summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--78732-0.txt8405
-rw-r--r--78732-h/78732-h.htm10958
-rw-r--r--78732-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 97771 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
6 files changed, 19379 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/78732-0.txt b/78732-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..34d238b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78732-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8405 @@
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78732 ***
+
+
+ AN
+ UNMARRIED FATHER
+
+ _A Novel_
+
+
+ By
+ Floyd Dell
+
+ NEW YORK
+ GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1927,
+ BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
+
+ AN UNMARRIED FATHER
+ PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ BOOK ONE: The Discovery
+
+ I. The Letter 9
+
+ II. Legal Advice 16
+
+ III. The Way of the World 24
+
+ IV. Post Mortem on a Dead Romance 32
+
+ V. Encounter 41
+
+ VI. Dr. Zerneke 46
+
+ VII. Flowers 58
+
+ VIII. Isabel 60
+
+ IX. The Baby 72
+
+ X. Art Alone Endures 77
+
+ XI. Common Sense 81
+
+ XII. Bad Dreams 87
+
+ XIII. En Route 91
+
+ XIV. Homecoming 100
+
+ XV. Family Breakfast 106
+
+ XVI. Aubade 111
+
+ XVII. Flight 120
+
+
+ BOOK TWO: In Exile
+
+ I. The Prodigal 125
+
+ II. A Man Has Some Rights 136
+
+ III. An Ambassador from Vickley 143
+
+ IV. Speech to the Jury 157
+
+ V. The Older Generation 163
+
+ VI. J. J. Overbeck 169
+
+ VII. Home 176
+
+ VIII. Apron Strings 185
+
+ IX. It Was Bound to Happen 195
+
+ X. Mrs. Case 202
+
+ XI. Paradise Lost 205
+
+ XII. Out of a Job 209
+
+ XIII. The Dreamer Wakes 215
+
+
+ BOOK THREE: The Dominant Sex
+
+ I. Vita Nova 225
+
+ II. Waste Not Your Hour 229
+
+ III. His Mother 235
+
+ IV. ’Ware Women! 239
+
+ V. As Usual 244
+
+ VI. Night Thoughts 248
+
+ VII. A Letter 255
+
+ VIII. A Sociological Interlude 260
+
+ IX. On Taking a Girl at Her Word 268
+
+ X. Which? 277
+
+ XI. As Luck Would Have It 281
+
+ XII. The Fugitive 284
+
+ XIII. Conversation in a Taxi 288
+
+ XIV. A Farewell 291
+
+ XV. The Inevitable 296
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK ONE
+
+ The Discovery
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I: The Letter
+
+
+THAT April morning Norman Overbeck drove his father to the station and
+put him on the early train for Springfield. The elder Overbeck--J. J.
+Overbeck--was going to argue a case before the supreme court. Norman,
+his unworthy son, as he felt himself to be, drove on to the office.
+Parking his car in front of the Overbeck building until he should want
+it again that afternoon, according to the leisurely custom of Vickley
+on the Mississippi, he went up the dingy, old-fashioned stairway to the
+Overbeck and Overbeck offices. In the hall he glanced up for a moment
+at the new sign with the name repeated, replacing the old one of “J.
+J. Overbeck, Attorney-at-Law.” It was less than a year since Norman
+had been admitted to the bar and been made a member of the law-firm.
+When his father wasn’t with him he sometimes glanced up at that sign,
+expecting to find in it some reassurance, something that would make him
+feel in himself the dignity and power which were associated with his
+father’s name. He never quite got it. Most of the time it seemed to
+him that all he had so far done was to make costly mistakes.
+
+“Good morning, Miss Patterson,” he said to the stenographer. “Is my
+mail ready?”
+
+“Yes, sir,” said the girl. “It’s on your desk.”
+
+She looked at him, when he turned away, with admiration: for he was
+tall, handsome enough with his thoughtful brown eyes and light wavy
+hair--and he was the son of J. J. Overbeck.
+
+He did not go to his own office immediately. He lingered in the outer
+office, staring at the rows of law-reports, bound in musty calf and
+newer buckram. He was pursuing a line of private psychological inquiry,
+not easily to be conducted when his father was there. His father
+would have asked, “What are you looking for?” and he would have had
+to give some sensible answer.... Perhaps it wasn’t the books, they
+were only law-books. He looked at the old leather-upholstered mahogany
+furniture.... He was trying to confront something about this office
+which obscurely intimidated him, made him feel foolishly young and out
+of place. It was absurd to feel that way, when he had won his first
+important case yesterday.... He turned to his office.
+
+As he passed Miss Patterson, he reflected that she obviously thought of
+him as grown up....
+
+He was sitting at his desk a minute or two later when the telephone
+rang. He lifted the receiver. “Yes?” he said. It was Miss Patterson.
+
+“Your sister just called up,” she said. (Doris? he thought.) “She
+didn’t want to disturb you and asked me to give you the message.”
+
+No, that wouldn’t be his kid sister Doris. She wouldn’t care whether
+she disturbed him or not. That was Lucinda. He frowned slightly, as the
+picture of that futile, pathetic, rather old-maidish sister came before
+him.
+
+“All right, what is it?” he asked patiently.
+
+“She wanted me to remind you that you promised to go and look at a dog
+for her. Out at Schwartz’s. It’s a Scotch terrier puppy. The one she is
+thinking of taking has a black spot over the left eye. She thought you
+might have forgotten.”
+
+It was true, he had forgotten, though she had spoken of it last night
+and again at breakfast this morning.
+
+“Thank you, Miss Patterson. If my sister should call up again, tell her
+I said I wouldn’t forget about it.”
+
+Why did he have to go and look at that dog? But that was just like
+Lucinda.... If Doris had wanted a dog, she’d have gone and bought it,
+without asking any advice.
+
+Whenever he thought of Lucinda, he consoled himself by thinking of
+Doris. An historical epoch seemed to have intervened between them. It
+was strange to think of them as being sisters. Families were queer
+things. Lucinda at thirty-five belonged to a decaying world; Doris at
+sixteen to another, a feverish and jazzy, but certainly a healthier
+one.... But families are not always pleasant things to think about.
+
+His mind went back to its interrupted thoughts about himself.
+
+--Yes, he reflected, he was grown up in everybody else’s eyes. Why
+not, then, in his own? He was twenty-five years old, and engaged to be
+married. He and Madge were going to be married in June. He had won that
+Harrington case. His future was secure. Why should he feel as though he
+were merely pretending to be what he was--and as though the pretense
+were likely to be found out at any moment, and he himself swept out
+into chaos like a scrap of paper in a high wind? What was he afraid of?
+There was nothing to be afraid of. He could cope with any situation
+that would arise. He was building himself securely into the solid
+structure of--of Vickley. He would be what his father had been. There
+was no doubt of it.
+
+He turned to his mail. He sorted it through rapidly, and finding
+nothing outwardly attractive and unbusiness-like to distract him, he
+opened the letters in turn. His day’s work had begun.
+
+The first two letters he made notations upon and put aside.
+
+The third letter puzzled him.
+
+It was from a Martha Zerneke, in Chicago--a person quite unknown to
+him, but, according to a small printed inscription in one corner of her
+letterhead, “Medical Director, St. Thecla Child Adoption Society.” The
+letter began pleasantly by hoping that he was coming, or could arrange
+to come to Chicago to attend the Springer exhibit at the Steinbach
+Galleries, April 4th to 18th, and preferably during the following week,
+when--as the letter went on strangely to say--she would like to have
+him call at her office concerning a matter of personal interest to him
+which it would not be so convenient to take up in correspondence. “Very
+truly yours.”
+
+After reading it, at first idly and then very carefully, he laid it
+aside as incomprehensible, and went on with his other mail. But having
+glanced at several letters, he took it up again, sat back in his chair,
+lighted a cigarette, and considered it thoughtfully.
+
+The reference to the Springer exhibit suggested that the letter was
+based upon some knowledge of his habits, for he made a point of running
+up to Chicago to see the most interesting of the picture shows; he had,
+in fact, planned to go to see this one, for he had been interested in
+Springer ever since he had seen him and his pictures back in Boston a
+year ago. So far the suggestion was of art matters. But the rest of the
+letter didn’t go to that tune. Indeed, the casual familiarity of the
+opening appeared to be a diplomatic disguise--as if for the benefit
+of any one else who might happen to open his mail in his absence! “A
+matter of personal interest to you which it would not be so convenient
+to take up in correspondence.” There was a veiled threat in that....
+What sort of matter was there that could not “conveniently” be taken
+up in correspondence? A matter of personal interest to him! And this
+from a doctor--a woman doctor. The Medical Director of a Child Adoption
+Society. Why, it was preposterous! Absurd!
+
+Perhaps he was reading into it some meaning that wasn’t there. He
+studied it carefully, and shook his head. If not that, what could it
+mean?
+
+His acquaintance with girls in Chicago was of the most casual sort.
+There was no one-- He had an impulse to throw the thing into the
+waste basket.... But if he ignored it, and this Dr. Zerneke did take
+up the matter in correspondence, it might become embarrassing. There
+was certainly some mistake; but that would be no protection if the
+thing--whatever it was--got into the newspapers. After all, appearances
+were against him. He had made trips to Chicago from time to time, and
+people would quite readily believe that it hadn’t all been for the
+sake of art. It would be a difficult position for the most innocent
+of men. And there was Madge to be considered. She might think there
+was something to it, and break off the engagement! And his father--oh,
+his father would believe him; but he would think he had made a fool of
+himself in some way, and that it was his fault that such a thing should
+ever have come up. Nobody had ever written a letter like that to J.
+J. Overbeck!... Doubtless because he attended strictly to the law,
+and did not waste his time prowling about art-galleries and studios.
+Perhaps it _was_ his own fault. Perhaps his father’s way of life was
+the only correct one, if he were to build himself into the solid
+structure of Vickley....
+
+It occurred to him that this was the sort of thing he had been
+awaiting, without knowing what it was--some accident that would crash
+down his life about him, and whirl him out like a scrap of paper on
+the wind.... Well, not so bad as all that! He was taking this much too
+seriously. But it did need thinking about.
+
+Under these circumstances--he smiled to himself--the proper thing to
+do was to consult a lawyer.... His father, of course, was the obvious
+person to consult, but he dismissed that idea instantly. Nor would he
+be likely to take up a thing like this with Medway, the chief clerk of
+Overbeck and Overbeck. Nor with any other lawyer in Vickley ... except,
+perhaps, old Gilbert....
+
+He considered a moment longer, and then abruptly put out his cigarette
+and took up the telephone.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II: Legal Advice
+
+
+GILBERT RAND--old Gilbert--was sitting, large and ruddy and cheerful,
+at a table in the corner of Henschel’s when Norman came in at
+twelve-thirty.
+
+There are various ways in which an elderly lawyer of repute may show
+consideration for a young and untried one, if he is so disposed. Old
+Gilbert had been so disposed on various occasions during the past year,
+for he liked the boy. He didn’t know what Norman wanted of him now
+except that it was something legal and personal, which nevertheless
+could be disposed of at lunch. Norman had suggested a quiet place
+where they could talk without interruption, and Gilbert had said that
+Henschel’s would do.
+
+He congratulated Norman on his victory in the Harrington case
+yesterday, to which Norman replied in a preoccupied way.
+
+“Now,” he said to Norman, when the luncheon was under way, “what’s on
+your mind?”
+
+Norman took the letter from his pocket and handed it over. “What do you
+think of this?” he said.
+
+Gilbert put on his glasses and read the letter; then he read it again.
+
+“A very clever piece of writing,” he said thoughtfully; “evidently
+intended to look as little like blackmail as possible.”
+
+Blackmail!
+
+“So you think so, too!” said Norman. “Well, what do you think I ought
+to do about it? Ignore it? or--what?”
+
+“That depends,” said Gilbert gravely. “If I’m to advise you, I’ll
+have to know something about the situation. Who the girl is--her
+circumstances and character: you’d better tell me the whole story. Then
+we’ll know where we’re at.”
+
+Norman was rather taken aback. But he saw the humor of it, and smiled.
+“Aren’t you taking a good deal for granted?” he said.
+
+Old Gilbert smiled back at him. “Oh,” he said, “the alibi part
+comes later. I realize, of course, that you are not necessarily the
+responsible party in this matter. Girls are sometimes unscrupulous
+about that sort of thing. The man who is in a position to pay gets
+saddled with the responsibility every time. You remember that case here
+in Vickley last winter, in Magistrate Cooley’s court--I saw you there,
+I remember.”
+
+“Look here,” said Norman. “You seem to accept it as a matter of
+fact--that I’m involved with some girl!”
+
+Gilbert glanced at the letter. “I thought,” he said, “that was what
+the letter was about. If I’m on the wrong track, you’ll have to set me
+right. What _is_ it about?”
+
+“I don’t know,” said Norman. “But when I read it, I thought the same
+thing you did. It seemed like a veiled threat of blackmail. That’s
+what puzzles me. You see, I’ve never heard of this Dr. Zerneke--and as
+for the girl, if that’s what it hints at, as you also seem to think,
+I don’t know who she’s supposed to be. The whole thing comes out of a
+clear sky. I haven’t the least idea what it’s all about.”
+
+“That’s curious,” said Gilbert. “Let’s have another look at it.” He
+took it up, readjusting his glasses. “There _is_ something queer about
+this letter,” he said.
+
+“Damned queer!” said Norman.
+
+“I mean,” said Gilbert, “that it has an air of--well, of quiet
+certainty.”
+
+“I don’t know what you mean,” said Norman, uncomfortably. Did old
+Gilbert think he was lying?
+
+“To begin with, you are known by the writer to be interested in art.
+That in itself is nothing much. But the fact is put forward in a
+rather suggestive way. The reference to the Springer exhibit and the
+Steinbach galleries looks as though it were intended to remind you of
+something.... Does it suggest anything to you--a girl you met at the
+Steinbach galleries, for example?”
+
+“I have not been in the habit of meeting girls at the Steinbach
+galleries--or any other galleries,” said Norman, a little on his
+dignity. “I know practically no girls in Chicago--and I certainly have
+made love to none of them.”
+
+“Well,” said old Gilbert, “there are hysterical girls who make strange
+accusations, upon slight or no provocation.”
+
+“I hadn’t thought of that,” said Norman. “It must be something like
+that.”
+
+“There’s some explanation for this letter,” said Gilbert. “Let’s see
+what we can make out of it. A girl in Chicago ... no, not necessarily
+in Chicago; she may have come there from somewhere. She goes to a
+doctor; we know nothing about this doctor, but presumably she knows her
+business. So we have to assume for the moment that the girl is actually
+in trouble. The doctor, apparently, is sympathetic. Money is evidently
+needed. The doctor undertakes to write to you.”
+
+“Yes--but why to me?”
+
+“Come, Norman; you are twenty-five years old, and so far as I know you
+have never taken any vows. How can you be sure that there’s no girl in
+the whole United States who couldn’t accuse you of having got her into
+this scrape?”
+
+Norman flushed. “I don’t want to pretend that I’m a saint,” he said.
+“But I’m not a cad, either; I’ve been engaged to Madge for six months,
+and I swear I haven’t looked at another girl in that time.... In fact,”
+he added, “you’ll see how absurd it is to think that I could be mixed
+up in such a thing, when I tell you that there’s been nothing of that
+sort in my life since I left Cambridge. There was a waitress there--but
+that was fully four years ago.”
+
+“Well, Norman, you ought to know. But the trouble with this matter is
+that it is so vague. If it mentioned a name, you would know where you
+are at. As it is, of course, you may have overlooked some trifling
+incident of no consequence to you at the time.”
+
+Norman laughed. “I’m not such a devil of a fellow as all that. I’d not
+be likely to forget such an incident.”
+
+“I hope you’re right. It might prove rather embarrassing to you if
+you went to this doctor in Chicago, indignantly convinced of your
+innocence, and then found you had made a little slip of memory.”
+
+“You think, then, that I ought to go and see this doctor?” Norman asked
+in surprise.
+
+“Somebody ought to go, and find out what it’s all about. There’s
+something that needs to be straightened out.... Mistaken identity,
+possibly.”
+
+“Yes--there’s that,” said Norman. “There may be some very simple
+explanation.”
+
+“In any case,” said Gilbert, “I don’t think it’s ordinary blackmail.
+A doctor, and especially one connected with a child adoption society,
+would hardly mix herself up with anything like that. And the whole
+tone of her letter shows a due consideration for your position. It’s
+written in such a way as not to make trouble for you if it fell into
+the wrong hands. And at the same time--or so it seems to me, though
+I’ve apparently stumbled into a mare’s nest--it attempts to remind you
+who the girl is.... That reference to the Steinbach Galleries--”
+
+“I said I knew no girls in Chicago,” Norman interrupted.
+
+“You might take a wider range,” suggested Gilbert.
+
+Norman made an impatient movement.
+
+“I’m only trying to help you,” said Gilbert.
+
+“I know, and at my own request,” said Norman. “But I thought we had
+cleared up the possibility of it’s being me who is involved.”
+
+“I suppose we have,” said Gilbert. “Well, I was going to propose this
+to you. I’m going to Chicago to-night, to see some people in connection
+with the Ostrander case; and I’ll go and see this doctor to-morrow
+if you like. I’ll be home Sunday, and your mind will be set at rest
+without undue delay.”
+
+“That’s damned good of you, Gilbert.”
+
+“Oh, it’s nothing.... Only you see, if I’m to act for you, I’d like to
+be quite sure of my facts.”
+
+“You can be quite sure the facts are as I’ve stated them,” said Norman
+comfortably.
+
+“Then I’ll take this letter with me,” said Gilbert. He folded it up and
+put it in his pocket. “However, there’s one more angle on this thing
+still to be checked up on.”
+
+“What angle is that?” asked Norman.
+
+“The Cambridge angle,” said Gilbert. “Nothing like being prepared for
+the worst, you know.”
+
+“But that,” said Norman, “is all ancient history now.”
+
+“Just the same, I’d better know something about it. When did these
+Cambridge incidents occur and what was the nature of them?”
+
+“Well, besides the waitress, there was just one incident, really,” said
+Norman. “It was just before I came home.... It seems ages ago.”
+
+“Actually, however,” said Gilbert, “it’s been something less than a
+year. Late June to early April--”
+
+“Ten--” said Norman, and then stopped, with a shock of dismay.
+
+“Ten months,” said Gilbert, “or to be exact, nine months and some
+days.” He looked at the young man questioningly. “Does that letter
+begin to mean anything to you now?”
+
+“It couldn’t be Isabel,” said Norman wonderingly. “And yet--”
+
+“Isabel?” said Gilbert inquiringly--suppressing a smile.
+
+Norman spoke with an effort. “Springer’s pictures.... It was with her
+that I first saw them. At his studio in Boston. She took me there.”
+
+Gilbert nodded. “And now,” he said, “this Isabel seems to be in
+Chicago, under the care of a doctor. It looks suspicious, doesn’t it?”
+
+“Oh, but that--it’s impossible!” said Norman.
+
+“For a girl to have an unexpected baby? I’m afraid not,” said Gilbert
+dryly. “Though this is rather late in the day for her to let you know
+about it.”
+
+“My God!” said Norman.
+
+The waiter appeared, and recommended the Mocha tarte.
+
+“I don’t think I want anything more,” said Norman faintly.
+
+“You’d better have some coffee. No? Then nothing for me either. Bring
+the check.”
+
+When the waiter was gone, he said: “There’s no occasion to look so
+upset. Girls have had by-blown babies before. And respectable Vickley
+citizens have been the fathers of them.”
+
+Then he added, more kindly: “We’ll go to my office, thresh the whole
+thing out, and decide what’s to be done.”
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III: The Way of the World
+
+
+GILBERT RAND, in his office, considered the boy sympathetically. “How
+do you feel now?” he asked.
+
+“Still in a sort of a daze,” Norman confessed.
+
+Gilbert took from his desk drawer a bottle and glasses. “A little shot
+of this will help steady your nerves.” He poured and they drank.
+
+“You realize,” said Gilbert, “that all this is merely a guess; there
+may be nothing to it whatever.”
+
+Norman shook his head. “It’s only too damned true,” he said. “I’m not
+going to try to fool myself about that.”
+
+“At any rate, we have to face it as a possible truth just now,” said
+Gilbert, “and think of ways and means to handle it. And if I seemed
+to take it lightly, it isn’t that I don’t understand the seriousness
+of the situation for you. You have a career ahead of you; you’re your
+father’s son; and you’re going to be married. This thing will have to
+be fixed up very quietly. But that’s not so difficult as you might
+think. I want you to know that I’m with you in this, and I’ll see you
+through it.”
+
+“It’s awfully good of you,” said Norman. “But what is there to do? You
+must forgive me if I seem stupid. I feel as though the roof of the
+world had fallen in.”
+
+“The first thing we have to do is to go over the facts of the case.
+With them in my mind, I will be able to deal with the situation,
+whatever it is, in Chicago. And I’ll be back here day after
+to-morrow--probably with everything all straightened out. All you have
+to do in the meantime is to keep smiling, and behave as if nothing had
+happened.... Now what’s the matter?”
+
+“I just remembered,” said Norman, “that I’ve got to see Madge to-night.”
+
+“Yes, that may be a little difficult,” said Gilbert.
+
+“I’m sorry to be such a fool,” said Norman. “But I don’t see how I can
+face her.”
+
+“Now don’t lose your nerve, my boy,” said old Gilbert kindly. “Just sit
+tight and keep mum--that’s all you have to do.”
+
+“That’s just the trouble,” said Norman.
+
+“I know how you feel,” said Gilbert. “But you won’t come wearing
+your secret on your face. You can easily invent some discouragement
+in your law practice to account for your jumpiness. Besides, it’s
+getting very near the time of your wedding; she’ll have her mind on a
+thousand other things besides your state of nerves. Women aren’t such
+good thought-readers as you might imagine.” Then, when Norman remained
+silent, he said sharply: “You wouldn’t be such an idiot as to tell her?”
+
+“I was thinking that I ought to,” said Norman. “She’ll have the right
+to know--a thing like this.”
+
+“Nonsense!” said Gilbert, and secretly cursed these modern ideas of
+frankness. Aloud he said: “There’ll be plenty of time to consider what
+there is to tell--if anything. There may be nothing, you know. You
+wouldn’t want to upset her needlessly.”
+
+“Oh, I’m sure you’ve guessed it right,” said Norman dully. “It will be
+only a question of sooner or later when she’ll have to know. I simply
+couldn’t get married with a thing like that hanging over us. It would
+come out some time--and I’d rather know the worst at once. If things
+are going to smash, it had better be before we are married.”
+
+“Now, now,” said Gilbert soothingly. “Nothing is going to smash. You’re
+all worked up and incapable of seeing things clearly. Everything is
+coming out all right, I tell you.”
+
+“You mean that this thing can be hushed up, I suppose.”
+
+“Yes, if there’s anything to hush up.”
+
+“That’s all very well. So far as the world at large is concerned,
+perhaps it could be hushed up. But--why should two people be married,
+with a secret like that between them? What kind of marriage would that
+be?”
+
+“Why, not so unusual a kind of marriage, I should say,” replied Gilbert
+coolly. “You don’t think men have to tell their wives everything, do
+you? By the way, have you told your fiancée anything at all about this
+Cambridge girl?”
+
+“No, I haven’t.”
+
+“You see, you’ve kept your little secret so far without any difficulty.”
+
+“But it didn’t really concern her--or it didn’t seem to--until now. It
+was only a part of my past, then--but now it affects our whole future.”
+
+“It won’t affect her future, if you keep a decent silence and let me
+attend to it,” said Gilbert. “Why didn’t you tell her anything about
+the Cambridge girl?”
+
+“Because it didn’t seem of any great importance,” said Norman. “And
+because she might be supposed to take something of that sort for
+granted. Perhaps I should have told her. It would make it easier now.
+But it would have hurt her feelings. I suppose that’s the reason why I
+didn’t.”
+
+“And a very good reason, too,” said Gilbert. “You did as any lover
+would do. And you still love her, don’t you?”
+
+“Madge? Of course I do!”
+
+“Yet now you seem to think the proper way to treat her is to inflict
+pain on her. I’d hate to believe you were that kind of moral weakling.”
+
+“I’m doubtless all sorts of moral weakling,” said Norman, “but I don’t
+know what you mean. It would take courage to tell her the truth.”
+
+“It will take more courage to keep your mouth shut,” said Gilbert.
+“It’s only the coward, the man who can’t bear the burden of his own
+sins, that has to go and blab them to his wife or sweetheart. If
+they’re his sins, he ought to be the one to suffer for them--not she.”
+
+Their minds, Norman realized, didn’t meet in this talk. There was a
+gulf of years between them. Old Gilbert was thinking of property and
+respectability, and not of human rights. And now he was talking about
+“sins.” No doubt if one believed that an illegitimate child was a sin,
+one repented it--and forgot it. But it wasn’t a sin to him; it was a
+fateful fact that had somehow to be faced.
+
+“Why,” old Gilbert was asking, “should a man want to drag the girl he
+loves into a thing like that--unless he wishes to hurt her?”
+
+“I don’t wish to hurt Madge. But she has a right to know what she’s
+getting into,” Norman insisted.
+
+“And if she decided not to marry you--as she easily might, if you came
+blurting it out like that--?”
+
+“That would be her privilege,” said Norman, tonelessly.
+
+“A nice privilege,” Gilbert commented. “A choice between a humiliation
+and an outrage--a marriage broken off at the last moment, or a secret
+scandal.”
+
+“It’s something she’ll have to decide about in any case, sooner or
+later,” said Norman. “And until she knows, the thing will be on my mind
+every moment. I shall feel like a dog, keeping it from her. She’ll go
+on making plans for our marriage--and all the while there’ll be this
+secret holding us apart.”
+
+“Do you think it would bring you together if you told her?” Gilbert
+asked ironically.
+
+“I don’t know. That’s what I don’t know. And I’ve got to find out....
+Perhaps not ... not unless she loved me a very great deal--more than I
+deserve. More than I’ve any right to expect.”
+
+“You’d like to give her a chance to prove how noble she is--how much
+she does love you: is that the idea? You’d throw her love for you
+into the gutter, to see whether she’d stoop and pick it up. I’m no
+psychologist, but I’d call that vanity.”
+
+Norman was silent.
+
+“Or else mere inexperience,” Gilbert went on. “You’ve just found out
+that some secrets are hard to keep. And because it hurts to keep a
+secret from the girl you love, you want to turn the world’s morality
+upside down.” That stab seemed to go home to its mark and Gilbert added:
+
+“Misery loves company. You’d like to share your unhappiness. Natural
+enough, perhaps. But heroic? No. Selfish.”
+
+“Oh, you’re probably right,” said Norman, suddenly weary. “I suppose it
+wouldn’t do to tell her....”
+
+Gilbert waited.
+
+“Everything seems to me--smashed,” said Norman. “But maybe something
+can be saved out of the wreck.”
+
+“If you’ll follow my advice, quite a number of things can be saved out
+of the wreck,” said Gilbert. “Your marriage, your career, your father’s
+pride.”
+
+“All right,” said Norman quietly. “I’ll do what you say. Just tell me
+what to do.”
+
+“I’m glad that you realize that you’re in no state of mind to decide
+on anything final right now,” said Gilbert. “I’ll be very glad to take
+charge of your destinies for a few days. Then you’ll feel differently.”
+
+“I’ve no doubt I shall. And I’ll be able to thank you properly. Just
+now it seems scarcely to matter....”
+
+“That’s all right. The thanks can wait. We’ll proceed to the other
+aspects of the case--if it’s settled that you are to be guided by me,
+and will say nothing about this to your fiancée till I get back from
+Chicago?”
+
+“Yes, that’s settled,” said Norman. “You’ve made it clear to me what a
+lie and sham marriage is. The trouble with me, I guess, is that I’ve
+not quite grown up; I seem to have some remnants of boyish idealism
+left in my mind. I had thought that this marriage was going to be
+real--that we weren’t going to have to lie to one another. I can see
+it’s nonsense.”
+
+“Men,” said Gilbert, “have lied to women since the dawn of history. The
+more they love them, the more they lie to them. You’ll be surprised to
+find how easy it comes. But just the same, I don’t think I had better
+trust that boyish idealism of yours too far right now. If I leave you
+here while I go to Chicago to straighten things out, you’ll have got
+them into some frightful mess by the time I’m back. I think I’d better
+take you along with me and keep an eye on you.”
+
+“I think that would be a good idea,” said Norman. “I’ll know the worst
+sooner. And if we could take the early train, I wouldn’t have to see
+Madge to-night.” In a shamefaced way he explained:
+
+“We were going to go over to see our new house that my father’s
+building for us: it’s nearly finished. I don’t think I could stand it.”
+
+“Very well,” said Gilbert. “Make your apologies by telephone, and we’ll
+take the six o’clock train this afternoon. Legal business in connection
+with the Ostrander case. I’ll reserve a compartment, and we can talk
+all the way. There’s still a lot to be gone over. And now you had
+better go home and pack.”
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV: Post Mortem on a Dead Romance
+
+
+“NOW,” said Gilbert Rand, in their compartment that evening, “do
+you want to tell me about this Cambridge girl, or shall I ask you
+questions?”
+
+“You’d better ask me questions. It’s never seemed quite real to me. I
+haven’t readjusted myself to it as a reality even yet.”
+
+Gilbert took out a pencil and paper.
+
+“What was her name? I think you referred to her as Isabel.”
+
+“Yes, Isabel Drury.”
+
+Gilbert wrote it down.
+
+The porter opened the door and looked in. “Did you ring, sir?”
+
+“No, but we could do with a little more air.”
+
+The porter opened the upper air-vents and went away.
+
+Gilbert went on with the inquisition.
+
+“Her age?”
+
+“Twenty-five.”
+
+“And yours was twenty-four. Well,” said Gilbert with satisfaction,
+“that clears up the matter of responsibility, at any rate. What was
+she? Stenographer, salesgirl, or what?”
+
+“I suppose,” said Norman slowly, “you’d call her an art student. She
+was studying art in Boston.” He was finding it difficult to put this
+matter in objective terms. Isabel had been to him a romantic mystery
+and a psychological puzzle and a symbol of the strangeness of life. But
+that wasn’t what old Gilbert wanted to know....
+
+“Art student.” Gilbert wrote it down. “Where did she come from, do you
+know?”
+
+Something of the satisfaction of old Gilbert’s tone reached his mind.
+He began to see Gilbert’s game. Isabel was to be made out as scarcely
+respectable. A Bohemian encounter. And, though that had in truth been
+the spirit of the affair, some perverse desire for fair play made him
+block that simple interpretation with some contrary facts.
+
+“Her father was a professor of Latin in a boys’ school. They had a
+place on the edge of Cambridge. Poor but terribly respectable.” And he
+added: “I was a guest at their home, more or less, when it happened.”
+
+Gilbert frowned. “How did you come to know her?”
+
+“The Drurys were neighbors of a classmate of mine. I spent a good many
+week-ends at his home. There were neighborhood parties, and Isabel was
+often there. We saw a good deal of each other that last winter and
+spring.”
+
+“What was your classmate’s name?” Gilbert asked casually.
+
+“Hal Sibley.” Then Norman looked suspiciously at his questioner. “See
+here, you mustn’t get him mixed up in this!”
+
+“Why do you say that?” Gilbert inquired blandly. “Was he interested in
+her too?”
+
+Norman flushed. “We were both romantic about her. But leave Hal out of
+this.” A disgust for these vulgar necessities of self-defense rose in
+him like nausea, and he said: “I couldn’t forgive myself if I thought
+you were trying to do that!”
+
+“Trying to do what?” asked Gilbert coldly.
+
+“Shield me by dragging in my friend.” Old Gilbert needn’t pretend he
+didn’t know what he was up to. “No, no--it won’t do. I’m not that kind
+of coward.”
+
+“I only wanted, my boy,” said Gilbert softly, “to take into account all
+the possibilities of the situation.”
+
+“Just the same, we’ll leave Hal out of this discussion.” A flicker of
+amusement in old Gilbert’s eyes made him feel a little ridiculous, and
+he added defensively: “He wouldn’t have dragged me in, if it had been
+he that was in this mess.”
+
+“You prefer not to consider that possibility?” asked Gilbert smoothly.
+
+Norman had the feeling of having mismanaged this matter. He had made it
+look as though he were quixotically shielding his friend. “Oh, go into
+it if you insist,” he said impatiently. “Only it’s a waste of time. I
+merely wanted to make it clear that I’m not going to try to--sneak out
+of my responsibility.”
+
+“Very well,” said Gilbert, “we’ll leave it at that for the present. Now
+as to the girl’s family: any brothers?”
+
+“No. An only child.” And Norman reflected that a girl’s brothers were
+her traditional protectors. That should please old Gilbert. He smiled;
+it was odd to think of Isabel as the menace against which he was being
+protected. He? His respectability, rather. The thing was out of his
+hands. Vickley was protecting itself. His career, his marriage, his
+reputation--these things belonged to Vickley. And old Gilbert had
+promised to guard them....
+
+“And the girl--” Gilbert was asking, “beautiful, I suppose?”
+
+Her image came powerfully before him--her slight figure, her pointed
+face with its grey-green eyes and shock of auburn hair. Beautiful? “In
+a sullen, discontented way: yes.” That, he thought, was sufficiently
+objective.
+
+“And you fancied yourselves hopelessly in love with one another?”
+
+“Not exactly.” He must try to explain it to old Gilbert. “I had been
+crazy about her all year--ever since I met her. Hal had talked to me
+about her. His favorite word for her was ‘elusive.’ And she was just
+that. She played with us in an imaginative sort of way. But she seemed
+emotionally untouched. She was scornful of the idea of love.”
+
+“Yes?” said Gilbert.
+
+“But when I was going away that summer, she seemed sorry we weren’t
+going to see each other any more. I stayed over a couple of weeks, at
+the Sibleys, before I came home. We saw more of each other. She told me
+things about herself--her ambitions. And she took me to see Springer’s
+pictures one day, just before I left. Coming back to her home that
+night, we lost ourselves in the woods. That was when we became lovers.”
+
+“You lost yourselves in the woods?”
+
+“We pretended we were lost. You see, everything had to be play between
+us. We always pretended all sorts of things. That night we pretended it
+was a wood near Athens.”
+
+“A wood near Athens?”
+
+“Midsummer-night’s-dream stuff. Perhaps you’d understand it if you knew
+her.”
+
+“Was there ever any question of marriage between you?”
+
+“There hadn’t been, up to then. I had--well, I had wanted to have a
+love affair with her. That was all. But in the woods, afterward, I
+was rather frightened about what we had done, and I said we must get
+married. I suppose I meant it. But fortunately she didn’t take me
+seriously. She laughed at me.”
+
+“She laughed at you?”
+
+“You see, love wasn’t a serious reality to her. It was just something
+to play at in idle moments. The only reality, to her, was art. She
+wanted to be a painter--a great painter.”
+
+Old Gilbert rubbed his chin thoughtfully. “Sort of Rosa Bonheur, eh?”
+
+“I think she would have despised Rosa Bonheur. Gauguin was more in her
+line.”
+
+“And so that was how it began?”
+
+“Yes--and how it ended. I saw her for the last time the next day,
+before I went back to my rooms in Cambridge to pack. I didn’t get a
+chance to talk with her. She seemed to avoid that deliberately. She was
+more distant, more elusive, than ever.”
+
+“Did you tell your friend Hal what had occurred?”
+
+“Of course not.”
+
+“And then you came home to Vickley.”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Did you write to her?”
+
+“Three times. She didn’t reply.”
+
+“You were not under the impression that you were her first lover?”
+
+Norman hesitated. “I really know nothing about that. But for some
+reason I assumed that she had had lovers.”
+
+“She seemed sophisticated?”
+
+“In her talk, yes.”
+
+“You didn’t ask her about her previous experiences?”
+
+“One couldn’t have asked her a thing like that. But I think she wanted
+it to be taken for granted.”
+
+Old Gilbert looked puzzled. “She wanted to have it taken for granted
+that she was not a virgin?”
+
+“Yes. But afterward--I wasn’t so sure. I’m not, now. Or rather--I think
+I was really her first lover, in spite of the way she talked.”
+
+Old Gilbert considered that helplessly, shook his head, and changed the
+subject.
+
+“As to Springer,” he asked, “was he married?”
+
+“Not at that time. He’s been married since then.”
+
+“How did Springer behave when she brought you to his studio?”
+
+“Springer is a great clumsy bear. He’s friendly with everybody, unless
+he’s in one of his suspicious moods. He was very friendly that day.”
+
+“How well do you know him?”
+
+“I’ve seen him only that once. Isabel told me a great deal about him.”
+
+“Does he make much money with his painting?”
+
+“Not yet, I’m afraid. What are you getting at?” Norman demanded.
+
+“Were Isabel and Springer very great friends?”
+
+Norman smiled. “She admired his work very much.”
+
+“Do you think they had been lovers?”
+
+“That idea had never occurred to me.”
+
+“Let’s see,” said Gilbert. “The girl was elusive for a long time--and
+then suddenly friendly. The day she took you to Springer’s studio was
+the day she made love to you. Do you make anything out of that?”
+
+“Nothing at all.”
+
+“You thought of her as a mysterious and incalculable creature; but
+let us supply the _x_ and see how the problem works out. She had
+been Springer’s sweetheart. But Springer threw her over for another
+girl--the one whom he afterwards married. And so she consoled herself
+with you--perhaps trying to make him jealous. Doesn’t that clear up the
+strangeness of her behavior?”
+
+Norman tried hard to be objective. “It might be true. It merely doesn’t
+fit in with my conception of Isabel.”
+
+“I’ve described a very human sort of girl,” old Gilbert went on. “You
+had your romantic ideas about her, to be sure. Why shouldn’t she be
+elusive, with Springer for her lover? Until he got himself another
+girl. Then she turned to you. I admit that this explanation is not
+calculated to appeal to a young man’s vanity.”
+
+“After all, what does it matter?” said Norman.
+
+But Gilbert seemed to think it did matter. “You offered to marry
+her,” he pursued, “but in spite of what had occurred between you, she
+refused--because she was still in love with Springer. You wrote letters
+to her. It wasn’t you she was thinking about; it was Springer. And when
+she found she was pregnant, it wasn’t to you that she’d write, but to
+him. Now, does it look,” asked Gilbert, “as though she thought it were
+your child?”
+
+“But, Good Lord--!” said Norman in bewilderment.
+
+“Then Springer married the other girl; evidently refused to have
+anything more to do with her. And now at last she remembers you. In
+this emergency, your money would be a great convenience, no doubt.”
+
+Norman shook his head. “I can’t believe that she’d lie to me,” he said.
+
+“If you had gone to see her,” said old Gilbert with a tolerant smile,
+“she wouldn’t have had to lie. She’d only have had to remind you of
+that night in the woods, and your guilty conscience would have supplied
+the rest.”
+
+“I wish to God I could believe it,” said Norman.
+
+“Would you rather,” asked Gilbert, “believe yourself the father of her
+child?”
+
+“What I wish,” said Norman, “is that I could wake up and find that this
+was only a bad dream.”
+
+“That’s the way it will seem to-morrow night,” answered Gilbert
+cheerfully.
+
+Norman turned toward the window, and stared out at the dark, flying
+landscape. Every moment was bringing him nearer to the truth. To-morrow
+he would know the truth. But--he wished he could see Isabel himself.
+This wasn’t something that old Gilbert could handle for him.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V: Encounter
+
+
+IT wouldn’t, he realized fully, be sensible to see Isabel. And besides,
+it would be unfair to old Gilbert. He had promised to leave his
+destinies to his friend’s charge. He had better leave things as they
+stood.
+
+When Gilbert left the hotel after breakfast to keep his appointment
+with the lawyers representing the other interests in the Ostrander
+case, it was with the understanding that they were to meet again at
+lunch for a final conference before Gilbert’s visit to Dr. Zerneke.
+
+When Norman was left alone in their suite at the hotel, he wondered
+what to do with himself in the meantime.
+
+He went out and strolled up Michigan Boulevard.
+
+He passed the Steinbach Galleries.
+
+Strolling back, he passed the Steinbach Galleries again.
+
+Springer might be there, getting ready for his exhibit.
+
+Norman turned and went in.
+
+The place seemed to be empty. But as he went from one of the rooms to
+another, passing the little office, he heard young Steinbach’s voice,
+and then Springer’s.
+
+He stopped, and sat down on a cushioned bench in the middle of the
+room, staring unseeingly across at a painting of a Pueblo Indian dance.
+
+He supposed what he was doing was foolish. But he had to hear what
+Springer had to say--about him and Isabel.... For Springer would know
+about it all. Springer was her friend.... And if he could not go to see
+this doctor, if that must be left to Gilbert, yet here was something he
+could do, while he waited.... All Gilbert’s carefully-built-up edifice
+of caution and secrecy melted into mist, in his mind.
+
+He had been there three minutes when Springer came out of the office.
+Norman well remembered that dark bushy head and great lumbering frame.
+Norman rose.
+
+Springer paused, glanced at him idly, and took out his watch and looked
+at it in a bored way.
+
+There had been no recognition in that glance. Norman was disconcerted.
+He would have to introduce himself.
+
+“Mr. Springer,” he said.
+
+Springer looked at him inquiringly. “Yes?”
+
+“My name is Overbeck--Norman Overbeck.” And, since that seemed to mean
+nothing to Springer, he added: “I met you a year ago in Boston.”
+
+Springer offered his hand with the embarrassment of one who had a
+bad memory in social matters. “Ah, yes,” he said, with an effort at
+cordiality. “How are you?”
+
+It wasn’t at all what Norman had expected. It was quite obvious that
+Springer didn’t know who he was at all. So Isabel hadn’t told him!
+Norman readjusted his mind to that.
+
+“Well, how did you find Italy?” asked Springer absently, misled by some
+_ignis fatuus_ gleam of false recollection.
+
+Norman, ignoring this mistaken reference, said firmly: “Isabel Drury
+took me to your studio.”
+
+“Oh, yes!” said Springer. “You wrote a play. I remember now.”
+
+“No, I didn’t write a play,” said Norman indignantly. “I am a lawyer
+down in Vickley. I was at Harvard at the time, and”--he added--“a
+friend of Isabel’s.”
+
+“I’m sorry,” said Springer, confused and chagrined at his blunder. “I
+remember your face quite well. So you are one of Isabel’s friends. Have
+you heard of her good luck?”
+
+“Good luck?” Norman repeated, baffled.
+
+“Yes, she’s going to Paris. Some rich woman is subsidizing her for a
+year’s study--isn’t it fine!”
+
+“Yes,” said Norman. “But--”
+
+He scarcely took in the news about Isabel’s going to Paris.
+
+Was it possible that Springer didn’t know about what had happened
+to her? Or was he keeping that secret? Yes, naturally enough, a
+secret from an outsider.... That, Norman realized, was what he was to
+Springer--an outsider! Because Springer didn’t know. Isabel hadn’t told
+him that part of it. Maybe he didn’t know anything about it at all!
+
+“How is Isabel?” Norman asked abruptly.
+
+“Oh,” said Springer, “she’s all right.”
+
+“All right?”
+
+Why should he say that? Did he mean anything? Did he know anything?
+
+“I suppose,” said Norman, as casually as possible, “that you keep in
+touch with her?”
+
+“Well, yes,” said Springer.
+
+“I understand,” said Norman, “that she’s here in Chicago now.”
+
+“Why, yes, she is,” said Springer reluctantly.
+
+So it was true!
+
+“I’d like to see her,” said Norman. His heart was beating heavily.
+“Where is she?”
+
+“Well, as a matter of fact, she’s--not seeing anybody. She’s just
+recuperating from an operation for appendicitis.”
+
+The usual lie! Springer said it with an air of protecting her from
+intrusive acquaintances. And Norman couldn’t say: “You mean she’s just
+had a baby!” No, he had to accept what Springer told him. He was an
+outsider.
+
+“Is that so?” he said, and his voice mechanically took on the proper
+tone of sympathy and courteous interest.
+
+Springer, having got past that point, spoke more fluently and easily.
+“She’s going to Michigan to rest up for a few weeks, and then go on to
+Paris,” he said.
+
+Norman wanted to ask him at what hospital she was. But he felt that
+Springer would evade that question.
+
+“I’d like to see her before she goes,” he said.
+
+“Are you going to be in town long?” asked Springer.
+
+“No--a day or two.”
+
+“I’m afraid there’s no chance,” said Springer.
+
+“I suppose not,” said Norman.
+
+The subject seemed closed.
+
+“I’m having a show here next week,” said Springer.
+
+“Yes, I would like to see it,” said Norman.
+
+Springer held out his hand.
+
+“Well, I may run into you here again,” he said.
+
+Norman was dismissed.
+
+He was conscious of two emotions--of annoyance with Springer, and,
+strangely enough, of an enormous relief. It was all true! He hadn’t
+doubted it, really, but something in his mind accepted this new
+evidence with gratitude. It was as though an unendurable tension had
+been relaxed. So Isabel had had a baby....
+
+And then it occurred to him that he didn’t know whether her baby was
+alive or dead.
+
+He had to go to see Dr. Zerneke.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI: Dr. Zerneke
+
+
+HE went to a telephone booth. He did not need to look in the book: Dr.
+Zerneke’s phone number was fixed in his mind.
+
+A girl’s voice answered the telephone. He gave his name.
+
+“Yes, Mr. Overbeck,” said the girl. “Dr. Zerneke is expecting you. Can
+you come right over?”
+
+“I’ll be there immediately,” he said.
+
+The taxi stopped in front of an apartment building on the North Side.
+The name, Dr. Martha Zerneke, was on a plaque in one of the front
+windows. He rang the bell, and a young woman admitted him.
+
+He gave his name.
+
+“Oh, yes,” she said. “Just wait in here a moment, please.”
+
+She opened the door of the reception room, and went back to her desk.
+
+He began to wonder why he had come. He ought to leave this part of it
+to Gilbert!
+
+There were three women in the room. One by one they were called into an
+inner office by the office nurse.
+
+Then it was his turn.
+
+As he walked across the room, his mind whirled. But part of his mind
+didn’t care. He would know the whole truth, now.
+
+A small dark woman seated at a desk rose and held out her hand.
+
+“How do you do, Mr. Overbeck.”
+
+“Dr. Zerneke?”
+
+“Yes. You received my letter?”
+
+“You asked me to come to see you.”
+
+“It is very good of you to come. Sit down, please.”
+
+Norman took the chair at the corner of the desk.
+
+“My letter,” said Dr. Zerneke, “wasn’t very explicit, I’m afraid. But
+possibly you guessed something of its meaning. If you didn’t, I can
+make the situation clear to you.”
+
+Norman had an impulse to delay matters, by pretending ignorance. If
+he had not talked with old Gilbert--if he had not met Springer--if he
+had walked in here unsuspectingly--what would she have said? She had
+offered just now to make the situation clear to him.
+
+“Please do explain,” he said.
+
+“I’m sorry if my letter appeared unduly mysterious, Mr. Overbeck.
+You’ll understand in a moment why I felt obliged to write as I did. The
+fact is that I need your assistance in a small technical matter.”
+
+So that, thought Norman, was how she would have begun!
+
+“You said, I believe,” he remarked, still keeping to his rôle of
+ignorance, “that it was of personal interest to me.”
+
+“Yes,” she answered, “sufficiently so that I feel sure you will go to
+some little trouble to oblige us in the matter.”
+
+“I should be glad to do anything I can,” he said. This, at least, was
+a way of postponing the inevitable for a few moments. He felt like a
+shipwrecked man who is holding to a plank and keeping his head above
+water while in the distance a great wave is sweeping down upon him. And
+at the same time he felt strangely calm.
+
+“I am confident that you will, when I explain,” said the doctor. “Your
+name has been given me by one of my patients under circumstances which
+oblige me to ask for your assistance and coöperation. The matter is
+a little unusual: that is why I go at it in this somewhat elaborate
+manner. And because of its character, I think I ought to begin by
+assuring you that the question of money is not involved. I want to make
+that plain first of all.”
+
+“I see,” said Norman.
+
+“Very well,” said the doctor. “Now as to my patient. A year ago, Mr.
+Overbeck, if I am rightly informed, you were going to law school at
+Harvard.”
+
+“Yes,” he said. The great wave hung overhead, about to fall.
+
+“At that time you were acquainted with a girl named Isabel Drury.
+Recently she has come under my care, and--”
+
+Enough of this farce of ignorance!
