thrust them
-back into the table; then ran her fingers along the
-underside of the lid until she found a tiny catch.
-Noting the position of this, she drew the top into
-place, satisfied herself that the spring had caught,
-and rose just as Jerry came back.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-
-<small>SHADOWS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nan</span> lay on her bed, fully dressed, on the evening
-of the day of the funeral, listening to the sounds of
-the street with an uncomfortable sense of strangeness
-and isolation. The faint tinkle of the bell
-roused her and the maid came up bearing Eaton&#8217;s
-card. She had told the girl to excuse her to callers,
-but Eaton sent word that he wished particularly
-to see her. She appeared before him startlingly
-wan and white in her black gown.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I knew you wanted to be alone, Nan, but there&#8217;s
-a matter I must speak to you about, and I thought
-it best to do it at once. I shan&#8217;t bother you long.
-I left a dinner at the Lawyers&#8217; Club to run up for
-a minute; in about an hour I shall be making a
-speech; so you needn&#8217;t prepare for a long visit!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad you came. It&#8217;s much harder than I
-thought it would be. I&#8217;m sorry I didn&#8217;t keep Mrs.
-Copeland or one of the girls with me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, you&#8217;re bound to feel it. It came as
-a great shock to all of us. A man like your father
-can&#8217;t pass out of the world without being missed&mdash;very
-deeply missed. He was a real person; a
-vivid personality. It has done me good to hear the
-fine things said of him; the crowd here at the services<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-showed that he had been held in very deep
-affection by all sorts of people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment&#8217;s silence. The tears had
-come into her eyes and he waited for her to control
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t be troubling you if I hadn&#8217;t felt
-that my business&mdash;if it can be called business&mdash;was
-urgent. I&#8217;m taking the liberty of an old friend&mdash;of
-yours and of Mr. Farley&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, there can&#8217;t be any question of liberty!&#8221; she
-protested. &#8220;You&#8217;re always so thoughtful, so kind!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My purpose is in no sense professional,&#8221; he
-continued. &#8220;Mr. Thurston was Mr. Farley&#8217;s lawyer
-and he will no doubt confer with you at once on
-business matters. He&#8217;s an excellent man; wholly
-trustworthy. No one stands higher at our bar.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I know papa had every confidence in him,&#8221;
-Nan replied, wondering what Eaton, who looked
-very distinguished in his evening clothes, could
-have to say to her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s in relation to that little difficulty&mdash;an unfortunate
-but wholly pardonable mistake you made&mdash;you
-see I speak frankly&mdash;in reference to a man
-named Harlowe, a lawyer from the south part of
-the State, in regard to a demand he made on you
-some time ago. Mr. Farley explained about it&mdash;all
-that he knew.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan clenched her hands tightly and drew a deep
-breath. It was inconceivable that that specter could
-reappear to trouble her.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she whispered faintly; &#8220;I remember. I
-was so grateful to you for your help that night.
-I don&#8217;t know what would have happened if you
-hadn&#8217;t come just then. Papa was very bitter
-about what I did, and of course it was cowardly of
-me; and very stupid, not to have advised with
-some one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You did what seemed perfectly justifiable at
-the moment; Mr. Farley saw it that way afterward.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He never spoke to me about it again; I have
-you to thank for that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; it was Mr. Farley&#8217;s aim to be just. Now,
-about this Harlowe: I don&#8217;t want to alarm you, but
-I have found it best to be prepared for difficulties
-even where there&#8217;s only a remote chance of having
-to confront them. I merely want you to know that
-if that man turns up again I&#8217;m ready for him. I
-have, in fact, accumulated a considerable amount
-of data that can be used against him if he makes
-another move. He&#8217;s an unscrupulous blackguard,
-a disgrace to the profession.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But that case against my brother is all over
-now. He couldn&#8217;t ask for more money?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not in that particular way,&#8221; Eaton replied
-slowly; &#8220;but having succeeded once in frightening
-money out of you, he might try it again. I suppose
-Mr. Farley never told you what I discovered&mdash;established
-with documentary proof that I have
-safely put away in my office&mdash;that the Corrigan<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-this Harlowe pretended to represent was not in
-fact your brother.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He went on quickly, ignoring the astonishment
-and bewilderment written on her face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That man was no more your brother than he
-is mine&mdash;you need have no doubts about it. Harlowe&#8217;s
-client went to the penitentiary&mdash;quite
-properly, no doubt. The poor fellow never knew
-how he had been used&mdash;never heard of that money!
-I take off my hat to Brother Harlowe&mdash;a shrewd
-scoundrel. It&#8217;s because I respect his talents that
-I&#8217;ve taken so much pains to look him up! Possibly
-you won&#8217;t hear from him at all; then again, you
-may. I&#8217;ve given some study to the peculiar moral
-nature of persons like Harlowe, and I won&#8217;t deny
-that it would please me to have a chance at him&mdash;though,
-of course, Mr. Thurston would be quite
-as competent to deal with the case as I am. My
-aim would be to get rid of him quietly, perhaps by
-methods that wouldn&#8217;t appeal to Mr. Thurston.
-Please listen to him carefully, if he should come to
-you. Concede nothing, but let him go as far as he
-will. That&#8217;s all, I think. Pardon me if I look at
-my watch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s very kind of you to warn me,&#8221; she said,
-with feeling. &#8220;It&#8217;s horrible to know there are
-people plotting against you in the dark. I was
-ashamed of myself for yielding as I did when that
-man came to me; I knew right away that I had
-made a mistake.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>&#8220;Well, as our friend Mr. Amidon would remark,
-forget it! forget it! We all make mistakes. I wish
-I had never made a worse one than that little slip
-of yours,&#8221; he added kindly.</p>
-
-<p>She had always been amused by Eaton&#8217;s oddities,
-his mysteriousness; but in this hour of dejection
-his sympathy and friendliness warmed her
-heart. She rose and stood before him, her hands
-clenched at her sides, and demanded passionately:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why am I always doing the wrong thing? Why
-do I escape so often when I have every intention of
-doing what I know to be wrong? I suppose if I&#8217;d
-waited another day I shouldn&#8217;t have sneaked my
-money out of the trust company and turned it over
-to that man! But I&#8217;ve had escapes I don&#8217;t understand;
-something gets in the way and I don&#8217;t&mdash;I
-<i>can&#8217;t</i>&mdash;do things I fully mean to do! And I look
-back and shudder. Why is that&mdash;can you tell
-me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He lifted his arm with one of his familiar gestures
-and inspected his cuff-links absently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re seeing things a little black now, that&#8217;s
-all, Nan. When you gave up that money you thought
-it was the right thing to do. You saw the mistake
-yourself the moment after it was done. That&#8217;s just
-our human frailty. It&#8217;s our frailties that make life
-the grand fight it is!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s not very consoling,&#8221; she replied, with
-a rueful smile. &#8220;I suppose we never know how much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-we count in other people&#8217;s lives. Oh, I don&#8217;t mean
-that I do&mdash;except to do harm; I was thinking of
-you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His eyeglasses gleamed as he bent her a swift
-glance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I&#8217;d be very happy to think I&#8217;d been of use
-to somebody.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you saved me once from going clear over
-the brink! You didn&#8217;t know that, did you?&#8221; she
-cried earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I most certainly did not!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you don&#8217;t know,&#8221; she said gravely, &#8220;I shall
-never tell you. Are you really sure you don&#8217;t know
-what I&#8217;m talking about?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear Nan, why do you ask me if I guess
-things&mdash;when facts are the consuming passion of
-my life! If I was ever of the slightest service to you
-it was unconscious good fortune on my part. And
-I hope there may be many such occasions! But,
-Nan,&#8221;&mdash;he waited until he was quite sure of her
-attention,&mdash;&#8220;Nan, we can&#8217;t rely too much on the
-man on shore in emergencies. He won&#8217;t always
-reach us in time. We&#8217;ve got to mind the thin ice
-ourselves&mdash;skate away as soon as we hear it cracking!
-We can&#8217;t trust to chance. Luck supports sound
-judgment&mdash;mainly. And we&#8217;ve got to fight our
-own battles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But if you&#8217;re a worthless, wobbly person like
-me, what are you going to do?&#8221; she demanded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cease wobbling! Good-night!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>Eaton had not been gone more than five minutes
-when a light knock on the glass panel of the front
-door startled her. The clocks through the house
-had just struck ten and she had dismissed the maid
-for the night. The rap was repeated more loudly,
-and stealing to the door she drew back a corner of
-the curtain and peered out. Copeland stood in the
-entry, plainly revealed by the overhead light; his
-hand was lifted for another knock.</p>
-
-<p>Her heart throbbed with fear and anger. Billy
-had no right to come at this hour in this furtive
-fashion&mdash;and on this day, of all days, to the house
-of the man who had so cordially hated him. She
-waited a moment hoping he would go away, but
-he began beating upon the glass.</p>
-
-<p>This clearly would not do, and she drew back the
-bolt and opened the door a few inches.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please go away! You have no right to come
-here at this time of night!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He seized the door as she was about to close it
-and forced his way past her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got to see you a minute&mdash;just a minute,&#8221;
-he said eagerly. &#8220;It&#8217;s a matter of importance or I
-shouldn&#8217;t have come to-night. I thought it best
-not to wait. It&#8217;s really a serious matter, Nan!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have no right to come at all,&#8221; she replied
-angrily. &#8220;What if the neighbors saw you! they
-know I&#8217;m alone. You know this won&#8217;t do; please
-go, Billy!&#8221; she pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose,&#8221; he said, walking toward the parlor,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-&#8220;that it&#8217;s all right for John Eaton to come when
-he pleases, but not for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was very different; he rang the bell and
-the maid let him in! And he came on a business
-matter. You can&#8217;t stay, Billy; you understand
-that. You must go at once!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I came earlier, but saw Eaton&#8217;s silk hat
-bobbing in and I&#8217;ve been hanging around waiting
-for him to go. I didn&#8217;t care to meet him here; and
-as far as business is concerned, maybe mine&#8217;s just
-as important as his. You&#8217;ll have to take my word
-for that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His manner and tone were amiable. There clearly
-was nothing to be gained by debating the question
-of his right to be there, but she remained resolutely
-in the parlor door, trying to devise some means of
-getting rid of him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll have to be quick, then,&#8221; she said, without
-relaxing her severity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I understand that, Nan,&#8221; he agreed readily.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s about the property&mdash;no&mdash;don&#8217;t stop
-me!&#8221; he exclaimed as she cried out impatiently.
-&#8220;You have certain rights and it&#8217;s the business of
-your friends to see that you get them. Another
-day and it will be too late.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m to see Mr. Thurston to-morrow; everything&#8217;s
-in his hands; you have nothing to do
-with it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He took a step toward her and his voice sank
-to a whisper.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>&#8220;That&#8217;s just it! Everything is not in his hands.
-That&#8217;s what I want to tell you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She stared at him blankly. His excited manner
-aroused her curiosity as to what he might have to
-say, but it was unlikely that he knew anything of
-importance about Farley&#8217;s affairs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re saying downtown that Farley was a
-crank about will-making; he made a lot of wills and
-kept them hid. Thurston&#8217;s let that out himself. If
-you know this, we can drop that part of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She made no reply, and her silence encouraged
-him to go on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The fact is, as we all know,&#8221; he began ingratiatingly,
-&#8220;that Farley wasn&#8217;t himself at all times. He
-probably made wills that he destroyed&mdash;or meant
-to destroy. It&#8217;s wholly possible that he vented his
-wrath on you at times by cutting down what he
-meant to give you, and the next day he&#8217;d be sorry
-for it. That would be like him. In old times at the
-store he used to blow up with fury one minute and
-be as tame as a lamb the next. But there&#8217;s no
-reason&mdash;there&#8217;s not the slightest reason why
-you should suffer if he died leaving a will lying
-around that might rob you of your just inheritance&mdash;that
-didn&#8217;t really express his normal attitude
-toward you. He never meant to be mean to you;
-I&#8217;m satisfied of that; but if there are some of those
-wills here in the house&mdash;you would have a right,
-considering his condition and all that&mdash;you would
-have a right&mdash;you see&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>He had been watching her narrowly for some
-sign of interest or encouragement, but finding
-neither he broke off without saying just what it
-might be right for her to do. However, while he
-waited a quick flutter of her lids indicated that she
-comprehended. Their eyes met in a long gaze. Her
-face grew white and her lips opened several times
-before any sound came from them. He had drawn
-closer, but he stepped back as he saw horror and
-repugnance clearly written in her face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have no right to talk to me like this! It&#8217;s
-too shameful, too terrible!&#8221; she gasped.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please, Nan, don&#8217;t take it that way,&#8221; he begged.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How else can I take it! To think that you should
-believe me capable of that, Billy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I hadn&#8217;t known that he had treated you like
-a brute and that he always carried his vindictiveness
-to the limit, I shouldn&#8217;t be here. I don&#8217;t want to
-see you cut off with little or nothing when the whole
-estate ought to be yours&mdash;<i>will</i> be yours if you don&#8217;t
-make a fool of yourself! He had no right to bring
-you up as his daughter and then leave you with
-nothing. Thurston isn&#8217;t going to protect your
-interests; he merely did from time to time what
-Farley told him to do, and you won&#8217;t get any help
-out of him. If there are different wills hidden
-about&mdash;you may know where he hid them&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He threw out his arms with a gesture meant to
-demonstrate the ease with which matters might
-be taken into her own hands. In the sobering hours<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-that had followed Farley&#8217;s death only his great
-kindness and generosity had been in her thoughts.
-The enormity of what Copeland proposed grew
-upon her. She bestirred herself suddenly. She
-must not let him think that she was tolerating his
-suggestion for an instant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry you thought that kind of thing
-would appeal to me! That&#8217;s your idea of me,
-is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m appealing to your good sense, Nan; in a
-few hours it will be too late, and if you know where
-he kept his papers, you can easily look them over
-and satisfy yourself as to just what he meant to do;
-and then you can do as you like. His last will
-would stand; maybe you don&#8217;t know that; and if
-it&#8217;s in the house, why shouldn&#8217;t you, at least, have
-a look at it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t&mdash;I <i>couldn&#8217;t</i> do such a thing!&#8221;
-she cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If there shouldn&#8217;t be any will at all,&#8221; he resumed,
-with his eyes fixed upon her intently, &#8220;then
-you would inherit everything! The adoption made
-you his child in law; there wouldn&#8217;t be any way
-of escaping that. It&#8217;s these wills that you&#8217;ve got
-to fear&mdash;the whims, the sudden vindictive anger
-of an old man who really meant to do the right
-thing by you. Neither he nor his wife had any near
-kin; there would be nobody to share with you in
-case there proves to be no will at all!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You make it perfectly plain what it would be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-possible for me to do!&#8221; she replied with quivering
-lips. &#8220;That seems to be all you have to say&mdash;and
-it&#8217;s enough! I want you to leave this house, and
-be quick about it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, Nan, you are taking this all wrong! It&#8217;s
-not as though you were robbing other people: you
-certainly have a better right to the money than
-anybody else. Suppose that in one of his mental
-lapses he had willed the greater part of his fortune
-to some silly charity; all the rest of your days you&#8217;d
-be sorry you hadn&#8217;t done what you could to protect
-yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please go,&#8221; she urged in a plaintive whisper,
-&#8220;so I can forget that you&#8217;ve been here!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course I&#8217;ll go,&#8221; he assented. &#8220;If I hadn&#8217;t
-felt that you looked to me at least as a friend, I
-shouldn&#8217;t have come. And if there&#8217;s anything to be
-done it must be done quickly&mdash;that&#8217;s as plain as
-daylight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He advanced this in a crisp, businesslike tone,
-as though there were nothing remarkable in his
-suggestions. She was already wondering, as he
-meant she should, whether, after all, there was
-anything so enormous in the idea. Fear stole into
-her heart; it would be unsafe to listen to anything
-further lest he persuade her of the justice of his
-plan. But he dropped the matter instantly, wisely
-calculating that he had said enough.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know, Nan, that nobody is as interested
-in your happiness as I am. If I didn&#8217;t care so much&mdash;if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-I didn&#8217;t hope that you cared, I shouldn&#8217;t
-have come here to-night; I shouldn&#8217;t have dared!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She made no response, but stared at him with
-widely distended eyes. Her silence made him uneasy.
-Her black gown had strangely transformed
-her. She was not the Nan who had promised to
-marry him&mdash;who would now, but for his folly, be
-his wife. He walked to the door and then said in the
-low tone he had employed from the beginning,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are other things I want to speak of, but
-I know this is not the time. I shall hope to see
-you again soon, and please try to think better of
-me, Nan!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She remained where she had stood throughout
-the interview until she heard the iron gate click
-behind him.</p>
-
-<p>She put out the lights and climbed the stairs
-slowly. The loneliness that had stifled her before
-Eaton&#8217;s appearance had deepened. She passed
-through the silent upper hall and locked herself
-in her room, resolved not to leave it until the world
-woke to life again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No! No! No!&#8221; she moaned aloud to fortify her
-resolution....</p>
-
-<p>At one o&#8217;clock she was still awake, questioning,
-debating with herself, while strange shadow-shapes
-danced in the surrounding blackness.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>NAN AGAINST NAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Was</span> Billy right, after all?</p>
-
-<p>The question haunted her insistently. She lighted
-the lamp by her bed and tried to read, but the words
-were a confused jumble. She threw down her book
-impatiently. If only she had kept Fanny Copeland
-in the house or had given the papers hidden away
-in the old table to Eaton to carry away, she would
-have escaped this struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Her thoughts were fixed upon Eaton for a time.
-He had enjoined her to take a firmer hold of herself.
-She readily imagined what his abhorrence
-would be of the evil thing Copeland had proposed....</p>
-
-<p>But, after all, Farley had meant to treat her
-generously, as Copeland had said, and if in some
-angry mood he had rewritten his will to reduce
-his provision for her, there was no reason why she
-shouldn&#8217;t seize an opportunity to right a wrong he
-never really intended....</p>
-
-<p>She rose, drew on her kimono, snapped on all
-the lights and found that it was only half-past one.
-She assured herself that she would not open the
-door of Farley&#8217;s room; and yet, the thought kept
-recurring that no one would ever know if she read<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-those wills and destroyed them. The fear that she
-might yield chilled her. She became frantic for
-something to do and set herself the task of putting
-the drawers of her desk in order. Some letters that
-Mrs. Farley had written her while she was at boarding-school
-caught her eye.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the Farleys had been kind, even foolishly
-indulgent. She read in her foster-mother&#8217;s even,
-old-fashioned hand:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t worry about your money, dear. I suppose
-when you go into town you see a lot of little things
-that it&#8217;s nice for a girl to have. We want you to
-appear well before the other girls. I&#8217;m slipping a
-twenty-dollar bill into this letter just for odds and
-ends. Don&#8217;t say anything to papa about it, as I
-would rather he didn&#8217;t know I send you money.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A little later she turned up a letter of Farley&#8217;s
-in which he had enclosed a fifty-dollar bill as an
-addition to her regular allowance. In a characteristic
-postscript he enjoined her not &#8220;to tell mamma.
-She thinks you have enough money and it might
-make her jealous!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She closed the drawer, leaving it in worse confusion
-than before. Comforts and luxuries were
-dear to her. She had enjoyed hugely her years
-at boarding-school. To be set adrift with a small
-income while the greater part of Farley&#8217;s money
-went to philanthropy&mdash;maybe Billy was right,
-after all!...</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>Two o&#8217;clock. She was in Farley&#8217;s room, crouched
-in a low rocker with her arms flung across the table
-in which the papers were hidden. Her heart beat
-furiously, and her breath came in quick gasps. She
-had decided now to read the wills; it would do no
-harm to have a look at them. If everything was
-to be taken away from her, she might as well know
-the worst and prepare for it.</p>
-
-<p>Her fingers sought the catch that released the
-spring; the top turned easily. The papers lay as
-she had left them the night Farley died. She folded
-the open ones and thrust them into their envelopes.
-She counted them deliberately; there were six,
-including the one that had fallen from the dressing-gown,
-which she identified by the crosses on the
-envelope....</p>
-
-<p>If there should be no will, Copeland had said,
-all the property would go to her as the only heir.
-There was a grate in the room with the fuel all
-ready for lighting. It would be a simple matter to
-destroy all the wills. She could explain the burnt-out
-fire to the maid by saying that the house had
-grown cold in the night and that she had gone into
-Farley&#8217;s room to warm herself. She was surprised
-to find how readily explanations covering every
-point occurred to her. The very ease with which
-she thought of them appalled her. No doubt it was
-in this fashion that hardened criminals planned
-their defense....</p>
-
-<p>She struck a match and touched it to the paper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-under the kindling. The fire blazed brightly. She
-was really chilled and the warmth was grateful.
-As she held her hands to the flames she surveyed
-the trifles on the mantel and her gaze wandered
-to a portrait of Mrs. Farley which had been done
-from photographs by a local artist after her death.
-The memory of her foster-mother&#8217;s simple kindliness
-and gentleness gave her a pang. She turned
-slowly until her eyes rested upon the bed in which
-Farley had suffered so long. She went back to the
-beginning and argued the whole matter over again.</p>
-
-<p>As at other times, in moods of depression, she
-thought of the squalor of her childhood; of her
-father, Dan Corrigan, trapper, fisherman, loafer,
-brutal drunkard. She gazed at her white, slim fingers
-and recalled her mother&#8217;s swollen, red hands
-as she had bent for hours every day over the wash-tub.