+
+“I know,” said Norman, “she has had a baby.”
+
+“Oh--you know that?”
+
+“It’s true, then!”
+
+“Yes. And for certain reasons, Mr. Overbeck--”
+
+“It’s--alive?”
+
+“Oh, yes.”
+
+“A--a boy or girl?”
+
+“A boy. And for certain reason which I’ll explain in a moment, it is
+desirable to have a record of the paternity in these cases. It is
+for this purpose only, that Miss Drury has consented to allow me to
+communicate with you.”
+
+“Tell me,” said Norman impatiently, “when did it happen?”
+
+“What? Oh, the baby was born eleven days ago.--The matter,” she
+went on, returning to her argument, “is entirely a private one, you
+understand....”
+
+“How did she--come through it?” Norman asked.
+
+“The delivery,” said the doctor, “was a somewhat difficult one, but she
+stood it very well.”
+
+“She’s all right now?” Norman persisted.
+
+“Oh, quite all right. She’ll be able to leave the hospital within a
+week or so.”
+
+“And the baby?” asked Norman.
+
+“The baby is a very healthy child. No physical defects. Six pounds at
+birth, now about six and a half.”
+
+“Isn’t that rather small?” Norman asked anxiously.
+
+The doctor smiled. “Not at all,” she said, “especially not for a first
+child. A very good weight, in fact. And now as to yourself.”
+
+“Yes?” said Norman anxiously.
+
+“Do you mind my asking you a few questions?” She drew a sheet of paper
+toward her. “How old are you?”
+
+“Twenty-five,” said Norman in surprise.
+
+“Have you recently had a thorough medical examination?”
+
+“I took out some insurance recently,” he said, wondering what this was
+all about. “I was examined then.”
+
+“Will you take off your coat and vest, please?” she asked firmly.
+
+He obeyed with some inward astonishment, and followed her into an
+inner office, where he was weighed on her scales, seated on a kind of
+trestle, and thumped and listened to in chest and back.... “Am I all
+right?” he asked haughtily when they went back into the other office.
+
+The doctor smiled. “You seem to be. Don’t put on your coat yet. Have
+any of your family ever had tuberculosis?”
+
+“No,” he said.
+
+“Epilepsy?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Insanity?”
+
+“No!”
+
+“Roll up your sleeve, please.”
+
+He did so, obediently.
+
+“This will only take a moment.” She put a tourniquet around his upper
+arm and tightened it. She took out a queer shaped instrument of glass,
+partly wrapped with cotton, and with a needle on the end.
+
+“What is that?” he asked curiously.
+
+“A Kiedal tube,” she replied. She sterilized the needle, and dabbed
+with alcohol a spot on the skin of his upper arm. “Double up your
+fist--hard.”
+
+She skilfully thrust the needle point into a swollen vein, and pressed
+upon the cotton about the tube, which immediately filled with blood.
+She withdrew the needle, took off the tourniquet, and dabbed again at
+his arm with alcohol.
+
+“What is that for?” he asked.
+
+“For a Kahn blood test,” she replied. “Now you may put on your coat and
+vest. Can you give me a statement from your family doctor about your
+family history--as to the hereditary diseases I asked you about?”
+
+“Why--I suppose so. Yes, I’m sure I can. But why do you want to know
+these things?”
+
+“Oh--I thought I had explained that, Mr. Overbeck. It is always
+desirable in these cases, when possible.”
+
+“But what is it all about?” he asked. “You see, I am engaged to another
+girl. Do you think I ought to marry Isabel, in order to legitimate the
+child? Is that why you sent for me?”
+
+The doctor looked surprised. “Apparently I have not yet made the
+situation quite clear,” she said. “No, that wasn’t why I sent for you.
+It is, as I told you, merely a technical matter. With a medical record
+of paternity, showing that the child is free from hereditary disease,
+a more desirable adoption can be effected. There was no intention of
+embarrassing you further. As for these medical records, they will be
+sealed and filed with the St. Thecla Child Adoption Society, of which
+I am the medical director. These records are secret, and can’t even be
+brought into court. Under these circumstances, I felt sure you wouldn’t
+mind giving us this assistance.”
+
+“I--no; I mean yes,” said Norman weakly, as with that word “secret”
+ringing in his mind the world righted itself from topsy-turviness and
+settled down about him--familiar, solid, secure.... He could marry
+Madge, his career would not be affected, everything would be just as
+old Gilbert had prophesied....
+
+“And I thank you very much,” said the doctor, rising and holding out
+her hand.
+
+“Then--that’s all?” he asked.
+
+“Yes, that’s all--except for the family medical history that you
+promised to send me. You won’t forget that?”
+
+“No, I won’t forget. But if you can spare the time--a moment or
+two--I’d like to know something further about what’s going to be done
+with the baby.”
+
+“Certainly,” said the doctor, resuming her seat. “I’ll be glad to
+explain that to you. Just what is it you want to know?”
+
+“Well,” said Norman uncomfortably, “I really don’t know--but I don’t
+quite like the idea of adoption!”
+
+“Yes,” said the doctor, “some people feel that way. It offends them
+to think of the child being separated from its natural mother.” And
+she went on, in an impersonal manner to speak of the different laws of
+different states--something about the mother having to keep her babies
+herself....
+
+“This,” Dr. Zerneke commented, “is supposed to be good for the girl’s
+character. In some cases, no doubt it is. And it at least makes it
+rather unlikely that those girls will have any more illegitimate
+babies. That, I sometimes think, is the real reason for putting that
+burden on them.”
+
+Norman felt confused by these generalizations. This wasn’t exactly what
+he wanted to know....
+
+“Social workers believe, theoretically,” the doctor went on, “that
+both parents should be held as strictly as possible to their
+responsibilities for children born out of wedlock. But in actual
+practice that means compelling the girl to take care of the baby, with
+some inadequate financial aid, if any at all, from the man....”
+
+Norman would have felt indignant, except that she seemed to have
+forgotten that he was one of those men she was talking about.... Yes,
+she was ignoring his personal interest in the question altogether. She
+was treating him as though he were some visitor who had inquired about
+the work of her society.... It was queer....
+
+“The fact is,” she was saying, “that there isn’t any right solution of
+the problem of illegitimacy. If we had a decent civilization, any baby
+would be legitimate. To have babies is a natural function of women.
+But the penalties for having them outside of marriage are still pretty
+severe; and when there are homes where these children are wanted,
+there seems to be no reason for penalizing the children. That’s why we
+undertake to get these children adopted.”
+
+“Yes, but--who is going to take Isabel’s baby?” Norman made himself ask.
+
+“The Society has a large waiting list,” said the doctor. “The
+applicants are thoroughly investigated.”
+
+“Do you mean that you can’t--or won’t tell me?”
+
+“I shouldn’t think of telling you,” said the doctor.
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“It makes trouble in the future,” said the doctor. “The adoptive
+parents want to be assured of untroubled possession of the child. The
+girl sometimes changes her mind and tries to get her child back.”
+
+“Then Isabel isn’t to know who they are, either?”
+
+“No more than you. If there were any chance of a parent turning up
+later to reclaim the child, they would refuse to take it. You can see
+that, Mr. Overbeck.”
+
+“And Isabel agrees to this?”
+
+“She trusts us to do the best for the child.”
+
+“Has she--signed over the child yet?”
+
+“Not yet. If you have any doubts of the Society I represent, Mr.
+Overbeck, its record is easily looked up. In fact, Mr. Overbeck, since
+you are a lawyer, I wish you would make an investigation, and advise
+Miss Drury accordingly. The one thing we are anxious to avoid is the
+charge of exerting undue influence upon the mothers of these children.”
+
+Norman was conscious of a feeling of frustration which he could not
+quite understand.
+
+“I shall certainly make inquiries about the Society,” he said. “But I
+might remind you that there are my rights, as well as the mother’s, to
+be considered.”
+
+“I’m sorry to have to correct you on a legal point,” said the doctor
+drily, “but the fact is that you have no legal rights to or over Miss
+Drury’s child.”
+
+“Is that true?”
+
+“You’ll find it to be quite true, Mr. Overbeck.”
+
+Norman was silent for a long moment. Then he looked up and said:
+
+“I must see her--Isabel. Can I?”
+
+“Certainly,” said the doctor, “as far as I am concerned. If she wishes
+to see you.”
+
+“Why shouldn’t she wish to see me?” Norman demanded.
+
+“She may feel that the fact that you are her child’s father gives you
+no special claim upon her.”
+
+“Why do you say that?”
+
+“She was quite unwilling for me to communicate with you at all. She
+particularly said that she did not wish to see you.”
+
+“She said that?”
+
+“But she may feel differently about it now. I am only warning you.”
+
+“I’ll call her up and ask her,” said Norman grimly.
+
+“I’ll call up for you, if you like, right now, and find out.”
+
+“Do, please,” said Norman coldly.
+
+“Do you wish to see her this morning?”
+
+“The sooner the better.”
+
+The doctor lifted the receiver and called the number.
+
+“Obstetrical B, please.... Miss Higginson? This is Dr. Zerneke. Please
+send word to Miss Drury in Room 37 that Mr. Norman Overbeck would like
+to visit her this morning.... Yes, Over-beck.”
+
+Norman waited.
+
+“Yes.... She will? Thank you.”
+
+Dr. Zerneke turned to Norman. “It’s all right. You can go at eleven.
+But I will have to remind you that emotional scenes are not good for
+nursing mothers. And don’t stay longer than fifteen or twenty minutes.”
+
+“Very well,” said Norman, and rose impatiently.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII: Flowers
+
+
+HIS taxi passed a florist’s shop, and he leaned forward and pounded on
+the window. “Stop a minute. Yes, right here.”
+
+It might be ridiculous-- But why should it be ridiculous? A girl who
+had a baby, a girl in bed in a hospital, would like to have flowers
+brought by a visitor, surely. Any girl!
+
+In the shop, he looked about at the banked flowers in uncertainty.
+
+“We have some very nice American Beauty roses,” said the salesman,
+leading him toward the glass fronted refrigerator. He took out
+a bunch of long stemmed buds. “Fifteen dollars a dozen.” Norman
+felt uncomfortable. He was vaguely apprehensive of the emotional
+inappropriateness of American Beauty roses for this occasion.
+
+Something yellow caught his eye. “Jonquils,” he said. “Let me see
+those.”
+
+“A dollar a dozen,” said the salesman, without enthusiasm.
+
+Norman hesitated. A husband, a lover, a dear friend, might give the
+yellow flowers she liked. But what was he? Isabel had always that power
+of making him feel at a loss. From a moment of intimacy she could
+withdraw herself until he felt infinitely remote, the most casual of
+acquaintances, almost a stranger.
+
+He bought the roses.
+
+In the taxi, he had a disconcerting picture of himself, with stick and
+gloves and tissue-wrapped bouquet. It seemed altogether too jaunty.
+He felt like a silly-ass character in a story by P. G. Wodehouse.
+Vindictively he accused himself of being really that--a superficial
+person, with no capacity for dealing with the serious aspects of life.
+Yes, what should a P. G. Wodehouse young man be doing in a Tolstoian
+situation? But real life seemed to be like that.
+
+Abruptly he knocked on the glass window. “Drive back to that
+florist’s,” he ordered.
+
+The driver turned the corner, rounded the block, and drew up at the
+florist’s shop again.
+
+“Give me two dozen jonquils,” said Norman to the salesman.
+
+When they were wrapped up and paid for, he handed back the other
+bouquet. “You can keep these,” he said, and walked out.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII: Isabel
+
+
+THE taxi brought him to the hospital a few minutes after eleven. He
+went up to Obstetrical Ward B. To a nurse who sat at a desk in the
+corridor he gave his name. “I would like to see Miss Drury in room
+thirty-seven.”
+
+“Just a minute,” said the nurse, and pressed a button on her desk.
+Presently another uniformed young woman appeared. “Take this visitor to
+room thirty-seven, Miss Paget.”
+
+He accompanied the young woman down the corridor.
+
+She tapped at a door, opened it slightly, and glanced in. “A visitor
+for you,” she said, and ushered Norman in.
+
+On a small high bed lay Isabel, her pointed face framed in loosely
+strewn locks of short auburn hair against her pillow. She raised her
+head a little as the door closed behind him.
+
+“Oh,” she said, and smiled, “it’s you.” A thin arm was withdrawn
+languidly from under the coverlet, and a hand was offered to him. It
+seemed strangely frail for her hand. She seemed queerly thin and white.
+He put his hat, stick and bouquet upon the little table by the bed, and
+bent over her hand. A sudden emotion flooded him so that he could not
+speak for a moment. He held her thin hand to his lips. He would have
+dropped on his knees beside the bed--but that would have been awkward,
+the bed was so high. His sense of the ridiculous helped him to recover
+his self-possession.
+
+“Isabel!” he said.
+
+“Yes, here I am,” she said. “Who would have thought it would come to
+this?” Her face was lit up by one of her amused ironic perceptions. How
+well he knew that look!
+
+“The wood near Athens,” he said.
+
+“Yes--the wood near Athens! But do sit down, Norman.”
+
+He drew the chair up close to her bed.
+
+“I hope you understand,” she went on, “that it really isn’t my fault
+you’ve been dragged into all this. Dr. Zerneke explained everything to
+you, didn’t she?”
+
+He nodded, not quite able to trust himself to speak.
+
+“I didn’t think I’d see you at all,” she said. “I thought it would be
+simpler not to. But when you called up, that seemed to me rather silly.”
+
+“Why didn’t you want to see me?” he asked.
+
+“Well--everything was settled, and I didn’t want things upset.
+I haven’t got my strength back yet, and I didn’t feel equal to
+arguing with you. I remembered you as being rather controversially
+conventional, you know.”
+
+“I suppose I am rather conventional,” he said humbly. “But what did
+you think my attitude would be, about this?”
+
+“Oh, I thought you might be shocked at the idea of my deserting my
+child. I thought you might preach the duties of motherhood to me--that
+sort of thing. You remember, we once had an argument about it. You
+thought woman’s destiny after all was the home. I suppose it is, for
+most of them. But I’ve got to paint, Norman. I can’t give up my life to
+a baby. Please don’t think I’m heartless. But I’m not going to let a
+biological accident change my whole life.”
+
+“Why didn’t you tell me about it?” Norman asked abruptly.
+
+“Well, I didn’t know for a long time.”
+
+“You didn’t know!”
+
+“At least I wouldn’t believe it. I was an awful fool, Norman. You
+see, I’d always thought of myself as an artist--not a woman. I simply
+couldn’t admit the possibility of such a thing as my having a baby. You
+remember, when you were afraid this might happen, and I laughed and
+said oh, it would be all right? That was just my sublime egotism!” She
+laughed. “I thought it _couldn’t_ happen to me.”
+
+“But you found out you were a woman after all,” he said solemnly.
+
+She stirred restlessly beneath the coverlet. “I found out that my body
+is a woman’s body,” she said. “And that still seems queer to me. Yes,
+apparently it’s true that this body of mine is a baby-factory, just
+like other girls’ bodies. And what a strange and cumbersome process
+it is, Norman! I’ve a good chance to observe it, you see. I was under
+ether during the final crisis, so I can’t speak of that. But I saw and
+felt enough to make me wonder at women--why they stand for it, being
+made use of this way as baby-producers. I suppose Nature traps them
+into it--and then they accept their fate. But I’m not going to! My body
+has been used nine months for a purpose that I never consented to--used
+and occupied and then torn and mangled--but I’m free now at last, and
+I’m going to stay free. My body may be a woman’s body, but my thoughts
+are not a woman’s thoughts. I have something else to do than take care
+of a baby! And even my silly body seems to know that at last.--I’m
+supposed to be a milk-producing animal now, a kind of contented cow
+with bloated udders. But my milk is drying up. Dr. Zerneke says it is
+because of my mental conflict. My mind, you see, is resuming possession
+of my body. Soon it will be all mine again. And then I shall be a
+painter once more, and never a woman again, Norman.
+
+“And yet,” she continued, “there has been one good thing about it. It
+has set me free from my family. They’ve repudiated me, thank God!--let
+me go my own way at last. I suppose that was why I could be so calm
+about it, and practically think nothing about it for so many months. I
+had nothing to lose when the truth came out--except my respectability.
+Nothing to lose but my chains, and a world to gain, as the soap-box
+orators say. And it was worth it. I comforted myself with that thought,
+Norman, when the pain came--that I was giving birth to a bastard child,
+and my shocked family would never lay loving hands on me again to drag
+me back into the fold. I was buying my freedom at last by going through
+that torture.”
+
+“Don’t!” said Norman involuntarily.
+
+“I’m sorry!” she laughed and reached out a white hand and patted his
+bent head as though he were a child. “I shouldn’t have talked that way.
+Poor boy, I’ve shocked you again. I suppose you came here to see a
+Madonna. I never could live up to your romantic expectations, Norman.
+You’d better stop trying to understand me. There’s no reason why you
+should be bothered. It’s no concern of yours.”
+
+“It seems to me,” said Norman, choking a little as he tried to speak,
+“that it--is--a concern of mine.”
+
+“I didn’t intend that it should be. Did it upset you when you heard
+about it?”
+
+“Naturally it upset me. But Dr. Zerneke’s letter was so diplomatic that
+at first I didn’t know what it was all about.”
+
+“That’s my fault. I made her promise to write very diplomatically. I
+thought of you in the bosom of your family there in Vickley--you might
+have forgotten the girl who led you astray back in Cambridge. I told
+her to say that I was the girl who took you to Springer’s studio.”
+
+“She mentioned Springer,” said Norman, and he thought of all
+the trouble that mention had caused--old Gilbert’s surmises of
+double-dealing. How far away that coil of respectability seemed now!
+
+“I saw him at Steinbach’s this morning,” he said.
+
+“Springer? Yes, he has a show on at Steinbach’s next week. He’s done
+some very fine things. You ought to see them.”
+
+“He spoke of you.”
+
+“He and Roberta have been very good to me. I don’t know what I’d have
+done without them. It’s nice, too, his being in Chicago now. I have
+somebody to talk to. And he’s got me a place to stay, in Michigan,
+until I’m able to stand the trip across. You’ve heard of my luck, I
+suppose? I’m going to study in Paris! I owe that to them, too. They’ve
+found me the sort of patron every young artist dreams about. A rich
+woman in Boston is giving me my traveling expenses and fifteen dollars
+a week for a year. With three hundred francs a week in Paris, I shall
+feel that I own the world!”
+
+“Does Springer approve of--your plans?”
+
+She frowned. “Springer is a dear,” she said, “but he can’t forget that
+I am a woman, and he doesn’t believe that women _can_ be artists in a
+serious way. See what he’s done to Roberta--”
+
+“Roberta is his wife, I take it?”
+
+She nodded. “Roberta had a great deal of promise as a painter. But
+she’s settled down to just being a painter’s wife. I think that’s why
+she has done all these things for me--to give me my chance.”
+
+“Then _he_ doesn’t think you ought to go to Paris?”
+
+“He doesn’t say anything about it. But he’s not very enthusiastic.”
+
+“What does he want you to do?”
+
+“I don’t know. Secretly, I suppose, he thinks I ought to give up my
+career and live for my child. Something of that sort.”
+
+“And you consider that--quite out of the question, I suppose.”
+
+“Yes, Norman. I’ve tried to tell you why. And I don’t think any sort
+of compromise would do--such as keeping the baby and going on with
+my career. I’d not be a good mother. It just wouldn’t work out. It
+wouldn’t be good for the child to have a mother like that. The only
+sensible thing is to have the baby adopted by people who do want one.”
+
+“Even if you know nothing of these people, Isabel?”
+
+“Dr. Zerneke knows them. And I’m sure they couldn’t be worse parents
+than I should be!”
+
+“Suppose,” said Norman, “they should be conventional people--and the
+boy should inherit your talent. They wouldn’t understand him. They’d
+try to discourage him.”
+
+“If he were an artist, that wouldn’t keep him from being one.” Then
+Isabel smiled. “But why not suppose that he will inherit your traits,
+Norman? That’s quite as likely. And then he’d get along perfectly well
+in his bourgeois environment.”
+
+“So that’s what you think of me--as a perfectly bourgeois person,” said
+Norman.
+
+“You’ve managed to make terms with the world you live in,” she said, “I
+thought you got along with it very comfortably.”
+
+“So I did,” he said, “until yesterday--when this thing came up. This
+has knocked the foundations of my old life to pieces.”
+
+“I’m sorry,” said Isabel. “I hope it’s not as bad as that. This needn’t
+affect your life.”
+
+“It does,” said Norman. “There’s no use pretending. Isabel, won’t you
+marry me?”
+
+She took his hand between both of hers for a moment. “It’s terribly
+sweet of you to want to, Norman. But we’ve already discussed that, back
+at Cambridge. You remember.”
+
+“I remember that you didn’t want to marry a bourgeois young lawyer and
+settle down to a life of teas and bridge in Vickley,” he said. “But
+now--I’m afraid you’d not be marrying a prosperous lawyer in Vickley,
+Isabel. You’d be marrying”--he smiled--“a ruined man and an outcast.”
+
+“You make it very attractive, Norman,” she said. “It’s a temptation to
+marry you, just to ruin you. But the trouble is, the marriage which
+would be your ruin would make me a respectable woman again. I can’t
+venture that. I’ve too recently escaped from prison to give up my
+freedom. I won’t marry you, Norman.”
+
+“Is that your real reason?” he asked.
+
+“Marriage is marriage, Norman. I’m going to Paris to paint. You want to
+keep me here, looking after your baby. No, thank you.”
+
+“Is that the real reason?” he repeated.
+
+“What else? Oh, I suppose you mean, do I love you?”
+
+“Perhaps that’s what I do mean. But I suppose I know the answer
+already.”
+
+“If I weren’t going to be a painter, I could love you, Norman. If I
+were a real girl, I’d be proud to have your babies. I’m sorry, for your
+sake--and perhaps for my own--that I’m such a queer monster as I am,
+and--and not a nice girl for you, Norman.”
+
+She turned her head away from him and flung her arm up to cover her
+face. She was crying.
+
+“Go away,” she said, after a moment.
+
+He thought with a thrill that this wild girl might yet be conquered....
+And then he remembered that he mustn’t upset Dr. Zerneke’s patient.
+
+He rose, contritely.
+
+She found a handkerchief under her pillow, and wiped her eyes, and
+turned toward him. He was fumbling with the tissue wrappings of the
+bouquet.
+
+“Oh, flowers!” she cried. And then, as he unwrapped them: “Jonquils! I
+love them! How nice of you to remember!”
+
+She is a girl, after all! thought Norman.
+
+“Put them in the water pitcher,” she told him.
+
+He did so.
+
+“And now come here and kiss me.”
+
+He bent over her, and their lips touched. What did that kiss mean?
+Gratitude, to be sure. A lonely girl in a hospital.... He wished he
+could believe it was more.
+
+“Norman, dear,” she said softly, “will you forgive me for being--what I
+am?”
+
+“But are you that, really?” he asked. “I wish I knew!”
+
+“Yes--yes--yes!” she cried, raising herself up from her pillow. “Don’t
+be fooled by a few silly tears, Norman. The real me is in Paris now,
+sitting before an easel in a paint-smeared smock. You’ve found me weak
+and helpless, but I’ve that hope. And if I didn’t have it, as God knows
+I mightn’t have--if I didn’t have Paris to look forward to and three
+hundred francs a week for a year and no questions asked--if I had been
+penniless and scared, I might have married you, Norman. But you’d only
+have had my woman’s body--my thoughts would never have stayed with you.
+That’s the truth, and we’re both lucky to have escaped such a trap.
+Think! if you’d given up everything for me, and then found you could
+never really have me--and if I had given up my dreams for food and
+shelter--we’d have hated each other, Norman.”
+
+“It isn’t just us,” he said. “Isabel, it’s our son. Couldn’t we--”
+
+She bit her lip and shook her head.
+
+“Besides,” she said, “you’re engaged to another girl. Hal told me so.”
+
+“What does that matter, now?”
+
+“She’ll give you another son.”
+
+“Doesn’t,” he asked desperately, “doesn’t it mean anything to you?”
+
+“Why,” she asked wonderingly, “should our child mean so much to you?
+You’ve never even seen him.”
+
+“I want to see him.”
+
+“You can. But don’t you understand--”
+
+“I understand that he would interfere with your career, yes,” said
+Norman harshly.
+
+“Hate me if you want to. But I am what I am. And if I’ve nursed this
+baby at my breast, and still think of myself as an artist and not as
+a mother--” She paused.... “Norman--I fought out this wife and mother
+business once before--when I was eighteen. I was engaged. And I was
+really in love ... more than I ever will be again. But I saw what
+marriage would do to me, and I wouldn’t go through with it. My mother
+tried to make me. But I wouldn’t--I couldn’t. I settled it for myself
+then that I was going to be an artist, and not a wife and mother. I
+don’t suppose you’ll ever understand. But there’s no use arguing with
+me. I’ve my own road to go.”
+
+“But to give your child away to strangers--!” he protested bitterly.
+
+She sank back on her pillow. “I can’t talk to you any more,” she said
+wearily. “You’d better go.”
+
+“I want to see my son,” he said stubbornly.
+
+“The nurse will show you.”
+
+“I’m sorry,” he said. “I didn’t mean to upset you. And--I’ll try to
+understand your point of view....”
+
+“Good-by,” she said. “And thank you for the flowers.”
+
+There was a tap at the door.
+
+“Yes?” said Isabel. “I think,” she said to Norman, “that’s the baby
+now.”
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX: The Baby
+
+
+THE door opened, and an angular, old-maidish-looking nurse entered with
+a baby in her arms. “Feeding time,” she said.
+
+She went to the bed and laid the baby down beside Isabel. “I’ll bring
+the bottle,” she said, and went out.
+
+“It’s a good thing,” said Isabel, “that this is a bottle feeding. I’m
+not supposed to go through scenes like this--it’s not good for my milk.”
+
+Norman looked down at the baby in a kind of terrified curiosity. It was
+a very tiny thing, with a round face, and some blond hair like his own
+on the queer-shaped skull. The blue eyes blinked up at him sleepily.
+
+“Yes,” said Isabel, “this is what we have been rowing about.” She
+turned to the baby. “This man thinks I ought to take care of you,”
+she said. “But you know better, don’t you? I’m a very poor mother, I
+haven’t even enough milk for you, and the little I have is not up to
+standard. You won’t be sorry to see the last of me.” She smiled at
+Norman. “Well,” she said, “he’s a healthy little bastard, isn’t he?”
+
+Norman flinched at the word.
+
+“Well, he is, you know,” said Isabel. “And he’s too young to have his
+feelings hurt by mentioning it. You and I ought to be able to face the
+fact. After all, Norman, it’s the sort of thing that happens quite
+regularly and inevitably in every civilized country on the globe. Do
+you happen to know the statistics for illegitimacy? I made Dr. Zerneke
+give me something to read about it. It’s very interesting. It seems
+that in the United States about one in every forty-two births is
+illegitimate. I’ve been figuring it out. Sixty thousand illegitimate
+births a year comes to about a hundred and sixty-four a day, or seven
+an hour, or one every eight minutes and twenty seconds. Statistics are
+very consoling. They take away the uniqueness of one’s discomforts.”
+
+He was looking at the baby. Gradually it had become thoroughly awake.
+It stretched its arms, and yawned magnificently. Its lips began to make
+sucking movements. Its face grew red, and broke into a wrinkled grimace
+of anger.
+
+Isabel went on talking. “Every year--you see, I’ve had nothing to
+do for days except to study statistics--out of every hundred and
+fifty-nine unmarried females of childbearing age, one gives birth to an
+illegitimate child. This year it so happened that the lot fell to me.”
+
+A loud wail came from the little bundle.
+
+“I’ve nothing for you,” said Isabel. “You’ll have to wait for your
+bottle.”
+
+“Why is his head such a queer shape?” asked Norman.
+
+“You ought to have seen it at first. It was pulled out of shape getting
+into the world. It’s getting to look all right now.”
+
+The baby’s wails grew more insistent.
+
+“Just a minute, young man,” said Isabel.
+
+“Have you--named him?” asked Norman.
+
+“Well,” said Isabel, a little embarrassed, “it really makes no
+difference--the people who are going to have him will never know, and
+they’ll name him all over again. But when I first saw him, he did look
+so much like you! Do you mind?”
+
+“You named him Norman?”
+
+“When the doctor was making out the birth certificate, she told me
+I’d have to give him some sort of first name--the first one that came
+into my head would do, she said. And that was the first one that came
+into my head. I know I shouldn’t have done it. But it doesn’t really
+implicate you, Norman.”
+
+“Why the devil,” asked Norman, “should you be so considerate of _me_?”
+
+“Because it wasn’t your fault, Norman. You didn’t know you were going
+to be let in for anything like this. You’ve your own life to live. It
+wouldn’t be fair.”
+
+“If--for any reason--” he said, “you had decided to keep the baby, what
+would you have done then--about me?”
+
+“I’d never have told you anything about it at all. It would have been
+my baby. I don’t see why you should be asked to support it, in any
+case.”
+
+“But I think that’s silly,” said Norman. “Because I could support
+it--and you couldn’t.”
+
+“Oh, yes, I could. Girls do, you know. And I’ll tell you this. I didn’t
+intend to, but I will.... You see, when a girl is going to give up
+her baby for adoption, she doesn’t nurse it at all, and never sees
+it--except just once, before she signs the papers. They manage it that
+way for fear of arousing the maternal instinct. Because usually, after
+a girl has nursed a baby, she wants to keep it. But that seemed to me
+a cowardly thing to do. I told Dr. Zerneke I’d nurse my baby, and take
+my chances of my maternal instinct being aroused. I didn’t explain to
+her, but I can tell _you_--it was a kind of test of myself: whether
+I was destined to be a mother or a painter. I decided that if I felt
+like keeping the baby, I would--I’d get a job of some kind and give
+up my year in Paris and everything--stop painting, and be a regular
+female.... Well, you see, my milk is drying up! And I don’t feel at all
+like a mother--I still want to paint! So that’s why--”
+
+“I see,” said Norman.
+
+Yes, he thought bitterly, if she were a real mother, she’d be
+interested in comforting that crying baby, instead of explaining her
+psychology!
+
+The spinsterish-looking nurse came in efficiently with the bottle.
+
+“I think your visitor has been here long enough,” she said firmly.
+
+“I’m going,” said Norman.
+
+He gathered up his hat and stick. “I’ll see you again, if I may.”
+
+“Yes, do,” said Isabel.
+
+“Here, precious!” said the nurse, cooingly, “here’s your itsie
+bottsie-wottsie.”
+
+Norman heard her crooning over his child as he went out the door.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter X: Art Alone Endures
+
+
+OUTSIDE of the hospital he hailed a taxi, and gave the name of his
+hotel.
+
+Coming out of some reverie too deep to remember, he looked out of the
+window and saw that he was on Michigan Boulevard, passing the Art
+Institute. On an impulse, he stopped the taxi, and went in.
+
+He climbed the wide stair to the large room in which the treasures of
+the place were on view--a miscellaneous lot of treasures: some of them,
+like Bougereau’s bather, cheapened by time’s changes in the realm of
+taste; none but the ignorant now stopped to admire the high lights on
+those perfect and polished toe-nails. And poor Gilbert Stuart--what
+an irony for a painter to be cherished because of the historical
+importance of one of his subjects! But here was, at least, a Van Dyck.
+Norman paused in front of it.... And from somewhere out of a memory
+whose leisure hours for some years had been given to connoisseurship
+in the art of painting, there leaped out the irrelevant fact that Van
+Dyck had had an illegitimate child in the Netherlands; the mother being
+unknown to history.... He passed on.
+
+He did not know what he was looking for.... Possibly for some proof
+that art was as important as he had always taken for granted that
+it was. These artists starved and painted, attained--if they were
+lucky--the heights of fame, and left pictures that eventually found
+their way to some American gallery. That seemed to be the final, ironic
+goal of all their striving. It was, no doubt, very improbable that
+this willful girl would ever achieve any sort of fame. But if she did,
+beyond her wildest dreams--then, some day, a troubled young man would
+stand in front of some picture of hers, and remember that she was said
+to have had an illegitimate child in America.
+
+“The father,” he murmured half aloud, “being unknown to history.”
+
+Yes, times were changing. Women were taking the privileges of men. And
+that careless masculine privilege of leaving behind an illegitimate
+child or so in the course of one’s career--that, too. Van Dyck hadn’t
+been stopped in his painter’s progress by a mere illegitimate child:
+why should Isabel Drury be?
+
+Oh, no doubt there was something to be said for her attitude. And it
+was important, doubtless, that she have her chance to paint a picture
+that would be bought after her death for a fabulous sum by an American
+millionaire. Just why it was important he could not at the moment
+seem to be able to tell himself. But he had always known that it was
+important....
+
+A fragment of a poem of Gautier’s flickered into his mind. “_Tout
+passe. La vers souveraine demeurent._” That had impressed him greatly
+when he read it at college. All passes; sovereign verse--or, as in this
+case, painting--lasts....
+
+To be sure. Children grow up; become old; die. Paint on canvas stays
+young. More or less. Less rather than more, to tell the truth. Paint
+ages, too. The gloom into which Whistler’s paintings are already
+fading.... An accident, perhaps. Isabel didn’t use that kind of a
+palette. She was a post-Impressionist.... But styles decay, too.
+_Pointillisme_--how quaint it looks already! Picasso--will he and all
+his manners seem to another generation as futile as Meissonier?... This
+whole age: was it perhaps afflicted, as some said, with a spiritual
+sickness? Was it because of something morbid in his own mind that he
+had ever been drawn to it?... A bourgeois thing to think!
+
+But then, he was a bourgeois: no doubt of that. What did he know about
+art? He had enjoyed the belief that he knew a great deal. And that did
+no harm--it would encourage him to buy some poor devil’s pictures; and
+if he guessed right, he could present them to a museum. That was his
+function--to buy pictures.... Some day he might have the privilege of
+buying some of Isabel’s.
+
+When he was dead, his widow would call in an expert and ask, “Are these
+worth anything?” If they weren’t, she would burn them up as trash--the
+mere record of a girl’s vain dreams. If the expert said, “Oh, yes,
+indeed, madam, those are very fine early Drurys!”--then they would
+pass into the possession of some millionaire. They would fetch a good
+price.... But the man who bought them wouldn’t know how cheap they were
+at any price.... He would be getting, not just paint and canvas and a
+name, but the milk that had dried up in Isabel’s breasts, the love that
+she had kept from her baby, the hope that she had refused to squander
+on a mere living child--all that she had saved up and put into her
+masterpieces rather than waste in motherhood: that’s what he would be
+getting for his money. And when after dinner he took his guests for a
+stroll through his gallery, and-- But this was mere sentimentality....
+
+Norman awoke from his reverie, in front of Millet’s picture of the
+new-born calf being brought home by two peasants on a straw-covered
+litter, the mother cow following along and licking her baby.... Silly
+sentimentalists, cows. Didn’t they know their real business was to
+produce cream for the tables of the bourgeoisie? And Millet--a damned
+sentimentalist, himself. Any post-impressionist would say so....
+
+Norman remembered suddenly his luncheon engagement with old Gilbert.
+They were to meet at the hotel.
+
+He hurried out.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XI: Common Sense
+
+
+“WELL,” said old Gilbert, at the table in the corner of the hotel
+dining room, “how have _you_ been spending your morning?”
+
+“I went to see Dr. Zerneke,” said Norman. “I couldn’t wait.”
+
+Old Gilbert stopped wiping his mouth and threw his napkin violently on
+the table.
+
+“I’ll be damned!” he said. “I suppose I ought to have known it.”
+
+“I couldn’t stay away,” said Norman. “I had to know.”
+
+“Well, and what did you find out?”
+
+“Your guess was true, of course. It’s Isabel Drury. She had her baby
+eleven days ago.”
+
+“I’ve had time to find out that much myself,” said Gilbert. “I had some
+one call up all the hospitals in town for me. What I want to know is
+what kind of mess you’ve got yourself into.”
+
+“If I haven’t got myself into a mess,” said Norman, “it’s not my fault,
+I’m afraid. I didn’t try to deny anything. But all that this doctor
+wanted--”
+
+“Yes, what did she want?”
+
+“She wanted to find out whether the baby has a healthy father. The
+people who are planning to adopt the child wished to be sure of that,
+it seems.”
+
+“Yes--and what else?”
+
+“That appears to be all. She was at great pains to assure me that I had
+no further responsibility in the matter. When I’ve furnished her with
+some more medical data, I can dismiss the matter from my mind entirely,
+I gather.”
+
+“The girl makes no claim on you?”
+
+“None at all.”
+
+Old Gilbert looked immensely relieved.
+
+“Tell me,” said Norman, “have you ever heard of the Thecla Child
+Adoption Society?”
+
+“Yes,” said Gilbert. “I’ve looked that up too.”
+
+“Is it a reputable organization?”
+
+“Perfectly. And I had Dr. Zerneke looked up, too.”
+
+“You found her to be all right?” asked Norman.
+
+“Professional reputation unimpeachable, it seems. Why?”
+
+“Well--about the adoption matter.”
+
+“That’s all right. They’ll handle it in the right way. I found out
+something about their work. And if you’ve been assured that your secret
+will be kept, you’ve nothing to fear from them.”
+
+“I didn’t mean that, precisely.”
+
+“What, then?”
+
+“I was thinking--of the child.”
+
+“They know their business. The child will be put in good hands. You
+needn’t worry about that.”
+
+Old Gilbert once more gave to his lunch the attention it deserved. “You
+see,” he said comfortably between mouthfuls, “things have turned out
+all right after all--just as I said they would. And now that you’ve had
+your mind put at ease, I think you’d better go right home. There’s no
+point in your hanging around Chicago.”
+
+“Why do you want me to go home?” asked Norman.
+
+“Because I think well enough is best left alone,” said Gilbert.
+“Everything is all right now, and that’s a good way to leave it.”
+
+“You mean that you’re afraid I might go to see Isabel?”
+
+“You’re safer, I think, back in Vickley.”
+
+“Well--I might as well tell you that I saw her, too. And the baby.”
+
+“You _have_ taken this case into your own hands, with a vengeance,”
+said old Gilbert in discouragement. “I was a damned fool ever to bring
+you here. Well, tell me the worst at once. Did you offer to marry her?”
+
+“I asked her to, and she refused.”
+
+“You asked her to!--and she refused? You certainly have fool’s luck.
+But why did she refuse you?”
+
+“For the same reasons as before. It would interfere with her career.”
+
+“That’s beyond me. But I suppose she has her reasons. Lord, what a
+tight squeak! You don’t know how lucky you are! But I suppose you
+thought that was the noble thing to do--offer to marry her! You didn’t
+happen to remember, I suppose, that you were engaged to another girl.”
+
+“It didn’t seem to make any difference.”
+
+“Boy, she might have taken you up. You were putting your head into the
+lion’s mouth!”
+
+“Oh, I knew what I was doing. And it wasn’t just a noble gesture. I was
+quite ready to let everything else go to hell.”
+
+“Good Lord, you’re as much infatuated with her as all that?”
+
+“No. I’m not even sure that I love her at all.”
+
+“Do you mean to say that you offered to marry her just to make an
+honest woman of her?”
+
+Norman laughed. “Nothing like that.”
+
+“Then why in the name of God did you offer to marry her? Can you tell
+me that?”
+
+“That seemed the simplest thing to do,” said Norman.
+
+“I think you’re a little mad,” said old Gilbert.
+
+“I don’t know,” said Norman. “I suppose it was foolish. Any way, she
+wouldn’t.”
+
+“Fortunately,” said Gilbert, “she seems to be just as crazy as you are!
+What would your father think of me if I took you here to Chicago and
+let you get into a mess like that, right under my nose!”
+
+“Well, you needn’t worry about it,” said Norman.
+
+“I shan’t ask her again.”
+
+“I should hope not!” said old Gilbert.
+
+“I saw Springer this morning.” And then Norman was sorry he had
+mentioned it. Gilbert would commence again on his suspicions.
+
+“What is _he_ doing here?” asked Gilbert.
+
+“Getting ready for his exhibit.”
+
+“Oh, you went to see him?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Well, what did _he_ say?”
+
+“He didn’t know me. He said Isabel had appendicitis. His wife has found
+her a rich patron, and she’s going to Paris to study.”
+
+“I’ve been wondering who was paying her expenses,” said Gilbert.
+
+“I suppose you still wish to think that Springer is mixed up in this
+affair,” said Norman, “and that something is being put over on me. But
+I am convinced that you are wrong. And I have acknowledged the child as
+my own.”
+
+“I’ve only been trying to act as your friend in this matter, Norman. Of
+course, if you are convinced that the child is yours, there’s nothing
+more to say on that score. The only question is, what do you propose
+to do about it? Publish the fact from the housetops? I appreciate
+your honorable scruples. They seem to me excessive, I must admit. But
+you have acted upon them--you have offered to marry the girl; and she
+has declined your offer. The question of money does not seem to be
+involved. If it were a matter of paying the girl’s expenses--or if
+she wanted to keep the child herself--I’m sure you would wish to be
+generous. As it is, there seems to be nothing more that you can do. Dr.
+Zerneke will find a good home for the child. The girl will go ahead and
+paint pictures. And you will go back to Vickley and resume the practice
+of law. That is the situation as I see it. The matter is closed. It has
+been very exciting, and no doubt instructive. But it’s all over.”
+
+“Yes,” said Norman, and sighed. “I suppose it is all over.” All except
+remembering, and thinking, and wondering--and he’d have the rest of his
+life for that.
+
+A picture flashed into his mind. An absurd picture--a melodramatic
+picture. He was older, and driving a car slowly through a Chicago
+street at night. A young man, with a revolver in his hand, stepped in
+front of the car and called, “Stop!” But he bent his head and stepped
+hard on the gas. A bullet grazed his cheek like a knife, and then
+he became aware that the car was dragging a dead, mangled body. And
+somehow he knew that it was his son’s....
+
+He pulled himself back to reality, and smiled wanly at the absurdity of
+his fancies.
+
+“Well,” old Gilbert was saying, “this business has turned out
+remarkably well, considering everything. We can go back to the status
+quo ante without a qualm. We take the eleven o’clock train to-night.
+You’ll be here at ten ready to go?”
+
+“Yes,” said Norman, “I’ll be ready.”
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII: Bad Dreams
+
+
+BUT what could he do that afternoon?...
+
+Two o’clock found him back in Dr. Zerneke’s waiting room.
+
+“Have you looked us up?” asked Dr. Zerneke cheerfully, when he was
+admitted to her office.
+
+“If I were a poor devil of a soda-fountain clerk,” said Norman, “and
+Isabel a stenographer I had got into trouble--what would you do?”
+
+“Just what I have done in this case,” said Dr. Zerneke. “The rest, so
+far as I am concerned, would be up to you and her. Did you ask her to
+marry you?”
+
+“Yes,” said Norman. “And she refused.”
+
+“I thought that was what would happen,” said the doctor. “She’s a very
+determined young woman. And all women are not to be forced into a
+single mold. She wants her career. So we must find the child a proper
+home.”
+
+“Yes, I understand that,” said Norman. “But what I object to is this
+business of turning the baby over to strangers!”
+
+“They are not strangers to the Society,” said Dr. Zerneke. “We have
+more applicants than we have babies, and as I told you, they are very
+thoroughly investigated. We know all about them.”
+
+“But I don’t,” said Norman stubbornly.
+
+“I’m afraid that can’t be helped,” said Dr. Zerneke. And then she
+repeated her question: “Have you made inquiries about the work of our
+Society?”
+
+“Oh,” said Norman, “I’ve no doubt your Society is all right. But--” He
+paused helplessly.
+
+“I was sure you would come to that conclusion,” said Dr. Zerneke. And
+then, as he sat there, silent and troubled, she added: “I don’t wish to
+take advantage of your situation, Mr. Overbeck, but if it would help to
+ease your feelings the Society would be glad to accept a check to help
+carry on its work.”
+
+“Yes,” he said, “I’ll be glad to do that.”
+
+He took out his check-book and his fountain-pen, and started to write.
+But suddenly he laid down his pen.
+
+“No,” he said, “I can’t buy them off that way.”
+
+He spoke softly, as if to himself, but Dr. Zerneke asked sharply:
+
+“Buy who off?”
+
+“The bad dreams--the pictures,” he said. “The things that come into my
+mind.”... A frightful vision had visited him as he held the pen poised
+over the check. It was like the one that had come to him at lunch, with
+Gilbert--only worse, this time. Its misty fringes still clung to his
+mind and afflicted him with horror.
+
+The doctor seemed to understand. She reached out and put her hand for
+a moment on one of his stooped, miserable shoulders. “I’m sorry,” she
+said. “What do you want to do?”
+
+“I--I don’t know,” he said.
+
+That vision-- No, of course nothing like that would ever really happen.
+But was he to be tormented with such pictures all his life? In every
+handcuffed youth being taken to prison--in every poster offering a
+reward for a young murderer--was he to seek for the features of his
+unknown son?
+
+“If you have any practical alternative to offer--” the doctor was
+saying.
+
+His mind was still grappling with the thought of a life haunted by such
+visions.... His wife would say, “Dearest, you’re positively morbid
+about crime-news!” He would have legitimate sons. “Dad, don’t you think
+I’m old enough to have a car of my own?” And then he would have to
+think about his other son, the one nobody knew about--a tramp, perhaps,
+freezing on the rods of a freight-train. He would be like a man haunted.
+
+“Do you think your own family would care to adopt the child?” Dr.
+Zerneke asked. “Is that what you would like to do?”
+
+“I hadn’t thought of that!” he said. “Of course--that’s what I’ll do!”
+
+“Well,” said the doctor thoughtfully, “you can consult them about it,
+and let me know.”
+
+Some dim apprehension of the actualities of that proposal came to
+him, clouding his relief. “Yes,” he said, “I’ll have to put it up to
+them....”
+
+“Of course,” said the doctor, “they may not take kindly to the idea.”
+
+“They’ll--_have_ to do it!” said Norman.
+
+“We’ll see,” said the doctor. “But I hope there will not be too much
+delay in settling the matter, one way or another.”
+
+“I’ll go back home to-night,” said Norman.
+
+“And do you think you’ll be able to give me the decision within, say,
+two weeks?”
+
+“Oh, yes,” he said.
+
+She rose. “I’ll expect to see or hear from you in a fortnight, then.”
+
+“In two weeks from to-day,” he said, “I shall come here to get my son,”
+and he walked out like some one in a dream.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII: En Route
+
+
+THERE was no use in waiting for old Gilbert. He would take the next
+train to Vickley.
+
+He packed, and left a message, and caught a train which would get him
+home at midnight.
+
+The train had barely left the environs of Chicago when he realized
+abruptly the folly of his errand. What! Propose to his father and
+mother that they should adopt and bring up his illegitimate child! It
+was too preposterous.
+
+He felt an impulse to get up and jump from the slowly moving train. He
+would go to Dr. Zerneke and ... And what? Give her a check?
+
+He sank back in his chair. The train slid more swiftly out past the
+little towns, gathered momentum, hurled itself on toward Vickley. The
+song of the wheels on the rails was a mocking one. It seemed to say,
+over and over, “You’re in for it now! You’re in for it now!”
+
+He could get off at Aurora, of course.
+
+No, he’d have to see it through, somehow.
+
+Was it so preposterous? He wished he had asked Dr. Zerneke for some
+statistics about this situation! Was it often done? He smiled, after a
+fashion, at the thought of saying to his father: “Every year, in the
+United States, six hundred respectable families (or sixty, or whatever
+it might be) take a son’s illegitimate child to raise. You see, this
+has plenty of precedent.” Yes, doubtless it did sometimes happen in the
+United States: but not in Vickley. Not with people like the Overbecks.
+
+He simply couldn’t involve his family in a thing like that.
+
+(Well, nobody asked him to! Why didn’t he get off at Aurora--go back
+and sign the check which let him off scot-free?)
+
+The train stopped presently at Aurora. Here was his chance. He’d better
+take it.
+
+But he was still in his chair when the train pulled out of Aurora.
+
+He simply couldn’t decide this thing by himself. It was too
+overwhelming--too full of lifelong consequences. It needed a wiser head
+than his own. And his father was the wisest man he knew.
+
+He would tell his father. His father might know what to do.
+
+He envisaged in imagination that interview with his father.
+
+“Did you seduce this girl under promise of marriage?”
+
+And “Was she a virgin?” Yes, that would be terribly important to his
+father. If she had been a virgin, if he had seduced her, if he had
+promised marriage, his father’s stern sense of justice might prevail
+though the heavens fell.... But it wasn’t a question of marrying
+Isabel. It was a question of what should become of her child.
+
+There had been a time, many years ago, when Norman not merely admired
+and feared his father, but loved and trusted him. When he was in
+trouble he could come to his father, though in fear and trembling, and
+tell the truth. He wished he could be that little boy again.
+
+“What is it, Son? Tell your father.”
+
+“I--I had a sweetheart at college, Father, and now she has a baby, and
+doesn’t want to keep it, and I don’t want it given away to strangers,
+and I don’t know what to do!”
+
+“Was she a good girl?”
+
+“Yes, Father.”
+
+“Then you’d better marry her, Son. It will hurt us all, but you must do
+what is right.”
+
+“But she won’t marry me, Father.”
+
+“Send her to me. I’ll talk with her about it. She’ll _have_ to marry
+you, Son.”
+
+Norman smiled. It would be wonderful to believe again in his father’s
+omnipotence.
+
+Well, what would his father say to Isabel? He imagined that, in the
+same boyish mood.
+
+“How old are you, Isabel?”
+
+“Twenty-six, sir.”
+
+“You were a year older than Norman when this happened. You can have no
+cause for resentment against him such as would justify you in refusing
+to marry him.”
+
+“But I want to be a painter!”
+
+“We cannot always have what we want. My son wanted to be a lawyer. Now
+he can’t be--and you must take your punishment along with him. I will
+buy a pants-pressing establishment for the two of you, down on Commerce
+Street. By faithfully pressing creases in the trousers of our best
+citizens for the rest of your life, you will expiate your sin. And now
+off to the preacher with you!”
+
+“Yes, sir!” (Exit Isabel, crying.)
+
+He frowned, and imagined it again, in a slightly more realistic vein.
+
+“You seem to be a well-brought-up young woman. I really can’t
+understand this at all.”
+
+“I’m afraid nothing I could say would make it any clearer to you, Mr.
+Overbeck.”
+
+“Well, we won’t go into that. The fact is that you and Norman have
+brought a child into the world. I have told him that he must marry you.”
+
+“And I have told him that I won’t marry him.”
+
+“Nonsense! Why not?”
+
+“Because I am going to Paris to paint.”
+
+“You can paint just as well in Vickley. The landscapes here along the
+Mississippi are as beautiful as any in the world. I have traveled,
+and I know. I’m sure Norman would have no objection to your doing
+water-color sketches in your spare time.”
+
+“I’m afraid that wouldn’t do, Mr. Overbeck. I’ve already explained to
+your son how I feel about it. It’s very good of you to trouble yourself
+in the matter, but quite unnecessary. My mind is fully made up.” Very
+cool Isabel was, in this interview. “And now, if you’ll excuse me, I
+have another engagement.”
+
+No, it wouldn’t be like that _at all_. His father had emotions--and
+so had Isabel. There would be a battle. He would almost crush, almost
+overwhelm her--but not quite. She would be defiant, stubborn to the
+last. It would be rather a magnificent spectacle, that struggle between
+them--between the world as it always had been and the world as it was
+perhaps coming to be--between the old dispensation and the new.
+
+(Why was he so sure his father would want them to marry? He might take
+old Gilbert’s practical and cynical view of the situation.... No, he
+wouldn’t do that. He was a good man, in his stern way. And in that
+thought there was some obscure comfort for Norman.)
+
+He rose restlessly and went into the smoking compartment.
+
+In all his experience of smoking cars and smoking compartments, he had
+never heard there what was known as a “typical smoking-car story.” But
+this time, as it chanced, one was being told. It was just finished as
+he entered, and there was a burst of laughter. He recognized the story
+from the final lines. It was the one about the young couple who had
+been caught in the storm while driving in the country, and had stayed
+overnight at a farmhouse. His entrance put a damper on the others, and
+they shifted self-consciously to the subject of automobiles. Norman
+sat down in a corner, lighted a cigarette, and picked up a discarded
+magazine that lay on the leather seat beside him. It was an obscure
+magazine devoted to the more humorous aspects of sex. Norman reflected
+that the aspects of sex with which he was now becoming personally
+acquainted rather took the humor out of stories about casual sexual
+encounters. He had once thought they were funny, too; but just now it
+seemed to him that these things were too serious to laugh about. Some
+time he might recover his sense of sexual humor, but just now it was at
+a low ebb.
+
+The world, however, had not changed because of an incident in the life
+of Norman Overbeck. Sex continued to seem funny to other people. The
+three other men in the smoking-compartment, encouraged by his apparent
+absorption in his reading, verged closer to that delectable topic, and
+presently one of them began to tell another story. “If I had secretly
+committed a murder,” thought Norman, “I suppose I would find them
+talking about murders!” For by a painful coincidence this story was the
+one about the eight girls in Scotland who had illegitimate children
+and all named the same boy as the father. The doctor’s curiosity was
+aroused, and he went to see the boy to find out how it could happen....
+
+Norman, feeling a little sick, threw down his cigarette, dropped his
+magazine and went out. As he went, he heard, in bad Scotch dialect,
+the tag line, “Wull, ye see, doctor, Oi’ve a bicycle!” And the robust
+laughter of the three followed him into the corridor.... Was he never
+going to be able to listen to a dirty story again with normal masculine
+gusto?
+
+The porter came through the car. “First call for dinner!”
+
+The man sitting across from him at the little table in the dining-car
+was a salesman. Norman roused himself and they talked about
+automobiles. If it had been anything else, he might have lost himself
+in the conversation for a few minutes at least. But one can talk about
+automobiles without having to think of what one is saying....
+
+He stopped in the smoking-compartment for a cigarette. The magazine
+devoted to funny stories about sex was gone. In its place was a copy
+of the New Republic. He turned the pages. At another time he would not
+have noticed it, but there staring him in the face was an article on
+“Unmarried Mothers.” The illegitimacy rate for Scotland, he noted, was
+66 per thousand births, for England and Wales 42, for France (before
+the war) 88, the United States 23.8.... He studied the tables guiltily.
+Isabel had found these statistics comforting, so she said. He did not
+find them so. “A considerable proportion of the mothers are girls
+in their teens, while what data is available indicates that a large
+majority of them are working in unskilled or semi-skilled occupations,
+with an undue proportion in factory work and domestic service.”
+
+But there wasn’t anything about girls who wanted to go to Paris and
+paint, and wouldn’t marry the fathers of their children....
+
+“Contrary, however, to prevalent ideas on the subject, European
+statistics show that illegitimacy rates tend to increase rather than
+decrease with the spread of education; they are lower in cities than
+in rural districts; and comparisons of the poorest parts of London
+with certain well-to-do parts show the richer districts as having an
+illegitimacy rate of nearly six times the poorest districts.”
+
+Well, there was a grain of comfort in that....
+
+But why must he, now, find the subject of illegitimacy everywhere he
+turned?
+
+Damn these coincidences!
+
+He took one more glance at the article, and read: “In Austria, about a
+quarter of all births are illegitimate; in some rural districts nearly
+a half.”
+
+Yes--but why had _Isabel_ had a baby? Perhaps simply because, after
+all, she was a girl. It seemed to be the sort of thing that quite
+generally happened to girls, in or out of marriage. Mere ignorance
+couldn’t account for all those illegitimate babies! Girls must _want_
+to have babies, in spite of the frightful penalties that are attached
+to having them except in accordance with the rules. Nature laughs at
+the solemn rules of marriage, and the babies come at her bidding. Not
+accident, not carelessness, but some profound wish, deeper than their
+conscious fears, for this fulfillment of their natural destiny! In
+Isabel, too? He had to believe that. The woman in her had wanted--not
+merely that hour of delirium in the woods--but motherhood. Yet her
+nature was divided against itself. Something else in her was in revolt
+against being a woman. She was running away from her fate. That was the
+truth.... And he, in this internal battle between woman and artist,
+was the victim, along with her child. The woman that was in Isabel had
+chosen him to be her child’s father. The artist that was in Isabel
+was deserting them both with a brutal indifference. But here they
+were, father and child, made so at her deep wish, the wish she now
+repudiated. Nothing she might do could destroy the bond she had created
+between him and her child. She had given him a son. Let her run away
+to Paris, and forget. He couldn’t forget. He was caught in a trap of
+Nature’s. It was real. It was damnable. But it was true. He had a son.
+And what was he going to do about it?
+
+He looked at his watch. Still an hour and a half from Vickley.
+
+Would his father understand?
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV: Homecoming
+
+
+HE decided to walk home from the station. A soft breeze tossed him its
+faint, acrid, earthy scents. The stars were hidden and revealed by
+the fleecy scud of clouds. The moon, dwindling to its last quarter,
+had just lifted itself above the hills. Back in those hills, among
+the trees, was his home. All was peaceful there. They didn’t know the
+trouble he was bringing them....
+
+The moon had been large and low when he and Isabel had gone together
+into the wood, last year. What was there about the moon that made
+people think they had to make love? And afterward the moon sailed
+on serenely, not giving a damn, leaving them to worry about the
+consequences. Usually, though, it was the girl who did the worrying....
+
+If he were a girl--would his folks understand? Better, perhaps, than as
+it was now. They’d have to take the baby....
+
+He had passed the old brick building where he used to go to school as
+a boy. And here was the house where the Snyders had lived. He had not
+noticed the house for years. He had forgotten the mystery that it once
+contained for him. But now he remembered. The little boy playing about
+the Snyder yard was really (it was whispered on the way home from
+school) not Sally Snyder’s little brother but her own bastard child.
+Norman had occasionally caught a glimpse of Sally Snyder--a tall, pale,
+quiet girl. She never went anywhere, it was said....
+
+That secret hadn’t been very well kept. And now Norman wondered how the
+little Snyder boy had got along in school. He himself had gone on to
+high school, ceasing to pass the house, and had forgotten the story.
+But had the other boys referred to Sally’s son, behind his back, as
+a bastard? (Or to his face?...) Norman counted up the years. Sally’s
+boy would be about eighteen now. Did he still live here? Did this dark
+house still shelter him and his tall, pale, silent sister-mother? Or
+had the family moved to some other town, where the story wasn’t known?
+
+That was one good thing about being poor. Poverty gave you, in a
+new town, a kindly obscurity.... But it wouldn’t be any use for the
+Overbecks to move away. (Or so it seemed to Norman, accustomed as he
+was to being a member of one of the chief families of Vickley.) They
+would have to stay and face what they would call their shame....
+
+He turned the corner. There was a light in his father’s study. Was his
+father waiting up for him? That would not be unlikely, if his father
+had known he was coming to-night. Anyway, it would be a good chance to
+tell his father everything. The sooner the better.
+
+He ran up the steps and went in. His father’s voice from the study
+asked in surprise and disapproval: “Who’s that?”
+
+So he wasn’t expected. But who of the family could be out at this
+hour? “Early to bed” was a rule strictly enforced in the Overbeck
+household. “It’s me,” he answered, and went into the study, where his
+father was sitting at a table, somewhat ostentatiously waiting. He sat
+stiffly in his chair, with an upright, severe bearing. People spoke
+with admiration of the old man’s soldierly carriage. Well, he had been
+a soldier, back in the years before Norman was born, in the Spanish
+war. But anybody else would have forgotten that. Not that that had
+anything to do with it. He must always have been a martinet--born with
+discipline in his blood. Here he was, the General, seeing that the
+little Overbeck army got safely to bed.
+
+“Oh,” said his father, “it’s you. I am waiting up for Doris.”
+
+Doris? Oh, yes, of course. This was the night of the spring “hop” of
+her high-school sorority. She had a new frock for the occasion. She had
+brought it in to show him the other day while he was packing to go to
+Chicago....
+
+“There she is now,” said his father, as a car stopped noisily at the
+curb.
+
+Doris! He hadn’t taken her into his calculations at all.... No, he had
+simply not thought of her--and his baby here in the house. Would they
+talk at school about her being the aunt of a ----? Or (Good God!)
+would they think it was really _hers_? His fists clenched, and his
+forehead was suddenly wet with perspiration....
+
+Out on the porch Doris and her boy friend were giggling....
+
+No--that was absurd. But just the same she would be involved in the
+scandal. It would poison her friendships, humiliate and hurt her. It
+might spoil her whole life. Oh, it was altogether out of the question.
+He couldn’t inflict that on her....
+
+“Good night, Peter!”
+
+“Good night, Doris!”
+
+Young voices....
+
+The front door opened and shut, and Doris came straight to the lighted
+room, saying in exasperated protest: “I _do_ wish, Father, you wouldn’t
+wait up for me! I can--”
+
+She paused in the doorway, seeing her brother. “Oh, _you’re_ home!” she
+cried. Then she walked in, with a little self-conscious swagger. She
+was showing herself off in her new frock to her big brother.
+
+“You look,” he said, “like a million dollars! How was the dance?”
+
+“I had a swell time,” she answered.
+
+There was a time when Mr. Overbeck would have reproved any child of his
+for using such vulgar expressions. But not even J. J. Overbeck could
+sweep back the rising tide. All he said was: “Doris, go up to bed. It’s
+nearly one o’clock.”
+
+“Oh, all rightie!” she replied, and swaggered out.
+
+“How did you come out with the supreme court?” asked Norman.
+
+“I think my arguments may have impressed them,” his father admitted.
+And then he asked: “How did you come to go to Chicago so suddenly?”
+
+Now, if ever, was the time to confess. But what was the use?
+
+And so Norman repeated what he had already told Medway to tell his
+father: “Old Gilbert got it into his head that I could help him--seeing
+some people in a will case. I didn’t think I’d really be of much use,
+but he insisted on my going along.”
+
+His father nodded. “That’s all right,” he said. “It won’t do you any
+harm to work with Gilbert Rand. There’s a good deal you can learn from
+him.”
+
+Norman’s chance had passed....
+
+“I’ll lock up,” said his father.
+
+“Good night,” said Norman.
+
+“Good night.”
+
+Upstairs, a door opened as he passed, and a whisper called him.
+“Norman!”
+
+It was his sister Lucinda, in wrapper and archaic curl-papers. He
+paused.
+
+“I just wanted to ask you--did you look at my puppy for me?”
+
+“Your puppy?” said Norman, wrenching his mind loose from his own
+thoughts.
+
+“Yes--you know you promised to go and look at him yesterday--the one
+with the black spot over his left eye. And I wasn’t here when you came
+home to pack, so I didn’t know whether you had or not.”
+
+“I’m sorry,” he said. “I was so rushed I couldn’t get around to
+Schwartz’s. I’ll go to-morrow if you want me to.”
+
+“Oh, I wish you would, Norman! I just can’t decide by myself!”
+
+How, he asked himself, as he went into his room, could he bring the
+truth into such a world as this? It couldn’t be done!
+
+But what was he going to do?
+
+He felt suddenly very tired--too tired to think.... He would decide
+to-morrow.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV: Family Breakfast
+
+
+AT eight o’clock a bell sounded through the Overbeck house, to tell
+everybody to get up. At eight-thirty it would sound again, telling them
+to come to breakfast.
+
+It had been so as long as Norman could remember--except that on
+week-days the bell sounded an hour earlier. And that bell, like the
+voice of J. J. Overbeck himself, had always been obeyed. But this
+morning, though the bell struck into his sleeping consciousness, he
+did not want to wake up. He wanted to hold fast to the dream he was
+dreaming.... Something about being off on a ship, alone....
+
+Ten minutes later his mother shook him gently by the shoulder, saying:
+“Norman, you’d better get up. It’s eight-forty. And you know how Father
+feels about having us all at the breakfast table.”
+
+“All--right!” he said reluctantly, opening his eyes.
+
+He watched her go out of the room--the little, sensible, practical wife
+of the great J. J. Overbeck....
+
+What was that dream? It had vanished completely.
+
+He sprang out of bed. And then he remembered yesterday--Isabel--the
+baby--Dr. Zerneke--his errand here. It seemed unreal.
+
+He shaved hurriedly, so as not to be late to breakfast.
+
+Doris came down a little late, sleepy and petulant. “I don’t see why
+I can’t be allowed to have my sleep out when I’m at a party the night
+before,” she said, as she dug her spoon into her grapefruit. “Everybody
+else sleeps on Sunday morning!”
+
+“You should have thought of that last night,” said Lucinda vindictively.
+
+“You know,” said her mother placatingly, “that Father likes us all to
+be at the breakfast table with him.”
+
+“Yes, I know,” said Doris, “but I don’t see the sense of it. It’s a
+darn silly rule, if you ask me.”
+
+They all waited for J. J. Overbeck’s quiet thunders and lightnings to
+descend upon the rebel.
+
+“If that’s the effect that late hours have on your temper,” said her
+father gravely, “I think perhaps this had better be the last of them,
+until you are old enough to have learned some self-control.”
+
+Doris struggled with her tears for a moment, and then jumped up and ran
+crying from the room.
+
+Norman looked down at his plate, ashamed. What a home!...
+
+It was always like this--meaningless tyrannies, with which they all
+made such terms as they could. Their mother didn’t seem to notice it.
+Lucinda had been crushed by it into what she was. He himself had
+learned how to get along with his father. Doris was stubborn, but she
+would have to learn.... And he had taken it all for granted.
+
+He had known that other homes were not like this. But as a boy he
+had accepted it as one accepts the climate. Away at college, he had
+preferred to forget it. But coming back to Vickley again, he had begun
+to take it for granted once more.
+
+His way of getting along with his father was to acquiesce publicly
+in his authority, but to retain a secret independence of opinion.
+It occurred to him now that this was rather cowardly. Even Doris’s
+undignified outbreaks were more honest. He had always sympathized with
+her in silence. Now he wanted to break that pattern and speak up in
+her defense. And so he said abruptly in the silence that followed his
+sister’s departure from the room:
+
+“I think Isabel is quite right.”
+
+He realized the slip of his tongue as they stared at him.
+
+“Who’s Isabel?” asked Lucinda.
+
+He flushed. “I meant Doris. She should be allowed to sleep after a late
+party. Especially on Sunday.”
+
+“Who is Isabel?” Lucinda repeated.
+
+His defiance, such as it was, had been completely spoiled by that silly
+slip of the tongue. They would all be wondering who Isabel was....
+
+He ignored Lucinda’s question and spoke sharply, forgetting his
+accustomed dignity:
+
+“Father has no right to punish her that way--for a mere trifle!”
+
+His father was surprised, and for a moment or two said nothing at all.
+At last he remarked quietly:
+
+“Late hours don’t seem to agree with you, either, Norman.”
+
+Lucinda’s lips were framing the question: “Who--?”
+
+“Well,” Norman demanded of his father belligerently, “are you going to
+send _me_ to bed at ten o’clock?”
+
+“Norman!” said his mother in sensible, practical disapproval of such
+nonsense.
+
+“If you are going to behave like a child,” said his father, “I ought to
+send you from the table like one.”
+
+“I’d prefer to go,” said Norman. He rose and marched out of the
+room--feeling as though he were ten years old.
+
+In the hall he saw Doris coming downstairs. He waited for her.
+
+“What are you going to do?” he asked.
+
+“Oh, I’m going back and apologize,” she said lightly. “It’s the only
+thing to do.”
+
+Their mother’s practical voice floated out from the breakfast room.
+
+“Norman, if you’re going out, take your overcoat.”
+
+“Where are you running off to?” asked Doris.
+
+She was helping him on with his overcoat. “To see Madge, I suppose!”
+
+“Madge? Oh--why--yes.”
+
+He had managed to forget Madge....
+
+“Wait a moment,” said Doris. “I’ll bring you a fresh handkerchief.” She
+snatched the old one out of his breast pocket, ran up the stairs, came
+back and tucked the clean one in. “There!” she said.
+
+Outside, he glanced over next door at the new frame building--the home
+his father was building for him and Madge--almost finished.... That was
+just like his father--to put them next door, where he could run their
+affairs for them, as if they were children.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVI: Aubade
+
+
+MADGE! Yes, he had to go to see her. But--could he tell her? What was
+the use! He couldn’t bring his son to Vickley. He realized that now....
+Perhaps he ought to be sensible about the thing.
+
+He wished Hal were here. Hal, at Cambridge, was the first real friend
+he had ever had since childhood. Hal wouldn’t argue with him, wouldn’t
+tell him what he ought to do. Hal would listen to him. That was what
+he needed. Maybe if he could talk to somebody--somebody who didn’t
+represent Vickley--he would feel better.
+
+At any rate, there was no sense in telling Madge. Old Gilbert had been
+quite right about that.... He would have to act a part.
+
+He would just behave as if nothing had happened.
+
+As Gilbert had said, she would be thinking about other things.... She
+would never need to know....
+
+His life stretched out in front of him--a long vista of bridge-parties,
+as it seemed at this moment, with Madge as a handsome young matron
+presiding over them. He would live all his life with that pretty
+stranger--for so now she seemed. She would be called his wife. Perhaps
+people would speak approvingly of their happy marriage....
+
+Here he was, already, at the Ferris house.
+
+He hadn’t thought what he was going to say.
+
+Just behave naturally--that was it.
+
+He gave the bell his customary long ring followed abruptly by two short
+ones--the signal that Madge said sounded like “_O_-ver-beck!”
+
+No one came immediately, and he had to fight an impulse to go away. He
+rang again, and waited.
+
+A sound of feet running down the stairs quickly. Madge! He felt a
+sick qualm in his stomach. Madge calling to the maid who came tardily
+hurrying from the back: “I’ll answer the bell, Katie!”
+
+She opened the door. “Hello, Toodles!” she said. In the hall she flung
+herself into his arms.... It seemed queer to be so passionately kissing
+a stranger....
+
+“Let little me help him off with his overcoat,” she said.
+
+She led him into the “den” off the hall. It was a place of memories of
+their courtship. But these memories seemed curiously alien to him now.
+Was it he that had read poetry to her, sitting on that sofa? Was it he
+who had asked her, one winter night, to be his wife?
+
+“She’s not dressed,” she said, drawing her flowery negligée about her,
+and bending her bobbed golden head toward him. “Her hair’s not dry!
+When your imperious ring came, she was just finishing her bath!”
+
+These childish mannerisms of speech had once enchanted him.
+
+“When did the old bum get home?” she demanded, drawing him down on the
+couch beside her.
+
+“Last night--late,” he said.
+
+“How late?”
+
+“My train got in at midnight.”
+
+“That’s not late. She was waiting for you--hoping you’d be back. She
+couldn’t get to sleep, thinking of you. And she had a queer dream....”
+
+He asked, with a pang of superstitious dread: “A dream--about me?”
+
+“Never mind,” she said. “She never tells her dreams before breakfast.”
+And then: “Why doesn’t he act as if he were glad to see me?”
+
+He kissed her again.
+
+“What’s the matter, Norman?” she asked abruptly, drawing away from him.
+“Has anything happened?”
+
+“Yes,” he said. (Why did he say that?)
+
+“What is it, dear?” she asked anxiously.
+
+He must not tell her.... And he spoke at random, saying the first thing
+that came into his mind--just to be saying something: “I looked at our
+house....”
+
+“Yes, Norman?”
+
+“It’s much too close to my father’s....”
+
+“I’ve known that all along,” she said quietly.
+
+“Did you?” That little remark of hers astonished him infinitely. He
+realized that he had never known this girl at all. “I didn’t,” he said,
+“until this morning.”
+
+“What happened this morning? Have you been quarreling with your family?”
+
+“Yes,” he said. “How did you know?”
+
+“What were you quarreling about?” she asked.
+
+“Why--nothing, really. About getting up on Sunday.” He laughed
+nervously. “You’d have to get up at eight on Sunday--if you lived
+there!”
+
+“You think I’d let your family run _me_?”
+
+“I don’t know how you’d help yourself.” (But why were they talking
+about that house?)
+
+“Trust me!” she answered. “Norman--we haven’t talked about it: but you
+and I are going to live our own lives, when we are married. We can live
+anywhere we like.”
+
+He didn’t say anything.
+
+“Have they been criticizing me?” she demanded.
+
+“Who?”
+
+“Well--your sister Lucinda.”
+
+“Oh, no--of course not!” he said. But the stream of memory began to
+flow back into its old channels. And he could remember that there had
+been a time, months ago, when Lucinda had been spiteful about Madge.
+She had called her “frivolous” and “giddy.” Nor, what was somewhat more
+important, had Madge’s Aunt Julia approved at all of him. She had
+thought of him, for some reason, as irresponsible. He and Madge had
+enjoyed all the sensations of being misunderstood, of defying their
+families, of being leagued together in love and faith against a hostile
+world.... And then the criticisms had changed to blessings. Within a
+few months, all their world was anxious to get them married and settled
+down. But to Madge, it would seem, their romantic defiance of the world
+was still real. That was the only thing she could imagine as shadowing
+their happiness--the opinion of his family.
+
+“Then what’s the matter?” she was asking.
+
+He couldn’t bring realities into that doll-world of hers.... “Nothing,”
+he answered--too evasively.
+
+“I know there is,” she insisted.
+
+It would be like hurting a child.... But he ought to give her some
+warning....
+
+“Madge,” he said, “I may have to give up my position in my father’s
+office--and go away--” He stopped. He hadn’t intended to say that....
+
+“Norman!”
+
+The trouble was that he kept forgetting his purpose. A purpose implies
+a conviction, and a stable sense of realities. His world fluctuated and
+changed about him from moment to moment....
+
+This puzzled, incredulous girl at his side--she wasn’t a child, but a
+woman. It was he who felt like a child.
+
+“I’m in trouble, Madge,” he said.
+
+Her arms were around him. “What is it, Norman?” she asked quietly.
+
+He wanted terribly to tell her. There was some reason why he
+shouldn’t--but he couldn’t remember exactly what it was.
+
+“I never told you,” he said, “about a girl I knew at Cambridge. We
+were--sweethearts. And--I didn’t know until the other day--when she
+sent for me--in Chicago--there’s a baby.”
+
+“You mean--yours?” Her voice was very cool, remote, far away. He didn’t
+look at her. But he was aware that her arms had slipped away from him,
+that her body no longer touched his.
+
+“Yes, mine,” he said.
+
+She rose, slowly. “I’m glad you told me,” she said.
+
+He didn’t look at her face, but he saw her body convulsed by a shiver,
+and her hands were fumbling together. Then a ring dropped to the floor.
+
+He stooped to pick it up, and rose. Now he remembered the reason why he
+must not tell her. She wouldn’t want to marry him--of course.
+
+“You’re free now,” she said, “to go to her.”
+
+They were struck silent in their tableau by a sense of people coming.
+The maid. And footsteps descending the stair. That would be Aunt Julia.
+
+But the maid came first.
+
+“Mr. Overbeck is wanted on the telephone.”
+
+“Me?”
+
+“It’s your sister, Miss Lucinda, Mr. Overbeck. It’s something about a
+dog.”
+
+It was too absurd.... “Yes--please ask her to wait one moment.” He
+would have to greet Madge’s aunt.
+
+The maid went away....
+
+Then Aunt Julia.
+
+“Good morning, Norman.” She offered her cheek to be kissed. “You’d
+better go and put some clothes on, Madge. I’ll entertain Norman while
+you dress. You’ll stay to breakfast, Norman.”
+
+Madge went out, and slowly up the stairs.... He hadn’t had a chance to
+explain anything to her. Why did Aunt Julia have to interrupt them just
+now? He smouldered with helpless anger.
+
+“When did you get back from Chicago?” Aunt Julia asked affably, seating
+herself on the sofa.
+
+“Last night.” Damn this silly woman!
+
+“Don’t walk up and down the room, Norman. Sit down. And tell me what’s
+the matter.”
+
+Oh, he’d have to tell her something.
+
+“Madge,” he said, “has just broken our engagement.” And as he spoke he
+seemed to realize for the first time what he had done. Of course she
+wouldn’t marry him. He had smashed everything....
+
+“What!” said Aunt Julia, in amused incredulity. “No, not really? You
+mustn’t take these lovers’ quarrels too seriously, Norman.”
+
+“Lovers’ quarrels! I wish that were all!” he said bitterly.
+
+“Oh, is it so bad as all that, really?”
+
+“Yes, Mrs. Ferris.”
+
+Her face took on an expression of sympathy, and after a moment’s
+thought she said reassuringly:
+
+“I know, Madge is a very high-spirited girl. But it’s a little late in
+the day to change her mind. If you’ll only tell me what the trouble is,
+I’ll be glad to talk with her. An older woman, you know, Norman, has a
+more reasonable point of view. If it’s really so serious, it must be a
+question of--well, another girl. Have you been philandering, Norman?”
+
+He saw what she was thinking, and reluctantly answered:
+
+“No--not exactly.”
+
+“Not exactly? But she thinks so! I see. Has it anything to do with your
+Chicago trip?”
+
+“Yes--in a way,” he said evasively.
+
+“Don’t you want to tell me about it, Norman? I’m sure it’s nothing that
+can’t be smoothed out. I know Madge will be reasonable when she’s had a
+chance to think things over.”
+
+Norman felt a sudden unreasonable anger. She was so comfortable--so
+sure that nothing could go seriously wrong in her little world. He
+wanted to shatter that complacency of hers....
+
+But it was not necessary for him to speak. At that moment they both
+heard a sound of sobbing upstairs. It was like no woman’s crying that
+he had ever heard. It had a strange note of animal pain in it.... Then
+silence.... Norman felt himself transfixed by pity as by a spear thrust
+through his body. He realized what he had done to Madge.... Aunt Julia
+rose, startled.
+
+The maid returned to say: “Miss Lucinda is still on the wire, Mr.
+Overbeck.”
+
+“Oh, yes. Excuse me.” What a nightmare!
+
+Lucinda’s voice. “Oh, Norman, Mr. Schwartz called up, and said that
+somebody else wants to buy that puppy. He wants to know whether I want
+it. Won’t you go and look at it right away, and tell me what you think?
+It’s the one with the black spot over his left eye!”
+
+“All right. I’ll go.”
+
+When he came back, the room was empty. Aunt Julia had gone upstairs to
+comfort Madge. He listened, and he heard the sound of voices....
+
+_Why_ had he done it? But it was too late to ask that....
+
+Anyway, he _had_ done it....
+
+It was all over....
+
+He stood there irresolutely for a moment, then took his things from the
+hall, and went quietly out of the house.
+
+Madge had been a good sport about it. But it was a little too much like
+committing murder.
+
+And _now_ to face the folks at home....
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVII: Flight
+
+
+BUT he did not go home. He walked down town.
+
+He had keys to the Overbeck building. He would go there and think.
+
+Why had he told Madge? There wasn’t any sense to it. Yes, why?...
+
+But that wasn’t the question, either. The question was what to do
+now--now that he had told Madge....
+
+He walked up and down in the outer office, trying to think. It was no
+use. His mind wouldn’t work.
+
+He lay down on one of the leather-upholstered benches, exhausted, and
+fell asleep.
+
+When he woke up it was dark. He looked at his watch. Ten o’clock. Had
+he slept all day?
+
+He had certainly made a frightful mess of things.... He reached for a
+cigarette.
+
+When he had smoked all his cigarettes, he went out for more. He had not
+been able to make any decisions at all.
+
+On an impulse, he stepped into the telephone booth at the cigar store,
+and called up Madge’s house. He was going to ask how she was. But when
+he heard her voice answering him, he lost his nerve. What could he say
+to her?
+
+“Sorry,” he muttered, and hung up the receiver.
+
+After a moment’s thought, he reached for his pocketbook. It wasn’t
+there, and he remembered that he had left it in the bureau in his room.
+
+He came out of the booth, and went up to the counter, taking out his
+check-book. “Jack,” he said, “how’s your cash to-night? Can you let me
+have twenty-five dollars?”
+
+“Fifty, if you like, Mr. Overbeck,” said Jack.
+
+“All right--I could use fifty. Or a hundred. Could you let me have a
+hundred?”
+
+“I’ll see, Mr. Overbeck.”
+
+He looked in the cash-register, and took some bills from his pocket.
+“I’m afraid I haven’t got a hundred here. I could let you have seventy.
+Or, if you don’t mind taking some silver, I could give you--let’s
+see--eighty. Eighty-five. Would that do?”
+
+“That will be fine.”
+
+Norman wrote out a check, pushed it across the counter, and stuffed the
+money in his pocket. “Do you happen to know what time the St. Louis
+train leaves?”
+
+Jack thought there was just about time to make it.
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK TWO
+
+ In Exile
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I: The Prodigal
+
+
+ON a certain Saturday afternoon, Norman Overbeck called up Dr.
+Zerneke’s office, asking if he might see her. The girl answered without
+hesitation, “Come right over, please!”
+
+When he arrived, the girl gazed at him curiously. He looked quite the
+same as she remembered him, with his little stick, his soft hat, his
+light wavy hair, his polite manner--and his courteous voice, by now
+familiar to her from hearing it daily over the telephone. It had been
+her duty during the last two weeks to send a telegram to Gilbert Rand
+in Vickley, saying, “Telephoned to-day as usual.” For this young man
+had called up every day, refusing to give any name, and imperiously
+demanding news of the health of Isabel Drury’s baby. At first she had
+argued with him about it; but when she had referred the matter to Dr.
+Zerneke, the doctor had smiled and said: “It’s all right. Tell him. He
+happens to be the baby’s father.” This week he had shown some anxiety
+when he heard that the baby had been sent to a “boarding home.” She had
+assured him that there was nothing to worry about....
+
+The waiting-room to-day was full of women patients, but Norman was
+ushered immediately into the doctor’s office.
+
+Norman felt rather like a fool--and at the same time quite pleased
+with himself. Dr. Zerneke, he felt, if anybody, would understand. At
+any rate, he hoped she would!...
+
+“Well!” said Dr. Zerneke, shaking hands with him. “What have you been
+doing, these last two weeks?”
+
+“I--why--I’ve been here in Chicago, as a matter of fact,” he said. “Has
+anybody been looking for me?”
+
+“Everybody has been looking for you,” said Dr. Zerneke. “Your friend
+Gilbert Rand is here in town looking for you right now. And I’ve been
+bombarded with telegrams about you. The police would have been looking
+for you, if you hadn’t turned up pretty quick. What do you mean by
+disappearing from the world like that?”
+
+“I’m sorry,” said Norman. “Were my family worried?”
+
+“Of course they were worried. They didn’t know whether you were alive
+or dead.”
+
+“But I sent a letter--”
+
+“So I heard. And it seems to have sounded to your family as if you were
+intending to commit suicide.”
+
+“Good Lord!” He had left Vickley out of his calculations. In fact, he
+had managed to keep from thinking very much of the folks at home during
+these two weeks. It was just like them to act as though he were a
+runaway child! Why couldn’t they let him alone for once?
+
+“But what have you been up to, all this time?”
+
+“Why, I’ve been getting a job.” He masked his secret pride with an air
+of casualness.
+
+“A job here in Chicago?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Really!”
+
+“Yes. In an advertising office. Wilkins and Freeman.”
+
+“So that’s what you’ve been doing!” She looked at him curiously.
+
+“Well--as a matter of fact that only took me a week. But I wanted to
+see whether I could hold the job before I said anything to any one
+about it. And you gave me two weeks, you know.”
+
+That was by way of reminding her of her promise. He had told her he
+would be back in two weeks. He hadn’t known, then, what it would mean
+to come back--over what débris of a wrecked career he would have to
+clamber.... But here he was.
+
+“The two weeks are up to-day,” he added.
+
+Dr. Zerneke said reflectively: “As I remember, I gave you two weeks to
+find out if your family would take the baby.”
+
+“Well, you see--I made rather a mess of that,” he confessed.
+
+“I was afraid you might find it difficult to persuade them.”
+
+“To tell you the truth, I didn’t really try. I saw it would be no use.
+I decided that I’d have to take care of the baby myself.”
+
+“You?”
+
+“Certainly. That’s why I came here and got a job.”
+
+He took out a cigarette, tapped it, and put it back in the case....
+
+“But you must realize,” said Dr. Zerneke, “that this is an entirely new
+proposal. Last week, it was a question of having the child adopted by
+a responsible family. Now you make it a question of turning the child
+over to an irresponsible young man of very uncertain prospects.”
+
+“I don’t think my prospects are so bad, really, Dr. Zerneke,” he
+protested.
+
+“Would you mind telling me--it’s a question you oblige me to ask--what
+you are now making, Mr. Overbeck, at your new job?”
+
+“I’m starting in at thirty dollars a week. I know that’s not very much.
+But it’s merely while I’m on trial. As soon as I show that I can do the
+work, I’ll get a raise to fifty or sixty. And so on. If I’m any good at
+all, I’ll be getting eighty-five or ninety in the course of the year.
+And the rest is up to me.--I’m repeating what my boss told me when I
+got the job. And, if you can take my word for it, I have some real
+ability at this kind of work. I ought to be getting my raise within a
+month or so.”
+
+“It’s not entirely a question of money,” said Dr. Zerneke. “It’s partly
+a matter of character.”
+
+He hadn’t expected to have to argue about it like this. But he would
+defend himself if he had to....
+
+“Yes--I know you called me irresponsible. Because I changed my job,
+I suppose. But you make it sound as if I were a drunkard or a thief.
+Haven’t I a right to stop being a lawyer if I want to?”
+
+“Look at the thing impersonally for a moment, Mr. Overbeck. Do you
+really think it is a recommendation of a young man’s character and
+stability, that he disappears from home for two weeks, allows his
+family to think him dead--”
+
+“But I didn’t know they were going to think any such idiotic thing.”
+
+“Well, why did you do it? That’s what I don’t understand.”
+
+“Because it was the only way I could be free to--to go ahead with this.
+I _had_ to cut loose from my family.”
+
+“You wish to acknowledge the child as your son?”
+
+“I do, certainly.”
+
+“And make him your heir?”
+
+“Yes, of course.”
+
+“I should think you could do that without so much melodrama, Mr.
+Overbeck. You do not need to have left home for that, surely. Your
+family would have had to reconcile themselves to the fact. If they
+refused to do so, that would be another matter.”
+
+“But--that isn’t all. I want to have my son with me.”
+
+“You are hardly in a position to take care of him, are you? You have
+no home at present--I take it that on thirty dollars a week you are
+living in a furnished room. And you have no one to look after the
+baby--you’re not married,--and you can scarcely afford to set up an
+establishment with a housekeeper and nurse. We don’t turn babies over
+to bachelors, Mr. Overbeck.”
+
+“Is that a rule, Dr. Zerneke? Even when the bachelor happens to be the
+baby’s father?”
+
+“I admit that precisely such a situation has never come up before in my
+experience. But there’s another thing--it wouldn’t be fair to the child
+to pitch him into the middle of a family row. A baby is a baby, Mr.
+Overbeck. He needs regular meals and sleep, in an atmosphere of peace
+and affection. He is getting that now. We’ve put him in a boarding
+home, as it’s called--a private family.”
+
+“Yes, so I heard. What’s--become of Isabel?”
+
+“She has left town.”
+
+“Oh!”
+
+He wouldn’t let himself think about Isabel.... That was all over....
+
+With an effort he put his attention on what Dr. Zerneke was saying:
+
+“If you want to act for the best interests of your child, Mr. Overbeck,
+you will go back home and straighten things out with your family. And
+then you will make a will acknowledging the child as your son and
+naming him as your heir. There is no reason why he should not inherit
+your share of your father’s estate some day. That is why I suggest
+that you make up with your family--so that you, and consequently your
+child, will not be disinherited. Now that you have a child, you must
+think of such things, and behave sensibly. This is not a matter for
+histrionics--defiance of your family, and all that.” She paused.
+
+“Yes, I can see your point of view,” said Norman doubtfully.
+
+“In the meantime--I assure you that the Society is glad enough to turn
+over its financial responsibilities--you can pay for the child’s care.
+You will be able to see him whenever you like. And later, when you
+marry, your wife will be prepared to take the child into your home. I
+believe that I have heard something about your being engaged?”
+
+“Yes, but that’s off. I told her about the baby, and she broke the
+engagement.”
+
+“No doubt it would be a shock to a girl, coming without warning. Well,
+if she won’t marry you, some other girl will. Then you can have your
+child to bring up.”
+
+“Not until then?”
+
+“Certainly not now. What would you do with a four-weeks-old baby, Mr.
+Overbeck?”
+
+Norman realized with a shock of surprise that the part of his mind
+which had been taking some satisfaction in the thought of having a son
+at his side, was picturing this son sometimes as a boy of eighteen
+and sometimes as a boy of five. His fantasies had all concerned the
+future, not the present....
+
+“I--I hadn’t worked all that out,” he said.
+
+“I thought not. Tell me, Mr. Overbeck--if you saw a roomful of babies,
+could you pick out your own child?”
+
+Norman reflected. “I think so,” he said. “He has light hair, like mine,
+and a queer-shaped head.”
+
+Dr. Zerneke smiled. “Would you like to see him again?”
+
+“Yes. I would.”
+
+“If I can feel safe that you’re not going to do something idiotic, I’ll
+let you see him.”
+
+“What do you mean, idiotic?”
+
+“Such as trying to kidnap him....”
+
+“Oh, but really--you don’t think I’m as crazy as all that!”
+
+“No, I don’t. That’s why I’m going to let you see him. And as soon as
+the situation clears up satisfactorily, as I trust it will, we can take
+the next step.”
+
+“I ought to tell you, Dr. Zerneke, that I have no intention of trying
+to make up with my family,” said Norman firmly.
+
+“Well, perhaps they will do the making up,” said Dr. Zerneke easily.
+“And in the meantime the child can stay with Mrs. Czermak. I’ll give
+you a note to her.”
+
+She took pen and paper, and wrote. Looking up, she said: “You’ll find
+her a very capable foster-mother. She has an interesting story that
+I’ll tell you some time. This is the third baby she’s taken care of for
+me.”
+
+“What,” asked Norman, “happened to the others?” His tone was anxious.
+He had heard of “baby-farms.”...
+
+Dr. Zerneke smiled. “They came back to their mothers fat and rosy. You
+needn’t worry about what happens to babies in Mrs. Czermak’s care.”
+
+She handed him the note.
+
+“And by the way,” she said, “we must make up a story for you.”
+
+“A story for me?”
+
+“To account for the baby. You don’t want everybody in Chicago to know
+the peculiar state of your affairs, do you?”
+
+“No. I’ve had enough of trying to explain it in Vickley.”
+
+“Now when a girl has a fatherless baby, we always advise a wedding ring
+and a dead husband to simplify matters. But I don’t think you ought to
+be a widower, Mr. Overbeck.” She paused thoughtfully. “A widower with
+a baby is the natural prey of womankind. You’ll have a hard enough
+time as it is. You ought to have a wife, even though an absent one, to
+scare them off. Now how should we account for her absence? She might be
+ill--but then people would be sympathetic and inquiring. Can you think
+of a good story--simple, convincing, and not too interesting?”
+
+“It does seem a rather difficult problem, doesn’t it?” said Norman,
+trying hard to think.
+
+“T.B. is the only thing I can think of.”
+
+“T.B.?”
+
+“Yes. Your wife has been ordered to Colorado for the sake of her
+health. She’s in a sanitarium--you can be vague about that: or you can
+say Dr. Rublee’s sanitarium--there isn’t any such place, but there
+might be. She’ll have to stay there six months or a year. Yes, I think
+that will do. You understand just why I advise this story, don’t you?
+It’s simply to keep you from being married off to the first unattached
+woman you come across.”
+
+“Do you really think there’s any great likelihood of any one being
+willing to marry me?”
+
+“My dear man, you don’t know what you’re up against. Well, you can
+start in practicing your story on Mrs. Czermak, if you like. I told her
+the mother was ill. You can elaborate it. She’ll be glad enough of the
+prospect of keeping the baby longer.”
+
+The telephone rang, and Dr. Zerneke turned to answer.
+
+“Yes, connect him, please.... Mr. Rand?... Yes, indeed--your young
+friend is right here. I’ll let you speak to him.”
+
+She handed the telephone to Norman.
+
+“Hello, Gilbert.”
+
+“Good God, is it really you, Norman?”
+
+“It’s all right, Gilbert. Where are you?”
+
+“At the Annex. What the devil have you been doing?”
+
+“I’ll tell you all about it. I’ll be with you in about an hour.... Keep
+your shirt on. Good-by!”
+
+He turned to Dr. Zerneke. “You don’t quite realize what I’m in for,” he
+said.
+
+Dr. Zerneke smiled. “I don’t know your family,” she said, “but I’ve
+been in communication with your friend Mr. Rand, and you’ll find him
+quite reasonable, I think.”
+
+“Just the same, I want to make my first visit to--my son. Before I see
+any one from Vickley.”
+
+“If that will make you feel better, go ahead,” said Dr. Zerneke.
+
+She dismissed him with a warm hand-shake.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II: A Man Has Some Rights
+
+
+MRS. CZERMAK’S address was on the North side, not far away.... He
+really couldn’t afford a taxi. But this was a special occasion--and
+Gilbert was waiting. He hailed one.
+
+One in a row of dingy three-story brick houses. He rang the bell. A
+young woman came to the door.
+
+“I want to see Mrs. Czermak.”
+
+“I’m Mrs. Czermak. Did you want a room?”
+
+She was younger than he had expected Mrs. Czermak to be--not a
+responsible-looking middle-aged matron, but a girl in her middle
+twenties--not at all what he had pictured as a child’s nurse.... And
+her speech did not have the foreign accent that her name suggested.
+
+“No--I--here’s a letter from Dr. Zerneke,” he said.
+
+She stood there, leaving him waiting on the doorstep, while she opened
+and read it. Then she looked up quickly.
+
+“Oh--so you’re my baby’s father?” and she opened the door wider to
+admit him. “Do you want to see him now? He’s asleep. You can look at
+him, though.”
+
+“I’d like to,” said Norman.
+
+She led him upstairs, through a bedroom, very clean and orderly, into
+a small room which was the nursery. There was the crib. They went up to
+it, and she drew back a coverlet.
+
+Norman felt no particular emotion at the sight of the sleeping child.
+He wondered why. He was moving heaven and earth to have that child for
+his own. He had broken Madge’s heart. It would make his family terribly
+unhappy. He had thrown away a career. And here was what it was all
+about--a baby with soft fair hair, and a queer-shaped head. No--the
+head wasn’t so queer-shaped to-day. And the face was pinker.... He was
+a little disappointed at his lack of any deep feeling....
+
+The baby stirred in its sleep, and flung up a tiny fist.
+
+Mrs. Czermak put back the coverlet, and Norman turned away. As they
+went back into the larger room, the picture of that small fist lingered
+in his mind.
+
+He realized that Mrs. Czermak was expecting him to say something. He
+felt embarrassed--as if it were somebody else’s baby he were being
+called upon to praise.
+
+“It’s awfully little, isn’t it!” he said awkwardly.
+
+“He’s a fine baby!” said Mrs. Czermak defensively.
+
+Norman was conscious of having said “it” instead of “he.” Was she
+offended by that? Did she think he didn’t appreciate the baby?
+
+“If you come just before six, you can see him awake,” she said.
+“That’s his feeding time. Or on Sundays you could come at a little
+before two.”
+
+Well, that was all. What had he expected? He had come to see his son.
+And he had seen him. Now he would go.
+
+Gilbert was waiting for him....
+
+Somehow, he had expected something more--something to fortify him
+against Gilbert’s reproaches--Gilbert’s news of the havoc he had
+left behind him in Vickley. He had run away from Vickley. He hadn’t
+permitted himself to think about what he had done to Madge--to his
+family. He’d hear about it all. And Gilbert would have some new, slick,
+plausible scheme.
+
+“Sundays at two, you say?” he asked.
+
+“Yes. That’s when he gets his bottle. You might come a little before
+then--fifteen minutes before.”
+
+He’d never get acquainted with his son, at that rate.... It was more
+of a job than he had realized. First he had to get reconciled to his
+family--and then, apparently, get married! Good Lord! And meanwhile the
+baby would stay here....
+
+As he started to leave, an idea came brilliantly. Yes, why not? He
+turned to Mrs. Czermak.
+
+“You say you have rooms for rent here?”
+
+She hesitated, and then answered reluctantly:
+
+“Sometimes.”
+
+He vaguely sensed some opposition to his plan. But he asked in a
+determined way:
+
+“Have you any vacant now?”
+
+Again she hesitated. “Not any suitable for two.”
+
+“I don’t want a room for two. I want a room for one.” He had the
+feeling of putting something over on Dr. Zerneke. Wait until he was
+married, to be with the baby? He would show her!