-Her mother had been at least an honest woman,
-who had addressed herself uncomplainingly to the
-business of maintaining a home for her children.</p>
-
-<p>All that the Farleys had done in changing her
-environment to one of comfort and decency and
-educating her in a fashionable school with the daughters
-of gentlefolk had not affected the blood in her.
-She had not been worthy of their pity, their generosity,
-their confidence. Yet it had meant much to
-these people in their childlessness to take her into
-their hearts and give her their name. Farley&#8217;s ideas
-of honor had been the strictest; the newspapers
-in their accounts of his career had laid stress on this.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-And how he would hate an act such as she meditated,
-that would prove her low origin, stamp her
-as the daughter of a degenerate!...</p>
-
-<p>Still, there was no reason why she shouldn&#8217;t
-read the wills. She returned to the table, drew one
-of them out, played with it for a moment uncertainly,
-then thrust it back.</p>
-
-<p>It was Nan against Nan through the dark watches
-of the night. If she yielded now she would never
-tread firm ground again. Once this trial was over,
-she would be a different woman&mdash;better or
-worse; and she must reach a decision unaided. She
-buried her face in her arms to shut out the light
-and wept bitterly in despair of her weakness....</p>
-
-<p>Four o&#8217;clock. A sparrow cheeped sleepily in the
-vines on the wall outside the window. Farley had
-liked the sparrows and refused to have them molested.
-They were &#8220;company,&#8221; he said, and he
-used to keep crumbs of bread and cake for them....</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her head, and confidence stole into her
-heart. She had not done the evil thing; she had
-not even looked at the sheets of paper that recorded
-Farley&#8217;s wavering, shifting faith in her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why don&#8217;t you do it? You are a coward; you
-are afraid!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her voice sank to a whisper as she kept repeating
-these taunts. Then she was silent for a time, sitting
-with arms folded, her eyes bent unseeingly
-upon the envelopes before her. There could be no
-happiness in store for her if she yielded. She saw<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-herself carrying through life the memory of a lawless
-act dictated by selfishness and greed. Suddenly
-she rose and walked to the bed; and her voice
-rang out with a note of triumph, there in the room
-where Farley had died:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have not done it; I will not do it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The sound of her voice alarmed her, and she
-glanced nervously over her shoulder. Then she
-laughed, struck by the thought that if Farley&#8217;s
-spirit lurked there expecting to see her yield, it
-was a disappointed ghost!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You silly little fool,&#8221; he had often said to her
-in his anger. Well, she was not so wicked as he
-had believed; but she thought of him now without
-bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>Wings fluttered; the sparrows began a persistent
-twitter.</p>
-
-<p>Light was creeping in under the shades. She returned
-to the table, stared at it, frowning, drew
-away quickly, ran to the door, and glanced back
-breathlessly. She walked back slowly, turned the
-papers over, peered into the drawer to make sure
-that she had overlooked nothing.</p>
-
-<p>She took up the wills that recorded Timothy Farley&#8217;s
-doubts and uncertainties and wavering generosities,
-dropped them into the little well in the table
-and drew the top into place.</p>
-
-<p>A feeling of exaltation possessed her as she heard
-the click of the spring. This, perhaps, was the reward
-of righteousness. &#8220;We&#8217;re all happier,&#8221; the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-simple-hearted Mrs. Farley used to say, &#8220;when
-we&#8217;re good!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She stood very still for a minute, stifling her last
-regret. Then she turned to the window and opened
-it, unfastened the shutters, and thrust her hands
-out into the gray light. A farmer&#8217;s wagon, bound
-for market, passed slowly by, the driver asleep with
-a lighted lantern on the seat beside him.</p>
-
-<p>She remained there for a quarter of an hour listening
-to the first tentative sounds of the new day.
-The newspaper carrier threw the morning paper
-against the door beneath the window, unconscious
-that she saw him. She closed the window, crept
-back to her room and threw herself exhausted on
-her bed....</p>
-
-<p>Outside Farley&#8217;s windows the sparrows chirruped
-impatiently for crumbs from the hand that
-would feed them no more.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-
-<small>NOT ACCORDING TO LAW</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nan</span> was reading the newspaper report of Eaton&#8217;s
-speech over her coffee when at nine o&#8217;clock he called
-her on the telephone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your speech sounds fine, though I don&#8217;t understand
-all the jokes,&#8221; she said. &#8220;But I&#8217;m sure you
-made a hit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not so sure of it myself, Nan. But please listen
-to me carefully. Our friend from the southern part
-of the State is here. I have him marked at his hotel.
-He has probably come to see you. Let him say all
-he has on his mind, then report to me. You will
-probably hear from Thurston, too, during the day.
-He&#8217;s trying a case this morning. But our brother
-from the South comes first. Don&#8217;t let him frighten
-you; just listen and encourage him if necessary to
-show what he&#8217;s up to this time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; she replied, though the thought of
-facing Harlowe alone filled her with misgivings.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Copeland was on the wire immediately
-afterward, to ask if she could be of any service.
-Then Thurston&#8217;s clerk called her to make an appointment
-for three o&#8217;clock.</p>
-
-<p>The night&#8217;s vigil had left its marks upon her.
-She was nervously alert for the day&#8217;s developments,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-but nothing could be worse than the long struggle
-against temptation. She had, she fancied, considered
-every possibility as to the future and she was
-prepared for anything that might befall her. She
-was happy in the thought that she faced the world
-with a clean conscience; never in her life had she
-been on so good terms with herself.</p>
-
-<p>She was standing at the parlor window when at
-eleven a familiar figure entered the gate. Harlowe,
-tall, slightly stooped, advanced to the door. She
-called to the maid not to trouble to answer the ring
-and let the man in herself.</p>
-
-<p>He began with formal condolences on what he
-called &#8220;her irreparable loss.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Much as we may be prepared for the death of
-a loved one, it always comes with a shock. I sympathize
-with you very deeply, Miss Farley.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She murmured her thanks and bade him be seated.
-She wished she had asked Eaton to be present at
-the interview, which he had forecast with a prescience
-that justified all her faith in his unusual
-powers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I came as quickly as possible after hearing of
-Mr. Farley&#8217;s death, in the hope of being of some
-service to you&mdash;of avoiding any difficulties that
-might possibly arise with reference to the settlement
-of Mr. Farley&#8217;s affairs.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded, and remembering Eaton&#8217;s injunction,
-gave him strict attention.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;that my handling of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-very distressing and delicate matter that brought
-me here last June won your confidence to such an
-extent&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He paused, watching her narrowly for any sign
-of dissent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I appreciated that, Mr. Harlowe; it was very
-considerate of you to come to me as you did.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t report on that case further, feeling
-that it might embarrass you, assuming that the
-whole matter was strictly between ourselves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite so,&#8221; she agreed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was distressed that after all our interest, and
-your own generosity, we could not save your unfortunate
-brother. Still, it&#8217;s something that we were
-able to secure what was a light sentence&mdash;taking
-everything into consideration. Only circumstantial
-evidence, to be sure, but it pointed very strongly
-to his guilt. You doubtless read the result in the
-papers?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I followed the case,&#8221; she answered. &#8220;And
-I&#8217;m sure you did the best you could.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His solemnity would have been amusing at any
-other time. He clearly had no idea that she had
-learned of his duplicity in taking money from her
-for the defense of a Corrigan who was in no manner
-related to her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I assume,&#8221; he said, &#8220;that no steps have yet
-been taken to offer for probate any will Mr. Farley
-may have left. I had hoped to see you first; this
-accounts for my visit to-day. I thought it best<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-to see you before going to Mr. Thurston. Mr.
-Joseph C. Thurston was, I believe, Mr. Farley&#8217;s
-attorney?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. He was one of papa&#8217;s best friends and he
-had charge of his affairs as far back as I can remember.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An excellent man. There&#8217;s no better lawyer
-in the State,&#8221; Harlowe responded heartily. &#8220;But
-I occasionally find it best to deal directly with a
-client. We lawyers, you know, are sometimes unwisely
-obstinate, and lead our clients into unnecessary
-trouble. As you are the person chiefly concerned
-in this matter, I came directly to you. I did
-this because in that former matter you were so
-quick to see the justice of my&mdash;er&mdash;request.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her amazement at his effrontery almost equalled
-her curiosity as to what lay behind his deliberate
-approaches.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is generally known that Mr. Farley was a
-man of violent temper,&#8221; he went on. &#8220;Some of his
-old friends on the river remember him well, and
-you may never have known&mdash;and I am sorry
-to be obliged to mention so unpleasant a fact&mdash;that
-his mother died insane. That is a matter of
-record, of course. The malady from which Mr. Farley
-suffered for many years is one that frequently
-affects the mind. No doubt living with him here, as
-you did, you noticed at times that he behaved
-oddly&mdash;didn&#8217;t conduct himself quite normally?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Remembering Eaton&#8217;s instructions she acquiesced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-without offering any comment. His designs,
-she now assumed, were not personal to herself,
-but directed against Farley&#8217;s estate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I represent two cousins of Mr. Farley&#8217;s who live
-in my county. Very worthy men they are; you may
-have heard Mr. Farley speak of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I knew about them. I sent them telegrams
-advising them of his death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was very thoughtful on your part, Miss
-Farley, and they appreciate it. But by reason of
-their poverty they were unable to attend the funeral.
-They asked me to thank you for thinking of them.
-Several times during the past twenty years Mr.
-Farley had advanced them small sums of money&mdash;an
-indication of his kindly feeling toward them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know of that; but it was like papa.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In case Mr. Farley left a will, it is my duty to
-inform you, that you may have time for reflection
-before taking up the matter with Mr. Thurston, that
-we are prepared to attack it on the ground of Mr.
-Farley&#8217;s mental unsoundness. I assume, of course,
-that Mr. Farley made a handsome provision for
-you, but quite possibly he overlooked the natural
-expectations of his own kinsfolk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She merely nodded, thinking it unnecessary to
-impart information while he continued to show his
-hand so openly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have probably understood, Miss Farley,
-that in case your foster-father died intestate, that
-is to say, without leaving a will in proper form,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-you would, as his heir, be entitled to the whole
-of his property.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I think I have heard that,&#8221; she answered
-uneasily.</p>
-
-<p>The cold-blooded fashion in which he had stated
-his purpose to contest the will on the ground of
-Farley&#8217;s insanity had shocked her. Copeland had
-suggested the same thing, but it was a preposterous
-pretension that Timothy Farley&#8217;s mind had been
-affected by his long illness. Even the assertion that
-his mother had been a victim of mental disorder,
-plausibly as he had stated it, would hardly stand
-against the fact that Farley&#8217;s faculties to the very
-end had been unusually clear and alert.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In case there should be no will,&#8221; Harlowe continued,
-&#8220;your rights would rest, of course, upon
-your adoption. It would have to be proved that
-it was done in accordance with law. The statutes
-are specific as to the requirements. I&#8217;m sorry, very
-sorry indeed, my dear Miss Farley, that in your case
-the law was not strictly complied with.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what you mean; I don&#8217;t understand
-you!&#8221; she faltered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t be alarmed,&#8221; he went on, with a
-reassuring smile. &#8220;I&#8217;m sure that everything can
-be arranged satisfactorily; I am not here to threaten
-you&mdash;please remember that; I merely want you
-to understand my case.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But my father never dreamed of anything of
-that kind,&#8221; she gasped; &#8220;it&#8217;s impossible&mdash;why, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
-would never have made a mistake in so serious a
-matter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Unfortunately, we are all liable to err, Miss
-Farley,&#8221; he answered, with a grotesque affectation
-of benevolence. &#8220;And I regret to say that in this
-case the error is undeniable. What Mr. Farley&#8217;s intentions
-were is one thing; what was actually done
-to make you his child in law is another. We need
-not go into that. It is a legal question that Mr.
-Thurston will understand readily; the more so,
-perhaps,&#8221; he added with faint irony, &#8220;because he
-was not himself guilty of the error, not being Mr.
-Farley&#8217;s attorney at the time the adoption was
-attempted.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The room swayed and she grasped the arms of
-her chair to steady herself. The man&#8217;s story was
-plausible, and he spoke with an easy confidence.
-All Farley&#8217;s deliberation about the disposal of his
-property would go for naught; her victory over the
-temptation to destroy his wills had been futile!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t misunderstand me, Miss Farley,&#8221;
-the man was saying. &#8220;My clients have no wish to
-deprive you wholly of participation in the estate.
-And we should deplore litigation. In coming to
-you now, I merely wish to prepare you, so that you
-may consider the case in all its aspects before taking
-it up with your lawyer. No doubt a satisfactory
-settlement can be arranged, without going into
-court. I believe that is all. Henceforth I can&#8217;t with
-propriety deal directly with you, but must meet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-your counsel. I assume, however, that he will not
-wholly ignore your natural wish to&mdash;er&mdash;arrange
-a settlement satisfactory to all parties.&#8221;...</p>
-
-<p>The door had hardly closed upon him before she
-was at the telephone calling Eaton, and in half an
-hour he was at the house. Harlowe&#8217;s words had so
-bitten into her memory that she was able to repeat
-them almost <i>verbatim</i>. Eaton listened with his usual
-composure. It might have seemed from his manner
-that he was more interested in Nan herself than in
-her recital. She betrayed no excitement, but described
-the interview colorlessly as though speaking
-of matters that did not wholly concern her. When
-she concluded Eaton chuckled softly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re taking it nobly,&#8221; were his first words;
-&#8220;I&#8217;m proud of you! You see, I had expected
-something of the sort&mdash;prepared for it, in fact,
-right after this fellow got that thousand dollars out
-of you. He&#8217;s crafty, shrewd, unscrupulous. But
-you have nothing to worry over. He came to you
-first and at the earliest possible moment in the hope
-of frightening you as he did before, hoping that
-you&#8217;d persuade Thurston to settle with him. As
-for Farley&#8217;s incompetence to make a will, that&#8217;s
-all rubbish! His mother suffered from senile dementia&mdash;no
-symptoms until she was nearly ninety.
-Every business man in town would laugh at the
-idea that Tim Farley wasn&#8217;t sane. He was just a
-little bit saner than most men. His occasional fits
-of anger were only the expression of his vigorous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-personality; wholly characteristic; nothing in that
-for Harlowe to hang a case on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But this point about the adoption is more serious.
-When I was down there watching Harlowe
-defend the man he pretended to you&mdash;but to nobody
-else&mdash;was your brother, I looked up those
-adoption proceedings, out of sheer vulgar curiosity.
-The law provides that adoption proceedings shall be
-brought in the county where the child resides, and
-that the parents appear in court and consent.
-Your parents were dead, and Mr. Farley&#8217;s petition
-was filed in this county after you had been a member
-of his household for fully two years.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I seriously debated mentioning these points
-to Thurston, after my visit down there, but on
-reflection decided against it. Contrary to the common
-assumption the law is not an ass&mdash;not altogether!
-I can&#8217;t imagine the courts countenancing
-an effort to set aside this adoption on so flimsy a
-pretext. Mr. Farley not only complied with the
-law to the best of his belief, but let the world in
-general understand that he looked on you as his
-child and heir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what every one believed, of course,&#8221;
-Nan murmured.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I dare say there&#8217;s a will,&#8221; Eaton continued.
-&#8220;Thurston may have to defend that&mdash;but you may
-rely on him. I have already made an appointment
-to meet him at luncheon to turn over to him all my
-data. I&#8217;ll say to you in all sincerity that I don&#8217;t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-see the slightest cause for uneasiness. If there&#8217;s a
-valid will, that settles the adoption line of attack,
-though this man may go the length of trying to
-annul it on the insanity plea, merely to tie up the
-estate until you pay something to these cousins to
-get rid of him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is a will; there are a number of them, I
-think,&#8221; said Nan soberly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Farley told you about them&mdash;let you
-know what he was doing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; he never spoke of them, except in general
-terms. I used to see him hiding them; once one
-dropped out of his dressing-gown.&#8221; She hesitated;
-then added quickly: &#8220;I read that one before putting
-it back. I know I shouldn&#8217;t have done it, but
-I did&mdash;as I&#8217;ve done a good many things these last
-two years I shouldn&#8217;t!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be so hard on yourself! It was quite
-natural for you to look at it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The night he died,&#8221; she went on breathlessly,
-&#8220;he had been looking at a number of wills he kept
-hidden in mamma&#8217;s old sewing-table. I put them
-back in the drawer. I suppose Mr. Thurston will
-ask for them when he comes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; he should see all such papers. You must
-tell him everything you know that relates to them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I almost burnt them all up last night,&#8221; she
-exclaimed in a strange, hard tone. &#8220;That one
-I read made me angry. I thought it niggardly and
-unjust. And&mdash;some one told me&#8221;&mdash;in her eagerness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-to make her confession complete she nearly
-blurted out Copeland&#8217;s name&mdash;&#8220;that if there
-should be no will I&#8217;d inherit everything. And last
-night I fought that out. And it was a hard fight;
-it was horrible! But for once in my life I got a grip
-on myself. You may remember saying to me,
-&#8216;Don&#8217;t wobble.&#8217; Well, I wobbled till I was dizzy&mdash;but
-I wobbled right! And now that that&#8217;s over,
-I believe&mdash;though I&#8217;m afraid to say it aloud&mdash;that
-I&#8217;m a different sort of a girl some way. I hope
-so; I mean to be very, very different.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You poor, dear, little Nan,&#8221; he said softly.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m proud of you&mdash;but not very much surprised!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you see it doesn&#8217;t count, anyhow,&#8221; she
-said, smiling, pleased and touched by his praise.
-&#8220;If there&#8217;s a will, it&#8217;s bad; if there isn&#8217;t, I&#8217;m not
-to be considered!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t belittle your victory by measuring it
-against mere money. As for those purely business
-matters, they&#8217;ll be attended to. You&#8217;re not going
-to be thrown out on the world just yet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t cry&mdash;not now&mdash;if it came to
-that! Now that I know what they mean, I think I
-rather like these little wars that go on inside of us.
-But I tell you it was good to see the daylight this
-morning and know I could pass a mirror and not
-be afraid of my own face!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is rather nicer that way; much nicer,&#8221; he
-said, with his rare smile. &#8220;I&#8217;m glad you told me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-this. I see that I don&#8217;t need to worry about you
-any more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You haven&#8217;t really been doing that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At times, at times, my dear Nan,&#8221; he said, looking
-at her quizzically, &#8220;you&#8217;ve brought me to the
-verge of insomnia!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XX<br />
-
-
-<small>THE COPELAND-FARLEY CELLAR</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">At</span> twelve o&#8217;clock on the night of Nan&#8217;s prolonged
-struggle, Jerry, having walked to the station
-with a traveling man of his acquaintance, paused
-at the door of Copeland-Farley, hesitated a moment,
-and then let himself in. He whistled a
-warning to the watchman, as was his habit when
-making night visits to the establishment. Hearing
-no response, he assumed that the man was off
-on his rounds and would reach the lower floor
-shortly.</p>
-
-<p>He opened his desk and busied himself with some
-memoranda he had made from the books that
-afternoon. There was no denying that the house
-was in a bad way; the one hundred thousand dollars
-of notes carried by the Western National matured
-the next day, and in addition to these obligations
-the Company was seriously behind in its merchandise
-accounts.</p>
-
-<p>A quarter of an hour passed, and the watchman
-made no sign. Jerry closed his desk, walked back
-to the elevator-shaft, and shouted the man&#8217;s name.
-From the dark recesses of the cellar came sounds
-as of some one running, followed by a stumble and
-fall. He called again, more loudly, but receiving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
-no response, he ran to the stairway, flashed on the
-lights, and hurried down.</p>
-
-<p>His suspicions were aroused at once by a heap
-of refuse, surmounted by half a dozen empty boxes,
-piled about the wooden framework of the elevator-shaft.</p>
-
-<p>The room where oils, paints, ethers, acids and
-other highly inflammable or explosive stock was
-stored was shut off from the remainder of the cellar
-by an iron door that had been pushed open. As
-he darted in and turned on the lights, he heard
-some one stealthily moving in the farther end of
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>Seizing a fire-extinguisher he bawled the watchman&#8217;s
-name again and plunged in among the
-barrels. A trail of straw indicated that the same
-hand that had piled the combustibles against the
-shaft had carried similar materials into the dangerous
-precincts of the oil room. In a moment he
-came upon a barrel of benzine surrounded with
-kindling.</p>
-
-<p>He decided against calling for help. No harm
-had yet been done, and it was best to capture the
-guilty person and deal with him quietly if possible.
-He kicked the litter away from the barrel and
-waited. In a moment a slight noise attracted his
-attention, and at the same instant a shadow vanished
-behind an upright cask. He waited for the
-shadow to reappear, advancing cautiously down
-the aisle with his eyes on the cask.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>&#8220;Come out o&#8217; that!&#8221; he called.</p>
-
-<p>A foot scraped on the cement floor and definitely
-marked the cask as the incendiary&#8217;s hiding-place.