+
+“Oh!” said Mrs. Czermak. “Well, I have a hall bedroom on the next
+floor.”
+
+“May I see it?”
+
+“Is it for yourself or your wife?” asked Mrs. Czermak.
+
+He remembered abruptly what Dr. Zerneke had told him to say.
+
+“My wife has been ordered to Colorado for her health. She started
+to-day.”
+
+“Oh--and without the baby!”
+
+“It will be quite out of the question for her to have the baby with her
+for another six months--possibly more,” said Norman solemnly. “She’s
+going to Dr. Rublee’s sanitarium.”
+
+“Where is that--in Denver?”
+
+“Yes,” he said. He was anxious to get off a subject on which further
+questions would be embarrassing. “May I see the room?”
+
+Her manner, which had become hostile for a minute or two, had changed
+to friendliness again. “Now that I come to think of it,” she said,
+“there’s the large front room downstairs. It was promised, but the
+people haven’t come. I’ll show it to you.” She took him there.
+
+He looked around. It was much larger, lighter, cleaner, than the one he
+had been living in.
+
+“How much is it?” he asked.
+
+She thought a moment. “We could let you have it for eight dollars, I
+guess.”
+
+Remarkably cheap! He had been paying eight for the hole he had been
+living in.
+
+“I’ll take it,” he said.
+
+Yes, if a baby couldn’t live with a bachelor father, there was nothing
+to keep a bachelor father from coming to live with his baby! Norman
+smiled, with a sense of triumphing over a hostile universe.
+
+Then he looked about the room again, with a practical glance. He went
+to the center-table. It was rickety under his touch, like the one
+upon which during his evenings for two weeks he had been computing
+and recomputing the statistics of illegitimate parenthood--a peculiar
+consolation which he had learned from Isabel. With the figures he
+had found at the Crerar library, and the further assistance of the
+population tables in the World Almanac, all sorts of interesting things
+could be worked out....
+
+“Could I have a small, solid table to write on? An unpainted kitchen
+table would do.”
+
+“Why, yes,” said Mrs. Czermak. “When do you want to move in?”
+
+“I’ll move to-night.” There wasn’t, as a matter of fact, anything to
+move, except his overcoat and his alarm clock. And the two weeks for
+which he had paid in advance were about up. He might as well make the
+change without delay, and get settled. He took out some bills.
+
+“By the way,” he said, “how much has Dr. Zerneke been paying you for
+taking care of the baby?”
+
+“Ten dollars a week. With Grade A milk, and clothes, it comes to about
+twelve dollars, not counting extras.”
+
+Norman calculated silently. Twelve dollars for the baby; eight for his
+room; nine, say, for his meals; a dollar for laundry; that was exactly
+thirty dollars, and left him nothing for carfare or cigarettes. But he
+would manage somehow--and it would be only a few weeks until he got a
+raise.
+
+“I’ll take care of that from now on,” he said.
+
+“Suppose I pay a week in advance for the room, and a week for the
+baby,” he said. “Will that be all right?”
+
+He handed her the money.
+
+She looked at it. “There’s supposed to be a deposit for the keys,” she
+said, “but we won’t bother about that.”
+
+“Why not?” he said, and offered her another dollar.
+
+“No,” she shook her head. “You’ll need every dollar you can save. With
+a sick wife in Colorado.”
+
+He somewhat guiltily put the dollar back in his pocket.
+
+“I’ll get you your keys,” she said, turning to go.
+
+“Never mind,” he said, “give them to me to-night. I’m in a hurry now.”
+He looked at his watch.
+
+“I’m afraid I can’t promise the table till Monday,” she said.
+
+“That’s all right.”
+
+“We’ll try to make you comfortable.”
+
+Well, that was settled! And now for old Gilbert....
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III: An Ambassador from Vickley
+
+
+GILBERT was standing in the door of his room. “You crazy loon,” he
+cried. “My God, I’m glad to see you.” He threw his arms around Norman,
+and pulled him inside the door. “You’ve aged me ten years in the last
+two weeks, you son-of-a-gun.”
+
+“I’m sorry I’ve given you so much trouble, Gilbert,” said Norman
+stiffly.
+
+“Oh, it’s all right,” said Gilbert. “Now that it’s turned out this way,
+it’s perfectly all right. Couldn’t be better. But tell me just one
+thing--what have you been doing these last two weeks?”
+
+“Looking for work.” And he told Gilbert briefly of his new job.
+
+Gilbert slapped him on the shoulder. “I thought so. That’s exactly what
+I’ve been telling them. Sit tight, I said, and trust me.--But I tell
+you, if you hadn’t shown up to-day or to-morrow, my hair would have
+gone white. Two weeks is a long time to wait.”
+
+“But I wrote in my letter to my mother, from the station, not to
+worry--”
+
+“I know what you wrote. And that there’d be news of you in two weeks.
+That’s what I counted on. That’s been my job--getting them to wait,
+instead of notifying the police.”
+
+“But really--why all this nonsense about suicide? Perhaps my letter
+wasn’t as tactful as I thought it was--but after all--”
+
+“Oh, that’s all right,” said Gilbert. “The suicide part and everything.
+It fitted in fine. You did everything just right.”
+
+“Well, I’m glad to hear that. I thought I had done everything just
+wrong. I’ve realized that my behavior must have seemed very queer to
+the folks at home. But even so--suicide!”
+
+“That’s just the point, my boy. People can forgive anything to a
+man who’s probably committed suicide. And when it turns out that
+you haven’t, they’re so glad, that nothing else matters. You framed
+the thing just right--that quarrel with your father, the mysterious
+references to the unknown girl, everything down to cashing that check
+at the cigar store and asking about the St. Louis train. Couldn’t have
+been better.”
+
+These remarks were evidently intended to be reassuring; but they
+reminded Norman uncomfortably of what a fool he had behaved like in
+Vickley.
+
+“I suppose you think I did it on purpose?” he said. “Well, I didn’t. I
+was in a state of mind. I hardly knew what I was doing, Gilbert. But I
+still don’t understand why you’re so happy about it all.”
+
+“I’m happy, you son-of-a-gun, because you’re alive. Here, have a drink.”
+
+Gilbert opened his suitcase and took out a bottle. “No? Well, I will.
+My nerves have gone to pieces over this.” He poured some whiskey into
+a tumbler, and drank.
+
+“You know, Norman, you let me down something awful. That’s no way to
+treat your lawyer. You ought to have told me what you were going to do.
+Here I arrived in Vickley with the thing all settled--and when I called
+up your house Sunday afternoon, hell was popping. I had to think fast.”
+
+“Gilbert--I know. I should have told you. I suppose I was afraid to.
+The truth is, I wasn’t capable of reasonable thought.”
+
+“I gathered that something had gone wrong, so I went over to your
+house. And there I was, sweating blood while the thing came out bit by
+bit that evening.”
+
+Norman felt uncomfortable. He had expected Gilbert to scold him. He had
+been prepared for that.... But he wasn’t prepared to hear all about
+just what had been happening in Vickley.... He really didn’t want to
+know.... But Gilbert would want to tell him. He would have to listen.
+There was no way of getting out of it....
+
+“I didn’t know exactly what you’d done, Norman, but I knew you were
+running amuck somehow,” Gilbert went on, with a smile.
+
+“You knew I had told Madge, at least,” said Norman unhappily.
+
+“Not at first. In fact, when I arrived, all that was known was that
+you hadn’t come home to dinner, and that you had quarreled with your
+father at the breakfast table. If I hadn’t been on the inside of your
+affairs, I should have thought they were damned fools to be making so
+much fuss about nothing. And then they asked me if I had ever heard you
+mention a girl named Isabel!”
+
+“But didn’t Madge--or her aunt--tell them anything about--about the
+engagement being broken?”
+
+“I’ve no doubt they supposed your family knew. And a silly thing
+happened there. It seems that your sister Lucinda had called up the
+Ferris house three or four times that morning, asking for you--”
+
+“I know--about a dog.”
+
+“Yes. About a dog. I imagine that Madge made some reference to what had
+happened, but Lucinda didn’t take it in. She kept talking about the
+dog. And at last Madge said, ‘Oh, damn your dog!’ So Lucinda cried, and
+wouldn’t let your mother call up the Ferrises any more, even to ask
+about you. The first any of us in the house heard about the engagement
+being broken was when some kind neighbors came in to inquire if it
+were true. Your sister Lucinda seemed to rather hope it was, but she
+wouldn’t let your mother call up and ask. I was the only one who had
+any notion of what had happened. All they were worried about was that
+their darling boy hadn’t come home to dinner. Even when the neighbors
+said that Madge’s aunt had taken to bed with nervous prostration, they
+didn’t begin to suspect anything serious might be the matter--anything
+that would affect them. And there was I, knowing the dynamite you were
+carrying around, and surer every minute that you had set it off.”
+
+Norman sighed. Must Gilbert go into all these painful details? Why not
+let the dead past be forgotten?
+
+“I tell you,” said Gilbert, “I was sweating blood!”
+
+“It didn’t occur to you, I suppose, to tell them the truth?” Norman
+asked with some asperity.
+
+“There’s where you do me an injustice, my boy. I’m more versatile than
+you think. I figured it all out--and this seemed to be one of those
+rare situations in which the truth might be better than the best lie
+that the mind of man could invent. Of course, I didn’t want to do
+anything rash. If I gave the show away, and then you walked in with
+some other story--that _would_ be a pretty mess! But I had a hunch that
+you weren’t going to walk in. My hunches were mostly right, that day. I
+didn’t understand what you were up to, all at once--not, in fact, till
+next day, when I got an answer to my wire to Dr. Zerneke. But I wasn’t
+far wrong in my first guess.”
+
+“What _was_ your first guess?” Norman asked, as patiently as he could.
+Of course, all this was interesting to Gilbert. The least he could do
+was to listen....
+
+“I thought you had come back in good faith, intending to keep your
+mouth shut and preserve the status quo--but that your damned honesty
+had got the best of you, and you had told Madge about the baby, and
+then lit out for Chicago when she threw you over. Not a bad guess,
+either. And for my purposes it was as good as the whole story. The
+point was that you had probably spilled the beans. They say a good
+lawyer is one that can take advantage of a defeat. Well, I was
+defeated, all right. My plans were all smashed to hell--and there
+wasn’t any use trying to patch them up. So I made new plans then and
+there. This has been one of the most interesting cases I ever handled,
+Norman--and if it had been tried in court I’d have made a great
+reputation on it. I figured that the whole town was my jury, or would
+be in twenty-four hours. There was no use trying to frame up any more
+alibis for you. I had to get the truth before the jury, and get you
+off that way. That’s what I was thinking when the clock commenced to
+strike midnight. We all knew what time it was, but we sat still and
+listened--your mother and father, Lucinda and I. It finished striking.
+You hadn’t come. And then there was a ring at the bell. We knew you
+wouldn’t have rung, you’d have walked in. It might be anything--your
+dead body. Waiting under an emotional strain for somebody for a few
+hours will do that to people’s minds! Well, it was your special
+delivery letter. Your mother was afraid to open it. Your father opened
+it. In that atmosphere, you see, your words weren’t as cheerful as you
+intended them to be. News of you in two weeks!--Not news _from_ you,
+but news _of_ you. It sounded like grim death itself.”
+
+Norman twisted uncomfortably in his chair.
+
+“I never thought of that, Gilbert. But _you_ knew--”
+
+“What did I know? Nothing. I didn’t guess until next day, when I heard
+from Dr. Zerneke about what you came home for. All I could think of
+then was that you were going to Chicago and make that girl marry you.”
+
+“Of course--you didn’t know,” Norman murmured.
+
+“But you were out of town--I knew that. And then we heard more about
+that. Somebody told the clerk at the cigar-store that your girl
+had jilted you. And he got worried, and confided to a policeman
+what he knew--the check, and the St. Louis train. And then some one
+recalled seeing a light in the Overbeck building. The police and the
+nightwatchman had gone to your office, and found cigarette stubs all
+over the floor. So along towards one o’clock we heard from the police.
+Then your father called up the Ferrises. Madge answered the telephone.
+Yes, she said, it was true that she’d broken the engagement that
+morning. No, she hadn’t seen you since. But she’d had a telephone call
+from you at about eleven o’clock. You’d said something about being
+sorry, and hung up. No, she’d prefer not to say why she had broken the
+engagement. She was cool enough about it.”
+
+“Cool?” Norman asked in surprise.
+
+“Your sister Lucinda called it heartless. She kept on talking about how
+heartless Madge Ferris was. Finally she came out with something about
+poor Norman possibly lying dead at this very moment. Your mother ssh’d
+her, and told her not to be silly. But the thing had been said--the
+thing that was in everybody’s mind. After all, when a man disappears
+like that, one of the possibilities _is_ suicide.”
+
+“You keep harping on that, Gilbert. It’s not a pleasant thought.”
+
+“I’m telling you just what happened.”
+
+“Of course. Go on.”
+
+“As a matter of fact, I was glad it had come to that. It put your
+family where I wanted them. It made the possibility of your being alive
+the only thing of any importance. And my mind was made up. You had told
+Madge about the baby, I was sure of that. The whole thing would come
+out. And now was the time to spring the truth. At the time, you see,
+I thought you were going to try to pull off a marriage with the other
+girl. It would be a sort of happy ending. But I looked at your sister
+Lucinda, and I thought again. I didn’t want my effect spoiled by any
+discordant notes. And I didn’t think she’d take so kindly to a happy
+ending that involved the mysterious Isabel. Your mother--it wouldn’t
+hurt her to do a little worrying. Your father--he was the one that had
+to be told. Only not in that house. There was something else, if it
+came to that, I was going to remind him of. So I suggested that he and
+I go down to the office where you had been camping all day. You might
+have left something there that the police hadn’t found--a letter, or
+something of the sort. He was glad to go. Norman, if you ever had any
+doubt whether your father loves you-- He was nearly crazy with anxiety.
+He had been trying to keep up a front with his women-folk, but alone
+with me in the office he was beginning to break down. He commenced to
+blame himself for a thousand things--including the way he had persuaded
+you against your wishes to go into the law.... Well, I told him the
+whole story.”
+
+“So he knows....”
+
+“Yes.” Gilbert looked into his empty glass, and poured himself another
+drink. “Everybody knows. That’s what I’m coming to. The whole damn
+town. And I’m the one that told them. Oh, I had good reasons. In the
+first place--you know what a lot of nonsense gets around--there was
+talk of your having embezzled some of the firm’s money. I wanted to put
+a stop to that. But that’s getting too far ahead. The next person I
+told the truth to was your fiancée.”
+
+“Madge? But she knew!”
+
+“She knew what you told her, which wasn’t much, I gather. Enough to
+give her the wrong slant on the whole thing. Well, somebody had to talk
+to her--and your sister Lucinda had taken to bed over what I had told
+your father the night before. Your mother was busy looking after her.
+And your father was pretty much shot to pieces. So that left me, to
+attend to all these little things. The impression your sister Lucinda
+got of what I had told your father was that you were eloping with an
+artist’s model. And, of course, with my connivance. The baby she simply
+didn’t believe in. She would have it that you had been victimized by
+some designing female. Well, I didn’t argue with her. I went to see
+Madge.”
+
+He would rather not hear that part of it. But he felt obliged to ask:
+
+“What did Madge say?”
+
+“At first she practically told me it was none of my business why
+she had broken the engagement. I said I could guess why it was, and
+reminded her that I had been with you in Chicago. She said, if I knew,
+there was no use discussing it. I admit I was pretty much stumped by
+her coolness. I wondered if she were really heartless, as your sister
+Lucinda said. But that wasn’t it. She was really trying to be a good
+sport, as I found out afterward. She was trying not to hate the girl
+who had taken you away from her. She wasn’t thinking about a baby at
+all. In fact, she didn’t know about it.”
+
+“But I told her about the baby!” he protested.
+
+“You didn’t get it straight, Norman--or she didn’t hear it. Or maybe
+her aunt mixed her up about it. You seem to have talked to her, too.”
+
+“Not about the baby, I think,” said Norman, making an effort to
+remember these things that seemed to have happened so many thousands of
+years ago.
+
+“So Madge said. But between what you told the girl and what her aunt
+imagined, she got it wrong.”
+
+“What in the world did she think I had told her?”
+
+“She didn’t say in so many words. But I realized that I knew more about
+it than she did, so I started in to tell her the whole thing. And she
+was surprised from beginning to end. She was under the impression that
+you had been carrying on an affair with the other girl while being
+engaged to _her_.”
+
+“I didn’t have a chance to go into details. But I’m sure I told her
+about the baby!”
+
+“Not that the baby was already born. You neglected that detail. And so
+naturally she thought of a pregnant girl that you had to marry.”
+
+“So--that’s what she meant.... She told me I was free--to go to her!”
+
+“Exactly. I tell you, Norman, she’s a good sport!”
+
+“I see that I blundered the thing frightfully.”
+
+“You made it seem even worse than it was. But that’s a good way of
+breaking bad news. She’d already suffered the worst. And what I told
+her--it took the poison out of the wound, so to speak.”
+
+“She’ll think a little more kindly of me, perhaps,” said Norman
+wistfully.
+
+“She’s sorry for you. And she’s interested in your wanting the baby.
+I told her why you had come home--to see if your people would take
+it. I had learned that from Dr. Zerneke over the long-distance. ‘Well,
+Madge,’ I asked, ‘can you hate him for a thing like that?’ And she
+said: ‘How could I hate him? I feel very humble.’”
+
+“Humble!”
+
+“To tell the truth, Norman, she thinks of you as a kind of saint.”
+
+“Gilbert, don’t razz me.”
+
+“Women are queer, Norman. Of course, there’s some credit due me as
+your advocate. I didn’t neglect my opportunities. And it _is_ rather
+dramatic, you know--your throwing up a career and respectability, for
+the sake of your son. It’s the sort of thing women can understand.”
+
+(Perhaps--but how did old Gilbert understand?)
+
+“The only trouble is,” Gilbert went on, “it leaves her out. She’d
+rather be the other girl, I think. She can’t understand Isabel--why she
+won’t marry you. But then, as I told her, I don’t either.”
+
+“You told her I had offered to marry Isabel?”
+
+“Yes--and that you didn’t love her. That’s correct, I think?”
+
+“Yes. How did Madge take that?”
+
+“She seemed to understand it perfectly. It made you all the more
+saintlike.”
+
+“Please lay off that, Gilbert.”
+
+“If you depart from the beaten track, Norman, you have to take the
+consequences. You can’t do what you’ve done without being regarded
+either as a scoundrel or a saint.”
+
+“I was prepared to be regarded as a scoundrel.”
+
+“Well, I’ve fixed that up for you, too. A saint to the women.... All
+except your mother and sister, Norman. They both, in their different
+ways, regard you as a child.”
+
+“You haven’t mentioned my kid sister--Doris. I was really trying to
+protect her.”
+
+“So did we all. She was sent away to the neighbors or up to bed during
+all the family conferences, and told some sort of transparent fib about
+your being called out of town on business. But she strolled into our
+conference Monday night--I had just got through telling them my revised
+story about you--and announced with a bored air that we needn’t trouble
+to keep the secret from her any longer. She knew all about Norman’s
+baby, she said. As a matter of fact, she heard this new story before
+the family did. It appears that the news, coming from some girl friend
+of Madge’s, had spread like wildfire among the younger generation. They
+all knew it by evening.”
+
+“Do you think it will--hurt her much?” Norman asked anxiously.
+
+“Doris? On the contrary, she’s quite a heroine on account of it. Times
+are changing, Norman!”
+
+“In Vickley!” said Norman incredulously.
+
+Gilbert looked at him gravely.
+
+“I haven’t intended to deceive you, Norman. You know perfectly well
+that you’ve cooked your goose, as far as the law business goes. If you
+wanted to set up as a romantic poet, it might be all right for you to
+come back. But not as a lawyer. You knew that, didn’t you?”
+
+“Thank God for that!”
+
+“Well, be that as it may, Norman, your career in Vickley is gone
+completely and absolutely to smash. There’s not a moment’s doubt about
+that. And there’s not a thing I or anybody else can do about that. You
+had me beaten there. The only thing I could gain was what is called a
+moral victory. And since that’s all I have to boast of, Norman, I’m
+boasting of that. Let me go ahead and tell you about my speech to the
+jury!”
+
+“All right.”
+
+“But first I’ll help myself to another drink.”
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV: Speech to the Jury
+
+
+“AND now,” said Norman, “what about this alleged moral victory? You
+didn’t by any chance tell people the real truth about me?”
+
+Gilbert put his feet up on a chair. He, at any rate, was enjoying these
+reminiscences.
+
+“Yes. This business of telling the truth is like any other drug habit.
+It grows on you. That same Monday night, after I left your house, I
+dropped in at Sam’s place for a drink. There were half a dozen men
+there--and Sam, behind the bar. One of the men was Davis of the Herald
+and another was Quinn of the Whig. I won’t name the others, but they
+are pillars of Vickley society. Well, Quinn came up to me and asked
+if I had heard the rumor that you were in financial difficulties when
+you left town--not that they would print anything about it, unless
+something came up so that they would be obliged to. Well, I had an
+inspiration. ‘Boys,’ I said, ‘I’m going to tell you the truth about the
+disappearance of Norman Overbeck. You can decide for yourself whether
+it can be printed.’--And not a word has been in the papers since. They
+couldn’t have printed the story anyway--not in Vickley. But it was a
+magnificent gesture. ‘This is for all of you to hear,’ I said. And so
+I made my speech to the jury right there at Sam’s bar. The doors were
+locked--Sam saw to that--so there wouldn’t be any interruptions. I’d
+had two or three rehearsals of my speech already, between your family
+and Madge, but this time it was for a different audience. These men
+were hard-boiled guys, and not in love with you....”
+
+“You--you didn’t--I mean--all that stuff about it’s being somebody
+else--some other man--you didn’t suggest that?” Norman asked painfully.
+
+“I cast no doubts on the paternity of your son, Norman, if that’s
+what you mean. I wasn’t out to make a fool of you. On the contrary. A
+scoundrel. It came to me in a flash. A saint--that was all very well
+for the women. But men don’t like saints. I had to make you out a
+villain--but a magnificent villain, such as men secretly envy. And I
+had learned something, Norman. I had learned that the paternal passion
+is repressed in our polite species--repressed, I believe, is the
+word--but not extinct. I was depending on that. I looked at my jury,
+and I said: ‘It isn’t embezzlement, gentlemen. It’s a baby.’ One fellow
+snickered. I thought: ‘All right--I’ll have _you_ crying before I’ve
+finished!’ And I did, too....”
+
+“What in God’s name did you tell them, Gilbert?”
+
+“The story of a respectable man and his illegitimate son. I must admit
+that I embroidered it a little. You know you dropped that hint about
+St. Louis--and several people saw you get on that train. Which shows
+the value of evidence. Well, I followed up that hint--saying that it
+was only a guess of mine. I said you had been talking to me about
+South America. I said I thought you had gone there. And why South
+America? Because it’s a Man’s Country. I’d been reading a story about
+it in Mencken’s Mercury, and I laid in on thick. There a man begets
+his children by all the girls he takes a fancy to. And he doesn’t have
+to sneak out of his responsibilities--the country isn’t run by a lot
+of old-maid Sunday-school teachers. When he gets tired of a girl he
+gives her a present and tells her to get out. But she leaves her baby
+behind. A South American gentleman, I gave them to understand, has a
+dozen bright and happy illegitimate children, and a big house in the
+country where he raises them, and visits them, and plays with them--and
+everybody, including the lawful wife, knows all about it. I pictured
+you, Norman, as a fellow that wasn’t going to be bluffed out of his
+natural feelings by our hypocritical civilization. If you couldn’t
+have your son with you in Vickley, you were going to South America,
+where such things are understood. Mind you, I said, I’m not defending
+the young man, I’m only trying to explain him. But I could see that
+the idea appealed to the crowd. There’s something of the Turk and the
+Mormon in us all. The truth is, we’d like not only to go to bed with
+all the pretty girls we take a fancy to, but we’d like to have them
+go right ahead and have their babies. And you needn’t tell me the
+girls don’t feel the same way about it. If polygamy wasn’t so damned
+expensive, that’s the way we’d do it, too. The aristocracy has always
+had its bastards without shame and apparently to the satisfaction of
+all concerned. It’s only our middle-class economy that has made us a
+race of hypocrites.”
+
+Norman looked at old Gilbert in astonishment. “I hope you don’t expect
+me to live up to your romantic stories!”
+
+“But, Norman--don’t go back on me now. You’re planning to adopt the
+boy, aren’t you? I made sure of that when Dr. Zerneke said you were
+calling up every day about him.”
+
+Norman flushed. “Of course I’m going to adopt him. But I don’t feel in
+the least like a Mormon or a Turk. Or a saint either.”
+
+“Well, you’ve made a good start in both directions. Norman, my boy”--
+Gilbert emptied the bottle into his tumbler--“you’ve done what every
+man at some time in his life wishes he dared to do--and what every
+woman feels instinctively that a real man ought to do.”
+
+“Gilbert--all this excitement has gone to your head. You’re talking
+bosh. Every man in America doesn’t beget a child out of wedlock. You
+see, I happen to know the statistics. It comes to only about--I’ve
+figured it out for Vickley: let me think. If Vickley runs true to
+statistical averages, there are only about twenty new illegitimate
+fathers there per year. And there are nearly twelve thousand males in
+Vickley between the ages of fifteen and sixty-five. So you see it’s
+really quite the exception, Gilbert.”
+
+“Your statistics, my boy, apply only to the illegitimate children
+that are actually born. I’m talking of the others. There may be men
+in Vickley who have never in all their lives sent a girl to the
+abortionist--but I’d not bet on any of them being there at Sam’s bar
+that night. And that’s what they were all thinking of--the girls who
+had cried because they couldn’t go ahead and have their babies--the
+girls whose abortions they had paid for--the girls who, as they
+damn well knew, despised them for being the dirty cowards that we
+respectable men have to be!”
+
+Norman looked at him curiously--wonderingly.... What did old Gilbert
+know about such things?
+
+The telephone rang. Gilbert took up the receiver.
+
+“A telegram? Yes, send it up.”
+
+He turned to Norman. “That will be from your father. I wired him that
+the lost was found and in good shape.”
+
+They waited. There was a knock at the door, and the boy with the
+telegram. Gilbert read it and handed it to Norman.
+
+In the stiff, reticent phrases that were so like his father, it read:
+
+ PLEASED AND GRATEFUL WILL ARRIVE CHICAGO SUNDAY MORNING AS PLANNED
+
+ OVERBECK
+
+Ten words.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V: The Older Generation
+
+
+LATE that evening they were talking in Norman’s new room.... They had
+dined together, going over the whole situation. Gilbert wasted no time
+in vain regrets. He accepted the new state of Norman’s affairs, and
+was anxious to help him make the best of his Chicago career. He took
+Norman’s job seriously, and discussed its future possibilities. And
+Gilbert had readily come with him to see the baby. He remarked upon its
+resemblance to Norman. They met Mrs. Czermak’s mother, whose name was
+Mrs. Case, and another daughter named Monica, a young stenographer.
+Also Mr. Victor, an elderly violinist, one of the boarders, just then
+out of a job.... Everybody, it seemed, was interested in the baby....
+
+“You know,” said Norman awkwardly, “he was named for me--by his mother.”
+
+Gilbert nodded. “Queer girl!” he said.
+
+They talked of Isabel. She had left town, said Norman; had probably
+gone to Michigan, he thought. It was just as well, he said coldly. He
+hadn’t wanted to see her again....
+
+Then they talked of Norman’s father--of whom Norman had been secretly
+and painfully thinking all the while....
+
+It was all very well to have gained what old Gilbert called a moral
+victory over the hard-boiled reprobates at Sam’s bar; over romantic
+Vickley matrons who wished to believe in a remarkable young male
+saint engaged in expiating his youthful sin by self-sacrifice; over a
+sensation-loving younger generation: over even that girl whose love and
+pride his destiny had driven him to trample upon so cruelly: but there
+remained J. J. Overbeck. No moral victory was possible over him!
+
+His father simply would not be able to understand what had happened.
+How could he? A man like that! No, this sort of thing might be
+comprehensible to a cynical philosopher like old Gilbert. But it would
+be outside the range of his father’s imaginative sympathy. That was
+what was going to make this meeting so hard. He couldn’t help wanting
+to make his father understand. And that would be impossible.
+
+“Still afraid of the old man?” asked Gilbert, smiling, as he read
+Norman’s thoughts, so plain to see in his troubled face.
+
+“I can’t help it,” said Norman. “No, it’s not exactly that I’m afraid
+of him. But I know that he won’t be able to understand this at all.”
+
+“No?” said Gilbert. “Well, I wouldn’t worry about that, if I were you.”
+
+“His whole life,” said Norman, “has gone to building up his family.
+He thinks in terms of the family. You say he loves me--but it’s just
+because I’m part of the family. I was to take his place in Vickley.
+I’ve hurt him in a way he never can forgive.”
+
+“Norman,” said Gilbert, “maybe I know your father better than you do.
+We were in Cuba together, you know. Before you were born.”
+
+“Are you hinting at something, Gilbert?” Norman asked in astonishment.
+
+“I never hint, Norman. I’m going to tell you a story. Because I think
+you ought to know it before your father comes. He won’t say a word to
+you about it. But he’ll know I’ve told you. He couldn’t do it. Just as
+I couldn’t tell my own son. But I know he’d like you to know.”
+
+“My--father!” Norman whispered incredulously.
+
+“Listen, Norman. That Sunday night, after midnight, when your father
+and I sat in his office--after I’d told him about your baby--he broke
+down. And ... well, you see I’ve known something about your father for
+a long time. He didn’t know I knew it. I’d never have told you, but
+it’s all right now. So I’ll begin with that.--You think of your father
+as an old man, don’t you? Just as you think of me as ‘old Gilbert.’
+Yes, it’s true he’s fifty-five and wears side-whiskers.... It’s hard to
+go on, Norman, with you looking at me like that. I know how you feel.
+But he’s not _my_ father--so it didn’t so much shock me to learn, as
+I did a good many years ago by accident, that he had--well, a secret
+life. Don’t look so God-damn’ solemn. It all happened before you were
+born. A rather plain woman in her thirties. A widow. I knew her name,
+but that meant nothing to me at the time. She is dead, now. This is
+all ancient history. She left Vickley about the time you were born,
+went out West to visit some relatives; and, as I learned the other
+night, came back to Vickley some years later--but it was all over
+then--and died.... Well, are you wishing I wouldn’t tell you?”
+
+“I--it does upset me, rather,” Norman confessed. “I’ve no right to feel
+like that, I know. But--”
+
+“Of course. One’s own father. And that’s the true origin of our
+conventional morality, my boy. I hear stuff about the hypocrisy of the
+older generation. It’s true enough--but whose fault is it? Who puts us
+up on a pedestal? Who refuses to believe that we are merely human? You
+wait! You’ve a son now. He’ll have an ideal of you--and you won’t dare
+shatter it. You’ll lie, like all the rest of us. You’ll be a hypocrite,
+too. Oh, it’s a joke!...
+
+“Well, I knew this thing about your father. And I smiled a little.
+But I didn’t know the real story till that night.... It goes back to
+the time we were in Cuba together, in the Spanish war. I don’t know
+why your father enlisted. He was married, and had a child. I guess
+your mother was all taken up with the child--your sister Lucinda. I
+know that I went for fun. I was married, too. Anyway, we were both old
+enough to know better, but there we were.
+
+“Well, there was another Vickley boy in our company, named Tom. Tom
+had never been any good at making money. Some new scheme he had put
+his hopes in went to smash--I guess he couldn’t bear to face his wife.
+He thought he was a failure, so he enlisted. And Tom and Jim--your
+father--got to be great friends in the army. Chums was the word in
+those days. I knew about their friendship. But I hadn’t thought of poor
+Tom in all these years....
+
+“Your father, that night, began to talk about Tom. And he began to cry.
+Then I remembered about their being chums. But all the rest was new to
+me, as your father told it. I never had known about Tom’s wife....
+
+“Jim and Tom were both wounded at El Caney--Tom badly. He was going
+to die, and he knew it. And there on the battlefield where they lay
+together he talked to Jim about Sally. Would Jim look after Sally when
+he got back? And Jim promised his chum that he would. And Tom died in
+the hospital, and Jim came home to Vickley.
+
+“That was twenty-eight years ago, Norman. Sally must have been about
+thirty, then. Tom had written her a lot about Jim, and she was prepared
+to like him. And of course she must have been terribly grateful for the
+help he gave her. But Jim didn’t tell his wife about it. And he went
+to see Sally in the evenings when he was supposed to be working at the
+office. He would bring something for a late supper. She was a jolly
+little woman, and her house was comfortable. He got to be more at ease
+there than at home. And so it began.
+
+“And so it went on. As such things do. Till you were born, and then he
+sent Sally out West, and that was the end of it. She came back later,
+and died.
+
+“That’s all. Except ... You belong to a hard, unsentimental generation,
+Norman. It will seem silly to you.... But there’s her grave, in a
+Vickley cemetery. He sometimes visits it alone. He goes at night. Do
+you--do you get the picture, Norman?”
+
+Norman saw, in the moonlight, a cemetery with its marble memorials of
+Vickley’s respectable dead. And over in an unkempt corner, a place that
+meant nothing except to the one who kept its secret tight-locked in
+his breast. And thither he saw that old man come, stealthily, with a
+posy--an old man, looking down at his lost youth, buried there in that
+secret grave. And Norman saw him slink away furtively in the moonlight,
+back to his home, his family, his career, his respectability, home from
+that secret, ridiculous, pitiful tryst. Symbol of an age that passes....
+
+“Yes--I get the picture,” said Norman.
+
+“He’ll know I’ve told you,” said Gilbert. “He wants you to know. But
+he’ll not want anything said about it--not a word.”
+
+“Of course not,” said Norman.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI: J. J. Overbeck
+
+
+HIS father was due to arrive on an early train Sunday morning, and
+Norman, having forgotten his alarm clock, had asked Mrs. Case that
+night if there was one about the house he could borrow. He explained
+that he had to meet his father at seven. “Rose will be up at six to
+give the baby his bottle,” she told him. “She’ll knock on your door
+at half-past six, and leave you a cup of coffee, if you like.” Norman
+protested that he couldn’t think of putting her to that trouble. But
+Mrs. Case said it would be no trouble; she made it for herself anyway.
+
+When the knock came, he sleepily answered “Yes.” And not Mrs. Czermak’s
+but her younger sister’s voice answered cheerfully: “Here’s your
+coffee, Mr. Overbeck. And would you like to have me call you a taxi?”
+
+“Yes, please do!” he said.
+
+“All right. It’ll be here when you’re ready.”
+
+He opened the door when she had gone, and brought in the tray she had
+left on the floor.
+
+There was toast, too!
+
+“What a nice family!” he thought gratefully.
+
+He was at the station in plenty of time. Gilbert, it was agreed, would
+stay at his hotel until called for, or they would all meet for lunch.
+Norman watched the gate, and the stream of passengers. There was his
+father.... Gilbert’s story seemed perfectly incredible.
+
+“Well, Father,” he said.
+
+“Well, Norman.”
+
+“Let me take your grip. Did you manage to get any sleep?”
+
+“I slept pretty well. Where are you taking me?”
+
+“We’ll have breakfast, and then I’ll take you to my room.”
+
+“It’s not breakfast time for me yet. This is Sunday, you know. You’d
+better take me to your room first.”
+
+“Certainly.”
+
+In the taxi he said: “Does your job permit of your taking taxis like
+this?”
+
+It was his kind of humor.
+
+“Only for very distinguished visitors,” said Norman.
+
+“I don’t know why Chicago is supposed to be such an ugly city,” said
+Norman’s father, presently. “I think it can hold up its head.”
+
+“Michigan Avenue isn’t bad-looking,” said Norman.
+
+They passed the Art Institute.
+
+“Been buying any more pictures?” asked J. J. Overbeck.
+
+That was probably humor, too.
+
+“Not on my present salary. I get thirty a week at present,” said Norman.
+
+“Thirty a week is not bad to start with,” said J. J. Overbeck. “I know
+young lawyers in Vickley who make less.”
+
+There was a silence.
+
+“What are you working at? If you don’t mind my knowing.”
+
+“Not at all. Advertising. Wilkins and Freeman.”
+
+“I’ve heard of them.”
+
+Silence again.
+
+“You neglected to pack a trunk when you left home. Your mother attended
+to it last night. It ought to be here to-morrow.” He took a stub out of
+his vest pocket and gave it to his son.
+
+“Thanks.”
+
+He would have liked to have his father say something more about his
+mother, and how she felt about all this. But he would not ask. And his
+father made no further reference to the family.
+
+“All right,” thought Norman, “who cares?”
+
+The taxi drew up presently at the curb.
+
+“Here’s where I live.”
+
+He took his father to his room. The bed had been made, and there was
+a vase of flowers on the table. To be sure, a visit from the baby’s
+grandfather was an important occasion. They were being damn’ nice to
+him, these people.... Tears came into his eyes.
+
+Father and son sat down.
+
+“Comfortable place,” said Norman’s father.
+
+“Yes. Very.”
+
+“And--where do you keep the baby?”
+
+So his father assumed--for Gilbert hadn’t told him--that the baby would
+be here! Of course--since that was what Norman had left home for....
+Well, he was right....
+
+“Upstairs,” said Norman. “I’ll find out if we can see him now.”
+
+He went out in search of Mrs. Czermak. The younger sister was in the
+hall, apparently waiting.
+
+“Is he ready to see the baby now?” she asked eagerly.
+
+“Yes, if he may.”
+
+“He’s in our room--the big room. You can go on up, any time.”
+
+“Thank you.”
+
+He went back. “We can go right up,” he told his father.
+
+He led the way to the upstairs room. Outside the door he started to say
+something, in an ordinary tone of voice, but his father silenced him
+with an abrupt, authoritative gesture. “You’ll wake him up,” he said in
+a low tone.
+
+J. J. Overbeck opened the door quietly, and went in. Mrs. Czermak was
+there, with a white cap and apron on. She came forward pleasantly, but
+J. J. Overbeck ignored her. He went past her straight to the crib,
+stooped over and looked at the sleeping baby. The morning sunlight,
+pouring in, lighted up his pink face with its grey side-whiskers, bent
+over the crib. Norman came closer. His father remained stooped in that
+way for a full minute. Then he uncovered the baby’s plump hand, and
+felt of it. Then the feet, in their tiny socks. Norman looked up to see
+whether Mrs. Czermak approved of these liberties. Apparently she did.
+She was looking on with quiet satisfaction. Her mother, and the younger
+sister, who had slipped into the room, were beaming.
+
+Then, deliberately and with assurance, J. J. Overbeck lifted the baby
+from the crib and held it in his arms. It slept on. J. J. Overbeck, not
+paying any attention to the others, marched slowly around the room,
+twice. Then he went back to the crib, and laid the baby down gently,
+and covered it up. Then he turned and walked quietly out of the room.
+
+Norman followed him.
+
+In Norman’s room, his father took out a cigar, and offered one, saying:
+“Not that it’s good for any one’s digestion, to smoke before breakfast.”
+
+“I’d rather have a cigarette, if you don’t mind,” said Norman.
+
+They sat down.
+
+“Have you made a new will?” his father asked.
+
+“Why, no,” said Norman,--remembering what Dr. Zerneke had told him as
+to the sensible way of proceeding in this affair.
+
+“You’d better, right away. That’s the thing to do. We can get Gilbert
+Rand to help us draw it up to-day.”
+
+Yes, Dr. Zerneke had said that he was to make up with his father, and
+then make the child his heir....
+
+“I suppose I’d better,” he said.
+
+“Have you named him?”
+
+“His mother--named him Norman.”
+
+Doubtless it would be politic to suggest calling him James Norman....
+But he wasn’t going to.
+
+“Norman.” His father nodded thoughtfully.
+
+There was a long silence, while J. J. Overbeck smoked.
+
+“I’m not going to change the firm name,” he said, with an air of
+finality.
+
+Norman frowned in a puzzled way.
+
+“I’m not expecting to come back,” he said.
+
+“I wasn’t suggesting that precisely,” said his father. “I hope you will
+find the advertising business agreeable. But I still think I shall let
+the firm name stand as it is. To do otherwise would seem a concession
+to vulgar prejudice.”
+
+As he spoke, he glanced thoughtfully over Norman’s head. At the
+ceiling, one would have said. But Norman’s mind followed that glance
+through plaster and flooring to the upstairs room and the cradle. Was
+that what his father was thinking of? A day in the future when, if he
+lived that long, he should see another Overbeck in the firm?
+
+(“Not if I know it!” thought Norman.)
+
+“Now, as to financial arrangements,” said his father. “Of course, I
+expect you to take care of yourself. But for the child--and for any
+emergencies--there’ll be a thousand dollars in the bank that you can
+draw on this year if you should need it. It will be put in a savings
+account, in your son’s name, you understand.”
+
+Norman resolved never to touch it.... But he must not offend his father.
+
+“It’s very good of you,” he said stiffly.
+
+J. J. Overbeck rose. “It’s time for breakfast,” he said. “We’ll go to
+the hotel and rout out Gilbert Rand.”
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII: Home
+
+
+HIS father had gone, taking the night train for Vickley. Gilbert Rand
+had gone with him. Norman went back to his room on the elevated.
+
+Now that it was all over, he could permit himself to realize what
+a frightful strain his father’s visit had been.... Old Gilbert’s
+romantic yarn about him still seemed incredible. Oh, no doubt it was
+true enough--but it hadn’t changed his feelings about his father.
+Nothing, it seemed, could change those feelings--not even his father’s
+extraordinary generosity about the baby.... Gilbert had thought that
+his story of that lonely grave in the moonlight was a touch of nature
+which would make him feel that his father was made of the same human
+stuff as himself. It should have done so, but it didn’t. The gulf of
+generation was between them. His father was still--his father. And he
+was tremendously glad that it was all over.
+
+Things had gone to the satisfaction of everybody concerned--except,
+perhaps, of Norman himself. A will had been drawn up; even a codicil to
+J. J. Overbeck’s will, leaving Norman’s share of his father’s property,
+in case of Norman’s death, to “my grandson, Norman Overbeck, the
+natural son of my son Norman.” They visited Dr. Zerneke at her office;
+she said that of course the Society would be glad to have the child
+adopted by its father; it would be formally arranged within a few days,
+she promised. And J. J. Overbeck made out a check to the Society which
+far more than covered the expenses to which it had been put in this
+matter. He also offered casually to pay any outstanding surgical or
+hospital bills....
+
+This was the only reference to Isabel’s part in the matter. And for
+some reason that fact gave Norman an inward satisfaction. He had been
+treated that way on his first visit to Dr. Zerneke’s office--as a mere
+biological instrumentality connected with the production of a child!
+Now it was her turn. And she deserved it, he thought vindictively. Yet
+it did not escape him that he was still being treated, himself, in
+something of the same impersonal fashion. The interests of the child
+alone were being considered--which was quite all right. Yet he vaguely
+felt it as a conspiracy to fasten upon this child the network of
+Vickley.... True, they were only doing, with a generosity which he had
+not expected, and a practical care exceeding his own impulsive efforts,
+what he himself had sought to do by marrying the child’s mother. They
+were undertaking merely to secure to his son, in so far as that could
+be done by legal means, all those rights which would otherwise be
+lost by the accident of birth outside of marriage. It was damned fine
+of them! Why, then, must he feel all the while as though there were
+something sinister in these proceedings? He remembered that glance
+of his father’s at the ceiling.... Oh, doubtless he was being unduly
+sensitive! His feelings as a parent were not being taken sufficient
+account of. It was too abrupt a change from the heroic and rebellious
+rôle he had been playing for two weeks! It was as if Vickley said:
+
+“A child is the tribe’s concern. Either a child does not officially
+exist for us, or it does. It would have been simpler for you to have
+let this child remain, so far as we are concerned, non-existent. But if
+you force the matter upon our attention, we shall take your child into
+the tribe. But it is we who give sanction to its existence--not you.”
+
+Well, it was over, for the time being. It now remained only for the
+Adoption Society to take formal action. The child would be his.... He
+wondered if Isabel knew.... But there was no reason why she should
+know. It was a matter of indifference to her what happened to the
+child.... So long as she didn’t have to bother with it herself....
+
+Norman abruptly realized that he was at his station.
+
+He would try to put these legalistic matters out of his mind. After
+all, he was living in the same house with his son.... Dr. Zerneke had
+been rather surprised when he told her that. But they couldn’t take
+that privilege away from him.
+
+He had just entered his room when there was a knock at the door. It was
+the elderly musician, Mr. Victor.
+
+“Pardon me,” he said with a smile, “but I’d like to hear the news, if I
+may.”
+
+“The news?”
+
+“You see, we can’t help all being interested in the little drama. We’d
+like to see it turn out right--for the sake of the little fellow.”
+
+“Oh--come in.”
+
+Of course--it would be a drama to them. They had seen his father--quite
+evidently somebody of consequence in his own world--they couldn’t help
+seeing that. And a son in evident poverty and disgrace. The family
+hadn’t approved of the marriage, they would think. But the sight of
+the baby conquers the grandfather’s stony heart--Abie’s Irish Rose, in
+fact. Well, they ought to be satisfied with the dénouement. That glance
+of his father’s at the ceiling had been a promise (or a threat, if one
+were so unreasonable as to take it so!) that this child should be one
+of the lords of Vickley! He might tell this romantic old bird that.
+It was what he wanted to hear--what every one, including Dr. Zerneke,
+seemed to be hoping for....
+
+“Won’t you sit down,” said Norman. “And as to the little drama, I think
+I can say that I have received assurances that my own follies will not
+be held against the child.” That was sufficiently nineteenth-century to
+suit the occasion, he thought.
+
+“The girls will be pleased,” said the old man. “They are very fond of
+the baby.”
+
+There was another knock at the door.
+
+“I think it’s them,” said Mr. Victor, with a smile. “Wanting to hear.”
+
+Norman opened the door. It was the younger sister, Monica.
+
+“Excuse me, Mr. Overbeck,” she said eagerly. “But what did he think of
+the baby?”
+
+Norman was touched at her interest, but he replied casually:
+
+“Well--he seemed favorably impressed. Didn’t you think so?”
+
+“Yes! we both thought so. Did he say anything?”
+
+Norman smiled. “My father doesn’t say much,” he told her. “I mean, when
+he’s pleased. One has to judge by the way he acts.”
+
+“He certainly acted pleased.”
+
+“Won’t you sit down?”
+
+“No--I just came in to ask. You don’t mind my asking? We couldn’t help
+being anxious.”
+
+“Well, it’s all right,” he said reassuringly.
+
+“I’m so glad!” she said, and was about to go when he remembered:
+
+“I haven’t thanked you for the flowers--and the coffee. It was terribly
+nice of you.”
+
+“Oh--the coffee,” she said. “We’d be very glad to bring you your coffee
+every morning, if you’d like it. You get to work at eight, don’t you?
+We’re having our own at seven, and it would be no trouble at all!”
+
+“Then you must let me pay you for it,” he said.
+
+“Oh, I don’t think my sister would want that,” she said.
+
+“We’ll discuss that later, then,” he said.
+
+“Good-night, then.”
+
+“Good-night.”
+
+“A nice family,” he remarked to Mr. Victor.
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Victor. “A very nice family. Not the usual type of
+people who keep rooming-houses. I know.”
+
+“They’ve been so friendly,” said Norman. “I don’t feel as though I were
+among strangers at all.”
+
+“We tried to make it homelike,” said Mr. Victor ingenuously. “I may say
+that the idea of Mrs. Czermak wearing her nurse’s costume was my own
+contribution, or suggestion. I thought it would help to impress your
+father favorably.”
+
+“Has Mrs. Czermak been a nurse-maid?” asked Norman.
+
+“Yes. Babies of her own--that’s what she needs,” said Mr. Victor wisely.
+
+“She’s not a widow, is she?” asked Norman.
+
+“No. But she isn’t living with her husband, you know.”
+
+“I didn’t know.”
+
+“Well, it’s not exactly a secret. He ran away.”
+
+“Oh!”
+
+“I might as well tell you,” said Mr. Victor. “He was a very young man,
+and a poet. Vladimir Czermak was his name. He also tried to write
+music. Very modern music.” Mr. Victor shook his head. “As to his
+poetry, I am perhaps not so well qualified to judge. But I have read
+some of it....”
+
+“He wrote in English?”
+
+“Yes. If it could be called English. He used to show me his things. He
+had a room here. That was how it began. But he looked like a genius.
+She has his picture--you must get her to show it to you some time.
+The Irish, if you have noticed, have a tenderness for genius. Mrs.
+Case allowed him to get behind in his rent. And then he married her
+daughter. She was a nurse-maid then. To tell you the truth, I think
+what she wanted was a baby of her own. But that wasn’t his idea at all.
+He was afraid of the responsibility. As a matter of fact he couldn’t
+very well afford to have a family. A young genius who is an unskilled
+worker and odd-job man is a poor stick as a husband and father. He
+wanted her not to have the baby, and when she went ahead having it he
+cleared out.”
+
+“And what happened to her baby?”
+
+“It was prematurely born, and it died very soon afterward.”
+
+“Hard luck,” said Norman.
+
+“I don’t think she or the baby had the right kind of care,” said Mr.
+Victor. “Poor people go to poor doctors. But Dr. Zerneke has been very
+good to her. She performed some kind of operation that was needed, and
+she gave her a baby to nurse. Your child is the third she has taken
+care of for Dr. Zerneke. She gets very much attached to them, and feels
+very bad at having to give them up. I understand,” he added, “that you
+may leave your baby here for some time.”
+
+“I probably shall,” said Norman.
+
+“She’s hoping so,” said Mr. Victor. “She’s devoted to it.”
+
+“And she hasn’t heard from her husband since he went away?”
+
+“No. She’s going to get a divorce shortly.”
+
+“The family isn’t Catholic, then?”
+
+“Their father was Protestant Irish, and the girls have broken away from
+the Church. And Dr. Zerneke seems to have persuaded the mother that it
+wasn’t a real marriage in the Catholic sense, on account of his not
+wanting to have a baby--something like that. At any rate, her scruples
+have been more or less overcome. She isn’t sure it’s quite right, but
+she’s making no protest. She realizes that Rose ought to be married
+again and having her own babies.”
+
+“How old is she--Mrs. Czermak?”
+
+“Twenty-seven. That was one of the difficulties about her marriage. The
+boy was three or four years younger.”
+
+“And her sister--how old is she?”
+
+“Monica is twenty.”
+
+“A nice kid,” said Norman, thinking of his sister Doris, and
+remembering Monica’s offer to bring him coffee every morning. He
+couldn’t help being moved by the sisterly kindnesses he was finding in
+his new home.
+
+“It’s a very pleasant place here,” he said.
+
+“Your wife is in Colorado for her health, I understand?” said Mr.
+Victor.
+
+They discussed the state of health of Norman’s alleged wife.
+
+“You mustn’t be discouraged,” said Mr. Victor encouragingly.
+“Everything will come out all right.” He rose to go.
+
+“Thank you,” said Norman, “I’m sure it will.”
+
+“That’s the right spirit!” said Mr. Victor.
+
+It was a little embarrassing to be sympathized with on such fictitious
+grounds. Nevertheless, after old Mr. Victor had taken his friendly
+leave, Norman found himself wondering why all homes couldn’t be as
+pleasant and comfortable as this one.
+
+He said to himself that his new life had really begun.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII: Apron Strings
+
+
+DURING that protracted Sunday conference Dr. Zerneke had suggested
+to Norman that he come to her home some evening that week, to clear
+up the situation in a talk of a less formal and legalistic sort. The
+engagement had been made for Monday evening.
+
+But on Monday morning, when Monica brought his coffee, he was up, and
+they conversed for a moment at the door; and she reminded him that this
+was the baby’s birthday. At that age, it appeared, birthdays came every
+month, and this was his first. It was to be a sort of special occasion;
+and it would be the first time (not counting that time at the hospital)
+that he had seen his son awake.
+
+He called up the doctor that afternoon and, explaining his reasons,
+postponed the engagement. It was arranged that he should call Wednesday
+evening instead.
+
+Junior’s birthday party--for now the girls called the baby by that
+name--was the pleasantest sort of contrast to Isabel’s impersonal
+indifference that day in the hospital. It was infinitely agreeable to
+Norman, the sight of these girls bending over his child--cooing to him,
+and triumphantly eliciting his smile. They knew every dimple by heart.
+And unquestionably the baby was rosier, plumper, happier, than he had
+been with that unnatural mother of his. It ministered to some deep need
+in Norman’s heart, the picture of maternal solicitude which these girls
+presented--Rose with her grave motherly preoccupation, and Monica with
+her joyous young excitement over every detail of this budding life.
+It made him very happy. He sat in the room on those evenings with his
+child and its young nurses, enchanted. Their mother, Mrs. Case, was
+there, too, sometimes--and occasionally he felt a little embarrassed by
+her Rabelaisian comments on babies and some of their natural functions;
+but the girls paid no attention, and he soon learned not to mind
+her way of talking.... Mr. Victor would drop in, too, to enjoy the
+spectacle.
+
+“You can see him bathed Sunday morning,” said Monica enthusiastically.
+
+And on Tuesday evening, after the ceremony of the bottle was over,
+and Mr. Victor was chatting with him in his room, Monica came in.
+“My sister doesn’t like to ask,” she said, “but you see--she and Ma
+have to be out to-morrow evening. It’s about Rose’s divorce. There’s
+some witnesses we have to see. Of course, I could stay and look after
+the baby, but I’m the one who has been talking to the lawyers, and I
+really know more about it than they do. I ought to go along. And we
+wondered--I wondered--if you were going to be in that evening. Because
+if you were, I thought you wouldn’t mind staying up in our room, next
+to the nursery. Of course, if you’re going to be out, I can stay at
+home just as well. It’s only for a couple of hours. We’ll be home in
+time to give him his ten o’clock bottle. I thought maybe you’d like to!”
+
+This was an occasion much too important to be sacrificed to a mere
+conference with Dr. Zerneke.
+
+“I’d be very glad to,” he said.
+
+He called up Dr. Zerneke the next day, and the engagement was postponed
+until Friday.
+
+On Friday evening, then, a little before ten, not without regrets at
+having to miss the important occasion of the day, he walked over to Dr.
+Zerneke’s home.
+
+It was an apartment some blocks away from her office, in a less
+imposing building. He had been told to ring the janitor’s bell, and “if
+I’m not there, the key’s on the lintel above the door.” Having passed
+the inspection of the janitress, he climbed the stairs, to the top
+floor. There was no answer to his knock, so he let himself in according
+to instructions.
+
+The ceilings at the front were low, with a garret-like slant. There
+were easy chairs, a large couch heaped with cushions, a little table
+with a coffee-bulb and cups set out, large bookcases filled with books.
+The rest of the wall space was occupied with etchings, lithographs,
+and oils. Here was one of Nordfeldt’s New Mexico etchings--he had
+several of that series himself. A lithograph by Picasso. And here was
+a Springer.... He hadn’t gone to Springer’s exhibit. Well, he was a
+workingman now. Not an art patron any more....
+
+Dr. Zerneke entered, carrying her medicine case.
+
+“You let yourself in--good. I’ll make some coffee in a moment.”
+
+Norman asked: “Can I do anything?”
+
+“No. Sit down.”
+
+Dr. Zerneke went into another room, put away her things, and came back.
+She carried the coffee-bulb into the kitchen, returned with it filled
+with water, and lighted the alcohol lamp.
+
+“Why,” she asked, “didn’t you consult me before going to live at Mrs.
+Czermak’s?”
+
+“It didn’t occur to me that it was a matter to consult anybody about,”
+Norman answered, a little defiantly. After all, he had not left home to
+take orders on every little thing from Dr. Zerneke.
+
+“Is there,” he asked, “any reason why I should not live there?”
+
+“It’s merely,” said Dr. Zerneke, “that it will make it more difficult
+for her to give up the baby.”
+
+“That won’t be necessary for some time, I presume,” said Norman.
+
+“I had not planned to leave the baby there more than a few weeks,” said
+Dr. Zerneke.
+
+“But why?” asked Norman in surprise. “I thought it was a fine place.”
+
+“It has its merits. But I should prefer to put your baby in another
+boarding-home, where there are other children, so that he won’t be
+spoiled by too much devotion. And you can see that your being there
+makes it unnecessarily embarrassing.”
+
+“Yes, I can see that. But what I can’t see is why the baby should be
+taken away.” It really seemed to him as though Dr. Zerneke were saying
+that to annoy him.
+
+“I think,” he added, “I might be allowed to be the judge of that. I was
+going to ask you if the Adoption Society hadn’t passed on the matter of
+the adoption, by the way.”
+
+“And I was going to tell you that the Society has decided that the
+proper procedure in this case would be for the mother to turn over the
+child to you herself.”
+
+“But she’s already given it up to the Society!” said Norman.
+
+“That would be cancelled. It may be a legal quibble, but for some
+reason this procedure is preferable. I’ve written to your father about
+it.”
+
+“Where is Isabel--in Paris?”
+
+“No--she doesn’t sail till the eleventh of May, according to her plans.
+She’s still in Michigan, resting. There won’t be much of a delay. As
+soon as she signs the papers we’ve sent her, the child will be your
+own. And for that reason, I think I ought to explain to you why you
+should not leave him at Mrs. Czermak’s indefinitely. The atmosphere of
+the place is all wrong. That kind of neurotic devotion is all right for
+a few weeks, but you don’t want the child to get too accustomed to it.”
+
+“Would you call them neurotic?” Norman asked defensively. “I should
+have said they were a very healthy lot.”
+
+“It’s the situation that is unhealthy. I’m thinking particularly of
+Mrs. Czermak herself. The obvious thing to say is that she needs babies
+of her own--and it’s quite true. She let her maternal instincts be
+exploited for a long time in a nurse-maid’s job. Then, when she did get
+married, it was to a no-account young genius who wanted to be the baby
+of the family himself. And since her baby died, I’ve been exploiting
+her for the benefit of other women’s babies. No, I don’t call it
+healthy to break her heart over children that don’t belong to her.
+Just because it’s your child that she’s in love with doesn’t mean that
+everything’s all right. And when she does have to give him up, you can
+thank yourself for making it worse for her.”
+
+“But how have I made it any the worse?”
+
+“A man around the house--her baby’s father--why, it’s almost like
+being married! I’m not suggesting that she’s necessarily in love with
+you, Mr. Overbeck--and if she were, it would not be so much a tribute
+to your own charms as to the fact that you are the baby’s father. Her
+baby’s, as she wishes to feel.”
+
+“Am I to take this as a warning?” Norman asked coldly.
+
+“Stranger things have happened. Of course, if you wish to settle down
+there permanently”--Dr. Zerneke smiled--“you’d find her an excellent
+wife in many respects.”
+
+“Good heavens!” said Norman, horrified. “I never realized that these
+things were so frightfully complicated. I only wanted to get acquainted
+with my son. I’ve only seen him five times--awake, that is.”
+
+“And to-night it was my fault that you were dragged away from the happy
+scene, wasn’t it?” said Dr. Zerneke. “Thoughtless of me!”
+
+The boiling water plunged upward through the glass tube furiously, and
+Dr. Zerneke put out the flame beneath.
+
+“Things came off very well Sunday, didn’t they?” she said.
+
+“My father,” he replied uncomfortably, “was more than kind.”
+
+“Yes--he was sensible, which is more to the point. When is your mother
+coming?”
+
+He hesitated. “No definite date has been set,” he told her.
+
+“Have you asked her?”
+
+“She knows where I am. She can come if she wants to.”
+
+“Have you written to her at all?”
+
+“No,” he said reluctantly.
+
+“Nor to any of your family?”
+
+“No. Why should I?”
+
+“You must remember that you repudiated them, when you left home without
+telling them about the baby. Don’t you suppose families have feelings?
+They won’t come to see the baby till you invite them.”
+
+“Oh, I suppose I should.”
+
+“Yes, I think you’d better. And I also think it might be just as well
+if you were living somewhere else when your mother and sisters come to
+see you, if you don’t mind my saying so.”
+
+He realized what she meant--they wouldn’t like his being so much at
+home there. And his sister Lucinda would be suspicious of Mrs. Czermak.
+It was perfectly absurd, but she would. She thought every woman had
+designs on him.... He sighed....
+
+“It’s been a very comfortable place,” he said. “I should be sorry to
+have to leave.”
+
+“Yes,” said Dr. Zerneke tartly, as she poured the coffee, “a man with
+a fond mother and sisters does get in the habit of letting women-folk
+wait on him. Sugar?”
+
+“Black, please,” he said, flushing. Had she heard of Monica’s bringing
+him his morning coffee? But that wasn’t his fault! They had all
+insisted on it. He couldn’t have refused without being rude....
+
+“I’ll stop scolding you,” she said, handing him the cup. “How is your
+work going?”
+
+“Not brilliantly, I’m afraid.”
+
+“Well, the adoption matter ought to be settled soon, and then you can
+settle down to a normal life.”
+
+Something in her tone made him ask: “What, exactly, is your idea of a
+normal life for me, Dr. Zerneke?”
+
+“Well, I don’t mind saying that it isn’t hanging over a cradle in your
+spare evenings. You ought to be having some kind of ordinary social
+life. You ought to be making friends. Men friends and girl friends.
+If I heard that you were caught drinking and dancing, I wouldn’t be
+shocked. Even if you were seen kissing a pretty girl. I know, this may
+seem precipitate to you. You’ve only been mooning over your baby for a
+week. Just the same, it’s time you began to form other habits.--Your
+habits would be admirable enough, if you were a husband, and one of
+those girls your wife. That’s how a home is built up. But you are a
+bachelor. And you ought to behave as such. It would be bad enough, the
+way you’re acting, if they were your own mother and sisters. I want you
+to snap out of it.... The truth is that something fell on you three
+weeks ago, and hit you like a ton of brick. Nevertheless, you’ve got to
+get over it. You can’t let time stop still for you at the moment when
+you found you had a baby. After all, staying in the cave and cooing
+to babies is a maternal occupation. Going out and killing bears is
+the paternal job. How long, if I may ask, are you going to work for
+thirty dollars a week? Or is your son going to be supported by his
+grandfather?”
+
+Norman set down his coffee cup and rose haughtily.
+
+“I’m sorry my conduct doesn’t please you,” he said. “Thank you for your
+advice. I will call on you when I want more of it.”
+
+And so saying, thoroughly outraged, he left Dr. Zerneke’s home abruptly.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX: It Was Bound to Happen
+
+
+THAT was on Friday evening. And on Saturday morning he had a telephone
+call from Dr. Zerneke.
+
+“I’ve heard from Isabel,” she said. “The papers are signed. If you
+can get off this afternoon to go to the courthouse, the thing will be
+settled for good.”
+
+He would be at her office at two, he said.
+
+The legal red-tape would soon be unwound, now--his son would be all his
+own!...
+
+Going back to his desk, he found a note there, saying formally that Mr.
+Wilkins wished to see him.
+
+He walked buoyantly into Mr. Wilkins’ office, thinking to himself that
+this would be his promised raise.
+
+“My luck is with me!” he said to himself.
+
+Ten minutes later, he came out of Mr. Wilkins’ office saying to himself
+over and over:
+
+“Of course. It was bound to happen. I’ve had too easy a time. It was
+bound to happen.”
+
+He had in his hand an order on the cashier for his week’s pay, and
+another week’s in advance.
+
+Mr. Wilkins had observed his work carefully, he said, during these two
+weeks. Not everybody had the makings of an advertising man in him. He
+felt sure that Mr. Overbeck would do better in some other field. Et
+cetera.
+
+Fired!
+
+He tried to persuade himself to take it lightly. After all, there were
+other advertising agencies in Chicago. He had got this job without
+any experience at all. With what he had picked up of the lingo of the
+profession, he ought to be able to get a better job. Yes, he was no
+longer a mere beginner. He would strike the next place for sixty-five
+dollars a week at least....
+
+While he felt that way, as soon as he had cleaned up his desk and got
+his money from the cashier, he walked over to the H. H. Warner agency
+and asked for a job. He did not get it.
+
+Then he tried the Simpson agency. There was nothing there for him,
+either.
+
+Well, it had taken him some little time to get that first job. It would
+take more than a day to get another.... And in the meantime he had to
+go to see Dr. Zerneke.
+
+What an irony! That it should be at such a moment that he should be
+given his son!
+
+With Dr. Zerneke, in her office, he was stiff and formal. He had
+decided not to tell her about losing his job--until he had found
+another.
+
+She wasted no words, but pushed a document across her desk.
+
+“That is the mother’s consent. And here”--she glanced at another paper,
+and handed it over--“is your petition. Sign it before a notary, and
+take it to Judge Hummel in the County Court, at three o’clock; our
+legal representative will be there. His name is Starrett.”
+
+“Thank you.”
+
+He took his departure stiffly.
+
+There was a notary’s office down the street. He had noticed it in
+coming. He stopped there, signed his name, and held up his hand while
+the notary mumbled a formula.
+
+At the courthouse he found Mr. Starrett waiting for him. They went into
+Judge Hummel’s chambers. The judge looked at him curiously. It was not
+every day, it seemed, that a man adopted his illegitimate child....
+
+It was over at last. And now to look for a job.
+
+But no--he must wait till Monday for that....
+
+He would have nothing to do over Sunday except think.
+
+He remembered what Dr. Zerneke had said about the child’s being
+supported by his grandfather. It was as if she had known he was going
+to lose his job....
+
+It was true that he had been slack at his desk all week. Not like the
+week before, when he had been living by himself, and calling up Dr.
+Zerneke’s office once a day to see whether the baby was all right....
+He had been working for his son, then. Ever since he had come to
+Mrs. Czermak’s, he had been lapped in a soft, sentimental dream of
+fatherhood....
+
+He realized that he had had no lunch. He must eat, even if he was out
+of a job.
+
+He went home early in the evening and picked up a book to read, to keep
+his thoughts off his situation. He had decided he would say nothing to
+the people here about losing his job. Not until he had got another. He
+would go out early in the morning as usual, and keep looking for a job
+all day....
+
+The book was one that had been in the room when he rented it, a novel
+of Dumas’. He had read it when he was a boy. He started to read it
+again, with the hope that in this cheerful swashbuckling romance he
+would find something to take his mind entirely away from his problems.
+It was about Athos--and, as he presently noted, about an illegitimate
+son of that worthy. And Norman vaguely remembered, from his boyhood,
+the story of how it had all come about. The young man had found upon
+his doorstep a bassinet containing the newborn child--a souvenir sent
+by a young lady of quality in memory of the jocund night of love which
+they had enjoyed the year before. So, it appeared, were such matters
+handled in those romantic days. And, as Norman remembered, the young
+hero had suffered no pangs of conscience; he had taken it as a matter
+of course, and sent the child away to be nursed and educated. Such, as
+well as Norman could remember, were the origins and early circumstances
+of the Vicompte de Bragelonne....
+
+Norman threw the book aside fretfully. Dumas had played him false--had
+merely reminded him of his own troubles....
+
+He looked at his watch. It was ten o’clock. Time for the feeding. But
+he did not want to go to see it.... He would feel ashamed, knowing that
+he had lost his job....
+
+What was it that Dr. Zerneke had said about the clock stopping for him?
+When he found that he had a baby. Yes, he hadn’t thought of much else
+since then.
+
+When Dumas’ hero found that bassinet on his doorstep, he didn’t moon
+over it. He took it in his stride....
+
+Well, when he had another job, he would begin to live what Dr. Zerneke
+called a normal life. He would make friends. He would meet girls. He
+would not hang over his son’s cradle every evening. He would be a
+normal young bachelor....
+
+But first he had to find a job--and work hard to keep it this time.
+
+What a fool he had been, to lose that job! It might be hard enough to
+get another.... But he wasn’t going to let his son be supported by J.
+J. Overbeck....
+
+There was a knock at the door. It sounded like Mr. Victor’s. He ignored
+it. And Mr. Victor took the hint of his silence and went away. But
+presently there came another tap that sounded like Monica’s. He ignored
+that, too. He sat slumped in his chair, thinking of his inadequacies.
+He was sitting thus, with his head drooped on his chest miserably,
+when the door opened slightly, and Monica’s voice uttered a surprised
+and apologetic “Oh!”
+
+Norman did not look up even then. For he became aware of the tears of
+self-anger and self-pity in his eyes. He did not want this girl to see
+him crying.
+
+But girls are stupid about such things. She stayed there in the
+doorway, and said “Oh!” again, this time in a sympathetic tone. Then
+she came timidly into the room, approached him, touched his arm with
+her hand. “Please--is anything the matter, Mr. Overbeck? Have you--have
+you had bad news from Colorado?”
+
+She stooped over him in a kind sisterly way.
+
+Colorado?
+
+“No!” he said. And he added roughly: “Go away and leave me alone!”
+
+She fled.
+
+He shouldn’t have said that, he thought regretfully. She wasn’t his
+sister, to be talked to in such a fashion. She had a right to ask--she
+had thought his wife was dying or something. That was what any one
+would think, to see him sitting there crying.
+
+Stricken with remorse, he went to the door.
+
+“Monica!” he called, for she was not in sight. She appeared abruptly at
+the head of the stairs. “Yes, Mr. Overbeck?”
+
+“I--I’m sorry, Monica,” he said.
+
+“Oh, it’s all right.”
+
+She was coming down. She stood there before him, with a queer
+frightened look on her face.
+
+He didn’t know that he was holding out his arms to her in the doorway.
+He didn’t know until she melted into his clasp, and they were kissing
+one another.
+
+“Oh!” she said at last, “we mustn’t do this. Your wife--”
+
+“Of course,” said Norman, infinitely astonished at himself. “I forgot!”
+
+There they were, in the doorway; and at the head of the stairs, as they
+both suddenly became aware, was Monica’s mother. They released each
+other abruptly. Monica ran out into the hall. Norman closed the door,
+and sat down to think.
+
+Now what?
+
+He couldn’t imagine why he had done such a foolish thing.
+
+Fortunately, he was supposed to have a wife in Colorado. Monica
+wouldn’t expect him to marry her.
+
+But what would her mother say?
+
+He wasn’t left long in doubt. A firm rap at the door was Mrs. Case’s.
+He rose to let her in.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter X: Mrs. Case
+
+
+“I’M very sorry, Mrs. Case,” he began, but she interrupted him.
+
+“That’s all right,” she said, “you would be, caught as you were, and
+I’m not worrying about what’s past. It’s the girl’s fault as much as
+your own, and natural enough on both sides, with small blame to either
+of you. It’s the days and nights to come I’m thinking of. A man with a
+wife away is bound to be kissing some girl, and if it’s not one it will
+be another, so another it shall be. We’ve trouble enough in our family,
+and it will be some other than my Monica that you philander with from
+now on. I’m not blaming you, Mr. Overbeck, you understand, but the way
+it is, with you a married man, I’ll just ask you to find another room,
+and take temptation out of harm’s way.”
+
+“It’s very kind of you to look at it in that way, Mrs. Case,” said
+Norman, much relieved. “I’ll move to-morrow.--I don’t know how it
+happened,” he began to explain.
+
+“Oh, I know how it happened,” said Mrs. Case. “There was you, and there
+was she, and that’s how it happened. I’m not saying a word against
+human nature. I can’t have it go on in _my_ house, that’s all. I’ll be
+sorry to see you go, but you know how it is. I can’t be staying awake
+all night to see that my daughter sleeps in her own bed.”
+
+Norman blushed. “I assure you,” he said, “that we--that I--”
+
+“You can save your assurances for your wife when she comes back, it’s
+then you’ll need them,” said Mrs. Case. “I know the world of men and
+women, and I’ve no great quarrel with the way they’re made. It’s all
+right with me, but you can just be leaving your door unlocked at night
+for the other girl at your new place, when it comes to that.”
+
+Norman, not quite following her meaning, asked in bewilderment and some
+indignation:
+
+“What other girl do you mean?”
+
+“Whatever one it chances to be, and I wish you good luck, too,” said
+Mrs. Case. “There’ll be one. You’re not the sort of young man the girls
+will let sleep single long, but I’d rather, as I say, it would be some
+other woman’s daughter that kept you company when the lights are out.”
+
+“Really, Mrs. Case,” said Norman in embarrassment. “You mustn’t think--”
+
+“Oh, it’s only human nature,” said Mrs. Case, “and nothing to apologize
+for. I think none the less of you, but I have to look after my own as
+best I may.”
+
+“I think you’re quite right, Mrs. Case,” said Norman.
+
+“We’ll all miss you, I say, and we’ll all be glad to see you when you
+come to visit your boy. You mustn’t think we’ve any grudge against
+you, Mr. Overbeck. That’s why I’m asking you to go now, before that
+happens which we’ll all be sorry for.”
+
+There was more to the same effect, and it was arranged that Norman
+should find another room and move to-morrow, on the excuse that he had
+to be nearer to his office.
+
+It was just as well all around, thought Norman; he would take a cheaper
+room while he was looking for work. He paid Mrs. Case two weeks in
+advance for the baby; that at least was secure....
+
+“I don’t mind saying I’ll sleep better when you’ve gone, and I don’t
+have to wonder is every creak a girl’s bare feet on the stairs,” she
+said, at which Norman blushed again.
+
+Was _that_--he wondered when she had gone--what everybody in this house
+thought of their brother-and-sisterly friendship?... Well--that kiss
+hadn’t been very brother-and-sisterly! After all, what did he know
+about himself? Or Monica? Perhaps this brassy-tongued old woman was
+right. Anyway, he gathered that these reflections upon his character
+were not intended by Monica’s mother as uncomplimentary.
+
+As he went to bed, he glanced at the lock on his door. Yes, perhaps
+it was just as well he was going to leave this place.... What did he
+really know about girls?
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XI: Paradise Lost
+
+
+ON Sunday morning he found a small room on the North side, not far
+away, a narrow hall bedroom on the top floor--a hole in the wall that
+cost him only four dollars a week.
+
+He went back to Mrs. Case’s to pack up. Mr. Victor came in. He had
+heard, he said, that Norman was leaving.
+
+Nobody else came in. They seemed to be avoiding him.
+
+He asked Mr. Victor to tell Mrs. Case that the corner expressman
+would come for his trunk. He looked around the room regretfully, and
+wondered again at that inexplicable kiss which had forfeited for him
+this comfort.... Well, unless he got a job right away, he couldn’t have
+stayed there anyway.
+
+“Say good-by for me to Mrs. Case, and Mrs. Czermak--and Monica,” he
+bade Mr. Victor. “Tell them how grateful I am and always will be to
+them, for the way they’ve looked after my child.”
+
+Mr. Victor raised his eyebrows. “But you’ll be coming here regularly to
+see the boy, won’t you?” he asked.
+
+Norman felt rather foolish. To Mr. Victor, of course, it was not a
+farewell to a lost paradise.
+
+“My work is going to keep me terribly busy for a while,” he said
+stiffly. “I shan’t be able to get here very often.”
+
+“You’ve been almost one of the family,” said Mr. Victor regretfully.
+
+Just a little too darned near, thought Norman.... That kiss still
+astonished him whenever he thought of it.
+
+But he didn’t like to go away as though he were sneaking off in
+disgrace. He wished he could see Monica for a moment.... An idea
+occurred to him.
+
+He unlocked his trunk. In the till were all sorts of trifles which
+his mother had collected from his chiffonier. He searched among them,
+looking for something appropriate.... Yes, girls wore cuff-links
+sometimes. He selected a handsome green jade pair with silver mountings.
+
+“May I entrust you with a little commission?” he asked Mr. Victor
+formally. “I would like you to give these to little Monica.”
+
+“She’ll be pleased as Punch,” said Mr. Victor, admiring them.
+
+“I don’t know when I’ll be here again,” said Norman, “so I’ll say
+good-by,” and shook hands with Mr. Victor.
+
+He went over to his new room and awaited the trunk. He was afraid at
+first that there would be no room for it. But he found that if it were
+set at the end of the narrow iron bedstead, it left space enough for
+the door to open half way--and that was enough.... He reflected that
+if the worst came to the worst, all those suits of clothes his mother
+had sent him ought to fetch something at a pawnshop.
+
+But that was no way to be thinking at a time like this....
+
+He dined as inexpensively as possible, and came back to his hole in the
+wall.... At Mrs. Czermak’s there had been a tree in front of the house.
+Here he looked out over a chaos of grimy roofs. Well, he might as well
+get used to it! This might be his life for some time now.
+
+All the rest of the day he stayed in his tiny room. He remembered that
+he had promised Dr. Zerneke to write to his mother. But he did not want
+her to come while he was out of a job. He would have to postpone that
+indefinitely.
+
+Well, what was he going to do? Look for a job, of course. But suppose
+he couldn’t find one?
+
+But he could. He would. He must!
+
+He hadn’t been discouraged when he started in to look for a job three
+weeks before. But this was different, somehow. Being a father, with a
+baby to support--that had been then a strange dream, a daring wish, a
+rebellious aspiration. Now it was a grim reality. He had to keep on
+paying that twelve dollars a week.... And he began with pencil and
+paper to figure out how long his money would last, computing his own
+expenses at the lowest rate. Less than three weeks! Scarcely more than
+two, in fact. He had that much time to find a job in. Then there was
+that trunkful of clothes to pawn.... Of course, his father’s money was
+there in the bank, waiting for such emergencies as this. But that would
+be a confession of failure....
+
+Why was he thinking of failure now? Three weeks ago he hadn’t worried
+about that possibility.... But three weeks ago he hadn’t just been
+fired from a job that he thought he was doing pretty well at.
+
+Yesterday he had formally adopted his and Isabel’s child. He, a man
+without a job, who could assure a child no more than three weeks’ food
+and shelter. What would Isabel think, if she knew? Would she be sorry
+she hadn’t given her baby to some well-to-do strangers?
+
+He found it difficult to get to sleep that night. The future stretched
+out before him, grim and frightening.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII: Out of a Job
+
+
+HE had intended to get up early Monday morning; but a troubled sleep,
+filled with a long, anxious, childish dream concerning an attempt to
+find the right train in a huge and bewildering railway station, held
+him fast in its grip. Apparently he was waiting for Monica’s knock to
+awaken him. But no knock came, and it was ten o’clock before he opened
+his eyes. A bad start! He would have to get an alarm clock.
+
+He called on an advertising agency that day, and was not surprised to
+be told that they needed no one.
+
+The rest of the day he spent in an aimless wandering about the streets.
+
+The next day, again rising late from the enthrallment of an
+anxiety-dream, he called on another advertising agency, and again used
+his further time in meaningless perambulation. The fact was that the
+experience of being refused a job robbed him of his courage for the
+rest of the day. And in addition there was a half-conscious conviction
+of the hopelessness of his search, which made him want to stretch out
+the effort over a period of days or weeks, and postpone as long as
+possible the inevitable conclusion of failure....
+
+What occupied his thoughts during these long days was a monotonous
+series of trifles which had assumed for him a heavy and grave
+importance. One, which took all week to decide about, concerned
+the buying of an alarm clock. He certainly needed one--there was
+no doubt of that. He was rising later and later from his poisonous
+fear-dreams.... But a clock cost money. He looked at clocks in the
+windows of drug stores as he passed, noted their prices, and figured
+out in his mind how many hours of his money the cheapest of them would
+set him back. For he had his money computed now in terms of hours.
+Every dollar, as he had calculated it, gave him and his child eight
+hours and some forty-eight minutes of food and shelter. A forty-five
+cent clock might seem cheap enough, but it robbed them of four hours’
+security! And figured in that fashion, its cost was so stupendous that
+its purchase must be postponed and reconsidered pro and con at great
+length.
+
+Again there was the matter of his meals. He had for this period set
+down the meager sum of fifty cents a day for food. That had seemed
+small enough, but when one ate only two meals a day at very cheap
+restaurants it was possible to cut down that figure. He could get a
+breakfast of doughnuts and coffee for ten cents, and a dinner of hash
+or spaghetti for thirty. The consideration of these items, and the
+sense of saving occupied much of his time and thought.... And yet,
+after a few days, when he came to balance his budget one evening,
+he found that he had spent more money than he should have done. Two
+dollars, or seventeen hours and a half, had vanished without trace....
+
+And there were items he had not reckoned on--cigarettes he could do
+without (he smoked a kind that went out, and he saved the stubs of
+his last box and had a luxurious puff or two from one of those before
+going to bed), but laundry was a necessity; and so, after butchering
+his face with his last dull blade, was a new supply of blades for his
+safety razor; though the soap on the washstand was as good for shaving,
+he found, as what comes in a tube. And even the small item of carfare
+seriously disarranged his estimates; at a minimum of ten cents a day
+for three weeks, it shortened his time of security by nineteen hours.
+And he had quite forgotten about having to pay for laundry.
+
+In truth, he knew these estimates were an absurd folly; yet he spent
+hours of time every evening going over his figures, working them out in
+decimals. There was this comfort in his preposterous mathematics, that
+it kept his mind precariously balanced on the edge of the abyss of fear
+along which he seemed to walk. It was as if he must keep his eyes fixed
+upon these figures, lest he should look down into that gulf and become
+dizzy....
+
+He did not go to see his child; he could not face the people
+there--yet. He called up every evening, and Mrs. Case or Mrs. Czermak
+reported that the baby was--of course--all right. Once it was Monica
+who answered the telephone; in a queer, constrained voice she gave him
+the information he wanted, and then, still in a reserved tone, thanked
+him for the cuff-links. (He had forgotten them.) He explained that he
+was very busy, but hoped to have time soon for a visit....
+
+Every day that week he went to an advertising agency. There were only
+two, besides the one from which he had been discharged, where he would
+have cared to work; one of them he had gone to last Saturday, and the
+other he held in reserve, going first to the smaller and negligible
+ones. On Saturday morning he would go to McCullough’s, the one he was
+holding in reserve.
+
+That day he rose early, having bought an alarm clock at
+last--recklessly paying seventy-nine cents for it. He indulged in the
+luxury of having his shoes shined. He bought a newspaper, and read
+about the preparations for the General Strike in England, and the
+sports news, so as not to be too out of touch conversationally with the
+outside world. Thus prepared, he went to McCullough’s.
+
+Mr. McCullough himself was not in, but somebody in charge told him
+flatly that there was no opening there just now for anybody....
+
+That afternoon, when going into a cheap restaurant to brace himself
+with another meal of doughnuts and coffee, he noticed a sign in the
+window: “Dishwasher Wanted.” He went up to the man at the cashier’s
+desk and asked about the job.
+
+The man looked at him doubtfully and said: “I don’t think it’s the kind
+of a job you want.”
+
+“How much does it pay?” asked Norman.
+
+“Go and see the boss. He’s in the back.”
+
+“Whom shall I ask for?”
+
+“Ask for the boss.”
+
+Norman went back into the greasy, steaming kitchen.
+
+“I want to see the boss,” he said to a fat man in an apron.
+
+“I’m the boss. What do you want?”
+
+“How about that dishwashing job?”
+
+The man looked at him. “My God, what next?” he said disgustedly.
+
+“Why, what’s the matter with me?” Norman asked.
+
+“You’d last about an hour,” said the man.
+
+“How much is the pay?” Norman demanded.
+
+“Twelve dollars and meals. You have the day shift for two weeks and
+then the night shift--seven to seven.”
+
+Twelve dollars--and meals. That was enough for the baby. And he could
+pawn his trunkful of clothes to pay for his room.
+
+“I’ll take it,” he said.
+
+“If you’re here at six-thirty to-morrow morning and nobody else has
+turned up, I’ll try you out,” said the man.
+
+“All right,” said Norman. “I’ll be here.”
+
+“The hell you will,” said the man doubtfully.
+
+As Norman went by the cashier’s desk the man there asked: “Get it?”
+
+“I think so,” said Norman.
+
+“Working for a paper?” asked the man. “Going to write us up?” And he
+smiled knowingly.
+
+Norman shook his head and went out. Why were they so suspicious of him?
+Just because of his clothes? Well, a week’s dishwashing would change
+that....
+
+He would have no time to call up Mrs. Czermak to-night. He’d better
+call up now.
+
+Monica answered the telephone.
+
+“Oh!” she said. “Dr. Zerneke wants very particularly to see you
+to-night. She said to go to her home at ten o’clock. Yes, Junior’s all
+right. When are you coming to see him?”
+
+“Soon, I hope,” said Norman vaguely.
+
+What did Dr. Zerneke want to see him about? Had she found out about his
+losing his job?
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII: The Dreamer Wakes
+
+
+DR. ZERNEKE was not in when he arrived at her home at ten o’clock, and
+he let himself in as before.
+
+Waiting for her, he turned to the book-shelves. He caught the name
+of Freud on the back of certain imposing volumes.... Ferenczi....
+Flexner.... Frazer.... Fabre....
+
+All very informative, no doubt.... Sanger.... Spencer and Gillen....
+Stendhal’s _L’Amour_.... Stopes.... If he read all those large books,
+he might understand his own situation better. But it was a little late
+to begin his education. Perhaps a younger generation, that babbled of
+sex and psychoanalysis instead of nursery rhymes, as it was reputed to
+do, would find clear sailing. And maybe not. He had thought he knew
+something, himself. He had had a smattering of modern ideas. He had
+thought of himself as a liberal.
+
+Goethe.... Godwin.... Groos.... Remy de Gourmont. Guyot’s _Breviare
+de l’amour experimentale_.... All about sex, it seemed.... Janet....
+James Joyce.... Ernest Jones.... Jung.... Kammerer.... Kempf.... Ellen
+Key.... The Koran.... Krafft-Ebing.... An omnium gatherum of biology,
+sociology, psychiatry, poetry, plays, and what not.... Adler.... Grant
+Allen’s “The Woman Who Did”--a novel Norman vaguely remembered having
+read in his ’teens; it was about a woman who deliberately and on theory
+had an illegitimate child; the child, as Norman recalled, did not
+thank her mother for conferring upon her that heroic but embarrassing
+distinction.... Aretino.... The Apocrypha....
+
+Norman took down the Apocrypha, and looking into it at random was
+interested to see there the name Thecla. He had wondered who was the
+St. Thecla for whom the Adoption Society was named. He would read the
+Apocrypha some time and find out.... He put the book back at the sound
+of some one coming up the stairs.
+
+Dr. Zerneke entered, and greeted him cordially.
+
+“Well, Mr. Overbeck,” she said, “I suppose you are feeling pretty good
+about everything?”
+
+Norman was disconcerted.
+
+“What about?” he asked suspiciously. Was she making fun of him?
+
+“Why, you have your son,” she said. “That hasn’t palled already, has
+it?”
+
+“Oh,” he said. “I thought--”
+
+“You thought what?”
+
+“I hadn’t intended to tell you,” he said. “But the fact is, I’ve lost
+my job.”
+
+“That’s too bad,” she said sympathetically. “As a matter of fact,” she
+added, “I knew.”
+
+“Oh’you did?”
+
+“Yes. I happened to call up Wilkins and Freeman, and they said you
+weren’t there any more.”
+
+“Of course.... It was foolish to think I could keep it a secret.”
+
+“You haven’t another yet, I suppose?”
+
+“No,” he admitted. “I’ve been looking for another all week without any
+success. I--I seem to have lost my nerve. I’m frightfully discouraged.
+To tell the truth, I took a job of dishwashing to-day.”
+
+“Dishwashing?”
+
+“Yes. So as to keep up my payments to Mrs. Czermak, while I’m looking
+for a real job.... Oh, things will turn out all right, I know, but this
+week my prospects haven’t looked so cheerful. It was something of a
+shock, losing that job at Wilkins and Freeman’s. And looking for a job
+and being turned down every day--it’s hard to keep up one’s courage.”
+
+“So now,” Dr. Zerneke commented, “you know how a good many other young
+fathers feel. Well, it may be good for you.”
+
+“It may take me, of course,” said Norman, “several weeks to find
+another job.”
+
+“Or several months, even,” said the doctor. “Do you know Mr. Victor, at
+Mrs. Case’s rooming-house? He’s been out of work since New Year’s.”
+
+“How do they keep up?”
+
+“Some of them don’t. Others have a little money put by for hard times.
+When you were a prosperous lawyer, didn’t you save anything?”
+
+“I had a bank account, yes.”
+
+“Why not draw on it, then?”
+
+“It’s not really mine, any longer, since I’ve quit the firm.”
+
+“Suit yourself. But I hope you’re not going to be silly.”
+
+“I’ve broken with my life in Vickley. I’d rather stay broken--not go
+back for help. Is that so foolish?”
+
+“Are you engaged in some private quarrel with your father? Or are you
+trying to make a career for yourself here in Chicago? If your son, when
+he grows up, goes to New York to look for a job, don’t you think he
+will need some money to live on before he gets started? Of course, you
+can do dishwashing jobs in cheap restaurants if you want to. It may be
+good for your soul. But I doubt it. I think you’re ashamed of having
+lost your job.”
+
+“Why shouldn’t I be?”
+
+“Shame is a luxury no sensible person can afford. Do you want to stay
+in the advertising business?”
+
+“I do. Very much. That’s really what I’m afraid of--that I’ll have to
+fall back on something else.”
+
+“Would you consent to let me do you a favor?”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“I thought you might be too proud. Well--first of all, how much money
+have you in the bank at Vickley?”
+
+“Of my own--something like a thousand dollars. I was going to spend it
+on my honeymoon.”
+
+“Write out a check for it and deposit it in some Chicago bank. How much
+are you paying for your new room?”
+
+“Four dollars a week.”
+
+“Rent a small apartment. You can get one, furnished, for the summer, in
+this neighborhood, for fifty or sixty dollars a month. Give my name as
+a reference. You will need such a place to entertain your family in,
+anyway. Do that Monday.”
+
+“And what then?” Norman asked curiously.
+
+“You are fond of buying pictures, aren’t you?”
+
+“I’ve confined myself to etchings, chiefly. I have a small collection
+of moderns in Vickley.”
+
+“Send for them. Or go to the galleries and buy something new that
+you’ll want to put on your walls. Do that on Tuesday. Also, go to a
+department store and buy some cups and saucers or hangings that please
+you. Do you dance?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I will send you tickets for a ball next Wednesday, for which you will
+please remit ten dollars. If you don’t find a girl to take, come alone,
+and I’ll introduce you. It’s a masquerade, but evening clothes will do.”
+
+“Is that all?” Norman asked grimly.
+
+“Thursday I leave to your own devices. And on Friday go to see Mr.
+McCullough, of the McCullough Advertising Agency, and ask for a job.”
+
+“I was in there this morning. They haven’t got a job to give me.”
+
+“They will probably have one next Friday.”
+
+“Why should they have one next Friday?” he asked suspiciously.
+
+“Because there is such a thing in this wicked world as ‘pull,’ and I
+use unscrupulously the little I have for the benefit of my friends. How
+do you suppose people get jobs?”
+
+“But what do you know about my ability?”
+
+“Nothing. After you get the job, it will be up to you to keep it.
+That’s not my affair. All I promise you is a two weeks’ trial. But
+it just happens that the last young man I rashly recommended to Mr.
+McCullough turned out to be pretty good. If you’re a flop, I’ll merely
+lose my reputation for intuition, that’s all. Only, if I were you, I’d
+ask for sixty a week to start on. They’ll not respect you otherwise.
+Remember that you’ve a baby to support.... And don’t, please, be angry
+at me for keeping you from conquering the world by your own unaided
+efforts.”
+
+“I’ll be everlastingly grateful,” he said. “But--I thought poverty was
+supposed to be an incentive. Evidently you don’t think so. Why should
+you want me to pretend to myself that I’m rich?”
+
+“Because you’ve always been well-to-do. You are, still, as a plain
+matter of fact. Your poverty is a fake poverty--a neurotic lie, to
+please yourself.”
+
+“It didn’t feel so to me. It seemed real enough. And it wasn’t at all
+pleasing!”
+
+“It was an exercise of your imagination, nevertheless. A dream. I’ve
+merely waked you up.”
+
+“It was a nightmare,” he said.
+
+“A grim little poetic fantasy. Write a poem about it, and send it to
+the Daily Worker. It will all be true enough--for others. Not for you!
+Be honest about this, if you can.”
+
+“I admit I feel better than I did when I came in. But why--aside from
+the job you’ve more or less promised me--why should the _facts_ seem
+different now? Because they do!”
+
+“You’re facing realities now. Not fighting shadows any more. The
+question isn’t whether you can conquer the world with your bare hands.
+It’s merely whether you can succeed in the advertising business. Maybe
+you can’t, you know!”
+
+Norman laughed, and thanked her warmly.
+
+“Have you asked your mother to come to see you?”
+
+“Not yet.”
+
+“Well, the sooner the better.”
+
+As Norman walked back to his room, he had a startling apprehension
+of the fact that what she had said about keeping a job was a really
+important truth.... There had perhaps been something grimly romantic
+about the thought of washing dishes and pawning his clothes to pay that
+twelve dollars a week for his son’s care. This problem of keeping
+a job after it had been given him--there was, he knew, nothing very
+romantic about that. It was a quite realistic problem that he had to
+face now....
+
+“Am I,” he wondered, “a perfectly incorrigible ass?”
+
+If it would help to do the things that Dr. Zerneke advised--if it would
+keep him from flying off on some preposterous new emotional tangent (he
+had Monica’s kiss in mind) he would do as she said.
+
+He would get an apartment.... And then he would ask his mother to
+come....
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK THREE
+
+ The Dominant Sex
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I: Vita Nova
+
+
+HIS mother was coming. He had wired, inviting her, and she had wired
+back the date of her arrival....
+
+Ten days had passed since his talk with Dr. Zerneke, and in the
+meantime he had done most of the things outlined in her program. He had
+transferred his bank account to Chicago. He had rented a good-sized
+furnished apartment on the North side for the summer. He had even,
+according to instructions, picked up an etching, a satiric thing by
+Peggy Bacon, and put it on the wall, to make the place more his own....
+
+He had in other respects dutifully carried out Dr. Zerneke’s commands,
+day by day. He had obediently gone to the dance for which she had sent
+him tickets (he thought of taking Monica, but rejected that idea as
+distinctly out of place); and rather to his surprise, he had found on
+that occasion that he was capable of enjoying himself like anybody
+else....
+
+And finally, with some uneasiness and considerable doubt, he had
+applied to Mr. McCullough for a job--and had been taken on at forty
+dollars a week, which was all he had the nerve to ask.
+
+He ought, he knew, to feel at ease now, in his comfortable apartment,
+and with his new job. But he had lost his sense of security. His
+experience of being out of a job had taught him something he could not
+so quickly forget. Some time he might be able to feel again that the
+world was made for him; but it seemed still a difficult and dangerous
+place, and he a somewhat helpless stranger in it. He was determined
+not to lose his new job. Never did a young man work at his tasks more
+earnestly and humbly....
+
+He had been to Mrs. Czermak’s to see his son twice in those ten
+days--formal visits, different enough from the warm intimacy of his
+former association with the family. He felt under constraint, and so
+did the girls. Monica was distant and resentful, though she was rather
+obviously wearing his present--the cuff-links.
+
+Well, at any rate, he was being sensible. With his mother coming to see
+him, he must not get involved in any more messes. But he felt a little
+guilty about Monica.... It wasn’t quite the thing to do to kiss a girl
+and then drop her cold....
+
+When he was settled in his apartment, and at work on his new job, with
+no further excuse for delay, he had wired his mother the invitation to
+visit him. Her answering wire had said she would arrive Sunday morning;
+and this had been followed by a letter, a friendly and casual letter,
+taking everything as a matter of course. And Doris had scribbled a
+postscript saying that she’d love to see the baby.... Lucinda, it
+appeared, was still suffering from “nerves.” He gathered that she had
+taken it all pretty hard....
+
+And there had been a letter from Gilbert Rand, giving him the town
+gossip. They were still talking about him in Vickley. Nothing like that
+had ever happened there.... Considering everything, Norman thought it
+was pretty sporting of his mother to be so calm and matter-of-fact
+about it.
+
+Nevertheless, with the approach of his mother’s visit, he began to
+feel a sense of filial constraint. His new apartment was associated
+with the thought of her visit: it was not so much his own place, as
+one in which to entertain her. He felt that with her visit he would
+lose the liberty he had gained in leaving home and coming to Chicago.
+And he began to regret more keenly the pleasures of his stay at Mrs.
+Czermak’s, and to recall the delightful details of that period--the
+friendly midnight chats with old Mr. Victor, the morning coffee brought
+by Monica, and the delightful half hours with the girls in the nursery.