-He jumped upon a barrel, leaped from it to the
-cask, and flung himself upon a man crouched behind
-it. They went down together with Jerry&#8217;s
-hand clutching the captive&#8217;s throat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good God!&#8221; he gasped, as he found himself
-gazing into Copeland&#8217;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The breath had been knocked out of Billy and
-he lay still, panting hard. His right hand clenched
-a revolver.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Give me that thing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry wrenched it from Copeland&#8217;s convulsive
-clutch, thrust it into his coat pocket, and stood
-erect.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m very sorry, sir,&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Damn&#8217; near shootin&#8217; you, Jerry,&#8221; drawled Copeland,
-sitting up and passing his hand slowly across
-his face; &#8220;damn&#8217; near! Gimme your hand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry drew him to his feet. Copeland rested
-heavily on the cask and looked his employee over
-with a slow, bewildered stare.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Might &#8217;a&#8217; known I couldn&#8217;t pull &#8217;er off! Always
-some damn&#8217; fool like you buttin&#8217; into my blizness.
-&#8217;S <i>my</i> blizness! Goin&#8217; do what I damn&#8217; please with
-<i>my</i> blizness. Burn whole damn&#8217; thing down &#8217;f want
-to. I&#8217;m incenjy&mdash;what you call &#8217;m?&mdash;incenjyary,&mdash;what
-you call &#8217;m&mdash;pyromaniac. Go to
-jail and pen&#8217;tenshary firs&#8217; thing I know.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>&#8220;Not this time,&#8221; said Jerry sternly. &#8220;I&#8217;m going
-to take you home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Home? Whersh that?&#8221; asked Copeland, grinning
-foolishly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I guess a Turkish bath would be better.
-Where&#8217;s Galloway?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gall&#8217;way&#8217;s good fellow; reli&#8217;ble watchman.
-Wife&#8217;s sick; sent him home with my comp&#8217;ments.
-Told &#8217;im I&#8217;d take full reshponshibility.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You didn&#8217;t expect to collect the insurance on
-that story, did you? You must have a low opinion
-of the adjusters. I&#8217;ll fire Galloway to-morrow for
-leaving you here in this shape.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not on yer life y&#8217; won&#8217;t! Silly old man didn&#8217;t
-know I wuz loaded. Came on me sud&#8217;ly&mdash;very
-sud&#8217;ly. Only had slix slocktails&mdash;no; thass wrong;
-thass all wrong. You know what I mean. Effect
-unusual&mdash;mos&#8217; unusual. Just a few small drinks
-at club. Guess I can&#8217;t carry liquor&#8217;s graceful-ly as
-I used to. Billy Copeland&#8217;s no good any more.
-Want lie down. Good place on floor. Nice bed
-right here, Jerry. Lemme go t&#8217; sleep.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He grasped the edge of the cask more firmly and
-bent his head to look down at the heap of straw
-he had been planting round it when Amidon interrupted
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much I won&#8217;t! But before we skip I&#8217;ve
-got to clean up this trash. Steady, now; come
-along!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He seized Copeland&#8217;s arm and forced him to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-stairway, where he left him huddled on the bottom
-step.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No respec&#8217; for head of house; no respec&#8217; whatever,&#8221;
-Copeland muttered.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry bade him remain quiet, and began carrying
-the straw and boxes back to the packing-room.
-He swept the floor clean, and when he was satisfied
-that no telltale trace remained he got Copeland
-to the counting-room and telephoned for a taxi.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Goin&#8217; to be busted to-morrow; clean smash.
-You made awful mistake, Jeremiah, in not lessing&mdash;no,
-not lesting me burn &#8217;er up. Insurance&#8217;d
-help out consid&#8217;ble. Need new building, anyhow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess we don&#8217;t need it that bad,&#8221; remarked
-Jerry, rolling a cigarette. He called the police station
-and asked for the loan of an officer to do
-watchman duty for the remainder of the night;
-and this accomplished he considered his further
-duty to his befuddled employer.</p>
-
-<p>Now that the calamity had been averted, his
-anger abated. Copeland&#8217;s condition mitigated
-somewhat the hideousness of the crime he was
-about to commit. Only his desperate financial situation
-could have prompted him to attempt to fire
-the building. Jerry&#8217;s silence and unusual gravity
-seemed to trouble Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Guess you&#8217;re dis&#8217;pointed in your boss, Jeremiah.
-Don&#8217; blame you. Drunken fool&mdash;damn&#8217;
-fool&mdash;incenjy-ary; no end bad lot.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>&#8220;Put your hat on straight and forget it,&#8221; remarked
-Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>He telephoned to Gaylord, an athletic trainer who
-conducted a Turkish bath, and told him to prepare
-for a customer. He knew Gaylord well, and when
-they reached his place Jerry bade him stew the
-gin out of Copeland and be sure to have him ready
-for business in the morning. While Copeland was
-in the bath, Jerry tried all the apparatus in the
-gymnasium and relieved his feelings by putting on
-the gloves with Gaylord&#8217;s assistant. After all the
-arts of the establishment had been exercised upon
-Copeland and he was disposed of for the night,
-Jerry went to bed....</p>
-
-<p>In the morning Gaylord put the finishing touches
-on his patient and turned him out as good as new.
-It had occurred to Amidon that Copeland might
-decide to avoid the store that day. He was relieved
-when he announced, after they had shared Gaylord&#8217;s
-breakfast, that he would walk to the office
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Guess I&#8217;ll give the boys a jar by showing up
-early,&#8221; he remarked.</p>
-
-<p>It was a clear, bracing morning, and Copeland
-set a brisk pace. He was stubbornly silent and
-made no reference to the night&#8217;s affair until they
-reached the heart of the city. Then he stopped suddenly
-and laid his hand on Jerry&#8217;s arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Jerry, I never meant to do that; for God&#8217;s sake,
-don&#8217;t believe I did!&#8221; he broke out hoarsely. &#8220;I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-was troubled about the business, and some other
-things had worried me lately. I took too many
-drinks&mdash;and I&#8217;d never meant to drink again! I
-wouldn&#8217;t have tried that sober&mdash;I wouldn&#8217;t have
-had the nerve!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was the drink, of course,&#8221; Jerry assented.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s all over now. You&#8217;d better forget it; I&#8217;m
-going to!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish to God I could forget it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland shrugged his shoulders impatiently,
-then drew himself erect and walked on more quickly.
-Jerry cheerfully changed the subject, and when they
-were near the store dived into an alley that led to
-the rear door of Copeland-Farley to avoid appearing
-before the clerks in Copeland&#8217;s company.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland remained in his room all morning,
-summoning the auditor from time to time to ask
-for various data. He called Jerry once and bade
-him make every effort to find Kinney by telephone.
-Kinney was in New York; had been there for a
-week. Copeland smiled sardonically at this news.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right. I knew he&#8217;d been away, but the fool
-said he&#8217;d be back to-day,&#8221; he said spitefully.
-&#8220;That&#8217;s all!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At two o&#8217;clock he put a bundle of papers into his
-pocket and walked toward the Western National.
-The bookkeepers exchanged meaningful glances
-and Jerry imagined that even the truckmen loading
-freight appeared depressed. Copeland&#8217;s desperation
-had been expressed vividly enough in his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-drunken attempt to burn the store. And now, if
-the Western National refused to extend his loans,
-Copeland-Farley might cease to exist. Jerry&#8217;s
-usual nonchalance left him. He failed to seize a
-chance to &#8220;land&#8221; on a drummer from a New York
-perfumery house who was teasing him for the
-latest news of Main Street....</p>
-
-<p>At three o&#8217;clock Eaton called Jerry on the telephone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want to see Copeland; please call me the
-minute he comes in,&#8221; said the lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly before four Copeland came back and
-walked directly to his office. There was another
-exchange of glances along the accountants&#8217; desks,
-where the clerks bent with affected diligence over
-their books.</p>
-
-<p>The auditor was summoned again, carried a
-book into Copeland&#8217;s room, and reappeared instantly.
-The air was tense. It was a source of relief
-to Jerry to hear Eaton&#8217;s voice as he reported
-Copeland&#8217;s return.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Watch him,&#8221; said the lawyer, with his usual
-calmness; &#8220;and don&#8217;t let him leave the store.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As Jerry nervously watched the door for Eaton&#8217;s
-appearance, Louis M. Eichberg, of Corbin &amp; Eichberg,
-entered and asked for Copeland. The bookkeepers
-exchanged glances again and bent over
-their ledgers with renewed zeal. The door of the
-private office closed upon Eichberg. It snapped
-shut sharply&mdash;ominously, Jerry thought.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-
-
-<small>A SOLVENT HOUSE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">I&#8217;ve</span> bought in your stock,&#8221; Eichberg was saying
-to Copeland. &#8220;You put up fourteen hundred
-and eighty-five shares with the Western National
-and I&#8217;ve bought &#8217;em in at private sale under your
-collateral agreement. As I understand it there are
-fifteen shares held by employees to qualify as directors.
-I guess there won&#8217;t be any trouble about
-them, and we&#8217;ll let &#8217;em stand for the present.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Those men paid for their stock and you have
-no right to touch it,&#8221; said Copeland. &#8220;The stock
-in this company has an actual value of two hundred
-dollars a share&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rubbish! Your capital&#8217;s shrunk till you can&#8217;t
-see it any more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you believe it! The house was never as
-sound as it is to-day. I hope you don&#8217;t think I&#8217;m
-going to stand by and let the Western sell me out
-on a small loan in this high-handed fashion! It&#8217;s a
-frame-up, a conspiracy to clean me out. I&#8217;ve still
-got a majority of the stock, and I&#8217;ll give you a run
-for your money before you get through with me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Keep your temper, Copeland! I don&#8217;t like
-doing this, but it&#8217;s better for me to have the business
-than to let it peter out, the way it&#8217;s doing.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
-I&#8217;ll even say that after we consolidate I&#8217;ll be glad
-to make a place for you in the house.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you needn&#8217;t trouble!&#8221; returned Copeland
-hotly. &#8220;You&#8217;re not going to get rid of me so easy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right! Just how much stock do you think
-you&#8217;ve got?&#8221; asked Eichberg with a faint ironic
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got fifteen hundred shares; the bank understood
-that when I refused their demand for a majority,&#8221;
-Copeland replied, frowning over the stock-ledger.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That shows how much you know about your
-own business! There&#8217;s twenty shares out of your
-half that I&#8217;ve been trying to lay my hands on for
-two months. It was a deal Farley made the last
-year he was down here with a Fort Wayne jobber
-named Reynolds that he bought out after your
-father died. I know because we tried to buy up
-Reynolds ourselves, but old Uncle Tim went us
-one better. There wasn&#8217;t much to the business,
-but the good-will was worth something and Farley
-let Reynolds have twenty shares just to beat us out
-of the sale. Farley had sense! When Reynolds died
-his executor sold the stock to somebody here. Foreman
-handled it, but he won&#8217;t tell me who he sold
-to. I know you didn&#8217;t get it! Foreman says he spent
-a month last summer lookin&#8217; for you to give you a
-chance to buy the stock, but he couldn&#8217;t get hold
-of you. You were always off sportin&#8217; with Kinney!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland had forgotten about the Reynolds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-shares. He mentally cursed Farley for not reminding
-him of them; Farley had never dealt squarely
-with him! Very likely he had personally told Eichberg
-and the Western National of the Reynolds
-shares. It was galling to be obliged to learn from
-Eichberg things he should have known himself. He
-had flattered himself that in persuading the bank
-to accept fourteen hundred and eighty-five shares
-as collateral instead of the majority for which demand
-had been made at first, he had shown his
-business sagacity; but evidently Eichberg had
-known of the Reynolds shares all along.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t intend that what&#8217;s left of this business
-shall go to the bad,&#8221; said Eichberg. &#8220;Either you
-come to terms, and let &#8217;em know outside that
-we&#8217;ve arranged a merger in a friendly way, or I&#8217;ll
-call up my lawyer and tell him to apply for a receiver.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Outside, the interested and anxious clerks and
-stenographers, cold with excitement, watched their
-associate, Mr. Jeremiah Amidon, who was inviting
-the wrath of the gods by knocking upon Copeland&#8217;s
-door. When he entered in response to an angry
-bellow, they expected to see him reappear instantly,
-possibly at the end of William B. Copeland&#8217;s foot.
-To their chagrin Amidon remained in the private
-office for some time; and they judged from the sudden
-quiet that followed his disappearance that he
-was exerting a calming influence upon Copeland
-and his visitor....</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; Jerry remarked while Copeland
-and Eichberg glared at him.</p>
-
-<p>To Copeland the sight of Jerry was an unwelcome
-reminder of the previous night. His remorse over
-his effort to burn the store vanished; if it hadn&#8217;t
-been for this meddlesome cub he wouldn&#8217;t now
-be entertaining Eichberg in his office!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what does the boy want?&#8221; demanded
-Eichberg, when Copeland found it impossible to
-express his wrath at Jerry&#8217;s intrusion.</p>
-
-<p>Eichberg knew Jerry perfectly well; everybody
-in the street knew Jerry! And it was the basest
-insult to refer to him as the boy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Excuse me, Mr. Eichberg! I just wanted to
-hand a memorandum to Mr. Copeland.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He drew from his pocket the certificate he had
-purchased from Foreman, and handed it to Copeland,
-who snatched it from him with an angry
-snarl.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where did you get this?&#8221; he asked faintly after
-a glance at the paper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, it just blew in my way early in the fall. I
-never bothered to get a new certificate, but I&#8217;ll
-turn it in right now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He pulled out a fountain pen, removed the cap
-deliberately, and wrote his name in the blank space
-above the executor&#8217;s endorsement. This done, he
-brushed an imaginary speck from his cuff, as he
-had seen Eaton do, and went out, closing the door
-softly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>&#8220;Well, here&#8217;s the answer, Eichberg,&#8221; said Copeland,
-with affected nonchalance; &#8220;here are those
-Reynolds shares.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did that damn&#8217; little fool get this?&#8221; demanded
-Eichberg, after a careful scrutiny of the
-certificate and endorsements.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, he&#8217;s a useful little damn&#8217; fool! He&#8217;s always
-picking up something,&#8221; replied Copeland coolly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose it was all set up,&#8221; Eichberg sneered.
-&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t you come right out and say you had
-that stock, and save my time? It&#8217;s worth something
-if yours ain&#8217;t! You&#8217;ll either sell me that stock
-or I&#8217;ll have the court throw you out. It&#8217;s up to
-you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I told you the truth about these shares,&#8221; said
-Copeland, whose good humor was returning. &#8220;I&#8217;m
-ashamed to say I&#8217;d clean forgotten them; but you
-see stock never figured much in our corporation;
-it&#8217;s always been a sort of family affair. I have
-no idea where Amidon got Reynolds&#8217;s shares&mdash;that&#8217;s
-straight! He&#8217;s always doing something he
-isn&#8217;t paid for. And you see it isn&#8217;t quite so easy
-to clean me out. But I take off my hat to you;
-you&#8217;re a business man!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hope had risen in him. In spite of his futile efforts
-to tide over the crisis there was still the remote
-chance that Kinney, who always seemed able to
-borrow all he wanted for his own purposes, might
-extend a helping hand. His change of manner had
-its effect on Eichberg.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>&#8220;The stock doesn&#8217;t cut any ice,&#8221; he fumed.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m not goin&#8217; to have a hundred thousand dollars
-in a concern that&#8217;s losin&#8217; money like this one!
-That statement you showed the bank was rotten!
-You ain&#8217;t got any credit; and you know mighty well
-you can&#8217;t go on here. You&#8217;ll either come to terms
-or I&#8217;ll get a receiver to-morrow. That&#8217;s all there
-is of that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He clapped on his hat and turned to the door
-just as it opened upon Eaton.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll look in again in the morning, Copeland,&#8221;
-said Eichberg in a loud tone. &#8220;You just think over
-that matter, and I guess you&#8217;ll see it my way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never put off till to-morrow what you can do
-to-day,&#8221; remarked Eaton, projecting himself into
-the office. &#8220;I&#8217;ll close the door if you don&#8217;t mind,
-Copeland. And, Mr. Eichberg, please wait a
-moment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you&#8217;re his lawyer, you don&#8217;t want me here.
-I&#8217;ve said all I&#8217;ve got to say to Copeland,&#8221; Eichberg
-answered. But he waited, glowering at Eaton,
-who removed his overcoat, placed it carefully on a
-chair, and began drawing off his gloves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Eichberg, they told me a moment ago at
-the Western National that certain stock held as
-collateral for maturing Copeland-Farley notes had
-been bought by you. Is that true?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s correct! I guess it was all regular,&#8221;
-Eichberg snapped.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll come to that presently. You have now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-in your possession through that purchase fourteen
-hundred and eighty-five shares of stock?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Right!&#8221; ejaculated Eichberg loudly.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton raised his hand, glanced intently at the
-palm, and then, with one of his familiar tricks,
-bent his gaze directly upon Eichberg.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Being a competitor of Copeland-Farley and a
-director of the bank, you have naturally&mdash;quite
-naturally&mdash;thought it would be a good investment
-to own a large block of the stock? And it
-undoubtedly occurred to you that a combination
-of Copeland-Farley with Corbin &amp; Eichberg would
-be highly advantageous? In fact, you thought you
-had more stock than Copeland owns, and that you
-could come in here and discharge him like a drayman!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s my business! You haven&#8217;t explained
-yet how you come to be buttin&#8217; in here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Presently&mdash;presently!&#8221; replied Eaton soothingly.</p>
-
-<p>His calm demeanor and refusal to lift his voice
-further infuriated Eichberg, who breathed hard for
-a moment, then pointed a stubby forefinger at the
-lawyer as his wrath found utterance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Copeland-Farley&#8217;s ruined&mdash;busted! If you&#8217;ll
-take a look at their last statement you&#8217;ll see they
-can&#8217;t pull out!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You anticipate me,&#8221; replied Eaton gently.
-&#8220;The fact is I had meant to buy that stock myself,
-but the bank&#8217;s haste to turn it over to you has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-spoiled that. I was annoyed&mdash;greatly annoyed&mdash;when
-I found awhile ago that the stock had been
-sold&mdash;sold, in violation of the stipulation&mdash;on the
-bank&#8217;s usual form&mdash;that three days&#8217; grace were
-to be given to the debtor to release his collateral.
-I don&#8217;t believe the Comptroller would like that. I
-shall consider seriously bringing it to his attention.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What good would three days have done him?&#8221;
-cried Eichberg. &#8220;The sooner he&#8217;s put out the
-better. His accounts payable are goin&#8217; to bring
-his general creditors down on him in a few days!
-Don&#8217;t you suppose I know? Haven&#8217;t they been
-telegraphin&#8217; me from all over the country for
-months askin&#8217; about this house?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And, of course,&#8221; said Eaton softly, &#8220;you did
-all you could to protect your competitor&mdash;neighborly
-feeling, and that sort of thing. Well, it will
-be a great relief to you to know that those accounts
-will be paid to-morrow&mdash;just as soon as the exchange
-window of your piratical bank is opened.
-There&#8217;s a hundred thousand dollars to the credit
-of Copeland-Farley over there right now. I know,
-because I went in a quarter of an hour ago and
-made the deposit. This house is solvent&mdash;absolutely
-solvent. Moreover, Copeland&#8217;s stock in the
-Kinney Ivory Cement Company is now marketable.
-I take some pride in that fact myself&mdash;immodestly,
-I dare say, and yet&mdash;I am only human!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He drew a telegram from his waistcoat pocket
-and handed it to Copeland.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>&#8220;That patent case was decided to-day&mdash;in favor
-of Kinney. Copeland, I congratulate you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland read the message, and looked dully
-from Eaton to Eichberg. He was roused by Eichberg,
-who had no difficulty in expressing his emotions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You fool,&#8221; he shouted, shaking his fist in
-Eaton&#8217;s face. &#8220;If you&#8217;re tellin&#8217; the truth, what do
-you mean to do about my stock?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton was drawing on his gloves without haste.
-His face expressed the mildest surprise at Eichberg&#8217;s
-perturbation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear Mr. Eichberg, you were in such a rush
-to buy the Western&#8217;s collateral that I&#8217;m surprised
-that you should trouble me&mdash;a casual acquaintance&mdash;with
-such a question.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a cheat; it&#8217;s a swindle! If there&#8217;s any law
-for this&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He flung out of the office and tramped heavily
-to the front door, while the clerks, worn with the
-many agitations of the day, stared after him
-mutely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In the morning,&#8221; Eaton was saying to Copeland,
-&#8220;I&#8217;ll have fuller details of the decision, but
-there&#8217;s no doubt about it&mdash;we&#8217;ve won on every
-point. Allow me to congratulate you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland half rose to take his proffered hand;
-then with a groan he sank back and buried his face
-in his hands.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXII<br />
-
-
-<small>NULL AND VOID</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">Those</span> documents have a familiar look,&#8221; remarked
-Thurston with a smile as Nan placed the
-packet of wills on the table beside him in the Farley
-parlor. &#8220;Mr. Farley was hard to please; I&#8217;ve
-learned a lot about will-writing just from studying
-the different schemes he proposed from time to
-time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan described the manner in which she had found
-the wills on the night of Farley&#8217;s death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He was evidently troubled about them and got
-out of bed to look them over. This one, that I found
-lying open on the table, is torn across as though he
-had begun to destroy it when the end came.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very likely that was his intention,&#8221; Thurston
-replied. &#8220;I had just written a new will for him,
-but it wasn&#8217;t signed&mdash;not unless he executed it
-that same afternoon. Perhaps you know about
-that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No one was here, I&#8217;m sure,&#8221; said Nan, after a
-moment&#8217;s consideration. &#8220;The nurse was off duty;
-she left for the evening at four o&#8217;clock, and I&#8217;m sure
-the servants weren&#8217;t in his room. I carried up his
-dinner tray myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s hardly possible he had signed that last will.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
-I was always present on such occasions and I got
-the witnesses. When I called now and then with a
-couple of his friends, or telephoned for them, there
-was a will to be signed. You probably understood
-that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He began opening the papers, glancing quickly
-at the last sheet of each will, and turning them face
-down on the table. The torn one he scrutinized
-more carefully, and returned to it for further examination
-when he had disposed of the others.
-Nan watched him nervously. He was a small,
-slight man of sixty, with a stiff gray mustache and
-a sharp, rasping voice. It would not have been
-easy to deceive Thurston if she had destroyed the
-wills; she could never have gone through with it!</p>
-
-<p>She felt that she had touched with her finger-tips
-the far horizons and knew at last something of the
-meaning of life. She had subjected herself to pitiless
-self-analysis and stood convicted in her own
-conscience of vanity, selfishness, and hardness.
-The recollection of her gay adventures with the
-Kinneys and her affair with Copeland had become
-a hideous nightmare. Not only was she ashamed
-of her dallying with Billy, but she accused herself
-of having exerted a baneful influence upon him.
-In all likelihood he would never have sunk so low
-as to propose the destruction of Farley&#8217;s will but for
-his infatuation for her.</p>
-
-<p>Farley&#8217;s death had in itself exercised a chastening
-effect upon her. She was conscious of trying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-to see herself with his eyes and fortify herself with
-something of the stern righteousness that made
-him, in the retrospect, a noble and inspiring figure.
-The upturned faces at the Settlement haunted
-her; there was a work for her to do in the world
-if only she could lay her hands upon it! In this
-new mood the life of ease which money would secure
-weighed little against self-dependence and
-service. Money had ceased to be an important
-integer in her calculations.</p>
-
-<p>Having concluded his examination of the papers,
-the lawyer lifted his head with an impatient jerk,
-then sighed, and began smoothing the open sheets
-into a neat pile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Those wills are worthless, Miss Farley,&mdash;not
-one of them can be probated. The testator&#8217;s signatures
-and the names of the witnesses have been
-scratched out!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In proof of his statement he extended one of the
-wills, pointing to the heavy cross-crosses at the
-bottom of the sheet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have no idea when he did this&mdash;you
-weren&#8217;t present, I suppose?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; he used to do his writing at the table
-where he hid the wills. He occasionally wrote a
-letter or a check there; but I never saw him open
-the table. I never knew of that inner compartment
-till the night he died.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I know that table very well; he had shown
-me the hidden drawer and explained how to open<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-it. But this is most unfortunate, deplorable! I
-kept in touch with his doctor about his condition
-and feared something like this might happen. And
-he dreaded it himself&mdash;was afraid he might die
-some time without leaving just the will he had determined
-to make. I account for all the wills I
-wrote for him but the last. The last time I was
-here I brought a new will, which I don&#8217;t find among
-these. Are you sure you haven&#8217;t overlooked it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was quite sure of it, but after she had described
-in minute detail the events of the last
-afternoon of Farley&#8217;s life, to confirm her statement
-that no one who could have acted as witness
-had visited Farley, she took the lawyer upstairs
-to examine the table for himself. They broadened
-the scope of the search, but without success.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For the present I think it best for you not
-to read those wills,&#8221; he said, when they had returned
-to the parlor. &#8220;They represent Mr. Farley&#8217;s
-changes of feeling in regard to many things&mdash;including
-yourself. A little later I shall be glad
-to submit them to you. The important thing just
-now is the threat of this man Harlowe to attack
-your rights under the adoption. Mr. Eaton and I
-have already discussed that. Now that we&#8217;re
-pretty sure there&#8217;s no will, this may give us some
-trouble, but with characteristic thoroughness Mr.
-Eaton has prepared for just this emergency. His
-reasons for not telling me earlier about these things
-are sound enough&mdash;his fear of disturbing Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>
-Farley unnecessarily. He would undoubtedly have
-wanted a proceeding brought to correct the adoption,
-but that could only have advertised the error,
-and Mr. Farley might have died before we finished
-it. Still, if I had known I should have taken care
-that he didn&#8217;t die intestate. But from what Mr.
-Eaton tells me, this man is all primed to attack
-any will that might have been left, on the ground
-of Mr. Farley&#8217;s mental incapacity&mdash;which is ludicrous,
-of course. There was never a saner man;
-and yet his eccentricities might be magnified before
-a jury&mdash;you never can tell. On the whole,
-Mr. Eaton&#8217;s silence was justified. But our next
-step must be carefully considered. In the mean
-time&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He paced the floor, considering means of relieving
-her anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, while these things are pending we
-shall arrange for your maintenance, on the old
-basis, in this house. No one can pretend that Mr.
-Farley didn&#8217;t have every intention of providing
-for you generously. It&#8217;s only fair to tell you this,
-that even when he seemed to waver at times he
-never cut your legacy below a hundred thousand
-dollars; and I know he regretted the comparative
-meagerness of that&mdash;tripled the amount in the
-very next will he made! You need have no fears,
-Miss Farley,&#8221; he went on reassuringly. &#8220;But you
-are entitled to your own counsel; it&#8217;s only right
-that I should say this to you immediately; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>
-I suggest that you ask Mr. Eaton to represent you.
-I hope you will confer with him at once.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He bowed with old-fashioned formality. He was
-more troubled than he cared to have Nan know,
-and her silence disconcerted him. But her face
-expressed neither disappointment nor alarm. She
-stood erect by the table, an intent look in her eyes.
-Not wishing to leave her weighed down by the
-uncertainties of her future, he said briskly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t bother yourself about these matters,
-Miss Farley. In the end you will find yourself
-a rich woman. So&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He waved his hand as the preliminary to a quick
-exit, but she called him back. He did not like being
-called back; now, he thought, there would be the
-tears he dreaded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t understand,&#8221; she said quietly. &#8220;I
-ought to have made it clear in the first place, but
-I didn&#8217;t know just how&mdash;or when&mdash;to say it.
-I can&#8217;t&mdash;I will not take any of Mr. Farley&#8217;s
-money&mdash;not even if the law should give it to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her with the mute appeal of the
-deaf when they fail to catch a meaning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really, Miss Farley&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t take one cent of Mr. Farley&#8217;s money,&#8221;
-Nan repeated firmly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t blame you for being disappointed&mdash;for
-resenting what may appear to be a lack of consideration
-on his part for your comfort&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, it isn&#8217;t that! I wouldn&#8217;t have you think<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
-<i>that</i>! I&#8217;m sure he meant to do what was right&mdash;what
-was generous! You don&#8217;t know how glad I
-am that our last day together was a happy one&mdash;we
-had never been on better terms. It&#8217;s not that
-I have any unkind feeling toward papa; it&#8217;s all
-myself. The Farleys were only too kind to me.
-I went my own way and it made me selfish&mdash;and
-pretty hard, too, I&#8217;m afraid. Papa knew it; and
-you know yourself how little he trusted me. And
-he was right about me: I didn&#8217;t deserve his confidence.
-But I&#8217;m going to begin all over again, as
-I couldn&#8217;t if I began fighting for this money. I can
-see now that money can&#8217;t make me happy. I&#8217;m
-going to work; I&#8217;m going to stop living, as I
-always have, just for myself: I&#8217;m going&mdash;I&#8217;m
-going to think about the rest of the folks a lot!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The folks?&#8221; repeated Thurston feebly. &#8220;What
-folks?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, everybody! The down-and-outers&mdash;girls
-like me who get a bad start or make mistakes!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Thurston&#8217;s brows worked convulsively. He had
-been prepared for anything but this.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do I&mdash;do I understand you to mean that,
-even if this estate could be turned over to you to-morrow,
-you&#8217;d decline to receive it? It can&#8217;t be
-possible&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; that&#8217;s what I mean!&#8221; she cried eagerly.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve thought it all out and have made up my
-mind about it. I don&#8217;t want to be considered in
-anything that has to do with papa&#8217;s property.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>&#8220;But, my dear child, you can&#8217;t&mdash;you <i>can&#8217;t</i>
-abandon your claims in any such fashion! It&#8217;s my
-duty&mdash;I owe it to my friend and client to see
-that his wishes are fulfilled. Why&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; she persisted, &#8220;between all those wills
-you can&#8217;t tell what he wanted&mdash;only that I was
-a great problem to him. I caused him a great deal
-of unnecessary worry and heartache. I hope this
-isn&#8217;t going to cause you any trouble&mdash;&#8221; And she
-smiled in spite of herself at his consternation, as
-indicated by the twitching of his brows. And there
-<i>was</i>, she realized, something absurd to her cool statement
-to a hard-headed lawyer that she renounced
-claims whose validity he was in duty bound to support.
-The situation was too much for him; he must
-escape as quickly as possible from this young woman
-who brushed away a fairly tangible fortune as a
-waiter clears away bread crumbs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really, Miss Farley&mdash;&#8221; he began; but, thinking
-of nothing further to say, he backed awkwardly
-into the hall.</p>
-
-<p>She helped him into his coat and opened the
-street door. He hurried off without saying good-bye,
-clasping Timothy Farley&#8217;s wills tightly under
-his arm.</p>
-
-<p>A light snow was falling; Nan stood on the steps
-and lifted her hot face to the fluttering flakes. She
-watched Thurston until he turned the corner and
-then went to the telephone.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment she was connected with Mrs. Copeland<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>
-at the farm. &#8220;I want a job,&#8221; she was saying
-in a cheerful tone; &#8220;yes, that&#8217;s it&mdash;a chance to
-work. You told me the other day you needed some
-one to look after your business at the market-house.
-I&#8217;m applying for the job. Oh, no! I&#8217;m not fooling;
-I want that place! Well, I want to see you,
-too; I&#8217;ll be out early in the morning!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN TRUST</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">Copeland Farm Products</span>&#8221; in blue letters
-against a white background swung over Nan&#8217;s
-head on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday mornings
-in the city market-house. On those days she
-left Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s farm at five o&#8217;clock with the
-day&#8217;s offerings and by six the stand was in order.</p>
-
-<p>An endless, jostling throng surged by, and every
-sale she effected, every negotiation for the future
-delivery of an order, had all the joy of an adventure.
-Her immediate neighbors were a big-fisted German
-gardener and a black-eyed Italian girl who sold
-fruits and vegetables. When business lagged, the
-German chaffed her about her wares or condoled
-with her when some frugal marketer priced her
-butter, sniffed, and departed. Nan commanded a
-meager knowledge of Italian and flung a phrase
-at her dark-eyed neighbor now and then in the
-spirit of comradeship which the place encouraged.
-She liked her &#8220;job.&#8221; She assured herself that she
-had never had so much fun in all her life, and that
-never again would she eat the bread of idleness.</p>
-
-<p>But it had not proved so easy as she imagined
-it would be to slip out of her old life into the new.
-If she had left the Farley house preceded by a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>
-brass band and had marched round the monument
-and the length of Washington Street before taking
-her place in the market, her flight could hardly
-have attracted more attention.</p>
-
-<p>The town buzzed. The newspapers neglected no
-phase of Nan&#8217;s affairs, nor did they overlook her
-as she stood behind the counter dispensing &#8220;Copeland
-Farm Products.&#8221; She was surprised and vexed
-by her sudden notoriety. A newspaper photographer
-snapped her, in her white sweater and blue-and-white
-tam o&#8217;shanter, passing eggs over the
-counter. The portrait bore the caption, &#8220;Miss
-Nancy Farley in a New R&ocirc;le,&#8221; and was supplemented
-by text adorned with such sub-headings as
-&#8220;Renounces her Fortune&#8221; and &#8220;Throws Away a
-Million Dollars.&#8221; To be thus heralded was preposterous;
-she had merely gone to work for reasons
-that were, in any view of the matter, her own
-private affair. But public sentiment was astonishingly
-friendly; even those who had looked askance
-at her high flights with the Kinney crowd said it
-was an outrage that Farley had failed to provide
-for her decently.</p>
-
-<p>Fanny, thinking at first it was only a joke, a
-flare of temperament (references to her temperament
-had begun to pall upon Nan!), had welcomed
-Nan to her house and given her charge of the
-market-stand; but it was not without difficulty
-that she persuaded the girl to occupy her guest-room
-and share her meals.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>&#8220;You&#8217;d better scold me when I make mistakes,
-for if I find I don&#8217;t suit I&#8217;ll fire myself,&#8221; Nan declared.
-&#8220;And if I have to leave you, I&#8217;ll go to
-clerking in a department store. I just mention this
-so you won&#8217;t be too polite. This isn&#8217;t any grandstand
-play, you see; I&#8217;m serious for the first time
-in my life!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was certain, at any rate, that Copeland Farm
-Products were sold with amazing ease. When it
-became known that Nan Farley had become Mrs.
-Copeland&#8217;s representative &#8220;on market,&#8221; there was
-lively competition for the privilege of purchasing
-those same &#8220;products.&#8221; Fanny complained ruefully
-that the jellies, jams, and pickles created by the
-young women in her industrial house would be exhausted
-before Christmas and that nothing would
-remain to sell but butter and eggs. Nan suggested
-orange marmalade and a cake-baking department
-to keep the girls at work during the winter, and
-on the off days she set herself to planning the preparation
-of these &#8220;specialties.&#8221; Mrs. Farley&#8217;s cooking
-lessons had not gone for naught; Nan could
-bake a cake in which there was no trace of &#8220;sadness,&#8221;
-and after some experiments with jumbles
-and sand-tarts she sold her first output in an hour
-and opened a waiting list.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Copeland told Eaton at the end of the second
-week that she had never known the real Nan
-till now. There was no questioning the girl&#8217;s sincerity;
-she had cut loose from her old life, relinquished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>
-all hope of participating in Farley&#8217;s fortune, and
-addressed herself zealously to the business of supporting
-herself. She became immediately the idol of
-the half-dozen young women in the old farmhouse,
-who thought her an immensely &#8220;romantic&#8221; figure
-and marveled at her industry and resourcefulness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Splendid! Give her all the room she wants,&#8221;
-Eaton urged Mrs. Copeland. &#8220;She&#8217;s only finding
-herself; we&#8217;ll have the Nan she was meant to be
-the first thing we know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know all these nice church-going
-people would come to condole with me, or I&#8217;d
-have left town,&#8221; Nan confided to Fanny. &#8220;These
-women who wouldn&#8217;t let their daughters associate
-with me a year ago can&#8217;t buy enough eggs now to
-show how much they sympathize with me. If they
-don&#8217;t keep away, I&#8217;m going to raise the price of
-their eggs, and that will break their hearts&mdash;and
-the eggs! But do you know,&#8221; she went on gravely,
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve never been so happy in my life as I am now!
-And I wouldn&#8217;t have anybody think it was out of
-pique, or with any unkind feeling toward papa,&#8221;&mdash;tears
-shone in her eyes as the word slipped from her
-tongue,&mdash;&#8220;but I tell you nobody ever could have
-made a nice, polite girl out of me. I was bound to
-get into scrapes as long as I hadn&#8217;t anything really
-to do but fill in time between manicuring and hair-washing
-dates. There&#8217;s a whole lot in that old
-saying about making a silk purse out of a sow&#8217;s
-ear: it can&#8217;t be did!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>&#8220;If you talk that way,&#8221; Fanny laughed, &#8220;I shall
-turn you out of my house. I don&#8217;t want you to
-think I approve of what you&#8217;re doing. I&#8217;m letting
-you do it because I&#8217;m scared not to!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d better be&mdash;for if you hadn&#8217;t taken me
-in, I should have gone on the stage,&mdash;honestly, I
-should,&mdash;in vaudeville, most likely, doing monologues
-right between the jugglers and the trained
-seals.&#8221;...</p>
-
-<p>On Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays Mr.
-Jeremiah A. Amidon found it convenient to visit
-the market-house as early as seven-thirty (in spite
-of pressing duties at the store), to make sure,
-he said, that Nan, and the farmhand who drove
-her in and helped arrange the stock, had safely
-passed all the railroad crossings on the way to
-town. Jerry was a consoling person and unobtrusively
-thoughtful and helpful. And in his way he
-was almost as keen as Eaton. Jerry did not require
-explanations, and nothing is so wholly satisfactory
-as a friend who understands without being told.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Little girl, if your eggs are guaranteed under
-the Pure Food Act, I&#8217;ll take one&mdash;the large size.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll find the hard-boiled eggs at the lunch
-counter in the next aisle, little boy,&#8221; Nan answered.
-&#8220;How is John Cecil?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Working himself to death. You&#8217;ve driven him
-to it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope you two are not abusing me; how
-about it?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>&#8220;No; not vocally. Cecil&#8217;s shut up in his office
-every night, getting ready to clean up those cousins
-of Farley&#8217;s down on the river, but he doesn&#8217;t say
-anything. Look here, Nan, we&#8217;ve got a line of
-cold cream and other toilet marvels&mdash;stuff you
-could handle here as a side line. Let us send you
-up a bunch to put next to that pink jelly. It&#8217;s
-high grade and we&#8217;ll make it to you at the right
-price.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not on your life, Jerry. Drugs and hand-made
-country butter can&#8217;t associate. You&#8217;d better run
-down to your own little shop now and go to work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After his morning inspection he was likely to
-reappear at lunch time, to see her for a moment
-before she left for the farm; and he assisted in balancing
-her cash when she confessed that it wouldn&#8217;t
-&#8220;gee.&#8221; His pride in her was enormous; he was
-satisfied that there was no other girl to compare
-with her.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry&#8217;s admiration was so obviously genuine and
-supported by so deep an awe and reverence that
-no girl could have helped liking it. And Jerry was
-unfailingly amusing; his airs and graces, his attempts
-to wear a little learning lightly, were wholly
-transparent and invited the chaff he welcomed.
-Nan&#8217;s feeling, dating from the beginning of their
-acquaintance, that their common origin in the back
-streets of Belleville established a tie between them
-had grown steadily. In all her late perplexities
-and self-questioning she had found herself wondering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>
-constantly what Jerry would say, and he had
-supported her warmly in her rejection of the estate.</p>
-
-<p>He had from the first confided his ambitions to
-her and they were worthy ones. He not only meant
-to get on, but he meant to overcome as far as
-possible his lack of early advantages. He steadfastly
-spent an hour at his Latin every night before
-he went to bed, with only an occasional lift from
-the busy Eaton. &#8220;As long as I&#8217;ve tackled it, I
-might as well keep it up,&#8221; he remarked apologetically.
-&#8220;Cecil says my English is so bad, I&#8217;d better
-learn a few foreign languages to make me respectable!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>One noon Nan was munching an apple while
-waiting for Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s man to carry out the
-empty crates and boxes, when Jerry appeared,
-looking unusually solemn.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s wrong with the world? You&#8217;re not out
-of work, are you?&#8221; she demanded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hoped you&#8217;d ask me,&#8221; he replied, with mock
-dejection. &#8220;The boss has been making a few
-changes at the store and I&#8217;ve got a new job.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better or worse?&#8221; she asked, with feigned carelessness.</p>
-
-<p>This was the first time he had referred to Copeland
-since her removal to the farm; and there
-were still vast areas of ignorance and uncertainty
-in his mind as to her feeling toward Copeland.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better for me; I don&#8217;t know about the house,&#8221;
-he answered. &#8220;Hasn&#8217;t anybody told you everything<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>
-that&#8217;s happened down our way?&#8221; He seated
-himself on the counter and clasped one knee with
-his gloved hands. &#8220;Well, we&#8217;ve reorganized; just
-about everything&#8217;s changed except the sign. Boss
-steady as a rock; things rather coming his way
-now. You heard about Kinney Cement? There
-was never any doubt about Cecil winning the
-patent cases; and now the boss has sold out his
-interest&mdash;quit cement for good and all; concentrating
-on drugs. I guess he got a good price for
-his cement stock, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He waited to see how she was affected by these
-confidences.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The drug business was in a bad way, wasn&#8217;t
-it?&#8221; she asked carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Um, well; it did look for a few minutes as
-though we mightn&#8217;t pull through.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed at his lightly emphasized &#8220;we.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What are you doing now?&mdash;counting money
-or running the elevator?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tease me some more! Say, Nan, I&#8217;m not kidding
-you. The boss made a new job for me; I&#8217;m
-sales manager&mdash;going to start out with a suit-case
-next week and shake hands with all our customers,
-just to get in touch. Not to interfere with
-our regular salesmen; oh, no! Just asking about
-the babies down the line and making the lowly
-retailer feel that we live only to please him. Do
-you get me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A gleam or two. So Mr. Copeland got out of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>
-his troubles, did he? Well, I&#8217;m glad to hear it.
-He&#8217;s too good a fellow to go to the bad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was spoken carelessly, but with a note of
-sincerity. Her world had turned upside-down since
-her last meeting with Billy. She waited for Jerry
-to enlighten her further.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s all right now; you can bet on that; he&#8217;s
-not going to fool with his luck any more. It&#8217;s
-funny&#8221;&mdash;he was finding it difficult to conceal his
-embarrassment in speaking of Copeland to Nan&mdash;&#8220;but
-the boss and Cecil are getting chummy.