+Even Mrs. Case’s Rabelaisian conversation was something which he missed
+with regret.... Mrs. Case had not felt any of the constraint which had
+marked his visits since his departure from her roof; and last Sunday,
+when he had seen his son bathed, she had in her frank way commented
+upon one feature of the baby’s anatomy which is usually avoided in
+polite conversation. “Ah!” she had said, addressing the baby, “little
+do you know, young man, how much trouble you’re going to make in the
+world with that!” A realist, she.... Norman grinned, remembering.
+
+He had lived there only a week altogether. And he had been rather
+longer than that installed here in his apartment. Yet that week
+would always live in his memory, full of warmth and color and homely
+sweetness. This week in his apartment had been merely barren.
+
+Sitting there in his living room, he looked about with a vague
+dissatisfaction. Polite comforts evidently did not suffice a man. The
+fact was that he was lonely....
+
+And his mother was coming in four days.
+
+He really ought to make the best of those four days....
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II: Waste Not Your Hour
+
+
+YES, he was lonely, that was the trouble.
+
+Dr. Zerneke had told him to make friends. But he had made friends
+already, and had had to drop them....
+
+Well, he must make some new friends.
+
+He took out his memo-book, in which he had written the names, addresses
+and telephone numbers of two girls he had met last week at that dance.
+
+They had been very interesting girls. One of them was a field-worker
+for some sort of agency which looked after delinquent children; she
+had snapping black eyes and curly black hair, and she had talked very
+interestingly about her work, in the intervals between dances. Her name
+was Jennie Michaelson; a very intelligent girl, whom he had been eager
+to know further. And she liked him. He wondered that he had let so long
+a time slip by--more than a week--without calling her up. He looked at
+his watch. It was only eight-thirty. She might be in from dinner, and
+they could go to a restaurant and talk. She lived on the West side....
+
+He hesitated, at the moment of going to the telephone, and sat there
+in the big chair beneath the bridge-lamp, looking at his memo-book.
+There was another new girl in it somewhere. Louise--he couldn’t
+remember her last name: a fine, healthy, lovely blonde, and a wonderful
+dancer. Yes--there she was: Louise Van Strohm. She was a student at
+the University of Chicago, majoring in biology. It was her idea of
+adventure to go around the world and down into deep seas seeing strange
+and curious forms of life, like Will Beebe. She would, too, some time,
+she said. She lived near the University. She was fond of music, and the
+concerts in Jackson Park were commencing. She had mentioned it herself.
+There was one to-night. Or they could go somewhere and dance--better
+still! He looked at her ’phone number....
+
+Again he hesitated, wondering whether what he most wanted to do
+was talk or dance. If he wanted to talk, Jennie would be the more
+interesting; if to dance, Louise danced like a dream. It was difficult
+to decide which girl he most wanted to see to-night....
+
+He sat there in his easy chair under the lamp, trying to decide between
+Jennie and Louise.
+
+The clock on the mantel chimed the hour of nine.
+
+Of course, he had no assurance that either Jennie or Louise would be in
+at this hour. Girls had other things to do with their evenings than sit
+around in a furnished room waiting for the’phone to ring--especially
+girls like these. It was no way to go about it, to call them up at that
+hour. Girls had to be dated up beforehand. He’d be a fool to think he
+could get them at a moment’s notice. In fact, he should have dated them
+up for some evening there at the dance. By now they had forgotten all
+about him. After all, if a man asked a girl for her telephone number,
+and then didn’t call up for a week, she would naturally conclude that
+he couldn’t be very much interested in continuing the acquaintance. It
+would be rather embarrassing to call up now....
+
+And if he did go to see one of these girls, what would he say to her?
+A year ago, at college, he’d have known what to say. But he was a
+thousand years older, now. Louise was twenty, Jennie twenty-two; Dr.
+Zerneke had told him their ages. They were only kids. He didn’t know
+how to get along with girls of that age any more....
+
+To be sure, he had got along with them well enough that night at the
+dance. But that was because of the stimulus of the music, the costumes,
+and the drink or two that everybody had under his and her belt. But
+to see these girls again in cold blood ... His spirit faltered at the
+frightful difficulties of talking to a strange girl....
+
+Well, no doubt it could be done. People did, somehow, get acquainted
+with each other.... And his imagination flew on to envisage a time
+when he and these girls might be better friends.... The trouble was,
+it would be awkward to be always pretending to have a sick wife in
+Colorado. Maybe they wouldn’t want to play around with a man who had
+a sick wife in Colorado. Of course, he could be a recent widower, if
+he preferred. Or a divorced man--one whose wife had run away: that was
+near enough to the truth.... And he speculated upon just what Jennie
+and Louise would think of a young divorced man with an infant child.
+When they knew him better, they would ask to see the baby. Girls seemed
+to be interested in babies--almost all girls. They might like him none
+the worse for having a baby.... But there was the rub. He couldn’t ever
+tell them the truth about that baby. There would be always an invisible
+barrier, in his relations with them, from the very beginning. It would
+spoil any friendship he might try to have with them.... Things would
+come up in conversation about illegitimacy--things like that did come
+up in conversation with girls nowadays!--and he would have to hide
+his own thoughts. Because he couldn’t go around telling everybody his
+story. And he would be ashamed of having to treat these girls as if
+they were enemies from whom his thoughts must needs be concealed. Their
+friendship would be a farce from the outset....
+
+The clock chimed the half-hour.
+
+It was really too late to call up those girls to-night. Besides, he
+didn’t want to go out. He wasn’t in the mood for girls. He would stay
+at home and read a book.
+
+He went to the book-case, took one down at random, glanced through its
+pages, and threw it aside. After a few restless turns up and down the
+room he abruptly put on his hat.
+
+It was too beautiful an evening to stay indoors. He would take a walk
+in the park.
+
+He found himself accidentally on the street where he had lived at Mrs.
+Czermak’s.... He walked past the house, looking at the lighted windows.
+His old room was dark. Had they rented it to somebody else yet? He
+hadn’t asked, and they hadn’t told him.... The upstairs room, next to
+the nursery, showed a glow of light at the edges of the curtains. That
+was the girls’ room--Rose Czermak’s and Monica’s....
+
+What did Monica think of him?
+
+He turned, and walked back, on the other side of the street, looking at
+the house.
+
+He could make some inquiry about the baby, as an excuse for coming.
+Yes, he hadn’t told them that his mother was coming. He ought to do
+that. He halted.... No, it wouldn’t be very sensible to go to see them
+in his present mood. Monica might be there. Better let well enough
+alone.... He could telephone them about his mother.... He went on....
+
+Walking through Lincoln Park, he reached the Lake front. The full white
+moon was lifting itself out of the waters of the lake. He stood and
+watched it....
+
+What was Monica doing?
+
+But he reminded himself that he was supposed to have a sick wife
+in Colorado. Monica wouldn’t be thinking of him. Besides, to a girl
+nowadays, a kiss meant nothing. She had doubtless forgotten all about
+it.
+
+And besides, his mother was coming in four days. He had best keep out
+of trouble....
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III: His Mother
+
+
+IT was Saturday evening. His mother was coming in the morning. Norman
+looked anxiously about his apartment, and spent an hour emptying
+ash-trays, picking up cigarette stubs from the hearth, and getting his
+bureau drawers in order. He found that he had forgotten to send off his
+laundry this week. Well, he could buy some new shirts on Monday....
+
+He sat down, seeing his apartment with his mother’s eyes. She would
+probably find fault with the work of his cleaning-woman. She would
+smile when she saw that bureau drawer full of bright chintz which he
+had bought for curtains, forgetting that there was nobody he could ask
+to sew them for him.... Mrs. Case, it was true, had asked if there was
+anything they could do to help him get settled in his new place. But he
+couldn’t have asked them to make his curtains....
+
+He had telephoned Mrs. Czermak to let her know that his mother was
+coming, and would probably be over to see the baby in the morning. The
+news had seemed to upset her....
+
+Well, there was nothing else to do to-night. He would read a while and
+then go to bed and get some sleep. His mother was arriving on the
+early train....
+
+He had happened to see a copy of the Apocrypha in a bookshop window,
+and had bought it out of curiosity, to see who St. Thecla was. But for
+some absurd reason that apocryphal girl saint had reminded him in a
+perverse way of Isabel. He did not want to be reminded of Isabel....
+To-night he opened the book, read a little of the story of Thecla, and
+fell to wondering about Isabel. She had been going to sail for France
+on the eleventh. That was four days ago. (It was curious what a perfect
+calendar his mind unconsciously was in these matters: it was four days
+ago that he had bought this book, too.) Was she on shipboard now? Or
+had she impatiently gone long before, and was she in Paris at this
+moment?
+
+Not that it made any difference to him....
+
+But he had a queer troubled dream that night, in which both Isabel and
+Monica figured--Isabel as a dim figure in the background, hiding her
+face, and Monica, warm and near and dear, holding out her hands to him
+appealingly....
+
+The alarm clock sounded.... In an hour he must meet his mother at
+the station. An hour. Then he could go on sleeping for five minutes
+longer.... He wanted to finish that dream....
+
+He was awakened by an insistent ringing of the door-bell, and
+sprang up in confusion, looking at his watch. Good heavens!--he had
+overslept nearly two hours.... Was that his mother now? He threw on a
+dressing-gown and went to the door.
+
+“Mother!” he cried out contritely.
+
+“Good morning, Norman. You always were a sleepy-head.” She kissed him.
+“It’s nice to see you, my boy.”
+
+“And I didn’t meet you!” He seized her suitcase and packages. “How
+awful of me! Come in!”
+
+“That was all right,” she said. “What a nice place you have. As a
+matter of fact, I was rather glad you didn’t come. I went over to see
+the baby.”
+
+“Oh! You did?”
+
+“Yes. He’s a very nice baby, Norman. He looks exactly like you.”
+
+“You--you liked him?”
+
+“Of course. Now, Norman, go and have your bath and get dressed, and
+I’ll get some breakfast.”
+
+“I’m sorry, Mother--I’m afraid there’s not a thing in the house.”
+
+“I brought everything. I stopped at a delicatessen. Go along, I’ll find
+the kitchen. You’re still half asleep. You need a good cup of coffee.”
+
+It wasn’t quite the way he had expected it to be.... But then, nothing
+ever was, he reflected as he hurried through his bath and into his
+clothes. She had simply and calmly walked in and taken possession....
+
+“Are you almost ready?”
+
+“Yes, Mother. In three minutes.”
+
+He could smell the appetizing odors of bacon and coffee.
+
+“All right. I’ll put the eggs in.”
+
+That was just like her....
+
+He felt half admiring and half resentful of such a mother.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV: ’Ware Women
+
+
+AT breakfast, when Mrs. Overbeck had satisfied herself that her son’s
+stomach was being properly ministered to, they talked--Norman with
+some caution and embarrassment, but she with apparent ease. It gave
+Norman a queer feeling. One would not have thought from her manner that
+there was anything unusual, let alone irregular, in his situation. She
+inquired briefly and casually about Isabel (whom she referred to quite
+familiarly by that name, instead of by any hostile circumlocutions),
+and Norman was relieved to find that he need not make any further
+explanation in regard to her. His mother appeared to take Isabel’s
+going to Paris for granted.... She commented on Mrs. Case and her
+daughters. “They seemed rather flustered at my visit,” she said. “They
+are all very fond of the baby,” she added.
+
+“Yes, they are,” he said.
+
+“By the way,” she remarked, “they asked me something about your wife’s
+health.”
+
+To be sure--he hadn’t warned his mother of that protective fiction.
+
+“Oh,” he said, “I’m supposed to be married, you know--on account of
+the baby. I told them I had a sick wife in Colorado. You didn’t say
+anything that would give me away, by any chance?”
+
+“Why, no, I think not. I didn’t discuss you with them. I just pretended
+not to notice the question, and went on talking about the baby. But you
+might have told me, Norman. You didn’t write me anything. All I know is
+what Dr. Zerneke has told me.”
+
+“Oh--you’ve seen Dr. Zerneke too?”
+
+“Not yet. I mean what she wrote to me.”
+
+He might have known. Doubtless his mother and Dr. Zerneke had been
+in correspondence about him all along. He seemed to sniff a maternal
+conspiracy.
+
+“What did she say about me?” he demanded.
+
+“Oh, just that you were well, and about your work.”
+
+“What did she say about my work?”
+
+“She said you’d got a new job that paid more money. I was glad to hear
+that. I didn’t see how you could live on thirty dollars a week in
+Chicago.”
+
+She hadn’t known, then, about his losing that other job. He felt
+relieved.
+
+“How is Lucinda?” he asked. He had already inquired about the other
+members of the family.
+
+“Well, you know how Lucinda gets--in a state of nerves over every
+little thing. Her new puppy is lost.”
+
+“What!”
+
+“Yes, the new one she got from Schwartz’s. It just got out of the house
+about ten days ago and disappeared.”
+
+“I remember. It had a black spot or something.”
+
+So Gilbert Rand was mistaken! It wasn’t concerned with him and his
+baby, Lucinda’s state of nerves. Only her dog--of course....
+
+“She’s thinking of coming on while I’m here.”
+
+“No!” said Norman in helpless protest.
+
+“Oh, well, you might as well let her, Norman. There’s plenty of room
+here. And your baby will take her mind off her lost puppy.”
+
+“Oh, then, by all means let’s have her,” said Norman ironically. “If my
+baby can assuage her grief--!”
+
+His irony was lost on his mother--as usual. “Yes,” she said, “I think
+it would do her good.”
+
+She had brought along her sewing-kit, and after breakfast sat down to
+do the curtains, which she had somehow already discovered in his bureau.
+
+“Now don’t let me interfere with your usual program,” she said. “Just
+go ahead and do whatever you want to do. And don’t let me keep any of
+your friends away.”
+
+He didn’t like to tell her that he hadn’t made any friends.... Really,
+he ought to bring somebody home, or she would think he was hiding them
+from her.... He might bring Charlie Beckett here some evening. Charlie
+was the only one at the office that he knew at all....
+
+“I really don’t know many people yet,” he confessed. “I’ve been so
+busy. I did get acquainted a little when I was living over at Mrs.
+Czermak’s place--but that’s about all. And of course there’s Dr.
+Zerneke. I’ve invited her to go out to dinner with us to-night, by the
+way.”
+
+“Yes, I’d like to meet her. And now go on out somewhere if you want to.
+These curtains, and the dishes, will occupy me till dinner-time.”
+
+“But I can’t have you washing my dishes, Mother,” said Norman,
+scandalized.
+
+“It won’t be the first time I’ve washed your dishes,” she said.
+
+“I’ll do them myself,” he said. “You’re my guest.”
+
+“Don’t be silly, Norman. Run along and leave me alone here for a while.”
+
+And after some feeble protest, he did.... He went over to Mrs.
+Czermak’s.
+
+“Well,” he asked her, “what do you think of my mother?”
+
+She looked at him in a frightened way.
+
+“Tell me,” she begged, “is she going to take the baby away?”
+
+“Take the baby away!” Norman echoed. “Why, of course not!” And then he
+added, wonderingly: “I never thought of--such a thing.”
+
+No, but now that he did think of it, it didn’t seem so impossible. If
+she wanted to, she would be hard to stop.
+
+“Why, did she say anything--when she was here?” he asked.
+
+“It wasn’t what she said. But I’m afraid!” said Mrs. Czermak, and led
+the way to the nursery. She lifted the sleeping child from his bed and
+held him close in her arms. “I don’t want her to take him away!” she
+said.
+
+“Oh, well,” said Norman reassuringly, “I’m sure she hasn’t any such
+idea.”
+
+But that evening, at dinner with his mother and Dr. Zerneke in the
+quiet restaurant he had selected, he was troubled by that thought....
+
+Well, wasn’t it what he had once gone home to propose?--that she take
+his child to raise!... Yes, but that was ages ago. It was the last
+thing in the world that he wanted, now, to have his son brought up by
+his family in Vickley.
+
+He was a little shocked to realize how much he had changed his mind, in
+the last six weeks....
+
+And another thing, that evening at dinner, bothered him--the sense
+that his mother and Dr. Zerneke were already too well acquainted--that
+Dr. Zerneke was her friend and ally, rather than his.... There was an
+air of implicit secret understanding between them--an understanding
+concerning him.
+
+What were these two women up to?
+
+Yet it was the first time they had met, and they were of such different
+kinds! They were only trying hard to be polite to one another. All they
+had in common, after all, was a feminine conviction of his masculine
+helplessness when it came to babies....
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V: As Usual
+
+
+WHEN Norman’s mother had been there less than a week, he had settled
+down to a somewhat fretful but unprotesting acceptance of her presence.
+She had got him an efficient cleaning woman; she had sewed buttons on
+his shirts, and bought him a needed supply of socks and handkerchiefs.
+She waked him in the morning to the kind of breakfast he had always had
+at home. It was no use trying to regard her as a guest. She slipped
+easily into the familiar, authoritative, useful and neglected rôle of
+mother.... When Charlie Beckett, at the office, suggested to Norman
+one day, as one bachelor to another, that they have dinner and go to a
+musical comedy together that evening, he called up his mother and said
+he wouldn’t be home till late--leaving her alone with no more thought
+than if he had been at home in Vickley.
+
+(One incident may be lightly touched upon. Norman was not much of
+a drinking man, but in Charlie Beckett’s genial company, at the
+place where Charlie took him to get some real old-fashioned beer
+after the show, he drank enough to become rather tearily and beerily
+confidential; though even then he presented his troubles in a somewhat
+fictional disguise. “M’ wife ran away. Lef’ me with a baby. Nice little
+kid, too!”--something like that, and so unlike Norman in his sober
+senses that he preferred to forget it....)
+
+His mother had written to Lucinda telling her she could come Saturday.
+“Just for a few days,” she explained to Norman.... She herself had not
+said how long she was going to stay; but on Monday she had brought
+home from the station a second suitcase which she had checked there
+on her arrival, and he guessed that she intended to remain at least a
+fortnight. Well, there was nothing to complain of, surely, in this;
+he had invited her to come--and he couldn’t say that she was in his
+way. She did make him comfortable. Nevertheless her motherly presence
+secretly and unreasonably irritated him. But that was no new thing,
+either. He had been secretly irritated at her for the last several
+years.... So that everything was much as it had always been.
+
+Once, only, there flashed into his mind the curious tale that Gilbert
+Rand had told him about his father. He hadn’t exactly doubted the
+story--he had taken its truth for granted; but in a certain sense he
+had not really believed it. How can one believe such things about one’s
+parents? He wondered, now, if his mother had guessed what was going on?
+And if she had guessed, had she sat there calmly, sewing buttons on her
+husband’s shirts, knowing that he would get over what ailed him sooner
+or later? Or had she never dreamed of such a thing? It was hard to make
+his mother out--impossible, now, to tell what she knew or thought....
+
+She saw the baby every day, and one evening they went together. If
+her alien presence exercised a constraint on Mrs. Czermak and her
+family, she appeared placidly unaware of it. She was friendly enough
+with them; they were formal with her--still suspicious, it seemed, of
+her intentions regarding the baby. Norman was ill at ease too, during
+this visit.... And thereby occurred a second and still more disturbing
+incident in Norman’s relations with Monica.
+
+It was a rainy evening, late in the week, and he had’phoned for a taxi
+to take them back home. As they were getting into the taxi, his mother
+remembered that she had left her bag in the nursery; and he went back
+to get it. Monica found it for him, and came down to the door with him.
+It was the first time they had been alone together since that night
+of the kiss, and they were both embarrassed. Doubtless it was this
+embarrassment which provoked him to a silly speech. As they passed the
+door of his old room, he remarked: “I suppose you’re bringing morning
+coffee to somebody else now?”
+
+She looked at him reproachfully, and they halted outside the room.
+“Do you think so?” she said. She turned the knob. “See--it’s still
+empty--waiting for you to come back.” And somehow or other they were
+there together in that empty room, with the door slowly swinging shut
+behind them. As it swung shut, the shadows closed in and obliterated
+the light from the flickering gas-jet in the hall. In the darkness
+Norman’s hand touched Monica’s hungrily. And this time he was not
+surprised that next moment they were in one another’s arms.
+
+No, he was not surprised. Monica no longer seemed to him a child. And
+he knew that he wanted this--her arms about him, her kisses on his
+mouth. He wanted it all so much that he couldn’t think of anything else
+at the moment.
+
+“Darling!” he whispered.
+
+Then, in the darkness, she whispered to him: “I can’t stand it, Norman!
+I want you too much! I don’t care if you _are_ married!...
+
+“Now you know!” And her mouth passionately met his again.
+
+“Do you want me?” she whispered.
+
+And what could a young man answer but--
+
+“Yes, of course I do!”
+
+“Then come back and live with us again--and don’t let her take the baby
+away!” she whispered pleadingly.
+
+“We’ll talk about it later,” he said, half brought back to sanity by
+this alien note ... half aware that this was all mad folly, until her
+kiss dizzied his senses again....
+
+“You must go, now, dear,” she said presently, pushing him gently out.
+
+“Good Lord!” thought Norman, as he ran down to the waiting taxi.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI: Night Thoughts
+
+
+HE could not get to sleep for a long time.
+
+Of course, he could not take Monica’s proposal seriously. They had both
+been a little mad. She hadn’t known what she was saying. She didn’t
+really mean it. He couldn’t take advantage of a young girl’s romantic
+emotions. It would be simply too caddish.... The best thing to do would
+be to ignore the incident. Yes, the next time they met he would just
+behave as though nothing had happened. No doubt she would be grateful
+and relieved....
+
+This mood of chivalry lasted for perhaps three quarters of an hour,
+when abruptly his thoughts took another turn. He had a sudden vision
+of her looking at him with scornful eyes. Women didn’t appreciate that
+kind of masculine chivalry. It would hurt her pride, and she would
+despise him....
+
+Well, what could he say to her? Not, after their kisses to-night, that
+he didn’t really care for her that much.... It would be a lie....
+
+Well, if he felt that way, why not take her up?
+
+The trouble was that it was impracticable. He couldn’t go to live
+there again. Mrs. Case would have something to say about that. She had
+foreseen this very situation. A realistic mother, Mrs. Case.... No, it
+wouldn’t do at all. Agreeable as Monica’s proposal was, as a young man
+of the world he had to realize that it must be foregone....
+
+To be sure, he had this apartment. And after his mother had gone back
+to Vickley--
+
+Yes, why not?
+
+Monica, he told himself, was old enough to know what she was doing. He
+wasn’t exactly seducing her. She had made the offer herself. And he
+would be a fool to say no....
+
+He played in imagination with the idea, and it was infinitely alluring.
+
+Of course, he must not let Monica enter into this relationship with any
+false romantic ideas of its seriousness. He would have to make it clear
+to her that it was just--well, a temporary and passing sort of thing....
+
+If Monica were older, and had had more experience in the ways of the
+world, she would take all this for granted. But that was not the case.
+And the thought of making these explanations to her was not very
+pleasant.
+
+As a matter of fact, it would all be terribly serious to her. She would
+be committing a sin, for the sake of their love. Because she thought he
+was a married man.... It was hardly fair to her....
+
+But if he told her the truth, she would want him to marry her....
+
+That, of course, was entirely out of the question. The deception
+would have to be kept up--or else, for that idea didn’t please his
+imagination, he would have to make clear to her why he didn’t want to
+get married....
+
+He could imagine her saying reproachfully: “You mean--you don’t want to
+get married to _me_!”
+
+Well, all right, take it that way. He supposed he would get married
+some day. But he had no intention of doing so for a long time....
+
+“But why don’t you want to marry me, Norman?”
+
+What could he answer to that? He might say that this wasn’t really
+love.... But she would indignantly deny that. And she would be right,
+so far as she was concerned. It really was love, with her.... And
+what was it with him? He remembered how he had walked up and down in
+front of her house, wanting desperately to go in and see her.... If
+he had felt that way about a young woman of his own social class,
+would he have doubted whether it was love?... Yes--that was why he was
+subjecting his emotions to so brutal an inquisition: because she was a
+stenographer and the daughter of a woman who ran a rooming-house! That
+was why he must not permit himself to think of this as love! Madness,
+folly, a young man’s casual amusement, a convenience, a chance not to
+be passed up--call it anything but love! But what was the truth?
+
+He wanted her. He liked her. He was happy in her presence. He thought
+about her all the time ... the curve of her mouth, the tilt of her
+chin, the steady look out of her eyes, the way she tossed back her
+bobbed hair, the smoothness of her arms, the poise of her young
+body--he knew these charms by heart.... Wasn’t that love?
+
+Oh, not so romantic and poetic as some sorts of love, perhaps. But it
+was real. Oh, it was real enough!
+
+And yet he didn’t want to marry her.
+
+Well, and why didn’t he? Simply because she wasn’t the sort of girl he
+had ever thought of marrying. Because she was a stenographer. Because
+her mother ran a rooming-house. Because her family was poor. Because
+she had none of the airs and graces of his own familiar middle-class
+world.... And because he was an Overbeck of Vickley.
+
+Perhaps it _was_ mere snobbishness.... But still--could he and a girl
+of such a different background get along together as man and wife?
+
+That, however, implied that he still belonged to Vickley. He reminded
+himself that he had actually left all that sort of thing behind him. He
+wasn’t his father’s son, any more. He could marry anybody he liked....
+And what could be a more appropriate wife for a struggling young man
+of uncertain prospects than a girl like Monica, able to take care of
+herself and make the best of narrow circumstances? It wasn’t at all a
+question of her fitting into his world, but of his fitting into hers!
+And the answer to that seemed to be the fact that he had been very
+happy living there at her house....
+
+He hastily summoned up in his mind the differences between them.
+Her lack of education.... He was interested in art and ideas, in
+abstractions which she would never be able to understand.... Not,
+indeed, that most girls cared much for art and ideas; but at least some
+girls knew how to talk about them....
+
+It did not seem to him, just now, to matter greatly. After all, one
+did not marry a wife for the sake of intellectual conversation. And
+Monica was no goose, either. She had a sensible little head on her
+young shoulders. And her own struggle with poverty had taught her what
+life was.... When she knew the truth about his child--she wouldn’t be
+shocked....
+
+His mother might not like such a match, but she would have to accept
+it.... He was running his life to suit himself, not his family.... If
+he and Monica could be happy together, what else mattered?
+
+Abruptly there flashed into his mind what his friend Hal would say
+about such a marriage. “_Nostalgia de la boue._” He had always chaffed
+Norman with having a common, earthy streak in him--just because,
+before he too had fallen under the spell of Hal’s ethereal inamorata,
+he had entertained a sufficiently realistic college-boy passion for
+a pretty young waitress in Boston.... Well, his affair with that
+girl had probably been healthier than his and Hal’s mooning over that
+art-struck vixen Isabel.... Homesickness for the mud? Possibly. If he
+hadn’t been an Overbeck from Vickley, he’d probably have married that
+waitress back in Cambridge. It was shame at finding that he couldn’t
+take that affair as lightly as the young-gentlemanly code demanded,
+that had made him break off with her. He had never told anybody but Hal
+how he really felt about that girl; and Hal had only laughed at him.
+But she had given him a taste of simple, earthy young love, reckless
+and sweet; and it was the memory, somewhere in the back of his mind,
+of her unhesitating and passionate surrender, that had made him so
+afraid of Monica. Well, he had been his father’s son at Cambridge;
+he couldn’t marry his waitress sweetheart. But he could marry Monica
+now--if he was really free from Vickley. _Nostalgia de la boue?_ Say
+rather homesickness for the honest, fragrant earth! In Isabel he had
+had enough dealings with the unattainable stars; and in his Vickley
+fiancée, with the middle region of respectable compromise....
+
+Vickley would hear about his marriage with Monica, of course; and
+Vickley would think it a final degradation. Vickley would take it as
+his surrender of any hope of ever making good and coming back. Well,
+let them! He did not want to go back to Vickley. And if marrying Monica
+prevented that, so much the better!
+
+There was nothing about Monica’s family that he really need be ashamed
+of. They were self-respecting, hard-working people. He had liked them
+all.... Something Dr. Zerneke had said, when she was scolding him, came
+into his mind: “If one of those girls were your wife, your behavior
+would be admirable.” Well, why shouldn’t Monica become his wife?
+
+Yes, why not tell her the truth and ask her to marry him?
+
+But he would rather wait until his mother had gone back to Vickley....
+And it wasn’t a thing to be decided on impulse. He would take the rest
+of the week to think it over....
+
+A week to think it over.... And he fell asleep to dream of happiness in
+Monica’s passionate young arms....
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII: A Letter
+
+
+HE was unusually gay at breakfast, and went whistling to his office....
+Of course, he must not tell Monica just yet; but he might manage a
+reassuring touch or word when he went in the evening with his mother to
+see the baby.... His imagination was busy with thoughts of their life
+together....
+
+But something happened that day to disturb the happy tenor of his
+thoughts.
+
+In the afternoon there was a telephone call from Dr. Zerneke.
+
+“I’ve just had a letter from Isabel,” she said.
+
+“From Paris?” he asked.
+
+“No. From Michigan.”
+
+“But I supposed she had sailed a week or more ago!”
+
+“It seems that she hasn’t. And this letter concerns you. In fact,
+it’s really intended for you. I’m sending it special delivery to your
+apartment. It’s something you’ll probably want to discuss with your
+mother.”
+
+“But what in the world--?”
+
+“You’ll find out when you read her letter.” And that was all she would
+say.
+
+What could Isabel have to say to him? She 256 An Unmarried Father
+hadn’t decided that she wanted to keep the baby after all? Girls, he
+knew, did sometimes change their minds about such things. But it was
+too late--the baby was his, now. And it was going to stay his.
+
+But he did not allow himself to think about it. He was working with
+Charlie Beckett on the Pearson account--an important job--and it needed
+all his attention. Charlie seemed to like his ideas....
+
+“Here’s a letter for you,” said his mother, when he came home that
+afternoon.
+
+“Oh, thanks,” he said. “Something from Dr. Zerneke.”
+
+He went into his room, tore open the envelope nervously, put aside Dr.
+Zerneke’s accompanying note, and glanced rapidly through the sheets
+covered with Isabel’s tiny handwriting.... But it was a long and prolix
+letter, and this rapid survey told him nothing, so he dropped into
+a comfortable chair, lighted a cigarette, and began it again at the
+beginning in a more leisurely manner:
+
+“Dear Dr. Martha--
+
+“I’ve delayed my sailing for a few weeks, because I seem to need a
+longer rest before my ocean trip. I should have taken your advice and
+stayed another week in the hospital, I realize now. But I expect to be
+all right in another week or so.
+
+“In the meantime, since signing over the baby to Norman, I’ve had
+plenty of time to think about it, and I feel that perhaps I ought
+to make a suggestion. You will, of course, use your own discretion
+in passing it on. If it’s out of place, please throw this in the
+wastebasket and forget about it.
+
+“I hadn’t, of course, realized that Norman was as much interested in
+the baby as all that. When he didn’t come to see me at the hospital
+any more, I thought he had gone back to Vickley and dropped the matter
+entirely. It was really quite a shock to get those documents. I saw
+that I had done him an injustice. (It really makes me a little ashamed
+of my own lack of the proper parental instincts. Norman and my baby! It
+seems very odd, and rather sweet. He will make a nice father.)
+
+“I feel awkward about making my suggestion. Not knowing anything
+about any other plans he may have, I can’t be sure my idea is not an
+unwelcome impertinence. If the girl in Vickley, the one he was engaged
+to, is going to marry him anyway and take the baby, then of course
+you won’t say anything to him about this. But Roberta writes me that
+he is living in Chicago now, so perhaps the Vickley engagement is all
+off.--You see, I’m very much in the dark about it all. You didn’t tell
+me anything; and I suppose it’s really none of my business. But it
+occurs to me that it may be almost as embarrassing for a man to have an
+illegitimate baby as for a girl. And I can’t forget that under those
+circumstances he was generous and considerate enough to offer to marry
+me. I appreciated the offer, but since I wasn’t going to keep the baby
+there was no reason for accepting it. But now that he has the baby,
+perhaps I ought to make him a similar offer. It would be, of course,
+and you must make that clear to him, only a legal fiction for his and
+the child’s benefit. I would go on to Paris immediately, and he could
+divorce me for desertion; or if he wanted the divorce more quickly,
+so as to marry somebody else, then I could get a divorce in Paris as
+soon as I had established my residence there. And as a divorced man he
+would be in a less awkward position about the baby. I only make it as a
+suggestion.
+
+“I tried to paint when I first got here, but gave it up. I shouldn’t
+have attempted any work so soon. But it was a reaction from the
+hospital atmosphere, and the sense of being a failure when my milk gave
+out--I wanted to do something I was equal to doing. But I shall have
+to wait a while longer--Art is off me for the present. The truth is, I
+feel discouraged. But in Paris, I know, it will all come back.
+
+“I keep wondering about Norman and the baby. I had no idea he was going
+to be such a Tolstoian saint, and atone for the sin of his youth in
+that fashion! And did his family throw him out when the scandal broke,
+the way mine did? You might tell a fellow something about it all!
+Anyway, if my suggestion should be accepted, I’ll be glad to stop in
+Chicago for a day on my way to New York, and fix it up accordingly with
+him.
+
+“I’m not trying to thank you for all you’ve done for me--you and St.
+Thecla. I’ll try to say it with paint in Paris. I hope Norman won’t
+take too long to decide, so I can have it off my mind and go with an
+easy conscience.
+
+ “Faithfully yours,
+ “Isabel Drury.”
+
+Norman laid down the letter and whispered bitterly to himself:
+
+“She can go to hell!”
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII: A Sociological Interlude
+
+
+DR. ZERNEKE had suggested that he would want to discuss this matter
+with his mother. But that was just what he did not want to do.
+
+“I’ve something to attend to,” he said. “Would you mind going to dinner
+and to see the baby alone this evening?”
+
+“Of course not. I’ll get myself a bite right here. Just run along.”
+
+He hurried out, saying that he would be back late that evening.
+
+He tried to get Dr. Zerneke on the telephone, but she was not in.
+Probably she would be, he reflected, at ten o’clock. He would go around
+to see her then.
+
+He did not want to go back to his apartment. His mother would notice
+his nervous manner, and wonder what was the matter. (Though she never
+asked any questions--that was one comfort.)
+
+He walked in Lincoln Park for an hour or two. What he felt like doing
+was to sit down and write Isabel a cold and decisive rejection of her
+proposal. He framed and re-framed that letter in his mind. In one of
+the versions it went like this:
+
+“Dear Isabel--Thank you for your kind offer. You had your own reasons
+for rejecting mine, and I have mine for rejecting yours. I wish you
+success in your artistic career. Sincerely yours.”
+
+Another version ran: “Dear Isabel--I have no desire to be made
+respectable. Your offer is declined.”
+
+As a matter of fact, none of these versions were as epigrammatic as he
+could have wished, or did anything like justice to his feelings.
+
+He was, of course, at a disadvantage. She had not addressed him
+directly. He might write an informal letter to Dr. Zerneke, and ask
+her to send it on. It might begin: “Dear Dr. Zerneke--You tell me that
+Isabel Drury has offered to marry me, in order to simplify matters in
+regard to my child. Well, a great deal of water has flowed under the
+bridge since I made a similar offer to her. In the meantime I have the
+child, and the marital farce seems quite unnecessary.” Something as
+casual and unemotional as that....
+
+But he ought to talk to somebody before he wrote to her. Not his
+mother--no. And Dr. Zerneke was the only other person he could talk to
+about it.
+
+Would she urge him--he wondered suddenly--to accept Isabel’s proposal?
+For the sake of the child? That had been her reason for everything so
+far. His own feelings were never considered in the least....
+
+Of course, marriage with Isabel _would_ (along with his acknowledgment
+of paternity) legitimate his son, according to the laws of the State
+of Illinois. He knew that. He had looked it up at the Crerar library.
+In California, subsequent marriage of the parents wasn’t necessary
+for legitimation; the child would be legitimated simply by his taking
+it into his home and treating it as if it were legitimate. In New
+Mexico a process in court sufficed. In New York, on the other hand,
+under English common law, subsequent marriage did not legitimate the
+child--though perhaps the original relationship could be legally
+construed as a common-law marriage. It was all helter-skelter and
+ridiculous--like the divorce laws. But he happened to live in Illinois.
+It _would_ make a difference.
+
+He wondered why his father hadn’t suggested it.... He had known, of
+course, that Isabel had refused. Had he taken that as final? It wasn’t
+like him, to let anybody’s wishes stand in the way of what he thought
+correct and proper. There must have been some other reason.... To be
+sure, now that the scandal was out, marriage with Isabel wouldn’t make
+the thing any more decent in the eyes of Vickley. But it would settle
+the legitimacy question. His son could never be called a---- Norman
+choked on the word even in his thoughts....
+
+Irrelevantly and bitterly, he reflected that it might have been kinder
+to his son to let him be adopted in the first place by some married
+couple. He would never, then, have known the secret of his birth. He
+would have considered himself the son of Mr. and Mrs.----whoever they
+were....
+
+But no, he would have found out, some time. And then he would always
+have wondered who his real father was.... Yes, and his mother, too, of
+course....
+
+It occurred to Norman that he mustn’t let his son grow up with a
+resentment against his mother for deserting him. A story would have to
+be concocted that wouldn’t hurt his feelings.... Norman remembered what
+Gilbert had said that time--about hypocrisy. Yes, that was the way it
+started. Well, there was a good deal to be said for hypocrisy, after
+all. It made things so much simpler.
+
+He looked at his watch. He hadn’t had any dinner, and it was nearly
+nine o’clock. That was silly. He would go and get something to eat.
+
+But instead, he went to the Crerar library.
+
+Some people, in their troubles, solace themselves with drink, others
+with statistics.
+
+Besides, Norman was a lawyer--or had been. What he had so far seen
+of the legal attempts to deal with the problems of illegitimacy only
+reënforced his secret contempt for Law. But in his recent reading he
+had come across approving references to recent legislation in Norway
+and Sweden, by which children born out of wedlock were given, entirely
+or almost, the same rights as others. He was thumbing over the card
+catalogue looking for information on this Scandinavian Utopia, when he
+came upon the title: “Marriage Laws in Soviet Russia.”
+
+“Well, let’s see how the Bolsheviks handle this thing,” he said to
+himself, and turned in a slip for the pamphlet.
+
+He glanced through its pages rapidly. Ah! Section 133. Note I.
+“Children descending from parents who are not married have equal rights
+with those descending from parents living in registered marriage.” He
+read on. Section 140 required an unmarried woman who becomes pregnant
+to give notice to the Bureau of Vital Statistics “not later than three
+months before the birth of her child,” together with the name and
+address of the father. Section 141 provided that upon receipt of the
+notice, the Bureau should issue a citation upon the man named, who
+would have two weeks in which to deny paternity. Further sections dealt
+with the court inquiry by which paternity should be established. The
+man held liable as father was to be held responsible for his share in
+the expenses of gestation, delivery, and maintenance of the child....
+
+Norman felt a little disappointed. This did not seem so frightfully
+revolutionary. A court process to determine paternity was no new
+thing in the history of the world. He remembered one in Vickley last
+winter--he had gone to Magistrate Cooley’s court out of curiosity. A
+girl had charged a neighboring storekeeper with being the father of her
+child. Under cross-examination she broke down and confessed that it was
+really not he but a young fellow out of a job. She wanted a father for
+her child who could support it properly.... Norman wondered if things
+like that happened in Soviet Russia. Human nature being what it was, he
+didn’t see why not!
+
+He turned the pages of the pamphlet idly, and his glance rested on this
+passage: “160. Children have no right to the property of their parents,
+nor parents to the property of their children. 161. Parents shall
+be bound to provide board and maintenance for their minor children
+and for children who are indigent and unable to work.” That reminded
+him--in Soviet Russia, he had heard, there was a different kind of
+economic system, which left nothing much for anybody to inherit. That,
+of course, would simplify this whole matter of legitimacy. It was
+in order to protect the inheritance rights of the legal family that
+illegitimate children had been so cruelly penalized the world over. He
+remembered a lecture to that effect at law school. And these Bolsheviks
+weren’t concerned with defending property rights. That was the real
+difference between Moscow and Vickley. If there weren’t any inheritance
+rights involved, there wasn’t any reason to deny their human rights to
+children born out of wedlock--nothing to make a fuss about at all!
+
+But he wasn’t living in poverty-stricken and revolutionary Russia. He
+was living in prosperous America, where the legal family had property
+rights to be defended against the claims of bastards. That was, it
+occurred to him, the real reason why he was now an outcast from Vickley
+respectability. If men were permitted to do what he had done, what
+would become of the Family, in its legal, sacred, property-inheriting
+sense? It would mean red ruin and the breaking up of close-corporation
+homes, to be sure.... And his father--Norman could appreciate now the
+old man’s grim idealism--he was battling stubbornly against his own
+respectable Vickley world, attempting to bring his grandson into that
+close corporation in spite of a bar sinister....
+
+“Board and maintenance”--that was all that Norman himself, set adrift
+from family protection, could seriously hope to offer his son: that,
+and his mere paternal love and companionship. He had no longer any
+illusions about the possibility of any great success in the advertising
+business--he would do well if he hung on to his job. And that was
+all he really wanted to give the boy, if the truth were told--an
+upbringing, and then freedom to make what he wanted to of his life!
+But J. J. Overbeck could offer his grandson the prospect not merely
+of a legal career, but of lordship in the small town of Vickley:
+a snug income from rents, mortgages, government bonds, and steel
+securities--and, with these, pride and power.
+
+Which would the boy choose?
+
+But at two months of age, the boy had no choice. Norman had to choose
+for him.... He might make it easy for his father, by marrying Isabel
+before she sailed for France. That, of course, was what Dr. Zerneke
+would want him to do. For the child’s sake.
+
+No!
+
+He would be damned if he would marry that girl--to make his son one of
+the little lords of Vickley.
+
+He looked up at the library clock.
+
+Five minutes of ten.
+
+He would tell Dr. Zerneke that there were limits to what a father
+should be asked to do.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX: On Taking a Girl at Her Word
+
+
+DR. ZERNEKE was in when he arrived, and the coffee was steaming.
+
+“How is your mother enjoying her visit?” she asked, pouring him a cup.
+
+“All right, I guess.” He drank his coffee at a gulp. “Well, I’ve read
+Isabel’s letter....”
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“I want to know what you think.”
+
+“What does your mother say?”
+
+“I haven’t asked her.... And I’m not going to.”
+
+Dr. Zerneke shrugged her shoulders. “I really don’t want to get mixed
+up in this,” she said.
+
+“But you can tell me what you think!”
+
+“And be blamed afterwards....”
+
+“I’ve got to talk it over with somebody!”
+
+“There’s your mother,” she reminded him.
+
+“But you know Isabel, and she doesn’t!”
+
+“Well, the only thing I feel like advising you is--not to do anything
+rash.”
+
+“Such as what?”
+
+“Such as taking Isabel at her word in a hurry, without having a chance
+to think it all over.”
+
+“You don’t want me to marry her?” he asked, in surprise.
+
+“I don’t care whether you marry her or not. That’s entirely up to you.”
+
+“I’m glad you feel that way about it,” he said. “I thought you’d say I
+_ought_ to do it.”
+
+His relief was so plain that she went on, with a smile: “We don’t
+advise girls, in similar circumstances, to marry the fathers of their
+children--not, I mean, just to be made respectable; I should think
+the same considerations would apply to a man. After all, you’ve gone
+through the worst of it, now.”
+
+“Of course,” he said, “it isn’t just me. Marrying her would serve to
+legitimate my son--and nothing else, in this state, will.”
+
+“That doesn’t matter so much,” said Dr. Zerneke. “In fact, I don’t
+think it matters at all, the way things have been arranged. It’s a mere
+legal quibble. Socially speaking, an illegitimate child is one whose
+father does not give him his name, support and protection. Your child
+is very well provided for in all those respects. He’s merely lacking a
+mother. But that is scarcely a reason for your marrying Isabel, when
+there are other girls in the world.”
+
+“Then what _would_ be a reason for my marrying her?” he asked.
+
+“If you were in love with each other, that would be a fairly good
+reason,” said Dr. Zerneke.
+
+Norman laughed, a little grimly. “Then it’s entirely out of the
+question,” he said. “Because we’re not. Not in the least. Besides, that
+isn’t the proposition to be considered. She says very plainly in her
+letter that it would be only a matter of legal form. A marital farce,
+she calls it. We would never live together. She would go on to Paris,
+and get a divorce.”
+
+The argument was not going quite as he had expected. In fact, it was
+almost as if he were arguing in favor of Isabel’s plan.
+
+“You would be quite willing that it should be only a matter of form?”
+Dr. Zerneke asked.
+
+“I certainly shouldn’t think of trying to persuade her to make it a
+real marriage--if _that’s_ what you mean!”
+
+“You wouldn’t?”
+
+“Of course not. We talked all that out, the time I went to see her at
+the hospital. She doesn’t want to be a wife and mother.”
+
+Dr. Zerneke opened a drawer and took out a sheet of paper. “I came
+across the report of our psychiatrist on her,” she said, “and had some
+of it copied. Would you like to see it? It might amuse you. We go about
+these things in a very scientific fashion nowadays.”
+
+He read the typewritten sheet.
+
+_“Case H 15278. Unmarried mother who refuses to keep her child._
+
+_“Report of Dr. A. B. Fishwanger, psychiatrist (extract):_
+
+“Her feeling of hostility toward maternity is thus accounted for as a
+repression of the psychic conflict originating in her father-complex,
+and expressing itself in her artistic ambitions. She is convinced that
+if she allowed herself to accept the full rôle of motherhood, she
+would never get a chance to be an artist. Something might undoubtedly
+be said for this view on strictly realistic grounds. But it would be
+truer to say that if she allowed herself to become interested in her
+child, she might stop wanting to be an artist. This is what she is
+really afraid of. If her child had been born in wedlock, she would
+probably have rebelled a little at her fate, and then settled down,
+as the saying goes, and become a sufficiently devoted mother. But she
+has deliberately managed the affair so as to keep what she calls her
+freedom.
+
+“A thorough analysis, lasting over several months, would probably be
+required to resolve her psychic conflict, which appears to be of a
+very deep-seated nature. (To this conflict is probably due, in view of
+the absence of other findings, the premature drying up of her milk.) A
+briefer analysis might have some considerable value, but on account of
+the resistance of the subject even this is out of the question.”
+
+“Can’t you imagine Isabel being interviewed by that psychiatrist?” said
+Dr. Zerneke, smiling. “I must say I rather sympathize with her. Still,
+it does throw some light on her psychology.”
+
+“I suppose she was in a state of conflict about it,” said Norman.
+“Still, she made up her mind. You don’t think anything has happened to
+change it?”
+
+“I think she’s probably in a very difficult situation just now.
+Undoubtedly she is finding out that she is more of a woman than she was
+willing to admit. Having a baby does something like that--it starts
+all the glandular secretions that create tenderness and devotion.
+She’s done her best to fight those feelings down, but they’re there.
+She can’t escape them. After all, it’s nothing unusual. Sometimes
+girls think beforehand that they are going to hate their illegitimate
+babies--but they generally don’t. And it’s quite the ordinary thing for
+a girl who has given her baby away to be sorry she’s done it.”
+
+“But she doesn’t say she’s sorry,” Norman objected.
+
+“I think that might possibly be read between the lines.”
+
+“It never occurred to me. You think she wants her baby?”
+
+“I can’t pretend to speak for her. But that might be one explanation of
+her offer.”
+
+“Not if she were going on to Paris,” said Norman.
+
+“She might not go on to Paris, then.”
+
+“But she says definitely that she would!”
+
+“No doubt she means it. But how do you know what would happen to you
+two young people after you get married? You both have families. They
+would have something to say about it. You might find yourselves boxed
+up in a house together the rest of your lives. That’s why I suggest
+that you think twice about marrying her.”
+
+“I see what you mean. But if I went up to Michigan and we were quietly
+married there--who would know about it?”
+
+“All the newspapers in the United States, I expect. And your mother is
+here, as you seem to forget. You couldn’t marry without telling her.”
+
+“I could make some business excuse for my trip to Michigan. She
+wouldn’t know till it was all over, and Isabel on the boat. Then it
+would be too late for our families to interfere.”
+
+“Do as you please. But don’t expect me to be surprised if Isabel comes
+back with you from Michigan to meet your mother.”
+
+“Aren’t you rather cynical, Dr. Zerneke? I think I could trust her. I’m
+sure of it.”