-When the pinch came, Cecil was right there;
-walked on to the scaffold and saved him after the
-black cap had been pulled on and tied under his
-chin. This is marked private&mdash;I don&#8217;t <i>know</i> anything&mdash;not
-a thing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan nodded. She did not see very clearly what
-he was driving at, but she refused to ask questions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The boss and Cecil are lunching together every
-day now, and they spend an hour together. That
-tickles me,&#8221; he ended softly. &#8220;I always wished
-they&#8217;d hit it off together.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He glanced at her for her approval of this new
-combination, which was hardly more surprising
-than his own manifestation of feeling. He evidently
-derived the deepest satisfaction from the new
-intimacy between Eaton and Copeland. The fleeting
-tenderness and wistfulness in his candid, humorous
-eyes touched her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221; he exclaimed cheerily, as the driver<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>
-announced that the wagon was ready, &#8220;do you
-fly back to the farm, or will you join me in refreshments
-at a one-arm sandwichorium? I&#8217;ve only got
-twenty minutes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll fool you by accepting,&#8221; she laughed. &#8220;I
-have some errands to do and can just about catch
-the three o&#8217;clock interurban.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They walked to a lunch room, where he found
-seats and brought her the sandwich and coffee she
-insisted was all she wanted. He was observing her
-narrowly for signs of discontent, but she had never
-seemed happier. He understood perfectly that she
-wished her new activities to be taken as a matter
-of course, and he carefully refrained from expressing
-his great pride in her. As long as she continued
-to countenance him, he was satisfied, and she
-had shown in countless ways that she liked him
-and believed in him.</p>
-
-<p>He introduced her to a bank clerk who paused
-in his hurried exit to speak to him and incidentally
-to have a closer look at Nan. A girl nodded to him
-across the room; he explained that she was one of
-the smartest girls in town&mdash;&#8220;the whole show in
-an insurance office; the members of the firm
-don&#8217;t turn round unless she says so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just think,&#8221; Nan remarked, &#8220;I might have died
-without knowing how it feels to be a poor working
-girl.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, don&#8217;t die now that you&#8217;ve found it out!
-It would be mighty lonesome on earth without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>
-you. Have a chocolate eclair,&#8221; he added hastily,&mdash;&#8220;&#8216;business
-girl&#8217;s special.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, thanks. If I don&#8217;t turn up to-night with
-an appetite for dinner Mrs. Copeland will be scared
-and send for the doctor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By the way, I wish you&#8217;d casually mention me
-to that gifted lady; I&#8217;d like to hop off at Stop 3
-some evening without being consumed by the dog.
-How about it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, she&#8217;ll stand for it! She&#8217;ll stand for &#8217;most
-anybody who shows up with a clean face and a kind
-heart. She&#8217;s an angel, Jerry. She&#8217;s the finest
-woman that ever lived!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d sort o&#8217; figured that out for myself, just
-passing her on the boulevards. I thought I&#8217;d try
-for a rise out of Cecil the other night and just
-mentioned her with a gentle o. k. I&#8217;d gone up to
-his office to see if I could shine his shoes or do any
-little thing like that for him, and he looked at me
-so long I nearly had nervous prostration, and then
-he said: &#8216;My dear boy, the poverty of your vocabulary
-is a constant grief to me!&#8217;&mdash;just like that.
-I guess he likes her all right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She has a good many admirers,&#8221; Nan replied
-noncommittally, as she crumpled her paper napkin.
-&#8220;She can&#8217;t help it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, anything Cecil wants he ought to have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I hope&mdash;I should hate to think he
-couldn&#8217;t get anything he wanted in this world,&#8221;
-said Nan.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span>Jerry had been deeply troubled at times by the
-fear that his adored Cecil might be interested in
-Nan, and the smile that accompanied her last remark
-was the least bit ambiguous. With all his
-assurance he was at heart a humble person, and
-he never ceased to marvel at Nan&#8217;s tolerance of
-him. It was not for him to question the ordinances
-of Heaven. If Cecil and Nan&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Nan began drawing on her gloves. When they
-reached the street she explained that she was going
-to the Farley house to gather up some of her traps
-that she had left behind. Fully conscious of his
-sudden soberness and perhaps surmising the cause
-of it, she lightened his burdened spirit by asking
-him to come out soon to see her, and boarded a
-street car....</p>
-
-<p>This was her first visit &#8220;home&#8221; since she had
-left the house to go to Fanny Copeland&#8217;s. In her
-hurried flight she had taken only a trunk and a
-suit-case, but her summer gowns and a number of
-odds and ends remained to be packed and moved.</p>
-
-<p>The colored maid, who had only vaguely grasped
-the meaning of Nan&#8217;s sudden departure, admitted
-her with joyous exclamations.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About time yo&#8217; &#8217;s comin&#8217; back, Miss Nan.
-Mistah Thu&#8217;ston came up heah and tole me and
-Joshua to stay right along. I guess Mistah Fa&#8217;ley&#8217;s
-been turnin&#8217; ovah in his grave &#8217;bout yo&#8217; runnin&#8217;
-away. He was mighty ca&#8217;less not to fix his will
-the way it ought t&#8217; been. Yo&#8217; &#8217;ll find yo&#8217; room just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>
-the way yo&#8217; left it. Mistah Thu&#8217;ston said fo&#8217; me
-to keep things shined up just the way they always
-was.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan explained that she had merely come to pack
-her remaining things and asked Joshua to bring
-up a trunk from the cellar. She filled the trunk and
-added to the summer frocks articles from her desk
-and other personal belongings that she wished to
-keep for their various associations.</p>
-
-<p>When she had finished, she crossed the hall to
-Farley&#8217;s room, rather from force of habit than by
-intention. She ran her hand across the shelves that
-represented his steadfast literary preferences that
-had never been altered in her recollection: &#8220;Pickwick,&#8221;
-Artemus Ward; a volume of Petroleum V.
-Nasby&#8217;s writings; Franklin&#8217;s &#8220;Autobiography&#8221;;
-Grant&#8217;s &#8220;Memoirs&#8221;; Mark Twain, in well-worn
-original first editions, including the bulky &#8220;Innocents
-Abroad&#8221; and &#8220;Roughing It.&#8221; She resolved
-to take the &#8220;Life on the Mississippi,&#8221; from which
-she had so often read to him in his last year. She
-rummaged in the closet for an album containing
-crude old-fashioned likenesses of Mr. and Mrs.
-Farley and a series of photographs of herself that
-marked the swift-moving years from the time she
-became a member of their household.</p>
-
-<p>In a last slow survey of the room her eyes fell
-upon the portrait of Mrs. Farley that had arrested
-her with its kind motherly glance on the night of
-her temptation. She reflected that her right to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span>
-remove anything from the house was questionable,
-but she meant to ask Thurston to give her the
-portrait when the house was finally disposed of.</p>
-
-<p>As she lifted the frame and shook the wire loose
-from the hook, a paper that had been thrust behind
-the picture slipped over the mantel-edge with a
-soft rustling and fell at her feet. She laid the portrait
-on the bed and picked up the paper.</p>
-
-<p>A glance sufficed to tell her that she had found
-another of Farley&#8217;s wills&mdash;possibly the last, for
-which Thurston had inquired so particularly.</p>
-
-<p>She opened it hurriedly and glanced at the last
-sheet. The spaces for the signatures of testator and
-witnesses were blank. It was only worthless paper,
-of no value to any one. It seemed a plausible assumption
-that Farley, having decided finally that
-he would have no use for the earlier wills, had
-begun to destroy them after first placing the last
-one behind the picture to avoid the chance of confusing
-it with the others.</p>
-
-<p>As Nan folded it, a name caught her attention
-and she began to read.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I hereby give and bequeath to Frances Hillard
-Copeland, as trustee, the sum of five hundred
-thousand dollars, the same to be held by said
-Frances Hillard Copeland, as such trustee, with the
-following powers and for the following purposes:
-... To pay to my said daughter upon her marriage
-the principal of said fund, together with all accretions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>
-thereto; provided, however, that the marriage
-of my said daughter shall be with the approval
-and express consent of said Frances Hillard
-Copeland....</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The room swayed as the meaning of this proviso
-sank into her whirling senses. Farley had interposed
-Fanny between her and Billy&mdash;Fanny,
-Billy&#8217;s former wife! The old man&#8217;s hatred of Copeland,
-his warm admiration for Fanny, had thus
-combined to fashion a device that was almost
-malevolent in its cunning. She followed Farley&#8217;s
-reasoning clearly. He had assumed that his own
-feeling toward Copeland was shared by Fanny, and
-that she would never consent to a marriage which,
-in the vague prospect, had given him so much
-concern. He had presumably promoted the friendly
-relations between Fanny and her with this end in
-view.</p>
-
-<p>As the first shock of the revelation passed, Nan
-laughed bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor papa!&#8221; she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>He little knew how near she had come to marrying
-Billy! She gasped as it occurred to her that
-Farley might have discussed the matter with Fanny
-and persuaded her to accept the trust; but she
-quickly decided against this. It was unlikely that
-Farley had ever spoken to her about it; and it was
-inconceivable that Fanny would have consented,
-when the purpose was so clearly to make use of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span>
-her, as Billy&#8217;s divorced wife, to stand between
-Billy and Farley&#8217;s money....</p>
-
-<p>She told the servants she would send for her
-trunk and instructed them to wrap up Mrs. Farley&#8217;s
-portrait and hold it until she could ask Thurston&#8217;s
-permission to remove it. She hurried to the car,
-carrying the will with her. She must, of course,
-show it to Thurston, but that could wait a day....</p>
-
-<p>First she would tell Fanny! It was only fair
-that Mrs. Copeland should know. Copeland had
-never been mentioned in their intercourse, but she
-would now confess everything that had ever passed
-between her and Billy. She would not spare herself.
-She should have done it earlier&mdash;before
-Fanny threw the mantle of her kindness and generosity
-about her.</p>
-
-<p>For a month she had been happy in the thought
-that she had escaped from all her troubles, and that
-she was free of the wreckage of her old life. Now
-it was necessary to readjust herself to new conditions,
-and she resented the necessity that compelled
-it. Her resolution to tell Fanny of this last
-will and of all that lay back of it remained unshaken
-as the car bore her homeward. It was the
-only &#8220;square&#8221; thing to do, she repeated to herself
-over and over again, as she looked out of the car
-window upon the gray winter landscape.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-
-
-<small>&#8220;I NEVER STOPPED LOVING HIM!&#8221;</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">While</span> they were still at dinner, Mrs. Copeland
-was called to the telephone. The instrument was
-in the living-room and Nan could not avoid hearing
-Fanny&#8217;s share in the conversation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s fine&mdash;quite splendid!&#8221; And then,
-&#8220;I&#8217;m so glad! I never can thank you! Well, of
-course, no one knows. You&#8217;re quite sure? That&#8217;s
-good; I might have known you&#8217;d manage it just
-right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment&#8217;s silence after she returned
-to the table. She dropped a lump of sugar into her
-coffee and watched the bubbles rise. Then she
-lifted her head with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose, Nancy Farley, that God has made
-better men than J. C. Eaton&mdash;kinder and more
-helpful men&mdash;but I&#8217;ve never known them!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her lips twitched and there were tears in her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose it&#8217;s his nature to be kind and helpful,&#8221;
-Nan replied. &#8220;I&#8217;ve never known any one like
-him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The nice thing about him is that he does you
-a favor quite as though it were a favor to him.
-He&#8217;s just done something for me that no one else<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>
-could have done; there&#8217;s no one else I could have
-asked to do it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She lapsed into reverie, and Nan&#8217;s thoughts
-ranged far. If Fanny and Eaton loved each other,
-how perfect it would be! Their telephonic communications
-had been frequent of late; nearly every
-evening Eaton called her, as though by arrangement,
-at the dinner hour. From the character of
-Fanny&#8217;s responses he seemed to be reporting upon
-some matter, the nature of which was not apparent,
-but Fanny always came from these conferences in
-good spirits.</p>
-
-<p>While Fanny was studying the produce market
-in the afternoon newspaper, Nan went upstairs to
-get the will. She had set herself a disagreeable task,
-but she did not falter in her determination to go
-through with it. She glanced through the will
-again, rehearsed the story as she meant to tell it,
-and returned to the living-room, where Fanny
-began reading the day&#8217;s quotations from the sheet
-before her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan, if eggs go much higher, we&#8217;ll be rich by
-spring. I&#8217;m going to double the poultry department
-next summer. They told me I couldn&#8217;t make
-it pay, and now it&#8217;s the best thing I&#8217;ve got!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan liked these quiet evenings. Sometimes the
-young women from the farmhouse came in for an
-hour of music, and Nan occasionally gave some of
-her recitations, much to their delight. At other
-times Fanny retired to her den to write letters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>
-or post her books, leaving Nan to her own devices.</p>
-
-<p>To-night Fanny produced some sewing and bade
-Nan tell her of her day&#8217;s experiences.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope the long winter evenings out here are
-not going to bore you, Nancy,&#8221; she remarked, noting
-the serious look on Nan&#8217;s face. &#8220;Gracious!
-What&#8217;s that you have there? It has an official look;
-we&#8217;re not being sued, are we?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s something I have to tell you, Fanny.
-It&#8217;s not a pleasant subject, and you&#8217;ll see in a moment
-how hard it is for me to tell you. And you&#8217;ll
-listen, won&#8217;t you; you&#8217;ll let me tell you everything
-I have to say about it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, Nancy!&#8221; said Fanny as Nan knelt
-beside her. &#8220;I should be sorry if you couldn&#8217;t
-come to me with anything! I hope nothing disagreeable
-has happened.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it isn&#8217;t pleasant. And to think I have to
-spoil one of our evenings by talking of it! We&#8217;ve
-had such good times here. It may be that you
-won&#8217;t let me stay any longer after you know. I
-should hate that; but I should understand it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She touched with a light caress a fold of Mrs.
-Copeland&#8217;s gown, then withdrew her hand quickly,
-and began fingering the will nervously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The sooner we get through with it the better,
-Nancy,&#8221; said Fanny kindly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, when I went to the house this afternoon
-I found that other will, the last one Mr. Thurston<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>
-wrote for papa. It was stuck behind mamma&#8217;s
-picture where he must have put it when he began
-destroying the other wills. It isn&#8217;t signed, but,
-of course, I shall have to give it to Mr. Thurston.
-Perhaps I shouldn&#8217;t have read it, but I
-did, and I knew right away that I ought to
-show it to you. I thought about it all the way
-out on the car, and I&#8217;m sure it&#8217;s the best thing
-to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You poor child! I should think you&#8217;d had
-enough of wills, without new ones popping out
-from behind picture frames. If you&#8217;re sure you
-want me to see it, I&#8217;m ready. Let me have it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan passed it to her grudgingly and rose and
-left the room. She waited in the dark dining-room,
-watching the headlight of a trolley car as it neared
-and passed in the highway below. The time seemed
-endless. She heard the rustle of paper as Fanny
-turned the pages. She was reading carefully, and
-as time passed without any sign from her, Nan
-knew that she was pondering deeply what she read.
-Nan remained at the window, pressing her forehead
-against the cold pane. Deep dejection settled upon
-her; she had made a mistake; it had not been necessary
-to make this revelation, which could only
-cause her dearest friend unhappiness....</p>
-
-<p>She felt suddenly the pressure of a warm cheek
-against her face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come, Nancy! Come back to the fire and let
-us talk about it,&#8221; said Fanny in her usual cheery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span>
-tone. &#8220;Of course, I never knew of this; never
-dreamed of any such thing. It&#8217;s a strange idea; I
-didn&#8217;t know such a will could be made; but if it
-was done with Mr. Thurston&#8217;s counsel, it must be
-all right. I should have thought, though, that they
-would have asked me about it. The responsibility
-is very great&mdash;too great&mdash;for any one to take.
-But, of course, as the will isn&#8217;t signed, that&#8217;s the
-end of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan turned wonderingly, doubtful whether
-Fanny had grasped the full significance of those
-phrases that touched so nearly her own life.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It doesn&#8217;t say anything about my giving a
-bond; I might have stolen the money!&#8221; Fanny
-continued lightly. &#8220;And if I didn&#8217;t like your suitors,
-I might have played the r&ocirc;le of the cruel father
-for twenty-five years! My! but you&#8217;ve had a
-narrow escape!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you don&#8217;t understand; you don&#8217;t understand!&#8221;
-Nan moaned. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you see; don&#8217;t you
-<i>know</i> what it all means?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I think I do, Nancy. But we don&#8217;t need
-to talk of that. It&#8217;s only so much paper, anyhow,
-and we needn&#8217;t bother. The best thing to do is to
-forget all about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I can&#8217;t let it go this way! You are far too
-kind! I must tell you the rest of it&mdash;I must tell
-you what made papa think of this!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But why should we talk of it, Nancy? It&#8217;s
-plain enough, I suppose, what was in Mr. Farley&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>
-mind; but it&#8217;s all over now. It was just a freak&mdash;a
-grim bit of irony; no doubt, if he had lived, he
-would have changed his mind about it. It would
-have been just as well if you hadn&#8217;t told me; it
-really wasn&#8217;t necessary! I&#8217;m sorry you thought it
-might make any difference.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, but I had to tell you; I could never have
-looked you in the face again if I hadn&#8217;t! He was
-afraid&mdash;he had been afraid for more than a year
-that&mdash;that&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She could not say it; she could not bring herself
-to the point of putting into words the intent of
-Timothy Farley&#8217;s last will, that was to make it
-impossible for her to marry this woman&#8217;s divorced
-husband! The shame of it smothered her; she
-wondered that she had ever had the effrontery to
-eat Fanny Copeland&#8217;s bread and share her fireside.
-The very calmness with which Fanny had received
-the news added to her discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>Fanny began moving about the room with her
-light, graceful step, touching a book, unconsciously
-straightening the flowers in a vase on the table.
-Then she walked to the fire, where Nan crouched
-mutely watching her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan, dear, do you want to marry Billy?&#8221; she
-asked, bending down and resting her hands lightly
-on Nan&#8217;s shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>No one would have known that this was the
-first time her former husband had been mentioned
-between them.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span>&#8220;No, no! That&#8217;s what makes this so hard&mdash;so
-unjust!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Were you ever&mdash;did you ever think you
-could?&#8221; Fanny asked in the same calm tone, in
-which there was no hint of accusation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; there was a time, there were times&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Fanny was about to resume her idle wandering
-about the room when Nan clasped her knees.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what I want to tell you; I want to tell
-you everything from the very beginning. Please
-let me! I ought to have told you before I came
-here; but I was so eager to come I didn&#8217;t think
-of it; it didn&#8217;t occur to me at all! You see, if I
-don&#8217;t,&mdash;if you won&#8217;t listen,&mdash;I must go away;
-I can&#8217;t spend another night here. You must see
-that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is like you&mdash;it is generous and kind, Nancy,
-to want to tell me. But you don&#8217;t need to; it&#8217;s all
-right; it&#8217;s not a thing that I should ever have
-asked; you know that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She drew up a chair and clasped Nan&#8217;s hands.</p>
-
-<p>Nan told the story; told it in all its details, from
-the beginning of her acquaintance with Copeland.
-She took pains to fix dates, showing that she and
-Copeland were launched upon a lively flirtation
-and were meeting, usually at the Kinneys&#8217;, before
-there had been any hint of a possible divorce. It
-had been her fault, her most grievous sin, that she
-encouraged Billy&#8217;s attentions. They had tickled
-her vanity. She had admired &#8220;Billy&#8221;; he had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span>
-a new type of man to her. She described her deception
-of Farley as to their clandestine meetings; told
-of his wrath when he learned of her disobedience;
-and, coming to the frustrated elopement, she made
-it clear that it was through no fault of hers that she
-had not run away with Copeland and married him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But it&#8217;s all over; even if it hadn&#8217;t been for this&mdash;this
-idea of papa&#8217;s to put you between us&mdash;I
-should never marry Billy. No, no!&#8221; she moaned.
-&#8220;I had decided that before papa died. You know,
-don&#8217;t you,&#8221; she pleaded, with the tears streaming
-down her cheeks, &#8220;that I wouldn&#8217;t have come
-here, I couldn&#8217;t have pretended to be your friend,
-if I&#8217;d ever meant to do that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You poor Nancy; you poor, dear, little girl!&#8221;
-Fanny murmured.</p>
-
-<p>There was a far-away look in her eyes as she
-slowly stroked the girl&#8217;s hair, but a smile played
-about her lips. She did not speak again until Nan&#8217;s
-grief had spent itself. Then she bent to the tear-wet
-face and pressed her cheek against it, whispering,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You poor little dear; you dear little Nancy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will let me stay&mdash;you will let me stay,
-after all that?&#8221; faltered Nan.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was fine of you to tell me; you don&#8217;t know
-how grateful I am&mdash;and glad. Of course, you will
-stay; it would break my heart to lose you now!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan drew away and looked long into the steady,
-tranquil eyes. She had not been prepared for this.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span>
-It was beyond comprehension that her story could
-be received with so much magnanimity, that forgiveness
-could be so easily won. She caught the
-hands that clasped her face and kissed them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you don&#8217;t know!&#8221; she cried fearfully. &#8220;I
-haven&#8217;t made you understand!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I understand it all, Nancy; I&#8217;d guessed
-most of it without your telling me. And it does
-make a difference; yes, it makes a very great difference.&#8221;
-And then, feeling Nan&#8217;s hands relax
-their tight hold, and seeing the fear in her face,
-she smiled and added, &#8220;But not the difference you
-think!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, if only you don&#8217;t send me away! It was
-brazen of me ever to come; I don&#8217;t know how you
-came to take me without a question, when I&#8217;d
-done you the greatest wrong one woman can do
-another.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But maybe you didn&#8217;t!&#8221; said Fanny quickly,
-with a wistful little smile. &#8220;I&#8217;m going to ask you
-one question, Nancy,&mdash;just to be sure. But you
-needn&#8217;t answer; you won&#8217;t feel you must, will
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anything&mdash;anything!&#8221; Nan faltered.</p>
-
-<p>Fanny turned her head, as though doubting,
-questioning, and her eyes were very grave.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then, Nancy, tell me this&mdash;and please be very
-honest, and don&#8217;t trouble about what I may think
-or feel about your answer&mdash;do you&mdash;do you love
-Billy&mdash;now?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>&#8220;No; no! It was never love; it was never really
-that! His attentions turned my head, and I hadn&#8217;t
-the sense to keep away from him. It was all my
-fault. I&#8217;m ashamed to tell you that I was very
-lonely after I came home from school&mdash;it is ungrateful
-to be saying it; but I have always felt
-uneasy&mdash;self-conscious among the people here.
-I have never got away from the feeling that whenever
-they saw me they were saying, &#8216;That&#8217;s the
-girl the Farleys raked out of the river and did
-everything for&mdash;and just look at her!&#8217; I couldn&#8217;t
-help that&mdash;the feeling that they knew I was just
-a waif, a nobody. It made me rebellious and defiant.
-Oh, I know it was unjustified and that it&#8217;s
-unkind to speak of it even to you. And that&#8217;s why&mdash;one
-reason, at least&mdash;I&#8217;ve enjoyed knowing
-Jerry so much. Jerry <i>knows</i>, and he doesn&#8217;t care!
-He knows every little tiny thing about me and my
-people, and how poor and wretched we were! But
-Billy&mdash;I haven&#8217;t any feeling about him now except&mdash;just
-friendliness&mdash;and pity!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I&#8217;ll tell you something that will show
-you how very dear you are to me,&#8221; said Fanny,&mdash;speaking
-slowly. &#8220;I think it was this that drew me
-to you&mdash;made me want to be friends with you
-when Mr. Farley first brought us together. Oh,
-Nan,&#8221;&mdash;her voice sank to a whisper,&mdash;&#8220;I still
-love Billy! I never stopped loving him!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-
-
-<small>COPELAND&#8217;S UNKNOWN BENEFACTOR</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Eaton</span> tore March from his office calendar,
-crumpled it in his hand, and glanced out of the
-window as though expecting to see April&#8217;s heralds
-dancing over the roofs below. It was nearing five
-o&#8217;clock and his big desk was swept clear of the
-day&#8217;s encumbrances. He paced the floor slowly,
-his gaze ranging the walls with their ranks of file-cases.
-A particular box in the &#8220;C&#8221; section seemed
-to exert a spell upon him. He glanced at it several
-times, then opened a drawer in his desk, peered in,
-and absently closed it. He was waiting for Copeland,
-and as usual, when he expected a visitor, was
-planning the interview to its minutest details.</p>
-
-<p>Since the reorganization of the Copeland-Farley
-Company he had been seeing much of Copeland.
-The winter had wrought changes in Billy&mdash;changes
-that at first provoked cynical comment
-from persons who had no faith in his reformation.
-But people were now beginning to say that they
-always knew Billy had the right stuff in him. Even
-the fact&mdash;which was pretty generally known&mdash;that
-Billy had narrowly escaped disaster didn&#8217;t
-matter particularly. Such fellows were always
-lucky. If the decision in the Kinney patent case<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>
-hadn&#8217;t come just when it did, he would have been
-down and out; but it <i>had</i> come. Yes; he was a
-lucky devil.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton was breathing easier now, as days passed
-and Copeland seemed to have settled into a sober
-and industrious routine. He was even giving time
-to broadening the scope and effectiveness of the
-Bigger Business Club, and had accepted a place on
-the municipal reform committee of the Chamber of
-Commerce. Mr. Jeremiah A. Amidon pointed to
-his boss with pride. Jerry had risen to the dignity
-of a standing invitation to Sunday evening tea at
-Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s and was the proudest and happiest
-of Jerries.</p>
-
-<p>Three slight snarls of a desk buzzer, marked, to
-the attentive ear, by an interval between the second
-and third, spelled Copeland in the office code.
-Eaton raised his arm and pressed a button attached
-to a swinging cord over his desk. By this
-system acceptable visitors could be announced by
-the girl in the reception room and disposed of at
-long range. If Eaton didn&#8217;t want to be bothered,
-he made no response. This was only one of his
-many devices for safeguarding his time. When he
-was studying a case, he ignored the presence of his
-most remunerative clients on the theory that they
-were unlikely to have anything of importance to
-impart. It was a fair assumption that before he
-undertook any case he extracted from the client&#8217;s
-head and stored in a file-box all the information of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span>
-which that particular client was possessed. Clients
-resented this treatment, but as Eaton was admittedly
-the best patent lawyer in three States,
-they were obliged to humor him.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland entered with a quick, springy step.
-Jerry had persuaded him to spend an hour three
-times a week at Gaylord&#8217;s, and as a result Copeland
-was in prime condition. He nodded to Eaton
-and sat down in the chair the lawyer pushed
-toward him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The state of your desk fills me with envy; I
-never get mine as clean as that. If I turn my back,
-somebody throws something on it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, my system has its disadvantages; strangers
-coming in think I haven&#8217;t any business. You
-wanted to speak about those notes?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; they&#8217;re due to-morrow and I&#8217;m ready to
-take them up. Our merchandise bills are cleaned
-up, and my personal obligations are all taken care
-of. Our credit&#8217;s A 1. The White River National
-is taking good care of us and they&#8217;re not as fussy
-as the Western was.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Western isn&#8217;t a bank,&#8221; remarked Eaton;
-&#8220;it&#8217;s a pawnshop with a third-degree attachment.
-About the notes,&#8221; he continued, tipping himself
-back in his chair and crossing his slender legs,
-&#8220;you don&#8217;t have to pay them to-morrow. They
-can be carried longer&mdash;indefinitely. It&#8217;s just as
-you say, however. It might be best to accept an
-extension of three or six months.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span>&#8220;No, thanks! I&#8217;ve got the money to pay, and
-you may be dead sure it&#8217;s a comfortable feeling to
-know I&#8217;ve got it! I hope I&#8217;ll never have to sweat as
-I did for a year or two.&#8221; He frowned, and slapped
-his gloves together. &#8220;Look here, Eaton, you&#8217;re the
-hardest man to thank I ever saw, but for God&#8217;s
-sake, don&#8217;t ever think I don&#8217;t appreciate all you&#8217;ve
-done for me! You saved me&mdash;hauled me out
-when I was going down for the last time! I don&#8217;t
-know why you did it; there was no reason why
-you or anybody else should have done it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not I you have to thank; it&#8217;s an enlightened
-judiciary that upheld Kinney&#8217;s patents on Ivory
-Cement machinery.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There may be something in that,&#8221; Copeland
-admitted, &#8220;but there are other things I want to
-speak of. I insist on speaking of all of them. In
-picking up that Reynolds stock as you did&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please stick to facts! It was our blithe gazelle
-Amidon who did that. I honestly didn&#8217;t know it
-was in existence till he came to me about it.
-Thank Jerry!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank him! I&#8217;m going to fire him if he doesn&#8217;t
-quit working me so hard,&#8221; laughed Copeland.
-&#8220;But you backed him, and advanced him the
-money. The way that boy strolled in with that
-certificate just as Eichberg was jamming me into
-a corner is the last thing I&#8217;ll think of when I
-die.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Strong sense of the dramatic, that Jerry!&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>
-observed Eaton musingly. &#8220;Great loss to the stage,
-his devotion to commerce.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He can sell goods, and he knows how to hypnotize
-other fellows into doing it. I&#8217;m giving him all
-the rope he wants. He&#8217;s the smartest youngster
-on the street, and I&#8217;m proud of him. There&#8217;s
-more than that; I&#8217;m going to tell you, because
-you&#8217;ve been mighty good to me and I want you
-to know just how desperate I was last November.
-I want you to know how near bottom I&#8217;d gone.
-Eaton, I tried to burn the store the night before
-the Western notes came due&mdash;and I&#8217;d have done
-it&mdash;I&#8217;d have done it if Jerry hadn&#8217;t stopped me!&mdash;God!&#8221;
-he groaned. His frame shook with repulsion
-and abhorrence and he turned his head to
-avoid Eaton&#8217;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a good thing, Copeland,&#8221; said the lawyer
-quietly, &#8220;that we&#8217;re not allowed to be as bad as
-we want to be in this world. No man is ever that!
-That, for a lack of a better word, is my religion.
-Let&#8217;s go back to the notes. You say you prefer
-to pay them; but that&#8217;s wholly optional. It had
-occurred to me that you might want to keep the
-money in the business, and if you do it&#8217;s yours,
-quite indefinitely.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland shook his head and drew out a check.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I made a big clean-up on my Cement stock
-and now that I&#8217;m out of it I&#8217;m never going to
-monkey on the outside again. Here you are, with
-interest!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>Eaton read the check, mentally verified the
-interest and opened the top drawer of his desk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are four notes of twenty-five thousand
-each,&#8221; he remarked, as he bent over his desk and
-wrote &#8220;Paid&#8221; across the four slips of paper. &#8220;They
-were made to me&mdash;you remember? As I told you
-at the time, I wasn&#8217;t making the advance myself,
-and I deserve no thanks for negotiating the loan&mdash;none
-whatever. You&#8217;re entitled to the canceled
-notes, of course; but perhaps you&#8217;ll be satisfied to
-let me destroy them here in your presence. The
-reason for that is that I endorsed the notes to the
-person who made the advance, to protect your
-creditor in case of my death. That person is very
-anxious not to be known in the matter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think I ought to know,&#8221; Copeland replied.
-&#8220;A debt like that can&#8217;t just be passed over. I&#8217;d
-be more comfortable if I knew.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps&mdash;&#8221; began Eaton.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland shook his head and put out his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Eaton bent a quick, penetrating glance upon
-him, then gave him the notes. Copeland&#8217;s face
-went white as he read the endorsements.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fanny!&#8221; he gasped chokingly. He bent forward
-and grasped Eaton&#8217;s arm. &#8220;This is a trick;
-a ghastly joke! She never would have done it; no
-human being would have done this after&mdash;after&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No human being&mdash;no!&#8221; replied Eaton, swinging
-round in his chair so that he did not face
-Copeland for a moment.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span>Copeland&#8217;s hand shook as he looked again at
-the endorsements.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, Eaton, you had no right to do it! You
-knew I wouldn&#8217;t have taken her help&mdash;not&mdash;after&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I knew you wouldn&#8217;t. And she knew you
-wouldn&#8217;t. That, of course, is why she did it in
-the way she did.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The intentness of Copeland&#8217;s thought showed in
-his face; he continued to turn over the notes in
-his shaking hands.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you will tell her how beyond any thanks
-this is&mdash;beyond anything I can do or say!&#8221; He
-bent his head and went on brokenly. &#8220;It would be
-cruel, Eaton, if it weren&#8217;t so kind, so generous, so
-merciful!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think you have done enough already to show
-your appreciation,&#8221; replied Eaton. &#8220;I&#8217;ll say to
-you that you&#8217;ve done what she expected&mdash;and
-what, to be frank about it, I did not expect. At
-least, I wasn&#8217;t very sanguine. You&#8217;d gone pretty
-far&mdash;farther than men go and come back again.
-You&#8217;ve proved your mettle. If you go on as you
-are, you are safe. And I&#8217;m glad&mdash;happier about
-it than I&#8217;ve been about anything in a mighty long
-time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t understand it. I was worse than ever
-you imagine. I treated her as a man doesn&#8217;t treat
-his dog!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Eaton acquiesced, &#8220;it was all that.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>&#8220;And you can see how it leaves me,&#8221; Copeland
-moaned, crumpling the notes in his hand,&mdash;&#8220;with
-a debt these things don&#8217;t express; a debt that can&#8217;t
-be discharged!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s something you can do, Copeland, if
-you will. She hasn&#8217;t asked it; I have no reason to
-think it has even occurred to her. It&#8217;s my own idea&mdash;absolutely&mdash;I
-want you to be sure of that. It
-strikes me as being only decent, only just.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, yes!&#8221; Copeland eagerly assented.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to speak plainly, Copeland. It&#8217;s
-about Manning. You let the impression get abroad
-that your wife had given you cause to doubt her
-loyalty. Yes; I know all about it. Manning was
-your friend, not hers. The injury was not only to
-her; it was to that man, too. Your use of him, to
-cast suspicion on the woman you had sworn to
-shield and protect, was infamous, dastardly! Manning,
-I have reason to believe,&#8221;&mdash;his eyes ranged
-the file-cases,&mdash;&#8220;is a gentleman, a high-minded
-fellow, who admired your wife only as any friend
-might be expected to admire her; but you used
-him&mdash;made him an excuse to hide your own
-infamy. You hadn&#8217;t the courage to bring him into
-court; you merely let some of your new-found
-friends whisper insinuations that were more damning
-than a direct charge of infidelity. Manning
-cut your acquaintance, I believe, when he found
-what you had done. You owe him an apology, at
-least. And if you want to act the part of a man,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span>
-you will go to Mrs. Copeland and tell her the
-truth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton&#8217;s feelings had for once got the better of
-him; several times his voice betrayed deep emotion.
-He turned toward his desk as the buzzer sounded
-a cryptic message. He telegraphed a reply, and a
-moment later the sound of steps in the corridor
-was followed by the closing of a door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will do it&mdash;I will do it,&#8221; said Copeland.
-&#8220;As I began to get my bearings again, that thing
-troubled me; it has been in my mind to speak to
-you about it. God knows, I want to make reparation
-for all the evil I&#8217;ve done. I was a brute, a
-coarse beast. And you&#8217;re right that Manning is a
-gentleman, and a mighty fine fellow&mdash;he never
-was anything else! I&#8217;ll go to him and be glad to
-do it. But to see Fanny&mdash;that is not so easy!
-You can understand that, Eaton. I must have
-time to think it over.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think it best for you to see Mrs. Copeland
-first,&#8221; replied Eaton, &#8220;then Manning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland, pondering with knit brows, nodded
-a reluctant acquiescence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I will do as you say; but what if she&#8217;d
-refuse to see me? It&#8217;s going to be mighty hard,&#8221;
-he pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s conceivable that she&#8217;d refuse, of course.
-She never meant for you to know of her help, and
-I&#8217;ve broken faith in telling you; but I&#8217;ll take the
-responsibility of sending you to see her. And I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>
-made this other suggestion&mdash;about Manning&mdash;with
-a feeling that sooner or later it would occur
-to you. I&#8217;m glad you&#8217;ve met me in this spirit. It
-confirms my impression of you&mdash;it satisfies me
-that I was right in assuming that once you got
-back in the straight road you would keep to it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not going to disappoint you, Eaton. I
-don&#8217;t intend to be pointed to as a failure in this
-community. The mistakes I&#8217;ve made have been
-bad ones&mdash;the very worst! God knows, I&#8217;m
-humble enough when I think of Fanny. It was
-like her to want to save me. That&#8217;s what makes it
-so hard&mdash;that it was like her to do it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Eaton gravely; &#8220;it was like her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He took his overcoat from a closet and drew
-it on, mused a moment, apparently absorbed in
-contemplation of the interior of his hat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Copeland is here, waiting to see me. She
-came a moment ago and is in the next room. She
-had no idea, of course, that you were likely to be
-here&mdash;rest assured of that. My business with her
-is not so important as yours. Come!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Copeland, startled, irresolute, followed him to
-the door of a smaller room used for consultations.
-Eaton opened it and stepped back.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall be dining at the club later, if you care
-to see me,&#8221; he said, and vanished.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-
-
-<small>JERRY&#8217;S DARK DAYS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Jerry</span>, who had never been ill in his life, was
-now experiencing disquieting sensations which he
-was convinced pointed to an early and probably
-a painful death. He went about his work listlessly,
-and from being the cheerfulest person in Copeland-Farley,
-he became so melancholy that his fellow
-employees wondered greatly and speculated in private
-as to the cause of the change. Jerry encouraged
-the thought of death and blithely visualized
-the funeral at which Eaton&#8217;s pastor (chastely
-surpliced and reinforced by a boy choir) would
-officiate. He chose the rector of Christ Church
-because that gentleman had not been unmindful of
-his occasional attendance upon services (Jerry had
-courageously repeated his first timid visit), and
-had even made a memorandum of Jerry&#8217;s name and
-address, with a view to calling upon him. This attention
-clearly pointed to the rector as the minister
-predestined from the beginning of things to
-officiate at his funeral, a function about which he
-meditated much in a spirit of loftiest detachment.</p>
-
-<p>A few people would be sorry when he died, but
-only a few. The boys at the store would contribute
-a wreath; they had done that for a drayman who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span>
-had succumbed to pneumonia a short time before;
-and the people at his boarding-house would probably
-grace the last rites with their presence. Copeland
-would probably attend; he might even add
-dignity to the occasion by acting as pallbearer.
-One of the girl stenographers, whose lachrymose
-facilities had occasionally aroused his ire, would
-doubtless weep; she had cried when the drayman
-died, though her acquaintance with that person
-had been the most casual. Nan might attend the
-funeral, but he hoped to time his passing so that
-the funeral could be held on a market morning,
-thus giving her a good excuse for absenting herself.
-It would be a sad, pitiful funeral, with only a handful
-of mourners, as his only living relative was a
-cousin in Oklahoma whose exact address he had
-forgotten. The brief list of mourners included the
-billiard-marker at the Whitcomb. Jerry had once
-lent him five dollars, which was still carried as an
-open account and probably a permanent one; he
-meant to leave a memorandum of general forgiveness,
-including a release of the billiard-marker
-from any obligation to pay the five dollars. And
-he would bequeath him his best cuff-buttons to
-show that he had died with no hard feelings against
-him. The thought of the meager attendance and
-of the general gloom of the affair gave him the
-keenest satisfaction. No one would care particularly.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry&#8217;s malady was one of the oldest that afflicts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>
-the human race. Jerry was in love; he was in love
-with Nan, though he would have stormed indignantly
-at any hint of this bewildering circumstance,
-this blighting, crushing fact. His first realization
-that this was the cause of his trouble fell upon him
-as he sat one evening in the hotel at Madison listlessly
-talking to a dry-goods drummer. Jerry was
-taking a run over Copeland-Farley territory to
-&#8220;jolly&#8221; the trade, carrying no samples and soliciting
-no orders, but presenting himself as the personal
-representative of the house, bent upon strengthening
-social ties only, and only casually glancing over
-the shelves to see how much Copeland-Farley&#8217;s
-competitors were selling. The dry-goods man,
-noting Jerry&#8217;s unwonted gloom, frankly attributed
-it to a love affair; and to find that his condition
-was perceptible even to the eye of a dry-goods
-drummer, for whose powers of discernment he had
-only the mildest respect, added considerably to
-Jerry&#8217;s melancholy.</p>
-
-<p>Nan was not for him; he knew this; there had
-never been any doubt in his mind that Eaton and
-Nan would marry ultimately. Any speculations as
-to his own part in Nan&#8217;s life, beyond the boy-and-girl
-comradeship he had been enjoying, were vain
-and foolish; they were even disloyal to Eaton; they
-were an insult to Nan. Nan had intimated several
-times that Eaton was in love with Mrs. Copeland,
-but now that the black clouds had risen on his own
-horizon, Jerry knew the absurdity of this. Eaton<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span>
-had appeared unusually absent-minded of late, and
-this marked his friend as a man in the toils of
-love. Jerry knew the symptoms! Except for a
-passing attachment for a stenographer in a hardware
-house, who had jilted him for a red-haired
-bookkeeper, Jerry had never been in love. He had
-grieved over the hardware girl&#8217;s perfidy for two,
-perhaps three, days. But this was the real thing
-and a very different matter; he meant to win the
-martyr&#8217;s wreath by going to his death so heroically
-that no one would ever know how he had suffered.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to town Saturday evening he checked
-his grip at a hotel and went to the theater, not for
-pleasure, but to lose himself among strangers and
-enjoy his misery. As he moodily surveyed the assembling
-audience a cold hand gripped his heart.
-Eaton, followed by Mrs. Copeland, Nan, and a
-lady he did not know, filed down to the second row
-where Eaton always sat.</p>
-
-<p>Since Farley&#8217;s death Nan had attended no entertainments
-of any kind; she had refused to accompany
-Jerry to a concert only a fortnight earlier.
-Her presence at the theater with Eaton confirmed
-his worst suspicions. Their engagement would
-doubtless be announced in a day or two; he must
-steel himself against this and prepare to offer his
-congratulations. The comedy presented was one
-of the hits of the season, but its best lines and most
-amusing situations failed to evoke a smile from
-Jerry, who clutched his programme and stared at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>
-the back of Nan&#8217;s head. Nan was enjoying herself;
-from his seat on the back row he was satisfied of
-that, and he assured himself that he was glad of
-her happiness. At the end of the second act, he
-left and went to his room to spend a wretched
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry found on his desk Monday morning a note
-from Eaton, written several days earlier, asking
-him to join his theater party and go to the club
-later for supper. His sister had come down from
-Cleveland to make him a visit, Eaton explained,
-and he wanted Jerry to meet her. For an instant
-the world was the pleasant, cheerful place it had
-been in the old days before love darkened his life.