+
+“I’m not suggesting that she has any intention of double-crossing you.
+That’s not the point. If she came back with you it would be because you
+had invited her to.”
+
+“But why should I do that?” he asked coldly.
+
+“You were in love with her once. And she’s your child’s mother. It
+would be the most natural thing in the world.”
+
+“You really think she’d stay with me if I asked her?”
+
+“Do you really want her to stay? Then the only way to find out is to
+ask her. If that’s what you want.”
+
+“It wouldn’t really mean giving up her career,” said Norman
+reflectively. “There would be time enough for that, later.”
+
+“It would be a decisive step, for her. I doubt if she’ll have any
+career, if she marries you now. But that is her own lookout. It’s
+nothing for you to worry about--except as it might mean having a
+discontented wife on your hands in Vickley.”
+
+“Why in Vickley?”
+
+“Can you support a wife on your present job?”
+
+“I suppose not. She’d have to work.”
+
+“Has she ever done any work?”
+
+“You don’t think I ought to marry her?”
+
+“I’m not trying to run your affairs for you, Norman. But I think you
+ought to understand what you may be getting into. Isabel is probably
+feeling much more like a mother than an artist, just now. If you want
+to capture her, this is undoubtedly your chance. And in justice to her,
+I don’t think you ought to accept her offer unless you are willing to
+urge her to make it a real marriage. But that is not a thing you can do
+out of mere generosity to her--nor is it really necessary to do because
+of the child. It all depends on how you feel about her. Do you want her
+as your wife?--That’s the real question, Norman. I don’t know how you
+feel about that.”
+
+Norman rose and walked up and down the room. “All this is new to me,”
+he said. “I can’t quite believe it.”
+
+“Take your time and think it over. Talk to your mother about it.”
+
+“That would mean taking the whole family into my confidence. I don’t
+want any more family conferences. And besides, it’s something that
+can’t be delayed indefinitely.”
+
+“She won’t go till she hears from you. I repeat that the only question
+is, do you want her for a wife?”
+
+Norman kept on walking back and forth unhappily.
+
+“She’s treated me atrociously,” he said.
+
+The doctor smiled. “Now you’ll have a chance to revenge yourself--by
+marrying her.”
+
+He paid no attention to that remark. “She doesn’t deserve to ever see
+her baby again,” he said bitterly.
+
+And, after a moment:
+
+“I ought to hate her!”
+
+“And instead, it seems, you still love her?”
+
+“Yes--damn her!”
+
+Dr. Zerneke laughed.
+
+“You think it’s funny, do you?” Norman said indignantly.
+
+“Promise me this,” said Dr. Zerneke, “that you’ll take a week to think
+it over.”
+
+“A week?”
+
+Something clicked in his memory. He realized that he had been going to
+take a week to think about marrying Monica....
+
+“Yes. Suppose you postpone your decision till next Saturday--or Sunday.
+And then tell me what you’ve decided.”
+
+“All right,” he said meekly.
+
+“Till next Sunday, then.”
+
+
+
+
+Chapter X: Which?
+
+
+HE walked in Lincoln Park for a while before going home.
+
+That damned letter from Isabel! Of course it had upset him....
+
+Anyway, he oughtn’t to put any confidence in Dr. Zerneke’s guesses as
+to Isabel’s feelings about marriage. He knew Isabel as well as Dr.
+Zerneke did--better! She was incapable of being in love with anybody
+or anything except her art. She meant just what she had said in her
+letter. If he married her, it would be a mere formality for the child’s
+benefit. Nothing more. Why should he suppose the marriage would mean
+more to her? She had expressed herself plainly enough in her letter.
+Why should he give her an opportunity to insult him again?
+
+She might be a little discouraged about her art just now--but it was
+all she really cared anything about. She wasn’t human. She wasn’t a
+woman at all. She was what Hal had said about her in a poem--she was a
+pixie ... or a leafy shadow in the spring moonlight that seemed like a
+girl until one tried to clasp it in one’s arms....
+
+Monica was real. Monica was a true flesh-and-blood girl. Monica could
+love....
+
+Why was he condemned still to be haunted by this ghost of his lost
+youth? Why couldn’t he forget her? Why wouldn’t she let him forget
+her? How like her this letter was!--in offering a stone for bread....
+
+Even if in the discouragement of the moment she should agree to
+try being his wife, that would mean nothing. That marriage would
+be foredoomed to failure. She had said it herself, that day in the
+hospital. She would never really belong to him. He would be clasping
+her body, but her thoughts, her soul, would be far away, in a world he
+could not enter.... They would come to hate each other....
+
+Unless--unless what Dr. Zerneke said about her was true....
+
+But it wasn’t true. He knew better than to believe that....
+
+It wasn’t quite fair to Monica--to think of marrying her with that
+ghost hovering in the background....
+
+And if he were going to moon over Isabel all his life, he might as well
+marry her and be done with it....
+
+Perhaps he was so cursed that he would rather be miserable with Isabel
+than happy with Monica....
+
+He would have to give her an answer, one way or the other, soon. If he
+said “no,” he might regret it all his life....
+
+If he said “yes,” he was throwing himself into a whirlpool of doubt and
+misery....
+
+But he didn’t have to decide right now. He ought to get some sleep. He
+had a job to go to in the morning.
+
+He entered the apartment quietly, so as not to wake his mother. But she
+came to his door in a dressing-gown, holding out a telegram.
+
+“Lucinda’s done such a fool thing,” she said. “Look at this! And I
+don’t want you to think it’s my fault, because it’s not.”
+
+He took the telegram. It read:
+
+ MADGE COMING TO CHICAGO WITH ME TO DO SHOPPING WILL BE AT ANNEX
+
+“Madge!” he said in astonishment. “And with Lucinda?”
+
+“Oh, yes--they’re great friends now. You know the way Lucinda is. But
+she ought to have more sense than to bring Madge with her. And Madge
+ought to have more sense than to come.”
+
+“Well,” said Norman, “I don’t expect Madge to stay away from Chicago on
+my account. Why shouldn’t she come with Lucinda, if she wants to?”
+
+“You know perfectly well why,” said his mother. “The shopping is only
+an excuse. Lucinda will take her to see the baby, and then somehow or
+other you’ll run into her.”
+
+“Well, what of it?” said Norman irritably. “Why shouldn’t we meet?”
+
+“Don’t talk like a fool, Norman. You know that girl’s still in love
+with you!”
+
+“No, I didn’t,” said Norman, disconcerted. “Is she, really?”
+
+His mother did not consider that worth a reply.
+
+She went back to her room, saying as she went:
+
+“Well, don’t blame me, is all I say!”
+
+“Good Lord!” said Norman helplessly.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XI: As Luck Would Have It
+
+
+A YOUNG man may expend anguished thought upon the question of which of
+two girls he ought to marry; but a third claimant breaks the spell of
+that dilemma. He no longer feels the sense of having to make a painful
+choice; his feeling is rather a bewildering one of having no choice at
+all. He loses in imagination the position of embarrassing masculine
+jurisdiction over the fate and happiness of the girls, and begins to
+feel a little like a hunted animal.
+
+Abruptly, when left alone by his mother, the color of the whole
+situation changed for Norman. He felt as though a horde of women
+were closing in upon him. It was not a dignified situation, and in
+self-defense he felt a burst of resentment against them all.
+
+What right had they to make demands upon him? They weren’t any of them
+in love with him, really. It was their damned maternal instinct. Even
+Monica had talked about the baby in the midst of their love-making....
+Everybody seemed to think that a man with a baby had to have a wife....
+Well, he would show them....
+
+He fell asleep in a mood of profound hostility to all womankind, and
+when he awoke it was with the grim resolve not to be bullied into
+marrying anybody.
+
+That Saturday afternoon, when he came back from lunch, there was a note
+on his desk. He knew when he saw it afar what it would say. That Mr.
+McCullough wished to see him.... And it did.... “Fired again!” thought
+Norman.
+
+He wasn’t surprised; he had thought he was doing damn good work on
+that Pearson account; but evidently McCullough knew better.... And it
+was just the time when a thing like this would happen, with his mother
+and sister looking on. He couldn’t keep it a secret from Vickley this
+time....
+
+But there was just one good thing about it: if he lost his job and
+became a bum on a park bench, maybe these women would let him alone....
+It would be a good excuse; he wouldn’t have to marry anybody.... Norman
+brightened, and went in cheerfully to get the ax from Mr. McCullough.
+
+But Mr. McCullough, as he somewhat gradually and rather incredulously
+discovered, had not sent for him in order to fire him--only to tell
+him that he seemed to be getting along pretty well, and that he could
+consider himself a regular member of the staff from now on. “Your
+salary check will be for seventy-five this week,” Mr. McCullough added
+casually. “And you can go on working with Charlie Beckett on the
+Pearson account.”
+
+“Thank you, Mr. McCullough,” said Norman, gulping down his emotions....
+
+Of course, one couldn’t be sorry that one hadn’t been fired.... But
+it took away his one avenue of escape from the embarrassing situation
+in which he found himself. It left him with no good excuse to make to
+those three girls....
+
+Those three girls--that was the way he put it in his conscious
+thoughts. But in reality it was only one of them that he had in mind.
+Isabel would not care--he knew that well enough. And reckless little
+Monica--she had offered her love and demanded nothing.... It was Madge
+that he was afraid of. Madge--and Vickley.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII: The Fugitive
+
+
+AS for Madge, he was determined to keep out of her way while she was in
+Chicago....
+
+Lucinda was at the apartment with his mother when he came home that
+afternoon. She had been taken to see the baby, and she expressed
+herself enthusiastically. Norman couldn’t help being touched. He had
+never heard her talk that way even about one of her pet dogs.... He was
+on the alert to ignore any reference she might make to Madge.... But
+she said nothing about Madge.
+
+At last, in impatience, he remarked: “I understood Madge was coming to
+Chicago with you.”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Lucinda, and went on talking about the baby.
+
+Had Madge seen the baby? He was curious to know, but he was determined
+not to ask....
+
+Doubtless it was the part of a brother to show his sister about
+Chicago--take her to dinner and the theater, and so on. But when she
+had been so indiscreet as to come companioned by a girl he did not want
+to see, she would have to go without these brotherly attentions. He
+would let her look after herself.
+
+Lucinda seemed not to notice that she was being neglected.... After
+all, she had been in Chicago before; and she was accustomed to Norman’s
+brotherly indifference.
+
+But Norman suspected a plot. How could he not suspect it? Lucinda’s
+friendship with Madge, her bringing Madge to Chicago--doubtless she
+hoped to bring about a reconciliation. His mother, in spite of her
+protests, might be in on it. And so might even Dr. Zerneke. They all
+thought of him as a helpless male who needed a wife. It was all very
+well-meant--but he’d thank them just to leave him alone....
+
+To block any plans they might have for an “accidental” meeting at Mrs.
+Czermak’s, he invented business engagements for all his evenings which
+would prevent his going there to see the baby this week. (And besides,
+he didn’t want to face Monica, either.) And with the idea that Madge
+might be at the apartment with Lucinda when he came home, he stayed
+away every night until very late.... At least, he did this until
+Saturday; and that evening, having found nothing better to do than sit
+in the Crerar library, he revolted. After all, his apartment belonged
+to him. It was rather absurd for him to be kept out of it that way. He
+went home.
+
+All the week he had been having, in his thoughts of Madge, the same
+experience which he had had so often since his life ran off the smooth
+track of custom and habit into the jungle of uncertainty in which he
+had to find out for himself what things were like--the experience
+of seeing facts change their appearance before his eyes.... In this
+changing and surprising world, his feeling about Madge had remained
+fixed until now. He had been sorry to have hurt her--but glad
+nevertheless to have escaped from that marriage, because of what it
+would have meant. And now that certainty was being undermined. Since
+Madge had come to Chicago, he was remembering things about her--no, not
+things to make him regret that she had thrown him over, nothing to make
+him think himself still in love with her--nothing like that: yet sweet
+and brave and tender and funny little things, making of her a human
+girl and not a graven image of conventionality, an algebraic formula
+of bourgeois marriage. And in merely becoming in his imagination a
+person rather than a formula, she had upset him dreadfully--more than
+he was willing to admit to himself. For his campaign of life in Chicago
+was based implicitly upon an obscure but profound conviction that it
+represented a revolt against a system of respectability and hypocrisy.
+He wasn’t a theorist, and he couldn’t, or wouldn’t have wished to,
+put it in words. But there it was. And that obscure theory gave him
+courage and faith. But if it was not against the rock-walled citadel
+of Respectability that he had dealt his clumsy and cruel blows, but
+against the naked and defenseless breast of a girl--a girl who happened
+to be in love with him--then some of the meaning went out of his whole
+brave adventure. He didn’t want to face that possibility. He had
+tried to put aside these inconvenient and unsettling memories. But he
+wondered more and more what Madge was really like. Perhaps he would
+never be sure until he saw and talked with her again.
+
+Anyway, what was there to be afraid of? If she was at his apartment
+this evening, well and good. He would find out what that respectable
+young woman to whom he had once been engaged to be married was really
+like....
+
+But there was no one at the apartment.
+
+He waited impatiently for his mother to come home.
+
+She came at last, with Lucinda. They had been to the theater, they
+said. They did not mention Madge. But he knew quite well she had been
+with them. She must have gone on to the hotel alone to avoid meeting
+him. These elaborate evasions were rather silly, he thought....
+
+Lucinda, in her exasperating fashion, got started on an account of the
+musical comedy they had seen, and could not be stopped until she had
+described it all. It was the same one Norman had seen the week before
+with Charlie Beckett. He heard her wearily to the end--noting that she
+had picked up some slangy terms of speech from Doris--and when she
+started to go, he said: “I’ll take you to your hotel.”
+
+She seemed surprised at this offer--and indeed it was a trifle unusual
+for Norman voluntarily to act as her escort. “Oh, you needn’t bother,”
+she said. “I can get a bus over on the Avenue.”
+
+“I’ll take you,” said Norman firmly.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII: Conversation in a Taxi
+
+
+IN the taxi he tried hard to think of something to talk about to his
+sister. He couldn’t seem to think of anything at all to say.
+
+They were going down Michigan Avenue. In another minute or two they
+would be at her hotel.
+
+“Has Madge seen the baby?” he asked abruptly.
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Lucinda. “She saw it the first thing.”
+
+“One look was enough, I suppose,” said Norman bitterly.
+
+“Oh, no,” said Lucinda. “She goes with us every day.”
+
+“Oh,” said Norman. “She does?”
+
+“There’s no reason,” said Lucinda, “why she should bear a grudge
+against the baby.”
+
+“I suppose not,” said Norman. “I’m the only one to blame. Of course,
+I couldn’t exactly help it--the way I treated her.... I had hoped she
+might understand that--and forgive me a little.”
+
+Lucinda said nothing.
+
+“Perhaps,” said Norman, “I ought to see her.”
+
+“I don’t know,” said Lucinda doubtfully. “Tell me, Norman--have you
+been carrying on with that little Monica Case?”
+
+“Why in the world should you think that?” asked Norman indignantly.
+
+“Well, she wears your jade cuff-buttons, and turns all colors when your
+name is mentioned.”
+
+“And what of it?” Norman asked defiantly.
+
+“Nothing. That’s just the sort of girl you _would_ get mixed up with,”
+said Lucinda. “Your tastes always were rather vulgar, Norman.”
+
+“We were speaking of Madge, I believe,” said Norman haughtily.
+
+“Well, that’s just it. I don’t think it’s very nice for Madge.”
+
+“I’m sorry,” said Norman, “but I can’t regulate my conduct to suit my
+ex-fiancée--or you either. Why did you bring Madge to Chicago?”
+
+“I didn’t bring her,” said Lucinda. “But I knew she wanted to see the
+baby--and I thought it might help her to get over it all.”
+
+“You’re lying, Lucinda,” he said. “You know you want Madge and me to
+make up. And so does Mother.”
+
+“Well,” said Lucinda, “I think we’d all rather you’d marry Madge
+than--that other girl.”
+
+“What other girl?”
+
+“The one who--deserted the baby. You don’t suppose I think you’d marry
+Monica Case, do you?” she added impersonally.
+
+“Why should I marry at all?” he demanded.
+
+“Oh, you’ll have to marry _somebody_. Because of the baby, you know.”
+
+He smiled. “And why not the baby’s mother, then?” he asked curiously.
+
+“Oh, Norman--that _would_ be the absolute limit! After the way she’s
+treated you! You wouldn’t be a--a doormat!” she said scornfully.
+
+“Anyway,” he said, “there’s no reason why Madge and I shouldn’t
+understand one another. I’ve no wish to hurt her feelings wantonly.”
+
+“Well, you can’t see her to-night,” said Lucinda. “She’s gone to bed by
+now. She went on to the hotel so as not to see you.”
+
+“I think it’s rather ridiculous,” said Norman, “all this artificial
+avoidance. Suppose you bring her over to the apartment for breakfast.
+About eleven. Will you?”
+
+“I’ll ask her,” said Lucinda.
+
+“Do.”
+
+The taxi stopped at the hotel.
+
+“I’ve told Lucinda to bring Madge around for Sunday breakfast,” he said
+casually to his mother, who was still puttering about the apartment
+when he returned.
+
+She frowned--in disapproval, Norman thought. But what she said was
+only: “I wonder if there are enough eggs.”
+
+She went into the kitchen, and came back. “Yes, there’s plenty of
+everything,” she said.
+
+If she saw any dramatic crisis imminent in her son’s life, she gave no
+sign of it....
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV: A Farewell
+
+
+WHEN his mother had gone to bed, Norman sat up smoking and thinking.
+
+So Lucinda--and Vickley in general, no doubt--thought he ought not to
+marry Isabel!
+
+Well, perhaps Vickley was right, at that.
+
+Why should she be given another chance? Why should she be allowed to
+have the son she had deserted?
+
+“No, by God--he’s mine!” thought Norman, rocked with an emotion of
+jealous hatred.
+
+He went to bed. But presently he got up and turned on the light and
+brought back to bed with him the Apocrypha he had picked up. He turned
+to the story of Thecla.... This apocryphal girl saint was to him a
+queer parable. When he had first read its opening sentences he had been
+reminded of something Isabel had told him that day in the hospital--how
+she had broken her engagement, at eighteen, for the love of art.... St.
+Thecla here in the Apocrypha had broken hers for the love of God.... It
+was all different enough and yet as he read it had seemed to him that
+Isabel’s rebellious career was a queer, perverse, modern echo of that
+old tale. For “the gospel of Paul” one need only put “the gospel of
+Modern Art.”
+
+He read it again, now, to allay his hatred of Isabel. For when he
+thought of Isabel, it was with love or hatred, and both were torments.
+He was safer in hating her, safer from the danger of more pain; but
+hating her hurt him. And in this parable he found something to make him
+sorry for her....
+
+The story he read told of how when Paul was preaching in Iconium a girl
+named Thecla, who was betrothed to a young man named Thamyris, sat in
+the window of her mother’s house and listened to this new gospel; nor
+would she depart from the window. And her mother, when she could not be
+prevailed upon, sent for Thamyris, who came with exceeding pleasure, as
+hoping now to marry her. He said to her mother, “Where is my Thecla?”
+
+Her mother replied: “Thamyris, I have a strange thing to tell you. For
+the space of three days my daughter has not moved from the window, not
+so much as to eat or drink, but is intent on hearing the artful and
+delusive discourses of a certain foreigner. Thamyris, this stranger
+causes trouble throughout the whole city of the Iconians, for the
+young men and girls listen to him and will not marry. And my daughter
+too, caught as in a spider’s web at the window, is possessed by a new
+desire and a fearful passion. But go you and speak to her, for she is
+betrothed to you.”
+
+And Thamyris went to her, desiring her, and yet alarmed because of her
+strange ecstasy, and said: “Thecla, why do you sit thus? What strange
+passion holds you in its power? Turn to your Thamyris and be ashamed
+of yourself!” And her mother likewise: “Thecla, why do you look down
+and answer nothing, as if you had lost your wits?” And they mourned,
+Thamyris for his betrothed and her mother for her child, and Thecla
+paid no heed to them but listened only the while to the new gospel.
+
+And Thamyris leapt up and went away ... and brought officers with
+staves to arrest Paul, and had him led to the proconsul, saying: “This
+is the stranger who keeps girls from marrying.” And Paul was taken to
+prison.
+
+But Thecla that night took off her bracelets and gave them to the
+doorkeeper and went into the prison and sat at Paul’s feet and listened
+to his words, and kissed his chains.
+
+And they were brought before the governor, who asked: “Thecla, why will
+you not marry Thamyris, according to the law of the Iconians?” But she
+looked only upon Paul and answered not, and her own mother cried: “Burn
+the lawless one, burn her that will not be a bride, so that the women
+of Iconium may be made afraid to follow these new teachings!”
+
+And she was brought naked to the stake, but God had compassion on her,
+and sent a rain to quench the fire. And she was set free, and went to
+Paul and said: “I will cut my hair, and follow you wherever you go.”
+
+But he said: “The time is ill-favored, and you are comely. I fear a
+harder trial may come, which you will not be able to withstand.”
+
+But she cut her hair and went with him to Antioch. And there a
+magistrate named Alexander saw her and was enamored of her, and sent
+Paul presents....
+
+(Norman thought: “I became interested in pictures just to please
+Isabel.”...)
+
+But Paul said: “I know not this woman of whom you speak, neither does
+she belong to me.”
+
+And Alexander seized her in the street, but she rent his cloak and took
+the wreath from his head, and made him a laughing-stock before the
+whole town....
+
+“That’s me,” thought Norman.
+
+He did not go on to read the rest of Thecla’s triumphant career. He
+stopped there with poor Alexander, who had been made a laughing-stock
+before the whole town.
+
+Nobody, he reflected, would ever write the inglorious story of
+Alexander. The sympathies of storytellers were always with the girl.
+
+Not, to be sure, precisely with a girl like Isabel, though. They didn’t
+understand a girl’s being faithful to her art, in spite of a moonstruck
+moment in the woods--in spite of having a baby at her breast--in spite
+of confusion, complications, tormented and conflicting emotions.
+Legend, if she became famous, would simplify her story; and he alone
+would know what a troubled soul she had been....
+
+She was waiting now for her answer. She was trusting him to decide
+her life for her. Too tired, sick, discouraged, to know any more what
+she wanted, she was leaving it to him to say whether she should be an
+artist or a mother. He could take her in this moment of weakness. But
+he would never be content with what she had to give....
+
+No, he would trouble her no more with his human demands for love. He’d
+let her go on to her own destiny....
+
+It seemed to him that he had forgiven her. At least, he did not hate
+her now. And if he still, in a way loved her, yet he did not want
+her for his own. He had let her go. She was remote, now, in his
+imagination, above the reach of desire, shining from the abode where
+things that seem eternal find refuge.... And at the same time, it
+seemed to him that he had put aside his youth for ever.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV: The Inevitable
+
+
+SUNDAY morning dawned for Norman--if it could be said to dawn at about
+ten o’clock--with a sense of fatality. At first he didn’t know why.
+He lay in bed, hearing his mother stirring in the kitchen. Then he
+remembered. She was getting breakfast for Madge. Madge was coming....
+
+Suddenly in his imagination he saw the two of them left alone together.
+She would reproach him. Well, she had a right to. And he would feel
+sorry and ashamed. But he would defend himself--he would try to make
+her understand. It would be like one of their old-time quarrels. For
+they had quarreled--and made up. They had kissed and made up, always,
+and everything had seemed all right again....
+
+Well, perhaps it was inevitable. Everybody seemed to think he had to
+have a wife. Lucinda had said so. Dr. Zerneke had said so. His mother
+had as good as said so. A man with a baby was helpless.... And if Madge
+would marry him....
+
+He turned, as if for the last time, to the thought of Monica....
+Reckless little Monica--the rooming house--old Mr. Victor--the homely
+maternal airs of Mrs. Czermak--the Rabelaisian conversation of Mrs.
+Case.... He sighed. He knew now that those things weren’t for him....
+
+He rose to face the day and what might come of it.... After all, Madge
+would be a damned sight nicer wife than he deserved....
+
+Breakfast was getting ready. He walked slowly back and forth.
+
+The bell rang. He went to the door.
+
+Lucinda was there, alone.
+
+“Where’s Madge?” he asked.
+
+“She wouldn’t come,” said Lucinda. “She’s very much upset. I left her
+at the hotel, packing to go back to Vickley.”
+
+“I’ll go and get her,” said Norman.
+
+“Wait. She wrote this to you last night.”
+
+He took the letter and walked out.
+
+Lucinda ran to the banister and called down to him. “The room is
+314--you’d better go right up, Norman, if you want to see her!”
+
+In the street he opened the envelope, stopped short on the corner, and
+read:
+
+“Dear Norman Overbeck: I came to see your child, not to see you.
+Perhaps it was foolish of me to come; but I wanted to, and I’m not
+sorry I did. And I can tell you better in a letter how I feel about
+you, without seeing you.
+
+“I don’t blame you for what happened. I mean, about the baby. I love
+your baby. But you weren’t fair to me. You never told me about the
+other girl. It wasn’t fair to ask me to marry you when you were still
+in love with her. But I could forgive that, because maybe you didn’t
+know and thought you were over it. That isn’t what hurts most.
+
+“What hurts is that you should not have trusted me to understand about
+the baby. You never gave me a chance. You ran away before we could
+talk it over. You treated me as if I were a conventional little fool.
+That is what you thought of me. You never came back to explain. You
+didn’t try to make me understand. You didn’t let me have a chance to
+say whether I would take the baby or not. You just assumed that I was
+a certain sort of person. You didn’t trust me, and that’s what I shall
+never forgive you for.
+
+“I’m not what you think. I’ll tell you this. If it had been I that had
+had another sweetheart, and found I was going to have a baby when I was
+engaged to you--I’d have told you, I’d have trusted you, I’d have given
+you your chance.
+
+“No, I’m not what you think. You never knew me. I hate Vickley as much
+as you do--more. It’s you who are conventional at heart.
+
+“You never gave me my chance.
+
+“I would rather not see you. Some time I may feel differently, but it
+is too bitter a subject just now. I’m glad I’ve seen Norman Junior. I’m
+going back to Vickley in the morning, and I’m leaving with Lucinda some
+little things I’ve bought for him while I’ve been here.
+
+“Good-by.
+
+ “Madge Ferris.”
+
+Norman stood there, with tears in his eyes. He hadn’t known she was
+like that.... He had been an awful fool. He didn’t understand girls at
+all....
+
+Well, if he got there before she left, it might still be all right....
+It was plain that she still cared for him....
+
+“Taxi?”
+
+“Yes!” He climbed in. “The Annex--quick!” In his imagination he could
+see Madge in the hotel room, packing.... He saw himself enter ... yes,
+and quarrel, and kiss. Oh, there was no doubt that they would make
+up.... And no doubt, either, that that would be the best thing all
+around....
+
+Only one thing bothered him. Madge wasn’t what he had thought, at all.
+She wasn’t a doll. She was a real girl, with a heart. She could love,
+and suffer. She wouldn’t mind being poor with him in Chicago. She would
+be a mother to his child. There was no reason why he shouldn’t be glad
+to marry her. And in spite of what she wrote, she would be hoping in
+her heart that he would come before she packed up and left the hotel.
+Only one thing stood in the way--and that was something a loving and
+tender wife could surely banish--the ghost of that girl who was so
+unaccountably the mother of his child ... Oh, he would forget Isabel in
+time....
+
+But he might as well settle that now. He looked out, and rapped on the
+glass. “Stop at that cigar store on the corner for a moment!”
+
+He would send her a telegram, and have that off his mind. He knew her
+address in Michigan.
+
+“Western Union, please....
+
+“I want to send a telegram....
+
+“To Miss Isabel Drury.... Yes.... Hawk Lake, Michigan.... Just a
+moment....”
+
+He had known what he was going to say. Something polite and final.
+But suddenly it was as if Isabel was at the other end of the wire,
+listening.... and the words went out of his head....
+
+“Just a moment,” he repeated, while the world rocked dizzily about
+him....
+
+Couldn’t he say the word that would free them both? Couldn’t he let
+that vain dream go?
+
+It seemed not. A new pattern of words was framing itself in his mind,
+forcing itself to his lips....
+
+Must he forever be a fool? Must he doom himself to endless unhappiness?
+It wouldn’t work out. He knew it. He had renounced her. Why couldn’t he
+take what life offered? Madge--and peace.... Madge--waiting now, ready
+to forgive him, cherish him, be patient with him....
+
+No.... But at least he could send a sane telegram.
+
+He spoke into the telephone to the impatient operator: “I have it, now.
+Here’s the message:
+
+“‘Call me McCullough Advertising Agency when you come Chicago this
+week preferably.’ Signed, ‘Norman.’
+
+“That’s all. How much is it?”
+
+He dropped in the nickels and dimes....
+
+And Madge?--he couldn’t help it, that was all....
+
+“I’ve changed my mind,” he said to the taxi-driver, and handed him a
+dollar bill.
+
+The taxi drove away, leaving him standing there on the corner.
+
+Yes, no doubt it was a crazy thing to do. But he didn’t care. He had to
+see this thing through with Isabel....
+
+He began to walk slowly back toward the apartment.
+
+
+ [The End]
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78732 ***
diff --git a/78732-h/78732-h.htm b/78732-h/78732-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0a3e4af
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78732-h/78732-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,10958 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+<head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
+ <meta name="format-detection" content="telephone=no,date=no,address=no,email=no,url=no">
+ <title>
+ An Unmarried Father | Project Gutenberg
+ </title>
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+ <style>
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 7%;
+ margin-right: 7%;
+}
+
+h1,h2,h3,h4 {
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+h3 {
+ page-break-after: avoid
+ }
+
+a {text-decoration: none;}
+a:hover {text-decoration: underline;}
+
+.chapter, .nobreak { }
+
+p {
+ text-indent: 1.3em;
+ margin-top: .5em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .5em;
+}
+
+hr.chap {
+ border: none;
+ position: relative;
+ text-align: center;
+ margin: 3em 0;
+ page-break-before: always;
+ page-break-after: avoid
+ }
+hr.chap::before {
+ content: "ꕥ";
+ position: relative;
+ padding: 0 1em;
+ background: white;
+ color: #777;
+ z-index: 1
+ }
+hr.chap::after {
+ content: "";
+ position: absolute;
+ top: 50%;
+ left: 0;
+ width: 100%;
+ border-top: 2px solid #ddd;
+ z-index: 0
+ }
+hr.front {
+ width: 10%;
+ margin: 1.5em 45%;
+ border: 0;
+ border-top: 1px solid #777;
+ page-break-after: avoid
+ }
+
+table {
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+}
+
+table td { padding: 0.25em; }
+
+.tdl {text-align: left;}
+.tdr {text-align: right;}
+
+.pagenum {
+ right: 1%;
+ font-size: x-small;
+ color: #333;
+ text-indent: 0;
+ text-align: right;
+ position: absolute;
+ padding: 0.1em 0.2em;
+}
+
+blockquote {
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-left: 5%;
+ margin-right: 5%;
+}
+
+.center {text-align: center; text-indent: 0;}
+
+.right {text-align: right;}
+
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+.smaller {font-size:smaller;}
+.xlarge {font-size:x-large;}
+
+.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
+
+ </style>
+</head>
+
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78732 ***</div>
+
+
+<div class="chapter center">
+<h1>
+AN<br>
+UNMARRIED FATHER<br>
+<i>A Novel</i></h1>
+<br>
+<br>
+By<br>
+<span class="xlarge">Floyd Dell</span><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+NEW YORK<br>
+GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
+</div>
+
+<hr class="front">
+<p class="center smaller">
+COPYRIGHT, 1927,<br>
+BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+AN UNMARRIED FATHER<br>
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+</p>
+
+<hr class="front">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="pv">v</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<table>
+ <tr><td colspan="3" class="center"><a href="#BOOK_ONE">BOOK ONE: <span class="smcap">The Discovery</span></a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td class="tdl">The Letter</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p9">9</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td class="tdl">Legal Advice</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p16">16</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td class="tdl">The Way of the World</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p24">24</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td class="tdl">Post Mortem on a Dead Romance</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p32">32</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td class="tdl">Encounter</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p41">41</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td class="tdl">Dr. Zerneke</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p46">46</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td class="tdl">Flowers</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p58">58</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td class="tdl">Isabel</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p60">60</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td class="tdl">The Baby</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p72">72</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td class="tdl">Art Alone Endures</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p77">77</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td class="tdl">Common Sense</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p81">81</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td class="tdl">Bad Dreams</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p87">87</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XIII.</td><td class="tdl">En Route</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p91">91</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XIV.</td><td class="tdl">Homecoming</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p100">100</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XV.</td><td class="tdl">Family Breakfast</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p106">106</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XVI.</td><td class="tdl">Aubade</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p111">111</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XVII.</td><td class="tdl">Flight</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p120">120</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td colspan="3" class="center"><a href="#BOOK_TWO">BOOK TWO: <span class="smcap">In Exile</span></a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td class="tdl"> The Prodigal<td class="tdr"><a href="#p125">125</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td class="tdl">A Man Has Some Rights</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p136">136</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td class="tdl">An Ambassador from Vickley</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p143">143</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td class="tdl">Speech to the Jury</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p157">157</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td class="tdl">The Older Generation</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p163">163</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td class="tdl">J. J. Overbeck</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p169">169</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td class="tdl">Home</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p176">176</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td class="tdl">Apron Strings</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p185">185</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td class="tdl">It Was Bound to Happen</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p195">195</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td class="tdl">Mrs. Case</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p202">202</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td class="tdl">Paradise Lost</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p205">205</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td class="tdl">Out of a Job</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p209">209</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XIII.</td><td class="tdl">The Dreamer Wakes</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p215">215</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td colspan="3" class="center"><a href="#BOOK_THREE">BOOK THREE: <span class="smcap">The Dominant Sex</span></a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td class="tdl">Vita Nova</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p225">225</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td class="tdl">Waste Not Your Hour</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p229">229</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td class="tdl">His Mother</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p235">235</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td class="tdl">’Ware Women!</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p239">239</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td class="tdl">As Usual</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p244">244</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td class="tdl">Night Thoughts</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p248">248</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td class="tdl">A Letter</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p255">255</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td class="tdl">A Sociological Interlude</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p260">260</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td class="tdl">On Taking a Girl at Her Word</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p268">268</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td class="tdl">Which?</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p277">277</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td class="tdl">As Luck Would Have It</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p281">281</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td class="tdl">The Fugitive</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p284">284</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XIII.</td><td class="tdl">Conversation in a Taxi</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p288">288</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XIV.</td><td class="tdl">A Farewell</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p291">291</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XV.</td><td class="tdl">The Inevitable</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p296">296</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p7">7</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_ONE">
+ BOOK ONE
+ <br>
+ The Discovery
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p9"></a>9</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_I_The_Letter">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter I</span>: The Letter
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>THAT April morning Norman Overbeck drove
+his father to the station and put him on the
+early train for Springfield. The elder Overbeck—J.
+J. Overbeck—was going to argue a case before
+the supreme court. Norman, his unworthy son, as
+he felt himself to be, drove on to the office. Parking
+his car in front of the Overbeck building until
+he should want it again that afternoon, according
+to the leisurely custom of Vickley on the Mississippi,
+he went up the dingy, old-fashioned stairway to the
+Overbeck and Overbeck offices. In the hall he
+glanced up for a moment at the new sign with the
+name repeated, replacing the old one of “J. J. Overbeck,
+Attorney-at-Law.” It was less than a year
+since Norman had been admitted to the bar and
+been made a member of the law-firm. When his
+father wasn’t with him he sometimes glanced up at
+that sign, expecting to find in it some reassurance,
+something that would make him feel in himself the
+dignity and power which were associated with his
+father’s name. He never quite got it. Most of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p10">10</span>time it seemed to him that all he had so far done was
+to make costly mistakes.</p>
+
+<p>“Good morning, Miss Patterson,” he said to the
+stenographer. “Is my mail ready?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” said the girl. “It’s on your desk.”</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him, when he turned away, with admiration:
+for he was tall, handsome enough with
+his thoughtful brown eyes and light wavy hair—and
+he was the son of J. J. Overbeck.</p>
+
+<p>He did not go to his own office immediately.
+He lingered in the outer office, staring at the rows
+of law-reports, bound in musty calf and newer
+buckram. He was pursuing a line of private psychological
+inquiry, not easily to be conducted when
+his father was there. His father would have asked,
+“What are you looking for?” and he would have
+had to give some sensible answer.... Perhaps it
+wasn’t the books, they were only law-books. He
+looked at the old leather-upholstered mahogany furniture....
+He was trying to confront something
+about this office which obscurely intimidated him,
+made him feel foolishly young and out of place. It
+was absurd to feel that way, when he had won his
+first important case yesterday.... He turned to
+his office.</p>
+
+<p>As he passed Miss Patterson, he reflected that
+she obviously thought of him as grown up....</p>
+
+<p>He was sitting at his desk a minute or two later
+when the telephone rang. He lifted the receiver.
+“Yes?” he said. It was Miss Patterson.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p11">11</span></p>
+
+<p>“Your sister just called up,” she said. (Doris?
+he thought.) “She didn’t want to disturb you and
+asked me to give you the message.”</p>
+
+<p>No, that wouldn’t be his kid sister Doris. She
+wouldn’t care whether she disturbed him or not.
+That was Lucinda. He frowned slightly, as the
+picture of that futile, pathetic, rather old-maidish
+sister came before him.</p>
+
+<p>“All right, what is it?” he asked patiently.</p>
+
+<p>“She wanted me to remind you that you promised
+to go and look at a dog for her. Out at Schwartz’s.
+It’s a Scotch terrier puppy. The one she is thinking
+of taking has a black spot over the left eye.
+She thought you might have forgotten.”</p>
+
+<p>It was true, he had forgotten, though she had
+spoken of it last night and again at breakfast this
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, Miss Patterson. If my sister should
+call up again, tell her I said I wouldn’t forget about
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>Why did he have to go and look at that dog? But
+that was just like Lucinda.... If Doris had
+wanted a dog, she’d have gone and bought it, without
+asking any advice.</p>
+
+<p>Whenever he thought of Lucinda, he consoled
+himself by thinking of Doris. An historical epoch
+seemed to have intervened between them. It was
+strange to think of them as being sisters. Families
+were queer things. Lucinda at thirty-five belonged
+to a decaying world; Doris at sixteen to another, a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p12">12</span>feverish and jazzy, but certainly a healthier one....
+But families are not always pleasant things to
+think about.</p>
+
+<p>His mind went back to its interrupted thoughts
+about himself.</p>
+
+<p>—Yes, he reflected, he was grown up in everybody
+else’s eyes. Why not, then, in his own? He
+was twenty-five years old, and engaged to be married.
+He and Madge were going to be married
+in June. He had won that Harrington case. His
+future was secure. Why should he feel as though
+he were merely pretending to be what he was—and
+as though the pretense were likely to be found
+out at any moment, and he himself swept out into
+chaos like a scrap of paper in a high wind? What
+was he afraid of? There was nothing to be afraid
+of. He could cope with any situation that would
+arise. He was building himself securely into the
+solid structure of—of Vickley. He would be what
+his father had been. There was no doubt of it.</p>
+
+<p>He turned to his mail. He sorted it through rapidly,
+and finding nothing outwardly attractive and
+unbusiness-like to distract him, he opened the letters
+in turn. His day’s work had begun.</p>
+
+<p>The first two letters he made notations upon and
+put aside.</p>
+
+<p>The third letter puzzled him.</p>
+
+<p>It was from a Martha Zerneke, in Chicago—a
+person quite unknown to him, but, according to a
+small printed inscription in one corner of her letterhead,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p13">13</span>“Medical Director, St. Thecla Child Adoption
+Society.” The letter began pleasantly by hoping
+that he was coming, or could arrange to come to
+Chicago to attend the Springer exhibit at the Steinbach
+Galleries, April 4th to 18th, and preferably
+during the following week, when—as the letter went
+on strangely to say—she would like to have him
+call at her office concerning a matter of personal interest
+to him which it would not be so convenient
+to take up in correspondence. “Very truly yours.”</p>
+
+<p>After reading it, at first idly and then very carefully,
+he laid it aside as incomprehensible, and went
+on with his other mail. But having glanced at several
+letters, he took it up again, sat back in his chair,
+lighted a cigarette, and considered it thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>The reference to the Springer exhibit suggested
+that the letter was based upon some knowledge of
+his habits, for he made a point of running up to
+Chicago to see the most interesting of the picture
+shows; he had, in fact, planned to go to see this one,
+for he had been interested in Springer ever since he
+had seen him and his pictures back in Boston a year
+ago. So far the suggestion was of art matters.
+But the rest of the letter didn’t go to that tune.
+Indeed, the casual familiarity of the opening appeared
+to be a diplomatic disguise—as if for the
+benefit of any one else who might happen to open
+his mail in his absence! “A matter of personal interest
+to you which it would not be so convenient
+to take up in correspondence.” There was a veiled
+<span class="pagenum" id="p14">14</span>threat in that.... What sort of matter was there
+that could not “conveniently” be taken up in correspondence?
+A matter of personal interest to him!
+And this from a doctor—a woman doctor. The
+Medical Director of a Child Adoption Society.
+Why, it was preposterous! Absurd!</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps he was reading into it some meaning that
+wasn’t there. He studied it carefully, and shook
+his head. If not that, what could it mean?</p>
+
+<p>His acquaintance with girls in Chicago was of the
+most casual sort. There was no one— He had an
+impulse to throw the thing into the waste basket....
+But if he ignored it, and this Dr. Zerneke did
+take up the matter in correspondence, it might become
+embarrassing. There was certainly some mistake;
+but that would be no protection if the thing—whatever
+it was—got into the newspapers. After
+all, appearances were against him. He had made
+trips to Chicago from time to time, and people
+would quite readily believe that it hadn’t all been
+for the sake of art. It would be a difficult position
+for the most innocent of men. And there was
+Madge to be considered. She might think there
+was something to it, and break off the engagement!
+And his father—oh, his father would believe him;
+but he would think he had made a fool of himself
+in some way, and that it was his fault that such
+a thing should ever have come up. Nobody had
+ever written a letter like that to J. J. Overbeck!...
+Doubtless because he attended strictly to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p15">15</span>law, and did not waste his time prowling about art-galleries
+and studios. Perhaps it <em>was</em> his own fault.
+Perhaps his father’s way of life was the only correct
+one, if he were to build himself into the solid
+structure of Vickley....</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to him that this was the sort of thing
+he had been awaiting, without knowing what it was—some
+accident that would crash down his life
+about him, and whirl him out like a scrap of paper
+on the wind.... Well, not so bad as all that! He
+was taking this much too seriously. But it did need
+thinking about.</p>
+
+<p>Under these circumstances—he smiled to himself—the
+proper thing to do was to consult a lawyer....
+His father, of course, was the obvious person
+to consult, but he dismissed that idea instantly.
+Nor would he be likely to take up a thing like this
+with Medway, the chief clerk of Overbeck and
+Overbeck. Nor with any other lawyer in Vickley
+... except, perhaps, old Gilbert....</p>
+
+<p>He considered a moment longer, and then abruptly
+put out his cigarette and took up the
+telephone.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p16">16</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_II_Legal_Advice">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter II</span>: Legal Advice
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>GILBERT RAND—old Gilbert—was sitting,
+large and ruddy and cheerful, at a table in the
+corner of Henschel’s when Norman came in at
+twelve-thirty.</p>
+
+<p>There are various ways in which an elderly lawyer
+of repute may show consideration for a young
+and untried one, if he is so disposed. Old Gilbert
+had been so disposed on various occasions during
+the past year, for he liked the boy. He didn’t
+know what Norman wanted of him now except that
+it was something legal and personal, which nevertheless
+could be disposed of at lunch. Norman had
+suggested a quiet place where they could talk without
+interruption, and Gilbert had said that Henschel’s
+would do.</p>
+
+<p>He congratulated Norman on his victory in the
+Harrington case yesterday, to which Norman replied
+in a preoccupied way.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” he said to Norman, when the luncheon
+was under way, “what’s on your mind?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman took the letter from his pocket and
+handed it over. “What do you think of this?” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert put on his glasses and read the letter;
+then he read it again.</p>
+
+<p>“A very clever piece of writing,” he said thoughtfully;
+<span class="pagenum" id="p17">17</span>“evidently intended to look as little like blackmail
+as possible.”</p>
+
+<p>Blackmail!</p>
+
+<p>“So you think so, too!” said Norman. “Well,
+what do you think I ought to do about it? Ignore
+it? or—what?”</p>
+
+<p>“That depends,” said Gilbert gravely. “If I’m to
+advise you, I’ll have to know something about the
+situation. Who the girl is—her circumstances and
+character: you’d better tell me the whole story.
+Then we’ll know where we’re at.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman was rather taken aback. But he saw the
+humor of it, and smiled. “Aren’t you taking a good
+deal for granted?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Old Gilbert smiled back at him. “Oh,” he said,
+“the alibi part comes later. I realize, of course, that
+you are not necessarily the responsible party in this
+matter. Girls are sometimes unscrupulous about
+that sort of thing. The man who is in a position
+to pay gets saddled with the responsibility every
+time. You remember that case here in Vickley last
+winter, in Magistrate Cooley’s court—I saw you
+there, I remember.”</p>
+
+<p>“Look here,” said Norman. “You seem to accept
+it as a matter of fact—that I’m involved with some
+girl!”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert glanced at the letter. “I thought,” he
+said, “that was what the letter was about. If I’m
+on the wrong track, you’ll have to set me right.
+What <em>is</em> it about?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p18">18</span></p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” said Norman. “But when I read
+it, I thought the same thing you did. It seemed
+like a veiled threat of blackmail. That’s what puzzles
+me. You see, I’ve never heard of this Dr.
+Zerneke—and as for the girl, if that’s what it hints
+at, as you also seem to think, I don’t know who she’s
+supposed to be. The whole thing comes out of a
+clear sky. I haven’t the least idea what it’s all
+about.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s curious,” said Gilbert. “Let’s have another
+look at it.” He took it up, readjusting his
+glasses. “There <em>is</em> something queer about this letter,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Damned queer!” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“I mean,” said Gilbert, “that it has an air of—well,
+of quiet certainty.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know what you mean,” said Norman, uncomfortably.
+Did old Gilbert think he was lying?</p>
+
+<p>“To begin with, you are known by the writer to
+be interested in art. That in itself is nothing much.
+But the fact is put forward in a rather suggestive
+way. The reference to the Springer exhibit and the
+Steinbach galleries looks as though it were intended
+to remind you of something.... Does it suggest
+anything to you—a girl you met at the Steinbach
+galleries, for example?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have not been in the habit of meeting girls at
+the Steinbach galleries—or any other galleries,”
+said Norman, a little on his dignity. “I know practically
+<span class="pagenum" id="p19">19</span>no girls in Chicago—and I certainly have
+made love to none of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said old Gilbert, “there are hysterical
+girls who make strange accusations, upon slight or
+no provocation.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hadn’t thought of that,” said Norman. “It
+must be something like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s some explanation for this letter,” said
+Gilbert. “Let’s see what we can make out of it. A
+girl in Chicago ... no, not necessarily in Chicago;
+she may have come there from somewhere. She
+goes to a doctor; we know nothing about this doctor,
+but presumably she knows her business. So we have
+to assume for the moment that the girl is actually
+in trouble. The doctor, apparently, is sympathetic.
+Money is evidently needed. The doctor undertakes
+to write to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—but why to me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Come, Norman; you are twenty-five years old,
+and so far as I know you have never taken any
+vows. How can you be sure that there’s no girl in
+the whole United States who couldn’t accuse you of
+having got her into this scrape?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman flushed. “I don’t want to pretend that
+I’m a saint,” he said. “But I’m not a cad, either;
+I’ve been engaged to Madge for six months, and I
+swear I haven’t looked at another girl in that time....
+In fact,” he added, “you’ll see how absurd it
+is to think that I could be mixed up in such a thing,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p20">20</span>when I tell you that there’s been nothing of that sort
+in my life since I left Cambridge. There was a
+waitress there—but that was fully four years ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Norman, you ought to know. But the
+trouble with this matter is that it is so vague.