-Eaton was still his friend; but only for a moment
-was the veil lifted. The clouds settled upon him
-again, as he grasped the motive behind Eaton&#8217;s
-friendly note&mdash;as though at any time in their
-intercourse there had been the ghost of a motive
-back of anything John Cecil Eaton had ever done
-for him except a perfectly transparent, generous
-wish to be kind to him! But the coming of the
-sister (who had never, so far as Jerry knew, visited
-Eaton before) could only mean that Eaton wished
-to introduce Nan to her as a prospective member
-of the family. And, proud of his logic, Jerry reasoned
-that he was to have been given an opportunity
-to offer his own congratulations.</p>
-
-<p>For a week Jerry kept away from the market-house;
-Nan knew he had been out of town, and,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span>
-failing to see him, would assume that he was still
-away. He could not face her; it would be a merciful
-thing if he never saw her again. Eaton he would
-avoid; his friend must never know of his hopeless
-passion. Nan and Eaton must begin their married
-life wholly ignorant that he had ever looked upon
-Nan as anything more than a good friend. Phrases
-out of novels he had read assisted him in the definition
-of his attitude toward her and Eaton. &#8220;Unworthy
-of the woman he loved,&#8221; and &#8220;climbed
-slowly, painfully, to the sublime heights of a great
-renunciation.&#8221; He <i>was</i> unworthy; he had known
-that all along; and he would give her up to his
-best friend with a beautiful magnanimity. The
-fiction with which he was familiar had not lacked in
-noble examples of just such splendid sacrifice. If
-death failed to end his misery, he would live on,
-sadly, but manfully, and on every anniversary of
-their meeting on the river bank, he would send
-her a rose&mdash;a single beautiful rose&mdash;always exactly
-the same, and it would puzzle her greatly
-and make her wonder; but she would never guess
-that it was from one who had loved her in the
-long ago.</p>
-
-<p>He had made no sign to Eaton, not even to acknowledge
-the theater invitation; and when one
-day he ran into the lawyer in the bank lobby he
-was about to pass him hurriedly when the familiar
-&#8220;Ah, Jerry!&#8221; arrested him. He swallowed hard;
-it was not easy to meet his friend with the air of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>
-sweet resignation and submission to inexorable
-fate that he had been cultivating.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An overdraft?&#8221; Eaton suggested in his usual
-tone. &#8220;Nothing else could account for your woeful
-countenance! I didn&#8217;t know you were in town.
-Just in, I suppose, from a flight into the remoter
-recesses of the Commonwealth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve been back a few days,&#8221; Jerry confessed
-reluctantly; &#8220;but I&#8217;ve been too busy to
-come around. I meant to call you up about that
-invitation; I didn&#8217;t get it until after the show.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We missed you; I had wanted you to meet my
-sister. In fact, I&#8217;d rather prepared her for the
-meeting&mdash;led up to it, warned her of your native
-flavor. She&#8217;s still with me. You&#8217;re working yourself
-to death; it&#8217;s in your eye. Can&#8217;t you come up
-Tuesday night and dine with us? I&#8217;ll see if we
-can&#8217;t get Mrs. Copeland and Nan to come in.
-They&#8217;ve been seeing something of Florence.
-You&#8217;ve seen Nan&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I haven&#8217;t seen her,&#8221; Jerry replied, a little
-resentfully, as though Eaton ought to know why
-Nan had become invisible so far as Jeremiah
-Amidon was concerned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s another victim of overwork,&#8221; Eaton remarked
-carelessly, but behind his glasses there was
-a gleam of humor. &#8220;Not quarreling, I hope? I
-confess that at times Nan is a trifle provoking, but
-she means nothing by it. You must give the benefit
-of all doubts to a girl who is just emerging from a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>
-severe ordeal&mdash;settling herself into a new manner
-of life. It&#8217;s wonderful; really amazing how she&#8217;s
-coming on. We shall be dining at seven. Please
-don&#8217;t make it necessary for me to explain a second
-scorning of my hospitality to my sister. She&#8217;d begin
-to think you a myth, like Jupiter and the rest
-of the immortals.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thanks; I&#8217;ll be there,&#8221; Jerry answered solemnly.
-Then he watched Eaton&#8217;s retreating figure
-shame-facedly. He was acting abominably toward
-Eaton.</p>
-
-<p>The Pembrokes had gone to Florida for the spring
-months, and Eaton had taken their house that he
-might indulge in a round of dinners and a ball that
-proved to be the season&#8217;s smartest event. These
-social activities Jerry had taken as another sign of
-Eaton&#8217;s approaching marriage. And Jerry had resented,
-as an attack upon his personal rights,
-Eaton&#8217;s transfer from the rooms where he had
-always been so accessible, to the big house where
-visitors were received by the Pembrokes&#8217; butler&mdash;a
-formidable person who, he fancied, regarded him
-with a hostile eye.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry presented himself at the hour appointed,
-wearing the crown of his martyrdom, which, if he
-had known it, was highly unbecoming. As he had
-walked around the block twice to prepare himself
-for the ordeal, he was late, and stood uncomfortably
-in the drawing-room door, quite unnoticed, while
-the sister (whose back he distrusted) finished a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>
-story she had been telling. But spying him, Eaton
-rose and greeted him cordially.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Florence, Mr. Amidon; my sister, Mrs. Torrington,
-Jerry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Torrington, a tall, dark woman in her early
-thirties, graciously assured him that she had delayed
-her departure from town until he could be
-produced for her edification.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess you wouldn&#8217;t &#8217;a&#8217; missed much,&#8221; said
-Jerry, hating himself at once for that unnecessary
-a, from which he had honestly believed himself
-permanently emancipated. He shook hands with
-Mrs. Copeland and then with Nan&mdash;without
-looking at her. The butler announced dinner, and
-he found himself moving toward the dining-room
-beside Mrs. Torrington. In her ignorance of the
-darkness in which he had immersed himself, she
-treated him quite as though they were in the habit
-of meeting at dinners. It was to his credit that he
-saw at once that she was a superior person, though
-he did not know until later that, as the wife of a
-distinguished engineer, she was known in many
-capitals as a brilliant conversationalist, with a reputation
-for meeting difficult situations. On the way
-down the hall she spoke of Russia&mdash;she had been
-telling a Russian story at the moment of his
-appearance&mdash;and her manner expressed a flattering
-assumption that he, of course, was quite
-familiar with the social life of the Russian capital.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span>It was the most informal of dinners; Jerry found
-himself placed between Mrs. Torrington and Mrs.
-Copeland, which left Nan at Eaton&#8217;s right. This
-arrangement had not been premeditated, but he
-saw only the darkest significance in Nan&#8217;s juxtaposition
-to Eaton. She seemed unwontedly subdued,
-and averted her eyes when their gaze met.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is the nicest party you&#8217;ve had for me,
-Cecil,&#8221; Mrs. Torrington was saying,&mdash;&#8220;cozy and
-comfortable so everybody can talk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry hoped they would talk! (He was watching
-Mrs. Torrington guardedly to see which fork she
-chose for her caviar.) Eaton was unusually grave;
-Mrs. Copeland seemed preoccupied; Jerry&#8217;s heart
-ached at the near presence of Nan. But at a hint
-from Fanny, Mrs. Torrington returned to her experiences
-abroad, and soon had them all interested
-and amused. Jerry quickly fell victim to her charm;
-he had never before met a woman of her distinction
-and poise. Even her way of speaking was different
-from anything he had been accustomed to&mdash;crisp,
-fluent, musical. Her good humor was infectious
-and she quickly won them all to self-forgetfulness.
-Mrs. Copeland described an encounter she had
-witnessed between a Russian and a Frenchman in
-a Roman <i>pension</i> where she had once spent a
-winter&mdash;an incident that culminated in a hasty
-exchange of wine-glasses across the table.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, Jerry,&#8221; remarked Eaton casually; &#8220;that
-leads us naturally to your pleasing adventures<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>
-down the road. Florence, if you urge Mr. Amidon
-he will tell you of most amazing experiences he has
-had right here at home in the pursuit of food.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Torrington&#8217;s fine eyes emphasized her appeal.
-They would all tell of the worst food they
-had ever eaten, she said; she had spent years collecting
-information.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You may lapse into the vernacular, Jerry,&#8221;
-Eaton added encouragingly; &#8220;we will all understand
-that you are falling into it merely in a spirit
-of realism.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is tough,&#8221; said Jerry, turning to Mrs.
-Torrington. &#8220;Your brother has told me a hundred
-times to cut out those stories.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was only after he had heard them all!
-And he has been boasting that he could persuade
-you to tell them to me. Please! I want to add them
-to my collection.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you understand this isn&#8217;t my fault&mdash;&#8221;
-he began....</p>
-
-<p>They were still demanding more stories after
-the dessert plates had been removed. He had so
-far yielded to their friendliness that he appealed
-occasionally to Nan, and finally asked her to tell
-one of Farley&#8217;s stories about the river, which he
-said he had forgotten. They remained at table for
-their coffee to avoid disturbing the good cheer that
-now prevailed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Amidon is up to my highest expectations,&#8221;
-Mrs. Torrington remarked when they rose. &#8220;I&#8217;ll<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>
-stay another week if you&#8217;ll give just this same
-party again!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve missed you at the farm,&#8221; said Mrs.
-Copeland, as Jerry seated himself beside her in the
-library. &#8220;And I was just beginning to feel that
-we were acquainted! But, of course, you&#8217;ve been
-away. I heard that from Mr. Copeland.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As she mentioned Copeland, she smiled gravely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I have been away, and we&#8217;re busier than
-usual just now,&#8221; he replied, realizing that something
-had happened in her relations with Copeland
-to make possible this careless reference to him.
-&#8220;I guess Mr. Copeland is working harder than any
-of us,&#8221; he added warmly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, we&#8217;re all happier when we&#8217;re busy,&#8221; she
-said lightly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not smoking, Jerry?&#8221; asked Eaton, proffering
-cigars.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve quit,&#8221; Jerry replied, remembering that he
-had given up smoking in his general abandonment
-of the joys of life.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Copeland left him, making it necessary for
-him to join Nan, who had moved a little away from
-the circle they had formed before the fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s too bad you don&#8217;t tell your friends about
-your troubles,&#8221; she remarked after a moment&#8217;s
-silence. &#8220;So many things have happened that you
-ought to be very cheerful.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t been feeling very well,&#8221; he answered
-doggedly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>&#8220;You do look utterly fagged out,&#8221; she retorted.
-&#8220;But if I were you I wouldn&#8217;t cut all my friends.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t cut anybody,&#8221; he replied. &#8220;I guess
-I know when to drop out. I want everybody to be
-happy,&#8221; he said plaintively, feeling his martyr&#8217;s
-crown pinching his brow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s very sweet of you, Jerry. The policeman
-at the market asked Saturday what had
-become of you. Your absence seems to have
-occasioned remark, though I hadn&#8217;t noticed it
-myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t suppose you would,&#8221; he said, with an
-effort at bitterness that was so tame that she
-laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, if you&#8217;ve lost interest, it&#8217;s all right.
-I never meant to bore you. And I&#8217;m not complaining.
-But you haven&#8217;t been kind to Mr. Eaton.
-I suppose it never occurred to you that he&#8217;s taken
-a good deal of pains to be nice to you. And just
-now, just now,&#8221;&mdash;she added, lowering her voice,&mdash;&#8220;we
-should all be as good to him as we can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He frowned at this. If she and Eaton were in
-love with each other, he saw no good reason why
-he should be sorry for either of them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I had a chance I could tell you some things,&#8221;
-Nan continued, &#8220;but I suppose it&#8217;s just as well to
-let you read about them in the papers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His spirits sank; he had been scanning the society
-columns daily expecting to see the announcement
-of her engagement.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>&#8220;When I&#8217;m an old, old woman and living all
-alone with my chickens somewhere, I suppose you
-may come to see me again and tell me about your
-troubles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t,&#8221; he replied with a smile he meant to
-be grim, &#8220;because I&#8217;ll be dead.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She regarded him with knit brows, puzzled,
-slightly disdainful.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just when things were a little hard for me, and
-I have been much troubled because one of the kindest
-friends either of us ever had or could have&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shrugged her shoulders impatiently, and
-rebuke and indignation were mingled in the glance
-she bent upon him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess we&#8217;re not talking about the same
-thing,&#8221; he said huskily. &#8220;You know I mean to do
-the square thing, Nan.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was so pathetic that she changed her tone,
-sorry that she had been so hard on him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think you do&mdash;usually, Jerry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;ll be out to-morrow night if you&#8217;re
-going to be at home,&#8221; he suggested timidly, her
-reproach still upon him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, if you&#8217;re not too tired, or ill, or anything,
-and can&#8217;t think of anything else to do, come along,&#8221;
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Copeland called to Nan that it was time to
-go. They had come in on the interurban, but Eaton
-announced his intention of taking them home in
-the Pembroke car.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span>&#8220;There&#8217;s no use of my living in all this borrowed
-splendor unless I use it. Jerry, please keep
-the fire burning till I get back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan&#8217;s smile as she gave him her hand conveyed
-an apology for her harshness and sent his spirits
-soaring.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope,&#8221; remarked Mrs. Torrington, as they
-heard the car leave the door, &#8220;that you know how
-fond my brother is of you. You&#8217;ve been a great
-resource to him; he&#8217;s mentioned you often in his
-letters. You know Cecil and I are very close,
-unusually so; and it breaks my heart to see him&mdash;&#8221;
-She waved her hand with a gesture that expressed
-the futility of explanations.</p>
-
-<p>She was taking him for granted as her brother&#8217;s
-friend, not a mere beneficiary of his big-heartedness.
-He was aware of something spacious in her nature;
-she would brush little things away with a sweep of
-her eloquent hands. A wonderful woman was John
-Cecil&#8217;s sister. She was addressing him as though
-he were a gentleman, a man of her own world,
-instead of the miserable ingrate he knew himself
-to be.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s lovely, quite adorable,&#8221; Mrs. Torrington
-continued, as though speaking of matters they had
-often discussed before. &#8220;I&#8217;ll say quite frankly
-that I&#8217;d been afraid to meet her after what he had
-written.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Jerry sat silent, wondering. Nan had left him
-mystified. He did not know what Eaton&#8217;s sister<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>
-was talking about unless it was his love for Nan.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall be leaving in a few days; my husband&#8217;s
-business calls him to China. I want you to keep an
-eye on Cecil; don&#8217;t let him be alone too much,&#8221; she
-went on. &#8220;A man with a sorrow like that in his
-heart oughtn&#8217;t to be alone. I came here on purpose
-to see just how the land lay; I suppose you
-understand that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He muttered incoherently, touched by her assumption
-of his sympathy, her direct, intimate
-appeal.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I felt that I could speak to you quite frankly,&#8221;
-Mrs. Torrington continued. &#8220;No one else seemed
-quite so accessible, no one really quite so close to
-him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, he has a lot of friends,&#8221; said Jerry
-humbly, and anxious to respond to the demand this
-fascinating woman was making upon his generosity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s going back to her husband; of course
-you know that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was a degree of indignation in her tone,
-as though the person of whom she spoke was doing
-an unpardonable thing.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry felt himself shrinking; his hands clutched
-the arms of his chair as it dawned upon him that
-it was Mrs. Copeland&mdash;not Nan&mdash;of whom
-Eaton&#8217;s sister was speaking. He was struck with
-fear lest she should read his thoughts as he realized
-how dull, how utterly selfish and contemptible, had
-been his apprehensions.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span>&#8220;I suppose,&#8221; said Mrs. Torrington, &#8220;that a man
-as fine as Cecil is doomed to just this kind of
-calamity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought maybe it would be Nan,&#8221; he faltered.
-&#8220;I know he likes Nan, and he&#8217;s done a lot for her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Torrington had been staring musingly into
-the fire. She turned toward him absently, and
-then, catching his meaning, her eyes widened with
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan,&#8221; she repeated slowly; and then, in her
-usual brisk tone, &#8220;A man like Cecil can&#8217;t be passed
-on from one affair to another so easily. And, besides,&#8221;&mdash;she
-smiled her charming, irresistible
-smile,&mdash;&#8220;that child is in love with you, you silly
-boy! It&#8217;s in her eyes! That&#8217;s the one hopeful
-thing about the situation&mdash;that together you two
-will take good care of him!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-
-
-<small>&#8220;JUST HELPING; JUST BEING KIND!&#8221;</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nan</span> crossed a pasture, whistling. The Holsteins,
-nibbling the young grass, lifted their heads
-and bent their slow, meditative gaze upon her.
-She paused to pat one of them on the nose. Nan
-was growing wise in dairy lore and knew at sight
-the heaviest producers of the herd. She resumed
-her whistling and went on toward the house, with
-a pair of robins hopping before her. June had come
-and summer sounds and scents filled the air.</p>
-
-<p>As she neared the bungalow a motor swept
-into the driveway and discharged Eaton and
-Thurston.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A child of the pastures! The daughter of Cincinnatus
-tripping in from the fields!&#8221; observed
-Eaton, as he shook hands.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just been tinkering an incubator, if you want the
-facts&mdash;counting chickens before they&#8217;re hatched,&#8221;
-laughed Nan, brushing a straw from her skirt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have a small business matter to discuss
-with you, Nan. We&#8217;ll fall upon it at once if you&#8217;re
-agreeable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Business!&#8221; Nan mocked. &#8220;I hoped you&#8217;d
-come to look at the dairy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was a very different Nan, Eaton reflected,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>
-from the Nan of a year ago. Exposure to wind and
-sun had already given her a becoming tan. Her old
-listlessness, the defiant air she had sometimes worn,
-had vanished; she had become alert, self-reliant,
-resolute. Within the bounds of her self-respect she
-meant that the world should like her. A democratic
-young person&mdash;this new Nan, on good terms with
-truck farmers, humble drivers of grocers&#8217; wagons,
-motormen, and market-house policemen. In her
-short skirt and plain blue blouse, she looked less
-than her years to-day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We can sit on the veranda if you gentlemen are
-not afraid of the country air.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t dare go in after that,&#8221; remarked
-Thurston dryly; &#8220;Eaton already refers to me as
-his learned senior.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Eaton is the youngest and the oldest man
-in the world!&#8221; Nan declared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Miss Farley,&#8221; Thurston began, as they
-gathered about a wicker table and he drew a formidable
-bundle of papers from a leathern pouch,
-&#8220;as we telephoned you yesterday, the opposition
-of Mr. Farley&#8217;s relatives has been disposed of and
-your adoption was upheld by the court. To prevent
-an appeal, and get rid of them for good, we&#8217;ve
-agreed on your behalf to pay the two cousins ten
-thousand dollars apiece. Mr. Eaton would have
-preferred to fight it clear through, but I prevailed
-on him not to make Brother Harlowe work too
-hard. You may not know it, but Eaton is a remarkably<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>
-belligerent person. There&#8217;s no compromise
-in him. He&#8217;d fight to the last ditch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He looked from Eaton to Nan over his glasses
-with a twinkle in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never saw a fellow I wanted to smash as
-badly as I do Harlowe,&#8221; Eaton remarked. &#8220;He&#8217;s
-the smoothest rascal I&#8217;ve ever known.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see that you&#8217;ve been very generous,&#8221;
-said Nan. &#8220;How much will he get as a fee?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About nine tenths of the twenty thousand,&#8221;
-replied Thurston grimly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather less than that,&#8221; said Eaton, with one
-of his elusive smiles. &#8220;I started the secretary of
-the White River Trust Company down to see the
-esteemed cousins before we signed the agreement;
-told him to persuade them to confide their ill-gotten
-gains to the company and advised them to
-cut off Harlowe with a niggardly ten per cent for
-his services. I was afraid to tell you that, Thurston.
-I knew you would scold me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Eaton, for combined ingenuity and malevolence,
-you haven&#8217;t an equal!&#8221; declared Thurston,
-chuckling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe it,&#8221; cried Nan, glad that the
-interview was progressing so cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, Miss Farley,&#8221; Thurston resumed, &#8220;if
-there&#8217;s anything a lawyer doesn&#8217;t like, it&#8217;s an
-ungrateful client. Mr. Eaton and I have a sneaking
-feeling that we&#8217;ve done pretty well with this
-case. The credit is chiefly his&mdash;and I take off<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>
-my hat to him. We&#8217;ve come here in the hope that
-we shan&#8217;t have to argue with you, but just tell you.
-Your scruples against accepting any share in Mr.
-Farley&#8217;s estate, expressed after his death, did you
-credit&mdash;in a way. But now it&#8217;s all yours; there&#8217;s
-no escape. A considerable amount of income has
-already accumulated, and we can arrange payments
-necessary for your support to begin at once,
-though the estate can&#8217;t be closed till the year of
-administration is up. So far as your ability to
-earn your own living is concerned, you have demonstrated
-that. You have shown a plucky spirit, and
-I admire it. I will go further, and say that the
-community has supported you strongly, and that
-your attitude has made many friends for you.
-But now&mdash;now, we must have no more of this
-nonsense!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He waved his hand to indicate the fields, and
-glanced meaningfully at Nan&#8217;s heavy walking-shoes,
-which were disgracefully muddy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But that was settled&mdash;once and for all!&#8221; Nan
-replied firmly. &#8220;You mustn&#8217;t think me ungrateful
-for what you&#8217;ve done; but I thought that all out
-before I came here, and I haven&#8217;t had a single
-regret. If it isn&#8217;t impolite, I&#8217;ll say that all I want
-is to be let alone!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thurston and I are not sentimentalists,&#8221; said
-Eaton. &#8220;We&#8217;ve given you free rein to indulge
-your whims; but now we&#8217;ve come to a point where
-we&#8217;ve got to take a hand.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span>&#8220;But you can&#8217;t make me, if I won&#8217;t!&#8221; laughed
-Nan. &#8220;Just think how humiliating it would be to
-back down now after I said I wouldn&#8217;t! Worse
-than that, think of the effect on these girls we have
-at work here; they&#8217;d lose their respect for me if
-they found I wasn&#8217;t really as poor as they are! And
-there are other reasons, too,&#8221; she went on soberly.
-&#8220;I don&#8217;t like to go over this again, but I never
-deserved anything of the Farleys. I&#8217;ve got my
-conscience to live with, and I could never get on
-with it if I allowed myself to take money which
-papa knew it was best for me not to have. I&#8217;m
-serious about this. He knew me better than I knew
-myself. You understand what I mean&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand it in the way you mean,
-Nan,&#8221; Eaton answered; &#8220;but let&#8217;s not argue it.
-Let&#8217;s be practical. Has it occurred to you that
-something has to be done with this property? The
-lawful heir can&#8217;t just walk off and leave an estate
-like this. It will be confiscated by the State&mdash;thrown
-into the treasury and spent by a lot of
-politicians if you refuse it. Take the money and
-buy a lot of farms with it or spend it on working
-girls as much as you like&mdash;but please don&#8217;t talk
-any more about refusing it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton had spoken lightly, but she saw that he
-was very much in earnest. The contingency he
-suggested had not, in fact, occurred to her. She
-had assumed from the beginning that the adoption
-would be nullified and that Farley&#8217;s money would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>
-be divided among the obscure and shadowy cousins;
-and this abrupt termination of the case brought
-her face to face with an unforeseen situation.
-Thurston was quick to take advantage of her
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have to consider, Miss Farley, what your
-foster-father&#8217;s feelings would be. He was a just man,
-and all the wills he considered from time to time
-prove that he never had the slightest intention of
-disinheriting you. Even in the last will creating the
-trusteeship, he made you his sole heir; it was really
-the most generous of all! Oh, yes,&#8221; he exclaimed
-hastily, as Nan colored deeply, &#8220;there was, I suppose,
-a certain bitterness behind that. I want to say
-to you again that I did my best to dissuade him
-from that step. I was confident he would change
-his mind about it, as he had about so many other
-things in his varying moods and tempers; and that
-he would realize its unkindness. We have no right
-to assume that when he hid that will behind his
-wife&#8217;s picture, he had any intention of executing
-it. It&#8217;s an open question and it&#8217;s only fair to give
-him the benefit of the doubt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s true enough,&#8221; Nan assented; &#8220;but
-when I read that will and found how bitter he had
-been, I knew I had done the right thing in refusing
-to take anything!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t agree with you,&#8221; Thurston continued
-patiently. &#8220;You must be just; you must remember
-that that was the act of a man near his death&mdash;nearer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span>
-than any of us imagined. He didn&#8217;t have
-a chance to change his mind again. It&#8217;s unjust to
-his memory to leave him in the wrong utterly, as
-you will if you persist. There has already been a
-great deal of talk about this attack on the adoption&mdash;people
-have been blaming him for not guarding
-against the possibility of any such thing. You see
-public sentiment is behind you! And in spite of
-anything you may say, your act would have the
-appearance of pique; it would be like slapping a
-dead man in the face!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Thurston is right, Nan,&#8221; said Eaton.
-&#8220;There is not only Mr. Farley&#8217;s memory as a kind
-and just man to protect, but you must guard
-yourself against even the appearance of resentment.
-The only thing you have to consider is Mr. Farley&#8217;s
-conscientious desire to provide for you, which was
-manifest at all times. As Mr. Thurston says, that
-last will gave you absolutely everything, cutting
-out all the bequests he had made at other times
-to benevolence and charity. My dear Nan, your
-scruples are absurd! You haven&#8217;t any case at all!
-The idea of letting the property Timothy Farley
-spent a laborious lifetime accumulating go to the
-State is horrible. I can readily imagine what his
-feelings would be! Why, my dear Nan, rather than
-let that happen, Thurston and I will steal the whole
-thing ourselves!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She received this with a grudging smile. What
-they said about the injustice to Farley of a refusal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span>
-impressed her, but her resolution was still unshaken.
-And there was a stubborn strain in her of which
-she had only lately been aware.</p>
-
-<p>She reached for a pencil, and Eaton pushed a
-pad of paper toward her. She began jotting down
-Farley&#8217;s various bequests to charity, as provided in
-the series of wills, pausing now and then to refer
-to Thurston for items she only imperfectly remembered.</p>
-
-<p>The total was three hundred and fifty thousand
-dollars. She tapped the paper reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; remarked Thurston anxiously, as
-he saw what was in her mind, &#8220;you are not bound
-by any of the legacies in those unsigned wills.
-Not one of the wills contained all those bequests,
-so your total doesn&#8217;t represent what he meant to
-dispose of in that way. And his last will is evidence
-that he had wholly changed his mind about them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are bound to accept that last will as convincing
-proof of his very great confidence in Miss
-Farley,&#8221; said Eaton quickly, &#8220;rather than as an
-expression of distrust.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We all know perfectly well what he meant by
-that,&#8221; Nan replied. &#8220;But I don&#8217;t want you to
-think I have any feeling about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They nodded gravely as she glanced at them
-appealingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can see,&#8221; she went on hurriedly, &#8220;that my
-refusal to accept anything at all might look like
-resentment; that it would be in a way unjust to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span>
-him.&#8221; She turned for a glance over the fields, as
-though seeking their counsel. &#8220;Papa really wanted
-to help people who hadn&#8217;t a chance; he was only
-hard on the idle and shiftless. If he hadn&#8217;t been
-big-hearted and generous, he never would have
-taken me up as he did. And mamma was like him.
-I feel strongly that even if he did change his mind
-sometimes, his wish to help these things&mdash;the
-Boys&#8217; Club, the Home for Aged Women, and all
-the rest&mdash;should be respected.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That can&#8217;t be done unless you take the whole,&#8221;
-said Eaton quickly. &#8220;But you needn&#8217;t decide
-about it now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; you should wait a few years at least!&#8221;
-added Thurston, crossing his legs nervously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And since I&#8217;ve been out here and have learned
-about the girls Mrs. Copeland is training to take
-care of themselves, I&#8217;ve thought of some other
-things that might be done,&#8221; said Nan, ignoring
-their manifest unwillingness to acquiesce in the
-recognition of Farley&#8217;s vacillating benefactions.
-&#8220;There ought to be, in a town like this, a home
-and training school for girls who start the wrong
-way, or make mistakes. We haven&#8217;t anything
-that quite fills that need, and there are a good
-many such girls. A hundred thousand dollars
-would provide such a place, and it ought to have
-another hundred thousand for endowment. Mrs.
-Copeland and I have talked of the need for such
-a school. It would be fine to start something like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span>
-that! And you know,&#8221; she added, &#8220;I might have
-been just such a girl myself!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Thurston turned to Eaton helplessly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s as plain as daylight,&#8221; Eaton remarked,
-amused by the despair in his associate&#8217;s face, &#8220;that
-you will soon pauperize yourself at this rate. It&#8217;s
-only fair to tell you that the estate shrank on a
-rigid appraisement of Mr. Farley&#8217;s property. The
-million the newspapers mentioned has dwindled to
-about eight hundred thousand. If you give away
-all that&#8217;s mentioned in those wills and start this
-girls&#8217; home, you won&#8217;t be able to keep more than
-three automobiles for yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, the proof of the pudding is in the eating&mdash;and
-I know it&#8217;s good!&#8221; Nan laughed. &#8220;I stuffed
-myself so long without thinking about my hungry
-neighbors that it won&#8217;t hurt me to pass the plate
-down the table!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, the main thing,&#8221; said Thurston, &#8220;is to
-get your assurance that you&#8217;ll accept the estate
-under your rights as Mr. Farley&#8217;s adopted daughter.
-I suppose we can&#8217;t prevent your giving it away
-without having you declared insane!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I dare you to try it!&#8221; Then, more serious than
-at any time during the interview, she said: &#8220;You&#8217;ll
-have to let me reason it out my own way. It was
-only a piece of luck that I wasn&#8217;t thrown into an
-orphan asylum or left to die on the river bank
-when the Farleys gave me a home. I shall never
-forget that&mdash;never <i>again</i>,&#8221; she added with deep<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>
-feeling. &#8220;The least I can do is to pass my good luck
-on. I&#8217;ve thought all that out, so please don&#8217;t make
-me talk of it any more!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then, as the men rose to leave, Fanny appeared,
-and urged them to remain to dinner. Thurston
-pleaded an engagement in town; Eaton said he
-would stay.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve broken that man&#8217;s heart, Nan,&#8221; Eaton
-remarked, as Thurston rolled away in his machine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did you do to him, Nancy?&#8221; asked
-Fanny.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She scared him to death! He&#8217;s convinced that
-she&#8217;s headed for an insane asylum&mdash;that&#8217;s all,&#8221;
-chuckled Eaton. &#8220;Mere altruism doesn&#8217;t interest
-Thurston; he thinks it just a sign of weak character&mdash;worse
-than a weak chin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve always thought,&#8221; said Fanny, as her arm
-stole around Nan, &#8220;that Nancy has a very nice
-chin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I might go further,&#8221; Eaton remarked daringly,
-&#8220;and say that the face in its entirety is pleasant
-and inspiring to look at!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Stop teasing me!&#8221; cried Nan, &#8220;or I&#8217;ll run out
-to the barn and cry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They were still talking in this strain when Copeland&#8217;s
-machine appeared in the driveway.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t tell you that we&#8217;re having a party
-to-night,&#8221; said Fanny. &#8220;Unless I&#8217;m mistaken, Mr.
-Amidon is driving that machine.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>She walked to the veranda rail and looked expectantly
-toward the approaching car. Though
-Billy had lately paid a visit to the farm, Nan had
-not met him. Fanny, with her usual frankness,
-had warned Nan of the expected visit, and Nan
-had carefully kept out of the way. She had not
-seen Billy since the night he proposed the destruction
-of Farley&#8217;s will.</p>
-
-<p>Copeland jumped from the machine and ran up
-the steps, while Jerry disposed of the car. He
-shook hands with Fanny, and then turned toward
-Nan inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p>She was already walking toward him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad to see you, Billy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad to see you, Nan,&#8221; he said, and added
-in a slightly lower tone, &#8220;I&#8217;m glad to see you <i>here</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;m glad to see you&mdash;here!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Both knew what was in the other&#8217;s thoughts.
-Copeland bowed slightly, and crossed to Eaton,
-who was gazing fixedly at the gathering glories of
-the sunset.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry, in a gray suit, and the very tallest collar
-he could buy, now added himself to the group.
-He bent over Mrs. Copeland&#8217;s hand with his best
-imitation of Eaton&#8217;s manner, and then, as he raised
-his head, looked around furtively to see whether
-his mentor was watching him.</p>
-
-<p>The laughter that greeted this had the effect of
-putting them all at ease.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I knew Jerry could do it,&#8221; said Nan, &#8220;but I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span>
-didn&#8217;t suppose he would dare try it in his Cecil&#8217;s
-presence.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what you&#8217;re talking about,&#8221; remarked
-Eaton, feigning indignation at their treatment
-of his prot&eacute;g&eacute;. &#8220;If you&#8217;re not satisfied with
-Jeremiah&#8217;s manners, we&#8217;ll both go home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nan ran away to change her clothes and reappeared
-just as dinner was announced.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please sit wherever you happen to be,&#8221; said
-Fanny, as they reached the dining-room; and then,
-as they sat down, she bit her lip and colored, finding
-that it fell to Copeland&#8217;s lot to sit opposite her.
-Eaton, noticing her embarrassment, immediately
-charged Copeland Farms with responsibility for the
-high cost of living.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must watch Nan carefully, Mrs. Copeland.
-She&#8217;s grinding the face of the poor. I heard Mrs.
-Harrington complaining bitterly last night about
-the price she has to pay for such trifling necessities
-as eggs and butter. You&#8217;re going to bring a French
-Revolution on this country if you&#8217;re not careful.
-And there will be eggs thrown that don&#8217;t bear the
-Copeland Farm&#8217;s stamp.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I refuse to have this suit spoiled with any other
-kind,&#8221; Jerry protested. &#8220;Speaking of eggs&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, you don&#8217;t!&#8221; Nan interrupted. &#8220;You can&#8217;t
-tell any of your country-hotel egg stories here. I
-refuse to hear them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right, then; we&#8217;ll drop the eggs. I was shaking
-hands with old friends on the lower Wabash<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>
-last week and struck three slabs of cocoanut pie in
-three days. I&#8217;m going to make a map of the pie
-habits of the Hoosiers and send it out as a Copeland-Farley
-advertisement. I&#8217;ve been all over the
-State lately, and I&#8217;ve never found cocoanut pie
-north of Logansport, and you never find it east of
-Seymour going south. Down along the Ohio you
-can stand on hotel porches in the peach season
-and see thousands of acres of peaches spoiling on
-the trees, and you go inside and find dried-peach
-pie on the programme. And you have to eat it
-or take sliced bananas or hard chunks of canned
-pineapple. No wonder traveling men go wrong! I
-wonder at times at my own pure life!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was evident that they liked Jerry. They encouraged
-him to talk, and he passed lightly from
-Praxiteles, whom he had just discovered in a magazine
-article, to the sinfulness of the cut-price drug
-store, which he pronounced the greatest of commercial
-iniquities.</p>
-
-<p>After coffee on the veranda, Eaton quietly disappeared.
-Then Jerry and Nan went off for a
-stroll, leaving Copeland and Fanny together.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess that&#8217;s coming out all right,&#8221; remarked
-Jerry, indicating the veranda with a wave of his
-straw hat. &#8220;But it&#8217;s tough on Cecil. I&#8217;ve been
-wondering whether <i>she</i> knows how it&#8217;s going to
-hit him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I hope not! But that&#8217;s something we&#8217;ll
-never know.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>&#8220;Of course, Cecil needn&#8217;t have done all the
-things he did to bring them together again. He
-might have let the boss go by the board. It wasn&#8217;t
-just money that saved the boss! it was John Cecil&#8217;s
-strong right arm!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And yours, too, Jerry! Oh, yes; I know more
-about it than you think I do. You helped&mdash;you
-did a lot to save him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, if I did,&#8221; he admitted grudgingly, &#8220;that
-was Cecil, too. I&#8217;d been busy rustling for myself&mdash;never
-caring a hang for the other fellow&mdash;till
-Cecil got hold of me. I&#8217;ve wondered a good deal
-how he did it&mdash;a scrub like me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be foolish, Jerry; it had to be in you
-first. But he does make people want to be different.
-He&#8217;s certainly affected me that way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you!&#8221; he exclaimed disdainfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, don&#8217;t you ever think I&#8217;m proud of myself,
-Jeremiah Amidon!&#8221; She paused abruptly at
-the edge of a brook that tinkled musically on its
-way to the river. &#8220;I&#8217;m only just beginning to try
-to be self-respecting and decent and useful; I
-think it&#8217;s going to be a lot of fun if I ever get
-started.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I hope to see you on the cars sometimes.
-I&#8217;ve got the same ticket, but I&#8217;m not sure it&#8217;s
-good on the limited. I&#8217;m likely to be chucked at
-the first tank.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They jumped the brook and followed a cow
-path across a broad pasture, talking of old times<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>
-on the Ohio, and of Farley, of whom Jerry always
-spoke in highest reverence, and then of his own
-prospects.</p>
-
-<p>Both were subdued by the influences of the night.
-The stars hung near; it seemed to Jerry that they
-had stolen closer to earth to enfold Nan in their
-soft radiance. A new idea had possessed him of
-late. His heart throbbed with it to-night.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In a place like this,&#8221; he began slowly, &#8220;you
-think a lot of things that wouldn&#8217;t strike you anywhere
-else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s just the dear country lonesomeness. I come
-out here often in the evenings; used to in the winter,
-when the snow was deepest. I love all this&mdash;&#8221;
-She stretched out her arms with a quick gesture
-comprehensive of the star-hung fields.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry&#8217;s dejection increased. The more he saw of
-Nan the less he seemed to count in her affairs.
-A Nan who tramped snowy fields and took counsel
-of the heavens was beyond his reach&mdash;immeasurably
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t take hold of things the way you do,
-Nan. Being out here just makes me lonesome, that&#8217;s
-all. I&#8217;ve got to be where I can see electric signs
-spelling words on tall buildings. Just hearing that
-trolley tooting away over there helps some; must
-be because it&#8217;s going toward the lights.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you feel so terribly, maybe we&#8217;d better go
-back!&#8221; she said tauntingly and took a step downward.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>&#8220;Don&#8217;t do that again! If you leave me here in
-the dark I&#8217;ll be scared to death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That <i>would</i> be a blow to the human race,&#8221; she
-mocked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve had blows enough!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You hide the scars well&mdash;I can say that!&#8221;
-she flung back.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen, Nan&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought John Cecil had broken you of the
-&#8216;listen&#8217; habit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Forget it! You know perfectly well what I
-want to tell you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then, why do we linger? We really must go!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My business is selling goods and it&#8217;s a rule of
-the game never to let a customer turn his back on
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; you go first!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan&#8221;&mdash;he drew nearer and planted himself
-in her path&mdash;&#8220;you can&#8217;t go&mdash;not till I&#8217;ve promised
-to marry you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This reversal of the established formula evoked
-a gay laugh; but she did not attempt to pass him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never meant to ask you; I was afraid you&#8217;d
-marry me for my money and I want to be loved
-for myself alone! And don&#8217;t think I&#8217;d be mentioning
-it now if I wasn&#8217;t so lonesome I could cry!
-If you&#8217;re going to take that money, it&#8217;s all off,
-anyhow. I can&#8217;t afford to have anybody questioning
-my motives. As far as loving you&#8217;s concerned,
-I started full time that first day we met on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>
-river bank, when you pulled my fly out of the tree.
-I might just as well have told you then&mdash;and I
-wish I had!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you needn&#8217;t scold me about it now!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not scolding. I&#8217;m just telling you what
-you missed!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why don&#8217;t you give me another chance? I
-know I&#8217;m only a poor working girl&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan, I wish you were that!&#8221; he cried earnestly.
-&#8220;But all that money&#8217;s coming to you now. I
-wouldn&#8217;t have the nerve&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It would be the first time your nerve ever
-failed!&#8221; Then, fearing she had wounded him, she
-added quickly, &#8220;Of course, I didn&#8217;t mean that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, don&#8217;t cry, little boy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, Jerry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I love you, Nan!&#8221; he said gently. &#8220;I wish you
-cared even a little bit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a good deal more than that, Jerry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He took her hands and kissed them. There was
-a great awe in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nan, this doesn&#8217;t seem right, you being you;
-and you know what I am!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think I know what you are, Jerry,&mdash;you&#8217;re
-fine and loyal and good!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to try to be,&#8221; he said humbly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you&#8217;ve helped me more than I could make
-you understand, from that very first day we met,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>
-when I hated myself so! You brought back the
-old days; everything that has happened since has
-made me think of you. You were the only person
-around here who really knew all about me&mdash;just
-what I came from, and all that. And it helped
-me to see how bravely you were fighting your own
-way up. I had the chance forced on me that you
-made for yourself. And I made a mess of everything!
-Oh, Jerry!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She clung to him, crying. As he kissed away her
-tears, the touch of her wet cheek thrilled him....</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We mustn&#8217;t be so happy we can&#8217;t remember
-other people,&#8221; she said as they loitered hand in
-hand toward the house.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess that&#8217;s the only way, Nan. That&#8217;s what
-Cecil&#8217;s always saying. And I guess he&#8217;s about
-right about everything.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eaton passed them, unconscious of their nearness.
-He walked with head erect, as one who has fought
-and won a good fight. A sense of all his victory
-had cost him was in both their hearts. There was
-an infinite pathos in his figure as he strode through
-the dusk, returning to the woman he loved and to
-the man he had saved and given back to her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s tough on Cecil,&#8221; said Jerry chokingly.
-&#8220;It doesn&#8217;t seem quite square, some way&mdash;I
-mean the Copelands hitting it off again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, we may be sure he doesn&#8217;t feel that way,&#8221;
-Nan answered. &#8220;It&#8217;s all come out the way he
-wanted it to. He brought them together.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_372.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE TOUCH OF HER WET CHEEK THRILLED HIM</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>&#8220;It&#8217;s funny, Nan; but I&#8217;m never dead sure I
-catch Cecil&#8217;s drift&mdash;the scheme or whatever it is
-he works by. I can&#8217;t find it in the books he gives
-me to read.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t in books, Jerry; it&#8217;s in his heart&mdash;just
-helping; just being kind!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="antiqua">The Riverside Press</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center">CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS</p>
-
-<p class="center">U . S . A</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-</div></div>
-
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