+If it mentioned a name, you would know where you
+are at. As it is, of course, you may have overlooked
+some trifling incident of no consequence to you at
+the time.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman laughed. “I’m not such a devil of a
+fellow as all that. I’d not be likely to forget such
+an incident.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope you’re right. It might prove rather embarrassing
+to you if you went to this doctor in Chicago,
+indignantly convinced of your innocence, and
+then found you had made a little slip of memory.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think, then, that I ought to go and see
+this doctor?” Norman asked in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Somebody ought to go, and find out what it’s
+all about. There’s something that needs to be
+straightened out.... Mistaken identity, possibly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—there’s that,” said Norman. “There may
+be some very simple explanation.”</p>
+
+<p>“In any case,” said Gilbert, “I don’t think it’s ordinary
+blackmail. A doctor, and especially one connected
+with a child adoption society, would hardly
+mix herself up with anything like that. And the
+whole tone of her letter shows a due consideration
+for your position. It’s written in such a way as not
+to make trouble for you if it fell into the wrong
+<span class="pagenum" id="p21">21</span>hands. And at the same time—or so it seems to
+me, though I’ve apparently stumbled into a mare’s
+nest—it attempts to remind you who the girl is....
+That reference to the Steinbach Galleries—”</p>
+
+<p>“I said I knew no girls in Chicago,” Norman interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>“You might take a wider range,” suggested
+Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>Norman made an impatient movement.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m only trying to help you,” said Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>“I know, and at my own request,” said Norman.
+“But I thought we had cleared up the possibility of
+it’s being me who is involved.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose we have,” said Gilbert. “Well, I was
+going to propose this to you. I’m going to Chicago
+to-night, to see some people in connection with the
+Ostrander case; and I’ll go and see this doctor to-morrow
+if you like. I’ll be home Sunday, and your
+mind will be set at rest without undue delay.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s damned good of you, Gilbert.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it’s nothing.... Only you see, if I’m to
+act for you, I’d like to be quite sure of my facts.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can be quite sure the facts are as I’ve stated
+them,” said Norman comfortably.</p>
+
+<p>“Then I’ll take this letter with me,” said Gilbert.
+He folded it up and put it in his pocket. “However,
+there’s one more angle on this thing still to be
+checked up on.”</p>
+
+<p>“What angle is that?” asked Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“The Cambridge angle,” said Gilbert. “Nothing
+<span class="pagenum" id="p22">22</span>like being prepared for the worst, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“But that,” said Norman, “is all ancient history
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Just the same, I’d better know something about
+it. When did these Cambridge incidents occur and
+what was the nature of them?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, besides the waitress, there was just one incident,
+really,” said Norman. “It was just before I
+came home.... It seems ages ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“Actually, however,” said Gilbert, “it’s been
+something less than a year. Late June to early
+April—”</p>
+
+<p>“Ten—” said Norman, and then stopped, with a
+shock of dismay.</p>
+
+<p>“Ten months,” said Gilbert, “or to be exact, nine
+months and some days.” He looked at the young
+man questioningly. “Does that letter begin to mean
+anything to you now?”</p>
+
+<p>“It couldn’t be Isabel,” said Norman wonderingly.
+“And yet—”</p>
+
+<p>“Isabel?” said Gilbert inquiringly—suppressing a
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>Norman spoke with an effort. “Springer’s
+pictures.... It was with her that I first saw
+them. At his studio in Boston. She took me there.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert nodded. “And now,” he said, “this Isabel
+seems to be in Chicago, under the care of a doctor.
+It looks suspicious, doesn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but that—it’s impossible!” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“For a girl to have an unexpected baby? I’m
+<span class="pagenum" id="p23">23</span>afraid not,” said Gilbert dryly. “Though this is
+rather late in the day for her to let you know about
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>“My God!” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>The waiter appeared, and recommended the
+Mocha tarte.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think I want anything more,” said Norman
+faintly.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d better have some coffee. No? Then
+nothing for me either. Bring the check.”</p>
+
+<p>When the waiter was gone, he said: “There’s no
+occasion to look so upset. Girls have had by-blown
+babies before. And respectable Vickley citizens
+have been the fathers of them.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he added, more kindly: “We’ll go to my
+office, thresh the whole thing out, and decide what’s
+to be done.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p24">24</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_III_The_Way_of_the_World">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter III</span>: The Way of the World
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>GILBERT RAND, in his office, considered the
+boy sympathetically. “How do you feel
+now?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Still in a sort of a daze,” Norman confessed.</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert took from his desk drawer a bottle and
+glasses. “A little shot of this will help steady your
+nerves.” He poured and they drank.</p>
+
+<p>“You realize,” said Gilbert, “that all this is
+merely a guess; there may be nothing to it whatever.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman shook his head. “It’s only too damned
+true,” he said. “I’m not going to try to fool myself
+about that.”</p>
+
+<p>“At any rate, we have to face it as a possible truth
+just now,” said Gilbert, “and think of ways and
+means to handle it. And if I seemed to take it
+lightly, it isn’t that I don’t understand the seriousness
+of the situation for you. You have a career
+ahead of you; you’re your father’s son; and you’re
+going to be married. This thing will have to be
+fixed up very quietly. But that’s not so difficult as
+you might think. I want you to know that I’m
+with you in this, and I’ll see you through it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s awfully good of you,” said Norman. “But
+what is there to do? You must forgive me if I seem
+<span class="pagenum" id="p25">25</span>stupid. I feel as though the roof of the world had
+fallen in.”</p>
+
+<p>“The first thing we have to do is to go over the
+facts of the case. With them in my mind, I will be
+able to deal with the situation, whatever it is, in
+Chicago. And I’ll be back here day after to-morrow—probably
+with everything all straightened out.
+All you have to do in the meantime is to keep
+smiling, and behave as if nothing had happened....
+Now what’s the matter?”</p>
+
+<p>“I just remembered,” said Norman, “that I’ve got
+to see Madge to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that may be a little difficult,” said Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry to be such a fool,” said Norman.
+“But I don’t see how I can face her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now don’t lose your nerve, my boy,” said old
+Gilbert kindly. “Just sit tight and keep mum—that’s
+all you have to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s just the trouble,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“I know how you feel,” said Gilbert. “But you
+won’t come wearing your secret on your face. You
+can easily invent some discouragement in your law
+practice to account for your jumpiness. Besides, it’s
+getting very near the time of your wedding; she’ll
+have her mind on a thousand other things besides
+your state of nerves. Women aren’t such good
+thought-readers as you might imagine.” Then,
+when Norman remained silent, he said sharply:
+“You wouldn’t be such an idiot as to tell her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I was thinking that I ought to,” said Norman.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p26">26</span>“She’ll have the right to know—a thing like this.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense!” said Gilbert, and secretly cursed
+these modern ideas of frankness. Aloud he said:
+“There’ll be plenty of time to consider what there is
+to tell—if anything. There may be nothing, you
+know. You wouldn’t want to upset her needlessly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I’m sure you’ve guessed it right,” said Norman
+dully. “It will be only a question of sooner or
+later when she’ll have to know. I simply couldn’t
+get married with a thing like that hanging over us.
+It would come out some time—and I’d rather know
+the worst at once. If things are going to smash, it
+had better be before we are married.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now, now,” said Gilbert soothingly. “Nothing
+is going to smash. You’re all worked up and incapable
+of seeing things clearly. Everything is coming
+out all right, I tell you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean that this thing can be hushed up, I
+suppose.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, if there’s anything to hush up.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all very well. So far as the world at
+large is concerned, perhaps it could be hushed up.
+But—why should two people be married, with a
+secret like that between them? What kind of marriage
+would that be?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, not so unusual a kind of marriage, I should
+say,” replied Gilbert coolly. “You don’t think men
+have to tell their wives everything, do you? By the
+way, have you told your fiancée anything at all about
+this Cambridge girl?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p27">27</span></p>
+
+<p>“No, I haven’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“You see, you’ve kept your little secret so far
+without any difficulty.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it didn’t really concern her—or it didn’t
+seem to—until now. It was only a part of my past,
+then—but now it affects our whole future.”</p>
+
+<p>“It won’t affect her future, if you keep a decent
+silence and let me attend to it,” said Gilbert. “Why
+didn’t you tell her anything about the Cambridge
+girl?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because it didn’t seem of any great importance,”
+said Norman. “And because she might be supposed
+to take something of that sort for granted. Perhaps
+I should have told her. It would make it
+easier now. But it would have hurt her feelings. I
+suppose that’s the reason why I didn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“And a very good reason, too,” said Gilbert.
+“You did as any lover would do. And you still
+love her, don’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Madge? Of course I do!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yet now you seem to think the proper way to
+treat her is to inflict pain on her. I’d hate to believe
+you were that kind of moral weakling.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m doubtless all sorts of moral weakling,” said
+Norman, “but I don’t know what you mean. It
+would take courage to tell her the truth.”</p>
+
+<p>“It will take more courage to keep your mouth
+shut,” said Gilbert. “It’s only the coward, the man
+who can’t bear the burden of his own sins, that has
+to go and blab them to his wife or sweetheart. If
+<span class="pagenum" id="p28">28</span>they’re his sins, he ought to be the one to suffer
+for them—not she.”</p>
+
+<p>Their minds, Norman realized, didn’t meet in this
+talk. There was a gulf of years between them.
+Old Gilbert was thinking of property and respectability,
+and not of human rights. And now he was
+talking about “sins.” No doubt if one believed that
+an illegitimate child was a sin, one repented it—and
+forgot it. But it wasn’t a sin to him; it was a fateful
+fact that had somehow to be faced.</p>
+
+<p>“Why,” old Gilbert was asking, “should a man
+want to drag the girl he loves into a thing like that—unless
+he wishes to hurt her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t wish to hurt Madge. But she has a right
+to know what she’s getting into,” Norman insisted.</p>
+
+<p>“And if she decided not to marry you—as she
+easily might, if you came blurting it out like that—?”</p>
+
+<p>“That would be her privilege,” said Norman,
+tonelessly.</p>
+
+<p>“A nice privilege,” Gilbert commented. “A
+choice between a humiliation and an outrage—a marriage
+broken off at the last moment, or a secret
+scandal.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s something she’ll have to decide about in any
+case, sooner or later,” said Norman. “And until
+she knows, the thing will be on my mind every moment.
+I shall feel like a dog, keeping it from her.
+She’ll go on making plans for our marriage—and all
+the while there’ll be this secret holding us apart.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p29">29</span></p>
+
+<p>“Do you think it would bring you together if you
+told her?” Gilbert asked ironically.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. That’s what I don’t know. And
+I’ve got to find out.... Perhaps not ... not
+unless she loved me a very great deal—more than I
+deserve. More than I’ve any right to expect.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’d like to give her a chance to prove how
+noble she is—how much she does love you: is that
+the idea? You’d throw her love for you into the
+gutter, to see whether she’d stoop and pick it up.
+I’m no psychologist, but I’d call that vanity.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman was silent.</p>
+
+<p>“Or else mere inexperience,” Gilbert went on.
+“You’ve just found out that some secrets are hard
+to keep. And because it hurts to keep a secret from
+the girl you love, you want to turn the world’s
+morality upside down.” That stab seemed to go
+home to its mark and Gilbert added:</p>
+
+<p>“Misery loves company. You’d like to share your
+unhappiness. Natural enough, perhaps. But heroic?
+No. Selfish.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you’re probably right,” said Norman, suddenly
+weary. “I suppose it wouldn’t do to tell
+her....”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert waited.</p>
+
+<p>“Everything seems to me—smashed,” said Norman.
+“But maybe something can be saved out of the
+wreck.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you’ll follow my advice, quite a number of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p30">30</span>things can be saved out of the wreck,” said Gilbert.
+“Your marriage, your career, your father’s pride.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” said Norman quietly. “I’ll do what
+you say. Just tell me what to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m glad that you realize that you’re in no state
+of mind to decide on anything final right now,” said
+Gilbert. “I’ll be very glad to take charge of your
+destinies for a few days. Then you’ll feel differently.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve no doubt I shall. And I’ll be able to thank
+you properly. Just now it seems scarcely to
+matter....”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right. The thanks can wait. We’ll
+proceed to the other aspects of the case—if it’s
+settled that you are to be guided by me, and will
+say nothing about this to your fiancée till I get back
+from Chicago?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that’s settled,” said Norman. “You’ve
+made it clear to me what a lie and sham marriage is.
+The trouble with me, I guess, is that I’ve not quite
+grown up; I seem to have some remnants of boyish
+idealism left in my mind. I had thought that this
+marriage was going to be real—that we weren’t
+going to have to lie to one another. I can see it’s
+nonsense.”</p>
+
+<p>“Men,” said Gilbert, “have lied to women since
+the dawn of history. The more they love them, the
+more they lie to them. You’ll be surprised to find
+how easy it comes. But just the same, I don’t think
+I had better trust that boyish idealism of yours too
+<span class="pagenum" id="p31">31</span>far right now. If I leave you here while I go to
+Chicago to straighten things out, you’ll have got
+them into some frightful mess by the time I’m back.
+I think I’d better take you along with me and keep
+an eye on you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think that would be a good idea,” said Norman.
+“I’ll know the worst sooner. And if we could
+take the early train, I wouldn’t have to see Madge
+to-night.” In a shamefaced way he explained:</p>
+
+<p>“We were going to go over to see our new house
+that my father’s building for us: it’s nearly finished.
+I don’t think I could stand it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well,” said Gilbert. “Make your apologies
+by telephone, and we’ll take the six o’clock train
+this afternoon. Legal business in connection with
+the Ostrander case. I’ll reserve a compartment, and
+we can talk all the way. There’s still a lot to be
+gone over. And now you had better go home and
+pack.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p32">32</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_IV_Post_Mortem_on_a_Dead_Romance">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter IV</span>: Post Mortem on a Dead Romance
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>“NOW,” said Gilbert Rand, in their compartment
+that evening, “do you want to
+tell me about this Cambridge girl, or shall I ask you
+questions?”</p>
+
+<p>“You’d better ask me questions. It’s never
+seemed quite real to me. I haven’t readjusted myself
+to it as a reality even yet.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert took out a pencil and paper.</p>
+
+<p>“What was her name? I think you referred to
+her as Isabel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Isabel Drury.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert wrote it down.</p>
+
+<p>The porter opened the door and looked in. “Did
+you ring, sir?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, but we could do with a little more air.”</p>
+
+<p>The porter opened the upper air-vents and went
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert went on with the inquisition.</p>
+
+<p>“Her age?”</p>
+
+<p>“Twenty-five.”</p>
+
+<p>“And yours was twenty-four. Well,” said Gilbert
+with satisfaction, “that clears up the matter of
+responsibility, at any rate. What was she? Stenographer,
+salesgirl, or what?”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose,” said Norman slowly, “you’d call her
+<span class="pagenum" id="p33">33</span>an art student. She was studying art in Boston.”
+He was finding it difficult to put this matter in objective
+terms. Isabel had been to him a romantic
+mystery and a psychological puzzle and a symbol of
+the strangeness of life. But that wasn’t what old
+Gilbert wanted to know....</p>
+
+<p>“Art student.” Gilbert wrote it down. “Where
+did she come from, do you know?”</p>
+
+<p>Something of the satisfaction of old Gilbert’s tone
+reached his mind. He began to see Gilbert’s game.
+Isabel was to be made out as scarcely respectable.
+A Bohemian encounter. And, though that had in
+truth been the spirit of the affair, some perverse desire
+for fair play made him block that simple interpretation
+with some contrary facts.</p>
+
+<p>“Her father was a professor of Latin in a boys’
+school. They had a place on the edge of Cambridge.
+Poor but terribly respectable.” And he
+added: “I was a guest at their home, more or less,
+when it happened.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert frowned. “How did you come to know
+her?”</p>
+
+<p>“The Drurys were neighbors of a classmate of
+mine. I spent a good many week-ends at his home.
+There were neighborhood parties, and Isabel was
+often there. We saw a good deal of each other that
+last winter and spring.”</p>
+
+<p>“What was your classmate’s name?” Gilbert
+asked casually.</p>
+
+<p>“Hal Sibley.” Then Norman looked suspiciously
+<span class="pagenum" id="p34">34</span>at his questioner. “See here, you mustn’t get him
+mixed up in this!”</p>
+
+<p>“Why do you say that?” Gilbert inquired blandly.
+“Was he interested in her too?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman flushed. “We were both romantic about
+her. But leave Hal out of this.” A disgust for
+these vulgar necessities of self-defense rose in him
+like nausea, and he said: “I couldn’t forgive myself
+if I thought you were trying to do that!”</p>
+
+<p>“Trying to do what?” asked Gilbert coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“Shield me by dragging in my friend.” Old Gilbert
+needn’t pretend he didn’t know what he was up
+to. “No, no—it won’t do. I’m not that kind of
+coward.”</p>
+
+<p>“I only wanted, my boy,” said Gilbert softly, “to
+take into account all the possibilities of the situation.”</p>
+
+<p>“Just the same, we’ll leave Hal out of this discussion.”
+A flicker of amusement in old Gilbert’s
+eyes made him feel a little ridiculous, and he added
+defensively: “He wouldn’t have dragged me in, if
+it had been he that was in this mess.”</p>
+
+<p>“You prefer not to consider that possibility?”
+asked Gilbert smoothly.</p>
+
+<p>Norman had the feeling of having mismanaged
+this matter. He had made it look as though he were
+quixotically shielding his friend. “Oh, go into it if
+you insist,” he said impatiently. “Only it’s a waste
+of time. I merely wanted to make it clear that I’m
+not going to try to—sneak out of my responsibility.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p35">35</span></p>
+
+<p>“Very well,” said Gilbert, “we’ll leave it at that
+for the present. Now as to the girl’s family: any
+brothers?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. An only child.” And Norman reflected
+that a girl’s brothers were her traditional protectors.
+That should please old Gilbert. He smiled;
+it was odd to think of Isabel as the menace against
+which he was being protected. He? His respectability,
+rather. The thing was out of his hands.
+Vickley was protecting itself. His career, his marriage,
+his reputation—these things belonged to
+Vickley. And old Gilbert had promised to guard
+them....</p>
+
+<p>“And the girl—” Gilbert was asking, “beautiful, I
+suppose?”</p>
+
+<p>Her image came powerfully before him—her
+slight figure, her pointed face with its grey-green
+eyes and shock of auburn hair. Beautiful? “In a
+sullen, discontented way: yes.” That, he thought,
+was sufficiently objective.</p>
+
+<p>“And you fancied yourselves hopelessly in love
+with one another?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not exactly.” He must try to explain it to old
+Gilbert. “I had been crazy about her all year—ever
+since I met her. Hal had talked to me about
+her. His favorite word for her was ‘elusive.’ And
+she was just that. She played with us in an imaginative
+sort of way. But she seemed emotionally untouched.
+She was scornful of the idea of love.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” said Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p36">36</span></p>
+
+<p>“But when I was going away that summer, she
+seemed sorry we weren’t going to see each other any
+more. I stayed over a couple of weeks, at the Sibleys,
+before I came home. We saw more of each
+other. She told me things about herself—her ambitions.
+And she took me to see Springer’s pictures
+one day, just before I left. Coming back to her
+home that night, we lost ourselves in the woods.
+That was when we became lovers.”</p>
+
+<p>“You lost yourselves in the woods?”</p>
+
+<p>“We pretended we were lost. You see, everything
+had to be play between us. We always pretended
+all sorts of things. That night we pretended
+it was a wood near Athens.”</p>
+
+<p>“A wood near Athens?”</p>
+
+<p>“Midsummer-night’s-dream stuff. Perhaps you’d
+understand it if you knew her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Was there ever any question of marriage between
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“There hadn’t been, up to then. I had—well, I
+had wanted to have a love affair with her. That was
+all. But in the woods, afterward, I was rather
+frightened about what we had done, and I said we
+must get married. I suppose I meant it. But fortunately
+she didn’t take me seriously. She laughed
+at me.”</p>
+
+<p>“She laughed at you?”</p>
+
+<p>“You see, love wasn’t a serious reality to her. It
+was just something to play at in idle moments. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="p37">37</span>only reality, to her, was art. She wanted to be a
+painter—a great painter.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Gilbert rubbed his chin thoughtfully. “Sort
+of Rosa Bonheur, eh?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think she would have despised Rosa Bonheur.
+Gauguin was more in her line.”</p>
+
+<p>“And so that was how it began?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—and how it ended. I saw her for the last
+time the next day, before I went back to my rooms
+in Cambridge to pack. I didn’t get a chance to talk
+with her. She seemed to avoid that deliberately.
+She was more distant, more elusive, than ever.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you tell your friend Hal what had occurred?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course not.”</p>
+
+<p>“And then you came home to Vickley.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you write to her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Three times. She didn’t reply.”</p>
+
+<p>“You were not under the impression that you were
+her first lover?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman hesitated. “I really know nothing about
+that. But for some reason I assumed that she had
+had lovers.”</p>
+
+<p>“She seemed sophisticated?”</p>
+
+<p>“In her talk, yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“You didn’t ask her about her previous experiences?”</p>
+
+<p>“One couldn’t have asked her a thing like that.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p38">38</span>But I think she wanted it to be taken for granted.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Gilbert looked puzzled. “She wanted to have
+it taken for granted that she was not a virgin?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. But afterward—I wasn’t so sure. I’m
+not, now. Or rather—I think I was really her first
+lover, in spite of the way she talked.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Gilbert considered that helplessly, shook his
+head, and changed the subject.</p>
+
+<p>“As to Springer,” he asked, “was he married?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not at that time. He’s been married since
+then.”</p>
+
+<p>“How did Springer behave when she brought you
+to his studio?”</p>
+
+<p>“Springer is a great clumsy bear. He’s friendly
+with everybody, unless he’s in one of his suspicious
+moods. He was very friendly that day.”</p>
+
+<p>“How well do you know him?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve seen him only that once. Isabel told me a
+great deal about him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does he make much money with his painting?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet, I’m afraid. What are you getting at?”
+Norman demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Were Isabel and Springer very great friends?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman smiled. “She admired his work very
+much.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think they had been lovers?”</p>
+
+<p>“That idea had never occurred to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s see,” said Gilbert. “The girl was elusive
+for a long time—and then suddenly friendly. The
+day she took you to Springer’s studio was the day
+<span class="pagenum" id="p39">39</span>she made love to you. Do you make anything out
+of that?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“You thought of her as a mysterious and incalculable
+creature; but let us supply the <i>x</i> and see how
+the problem works out. She had been Springer’s
+sweetheart. But Springer threw her over for another
+girl—the one whom he afterwards married.
+And so she consoled herself with you—perhaps trying
+to make him jealous. Doesn’t that clear up the
+strangeness of her behavior?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman tried hard to be objective. “It might be
+true. It merely doesn’t fit in with my conception of
+Isabel.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve described a very human sort of girl,” old
+Gilbert went on. “You had your romantic ideas
+about her, to be sure. Why shouldn’t she be elusive,
+with Springer for her lover? Until he got himself
+another girl. Then she turned to you. I admit that
+this explanation is not calculated to appeal to a
+young man’s vanity.”</p>
+
+<p>“After all, what does it matter?” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>But Gilbert seemed to think it did matter. “You
+offered to marry her,” he pursued, “but in spite of
+what had occurred between you, she refused—because
+she was still in love with Springer. You wrote
+letters to her. It wasn’t you she was thinking about;
+it was Springer. And when she found she was pregnant,
+it wasn’t to you that she’d write, but to him.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p40">40</span>Now, does it look,” asked Gilbert, “as though
+she thought it were your child?”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Good Lord—!” said Norman in bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>“Then Springer married the other girl; evidently
+refused to have anything more to do with her. And
+now at last she remembers you. In this emergency,
+your money would be a great convenience, no doubt.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman shook his head. “I can’t believe that
+she’d lie to me,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“If you had gone to see her,” said old Gilbert with
+a tolerant smile, “she wouldn’t have had to lie.
+She’d only have had to remind you of that night in
+the woods, and your guilty conscience would have
+supplied the rest.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish to God I could believe it,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Would you rather,” asked Gilbert, “believe yourself
+the father of her child?”</p>
+
+<p>“What I wish,” said Norman, “is that I could
+wake up and find that this was only a bad dream.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the way it will seem to-morrow night,”
+answered Gilbert cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p>Norman turned toward the window, and stared
+out at the dark, flying landscape. Every moment
+was bringing him nearer to the truth. To-morrow
+he would know the truth. But—he wished he could
+see Isabel himself. This wasn’t something that old
+Gilbert could handle for him.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p41">41</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_V_Encounter">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter V</span>: Encounter
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>IT wouldn’t, he realized fully, be sensible to see
+Isabel. And besides, it would be unfair to old
+Gilbert. He had promised to leave his destinies to
+his friend’s charge. He had better leave things as
+they stood.</p>
+
+<p>When Gilbert left the hotel after breakfast to
+keep his appointment with the lawyers representing
+the other interests in the Ostrander case, it was with
+the understanding that they were to meet again at
+lunch for a final conference before Gilbert’s visit to
+Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>When Norman was left alone in their suite at the
+hotel, he wondered what to do with himself in the
+meantime.</p>
+
+<p>He went out and strolled up Michigan Boulevard.</p>
+
+<p>He passed the Steinbach Galleries.</p>
+
+<p>Strolling back, he passed the Steinbach Galleries
+again.</p>
+
+<p>Springer might be there, getting ready for his
+exhibit.</p>
+
+<p>Norman turned and went in.</p>
+
+<p>The place seemed to be empty. But as he went
+from one of the rooms to another, passing the little
+office, he heard young Steinbach’s voice, and then
+Springer’s.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p42">42</span></p>
+
+<p>He stopped, and sat down on a cushioned bench
+in the middle of the room, staring unseeingly across
+at a painting of a Pueblo Indian dance.</p>
+
+<p>He supposed what he was doing was foolish. But
+he had to hear what Springer had to say—about him
+and Isabel.... For Springer would know about it
+all. Springer was her friend.... And if he could
+not go to see this doctor, if that must be left to Gilbert,
+yet here was something he could do, while he
+waited.... All Gilbert’s carefully-built-up edifice
+of caution and secrecy melted into mist, in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>He had been there three minutes when Springer
+came out of the office. Norman well remembered
+that dark bushy head and great lumbering frame.
+Norman rose.</p>
+
+<p>Springer paused, glanced at him idly, and took
+out his watch and looked at it in a bored way.</p>
+
+<p>There had been no recognition in that glance.
+Norman was disconcerted. He would have to introduce
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Springer,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Springer looked at him inquiringly. “Yes?”</p>
+
+<p>“My name is Overbeck—Norman Overbeck.”
+And, since that seemed to mean nothing to Springer,
+he added: “I met you a year ago in Boston.”</p>
+
+<p>Springer offered his hand with the embarrassment
+of one who had a bad memory in social matters.
+“Ah, yes,” he said, with an effort at cordiality.
+“How are you?”</p>
+
+<p>It wasn’t at all what Norman had expected. It
+<span class="pagenum" id="p43">43</span>was quite obvious that Springer didn’t know who he
+was at all. So Isabel hadn’t told him! Norman
+readjusted his mind to that.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, how did you find Italy?” asked Springer
+absently, misled by some <i lang="la">ignis fatuus</i> gleam of false
+recollection.</p>
+
+<p>Norman, ignoring this mistaken reference, said
+firmly: “Isabel Drury took me to your studio.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes!” said Springer. “You wrote a play.
+I remember now.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I didn’t write a play,” said Norman indignantly.
+“I am a lawyer down in Vickley. I was at
+Harvard at the time, and”—he added—“a friend
+of Isabel’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” said Springer, confused and chagrined
+at his blunder. “I remember your face quite
+well. So you are one of Isabel’s friends. Have you
+heard of her good luck?”</p>
+
+<p>“Good luck?” Norman repeated, baffled.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, she’s going to Paris. Some rich woman is
+subsidizing her for a year’s study—isn’t it fine!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Norman. “But—”</p>
+
+<p>He scarcely took in the news about Isabel’s going
+to Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Was it possible that Springer didn’t know about
+what had happened to her? Or was he keeping that
+secret? Yes, naturally enough, a secret from an
+outsider.... That, Norman realized, was what
+he was to Springer—an outsider! Because Springer
+didn’t know. Isabel hadn’t told him that part of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p44">44</span>it. Maybe he didn’t know anything about it at all!</p>
+
+<p>“How is Isabel?” Norman asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” said Springer, “she’s all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right?”</p>
+
+<p>Why should he say that? Did he mean anything?
+Did he know anything?</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose,” said Norman, as casually as possible,
+“that you keep in touch with her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, yes,” said Springer.</p>
+
+<p>“I understand,” said Norman, “that she’s here in
+Chicago now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, yes, she is,” said Springer reluctantly.</p>
+
+<p>So it was true!</p>
+
+<p>“I’d like to see her,” said Norman. His heart
+was beating heavily. “Where is she?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, as a matter of fact, she’s—not seeing anybody.
+She’s just recuperating from an operation for
+appendicitis.”</p>
+
+<p>The usual lie! Springer said it with an air of protecting
+her from intrusive acquaintances. And Norman
+couldn’t say: “You mean she’s just had a baby!”
+No, he had to accept what Springer told him. He
+was an outsider.</p>
+
+<p>“Is that so?” he said, and his voice mechanically
+took on the proper tone of sympathy and courteous
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>Springer, having got past that point, spoke more
+fluently and easily. “She’s going to Michigan to
+rest up for a few weeks, and then go on to Paris,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p45">45</span></p>
+
+<p>Norman wanted to ask him at what hospital she
+was. But he felt that Springer would evade that
+question.</p>
+
+<p>“I’d like to see her before she goes,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you going to be in town long?” asked
+Springer.</p>
+
+<p>“No—a day or two.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid there’s no chance,” said Springer.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose not,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>The subject seemed closed.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m having a show here next week,” said
+Springer.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I would like to see it,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>Springer held out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I may run into you here again,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Norman was dismissed.</p>
+
+<p>He was conscious of two emotions—of annoyance
+with Springer, and, strangely enough, of an enormous
+relief. It was all true! He hadn’t doubted
+it, really, but something in his mind accepted this
+new evidence with gratitude. It was as though an
+unendurable tension had been relaxed. So Isabel
+had had a baby....</p>
+
+<p>And then it occurred to him that he didn’t know
+whether her baby was alive or dead.</p>
+
+<p>He had to go to see Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p46">46</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VI_Dr_Zerneke">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VI</span>: Dr. Zerneke
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HE went to a telephone booth. He did not need
+to look in the book: Dr. Zerneke’s phone
+number was fixed in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>A girl’s voice answered the telephone. He gave
+his name.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Mr. Overbeck,” said the girl. “Dr.
+Zerneke is expecting you. Can you come right
+over?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll be there immediately,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The taxi stopped in front of an apartment building
+on the North Side. The name, Dr. Martha
+Zerneke, was on a plaque in one of the front windows.
+He rang the bell, and a young woman admitted
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He gave his name.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” she said. “Just wait in here a moment,
+please.”</p>
+
+<p>She opened the door of the reception room, and
+went back to her desk.</p>
+
+<p>He began to wonder why he had come. He
+ought to leave this part of it to Gilbert!</p>
+
+<p>There were three women in the room. One by
+one they were called into an inner office by the office
+nurse.</p>
+
+<p>Then it was his turn.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p47">47</span></p>
+
+<p>As he walked across the room, his mind whirled.
+But part of his mind didn’t care. He would know
+the whole truth, now.</p>
+
+<p>A small dark woman seated at a desk rose and
+held out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>“How do you do, Mr. Overbeck.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dr. Zerneke?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. You received my letter?”</p>
+
+<p>“You asked me to come to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is very good of you to come. Sit down,
+please.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman took the chair at the corner of the desk.</p>
+
+<p>“My letter,” said Dr. Zerneke, “wasn’t very explicit,
+I’m afraid. But possibly you guessed something
+of its meaning. If you didn’t, I can make
+the situation clear to you.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman had an impulse to delay matters, by pretending
+ignorance. If he had not talked with old
+Gilbert—if he had not met Springer—if he had
+walked in here unsuspectingly—what would she have
+said? She had offered just now to make the situation
+clear to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Please do explain,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry if my letter appeared unduly mysterious,
+Mr. Overbeck. You’ll understand in a
+moment why I felt obliged to write as I did. The
+fact is that I need your assistance in a small technical
+matter.”</p>
+
+<p>So that, thought Norman, was how she would
+have begun!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p48">48</span></p>
+
+<p>“You said, I believe,” he remarked, still keeping
+to his rôle of ignorance, “that it was of personal interest
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she answered, “sufficiently so that I feel
+sure you will go to some little trouble to oblige us in
+the matter.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should be glad to do anything I can,” he said.
+This, at least, was a way of postponing the inevitable
+for a few moments. He felt like a shipwrecked
+man who is holding to a plank and keeping
+his head above water while in the distance a great
+wave is sweeping down upon him. And at the same
+time he felt strangely calm.</p>
+
+<p>“I am confident that you will, when I explain,”
+said the doctor. “Your name has been given me by
+one of my patients under circumstances which oblige
+me to ask for your assistance and coöperation. The
+matter is a little unusual: that is why I go at it in
+this somewhat elaborate manner. And because of
+its character, I think I ought to begin by assuring you
+that the question of money is not involved. I want
+to make that plain first of all.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well,” said the doctor. “Now as to my
+patient. A year ago, Mr. Overbeck, if I am rightly
+informed, you were going to law school at Harvard.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said. The great wave hung overhead,
+about to fall.</p>
+
+<p>“At that time you were acquainted with a girl
+<span class="pagenum" id="p49">49</span>named Isabel Drury. Recently she has come under
+my care, and—”</p>
+
+<p>Enough of this farce of ignorance!</p>
+
+<p>“I know,” said Norman, “she has had a baby.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh—you know that?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s true, then!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. And for certain reasons, Mr. Overbeck—”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s—alive?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“A—a boy or girl?”</p>
+
+<p>“A boy. And for certain reason which I’ll explain
+in a moment, it is desirable to have a record
+of the paternity in these cases. It is for this purpose
+only, that Miss Drury has consented to allow me
+to communicate with you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me,” said Norman impatiently, “when did
+it happen?”</p>
+
+<p>“What? Oh, the baby was born eleven days
+ago.—The matter,” she went on, returning to her
+argument, “is entirely a private one, you understand....”</p>
+
+<p>“How did she—come through it?” Norman
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“The delivery,” said the doctor, “was a somewhat
+difficult one, but she stood it very well.”</p>
+
+<p>“She’s all right now?” Norman persisted.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, quite all right. She’ll be able to leave the
+hospital within a week or so.”</p>
+
+<p>“And the baby?” asked Norman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p50">50</span></p>
+
+<p>“The baby is a very healthy child. No physical
+defects. Six pounds at birth, now about six and a
+half.”</p>
+
+<p>“Isn’t that rather small?” Norman asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor smiled. “Not at all,” she said, “especially
+not for a first child. A very good weight,
+in fact. And now as to yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” said Norman anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mind my asking you a few questions?”
+She drew a sheet of paper toward her. “How old
+are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Twenty-five,” said Norman in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you recently had a thorough medical examination?”</p>
+
+<p>“I took out some insurance recently,” he said,
+wondering what this was all about. “I was examined
+then.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you take off your coat and vest, please?”
+she asked firmly.</p>
+
+<p>He obeyed with some inward astonishment, and
+followed her into an inner office, where he was
+weighed on her scales, seated on a kind of trestle,
+and thumped and listened to in chest and back....
+“Am I all right?” he asked haughtily when they
+went back into the other office.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor smiled. “You seem to be. Don’t
+put on your coat yet. Have any of your family ever
+had tuberculosis?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p51">51</span></p>
+
+<p>“Epilepsy?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Insanity?”</p>
+
+<p>“No!”</p>
+
+<p>“Roll up your sleeve, please.”</p>
+
+<p>He did so, obediently.</p>
+
+<p>“This will only take a moment.” She put a
+tourniquet around his upper arm and tightened it.
+She took out a queer shaped instrument of glass,
+partly wrapped with cotton, and with a needle on
+the end.</p>
+
+<p>“What is that?” he asked curiously.</p>
+
+<p>“A Kiedal tube,” she replied. She sterilized the
+needle, and dabbed with alcohol a spot on the skin
+of his upper arm. “Double up your fist—hard.”</p>
+
+<p>She skilfully thrust the needle point into a swollen
+vein, and pressed upon the cotton about the tube,
+which immediately filled with blood. She withdrew
+the needle, took off the tourniquet, and dabbed again
+at his arm with alcohol.</p>
+
+<p>“What is that for?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“For a Kahn blood test,” she replied. “Now you
+may put on your coat and vest. Can you give me
+a statement from your family doctor about your
+family history—as to the hereditary diseases I asked
+you about?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why—I suppose so. Yes, I’m sure I can. But
+why do you want to know these things?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh—I thought I had explained that, Mr. Overbeck.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p52">52</span>It is always desirable in these cases, when
+possible.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what is it all about?” he asked. “You see, I
+am engaged to another girl. Do you think I ought
+to marry Isabel, in order to legitimate the child?
+Is that why you sent for me?”</p>
+
+<p>The doctor looked surprised. “Apparently I have
+not yet made the situation quite clear,” she said.
+“No, that wasn’t why I sent for you. It is, as I
+told you, merely a technical matter. With a medical
+record of paternity, showing that the child is free
+from hereditary disease, a more desirable adoption
+can be effected. There was no intention of embarrassing
+you further. As for these medical records,
+they will be sealed and filed with the St. Thecla
+Child Adoption Society, of which I am the medical
+director. These records are secret, and can’t even
+be brought into court. Under these circumstances,
+I felt sure you wouldn’t mind giving us this assistance.”</p>
+
+<p>“I—no; I mean yes,” said Norman weakly, as
+with that word “secret” ringing in his mind the world
+righted itself from topsy-turviness and settled down
+about him—familiar, solid, secure.... He could
+marry Madge, his career would not be affected,
+everything would be just as old Gilbert had prophesied....</p>
+
+<p>“And I thank you very much,” said the doctor,
+rising and holding out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Then—that’s all?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p53">53</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that’s all—except for the family medical
+history that you promised to send me. You won’t
+forget that?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I won’t forget. But if you can spare the
+time—a moment or two—I’d like to know something
+further about what’s going to be done with the
+baby.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly,” said the doctor, resuming her seat.
+“I’ll be glad to explain that to you. Just what is it
+you want to know?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Norman uncomfortably, “I really
+don’t know—but I don’t quite like the idea of
+adoption!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the doctor, “some people feel that
+way. It offends them to think of the child being
+separated from its natural mother.” And she went
+on, in an impersonal manner to speak of the different
+laws of different states—something about the mother
+having to keep her babies herself....</p>
+
+<p>“This,” Dr. Zerneke commented, “is supposed to
+be good for the girl’s character. In some cases, no
+doubt it is. And it at least makes it rather unlikely
+that those girls will have any more illegitimate
+babies. That, I sometimes think, is the real reason
+for putting that burden on them.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman felt confused by these generalizations.
+This wasn’t exactly what he wanted to know....</p>
+
+<p>“Social workers believe, theoretically,” the doctor
+went on, “that both parents should be held as strictly
+as possible to their responsibilities for children born
+<span class="pagenum" id="p54">54</span>out of wedlock. But in actual practice that means
+compelling the girl to take care of the baby, with
+some inadequate financial aid, if any at all, from the
+man....”</p>
+
+<p>Norman would have felt indignant, except that
+she seemed to have forgotten that he was one of
+those men she was talking about.... Yes, she was
+ignoring his personal interest in the question altogether.
+She was treating him as though he were
+some visitor who had inquired about the work of her
+society.... It was queer....</p>
+
+<p>“The fact is,” she was saying, “that there isn’t any
+right solution of the problem of illegitimacy. If we
+had a decent civilization, any baby would be legitimate.
+To have babies is a natural function of
+women. But the penalties for having them outside
+of marriage are still pretty severe; and when there
+are homes where these children are wanted, there
+seems to be no reason for penalizing the children.
+That’s why we undertake to get these children
+adopted.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but—who is going to take Isabel’s baby?”
+Norman made himself ask.</p>
+
+<p>“The Society has a large waiting list,” said the
+doctor. “The applicants are thoroughly investigated.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean that you can’t—or won’t tell me?”</p>
+
+<p>“I shouldn’t think of telling you,” said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“It makes trouble in the future,” said the doctor.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p55">55</span>“The adoptive parents want to be assured of untroubled
+possession of the child. The girl sometimes
+changes her mind and tries to get her child
+back.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then Isabel isn’t to know who they are, either?”</p>
+
+<p>“No more than you. If there were any chance of
+a parent turning up later to reclaim the child, they
+would refuse to take it. You can see that, Mr.
+Overbeck.”</p>
+
+<p>“And Isabel agrees to this?”</p>
+
+<p>“She trusts us to do the best for the child.”</p>
+
+<p>“Has she—signed over the child yet?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet. If you have any doubts of the Society
+I represent, Mr. Overbeck, its record is easily
+looked up. In fact, Mr. Overbeck, since you are a
+lawyer, I wish you would make an investigation, and
+advise Miss Drury accordingly. The one thing we
+are anxious to avoid is the charge of exerting undue
+influence upon the mothers of these children.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman was conscious of a feeling of frustration
+which he could not quite understand.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall certainly make inquiries about the Society,”
+he said. “But I might remind you that there
+are my rights, as well as the mother’s, to be considered.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry to have to correct you on a legal
+point,” said the doctor drily, “but the fact is that you
+have no legal rights to or over Miss Drury’s child.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that true?”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll find it to be quite true, Mr. Overbeck.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p56">56</span></p>
+
+<p>Norman was silent for a long moment. Then he
+looked up and said:</p>
+
+<p>“I must see her—Isabel. Can I?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly,” said the doctor, “as far as I am concerned.
+If she wishes to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why shouldn’t she wish to see me?” Norman
+demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“She may feel that the fact that you are her child’s
+father gives you no special claim upon her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why do you say that?”</p>
+
+<p>“She was quite unwilling for me to communicate
+with you at all. She particularly said that she did
+not wish to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“She said that?”</p>
+
+<p>“But she may feel differently about it now. I am
+only warning you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll call her up and ask her,” said Norman
+grimly.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll call up for you, if you like, right now, and
+find out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do, please,” said Norman coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you wish to see her this morning?”</p>
+
+<p>“The sooner the better.”</p>
+
+<p>The doctor lifted the receiver and called the number.</p>
+
+<p>“Obstetrical B, please.... Miss Higginson?
+This is Dr. Zerneke. Please send word to Miss
+Drury in Room 37 that Mr. Norman Overbeck
+would like to visit her this morning.... Yes,
+Over-beck.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p57">57</span></p>
+
+<p>Norman waited.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.... She will? Thank you.”</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke turned to Norman. “It’s all right.
+You can go at eleven. But I will have to remind
+you that emotional scenes are not good for nursing
+mothers. And don’t stay longer than fifteen or
+twenty minutes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well,” said Norman, and rose impatiently.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p58">58</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VII_Flowers">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VII</span>: Flowers
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HIS taxi passed a florist’s shop, and he leaned
+forward and pounded on the window. “Stop
+a minute. Yes, right here.”</p>
+
+<p>It might be ridiculous— But why should it be
+ridiculous? A girl who had a baby, a girl in bed in a
+hospital, would like to have flowers brought by a
+visitor, surely. Any girl!</p>
+
+<p>In the shop, he looked about at the banked flowers
+in uncertainty.</p>
+
+<p>“We have some very nice American Beauty roses,”
+said the salesman, leading him toward the glass
+fronted refrigerator. He took out a bunch of long
+stemmed buds. “Fifteen dollars a dozen.” Norman
+felt uncomfortable. He was vaguely apprehensive
+of the emotional inappropriateness of American
+Beauty roses for this occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Something yellow caught his eye. “Jonquils,” he
+said. “Let me see those.”</p>
+
+<p>“A dollar a dozen,” said the salesman, without
+enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>Norman hesitated. A husband, a lover, a dear
+friend, might give the yellow flowers she liked. But
+what was he? Isabel had always that power of
+making him feel at a loss. From a moment of intimacy
+she could withdraw herself until he felt infinitely
+<span class="pagenum" id="p59">59</span>remote, the most casual of acquaintances,
+almost a stranger.</p>
+
+<p>He bought the roses.</p>
+
+<p>In the taxi, he had a disconcerting picture of himself,
+with stick and gloves and tissue-wrapped
+bouquet. It seemed altogether too jaunty. He felt
+like a silly-ass character in a story by P. G. Wodehouse.
+Vindictively he accused himself of being
+really that—a superficial person, with no capacity
+for dealing with the serious aspects of life. Yes,
+what should a P. G. Wodehouse young man be
+doing in a Tolstoian situation? But real life seemed
+to be like that.</p>
+
+<p>Abruptly he knocked on the glass window.
+“Drive back to that florist’s,” he ordered.</p>
+
+<p>The driver turned the corner, rounded the block,
+and drew up at the florist’s shop again.</p>
+
+<p>“Give me two dozen jonquils,” said Norman to
+the salesman.</p>
+
+<p>When they were wrapped up and paid for, he
+handed back the other bouquet. “You can keep
+these,” he said, and walked out.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p60">60</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VIII_Isabel">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VIII</span>: Isabel
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>THE taxi brought him to the hospital a few
+minutes after eleven. He went up to Obstetrical
+Ward B. To a nurse who sat at a desk in
+the corridor he gave his name. “I would like to see
+Miss Drury in room thirty-seven.”</p>
+
+<p>“Just a minute,” said the nurse, and pressed a
+button on her desk. Presently another uniformed
+young woman appeared. “Take this visitor to room
+thirty-seven, Miss Paget.”</p>
+
+<p>He accompanied the young woman down the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>She tapped at a door, opened it slightly, and
+glanced in. “A visitor for you,” she said, and ushered
+Norman in.</p>
+
+<p>On a small high bed lay Isabel, her pointed face
+framed in loosely strewn locks of short auburn
+hair against her pillow. She raised her head a little
+as the door closed behind him.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” she said, and smiled, “it’s you.” A thin
+arm was withdrawn languidly from under the coverlet,
+and a hand was offered to him. It seemed
+strangely frail for her hand. She seemed queerly
+thin and white. He put his hat, stick and bouquet
+upon the little table by the bed, and bent over her
+hand. A sudden emotion flooded him so that he
+<span class="pagenum" id="p61">61</span>could not speak for a moment. He held her thin
+hand to his lips. He would have dropped on his
+knees beside the bed—but that would have been
+awkward, the bed was so high. His sense of the
+ridiculous helped him to recover his self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>“Isabel!” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, here I am,” she said. “Who would have
+thought it would come to this?” Her face was lit
+up by one of her amused ironic perceptions. How
+well he knew that look!</p>
+
+<p>“The wood near Athens,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—the wood near Athens! But do sit down,
+Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>He drew the chair up close to her bed.</p>
+
+<p>“I hope you understand,” she went on, “that it
+really isn’t my fault you’ve been dragged into all this.
+Dr. Zerneke explained everything to you, didn’t
+she?”</p>
+
+<p>He nodded, not quite able to trust himself to
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t think I’d see you at all,” she said. “I
+thought it would be simpler not to. But when you
+called up, that seemed to me rather silly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why didn’t you want to see me?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Well—everything was settled, and I didn’t want
+things upset. I haven’t got my strength back yet,
+and I didn’t feel equal to arguing with you. I remembered
+you as being rather controversially conventional,
+you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose I am rather conventional,” he said
+<span class="pagenum" id="p62">62</span>humbly. “But what did you think my attitude would
+be, about this?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I thought you might be shocked at the idea
+of my deserting my child. I thought you might
+preach the duties of motherhood to me—that sort
+of thing. You remember, we once had an argument
+about it. You thought woman’s destiny after
+all was the home. I suppose it is, for most of them.
+But I’ve got to paint, Norman. I can’t give up my
+life to a baby. Please don’t think I’m heartless.
+But I’m not going to let a biological accident change
+my whole life.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why didn’t you tell me about it?” Norman asked
+abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I didn’t know for a long time.”</p>
+
+<p>“You didn’t know!”</p>
+
+<p>“At least I wouldn’t believe it. I was an awful
+fool, Norman. You see, I’d always thought of myself
+as an artist—not a woman. I simply couldn’t
+admit the possibility of such a thing as my having a
+baby. You remember, when you were afraid this
+might happen, and I laughed and said oh, it would be
+all right? That was just my sublime egotism!”
+She laughed. “I thought it <em>couldn’t</em> happen to
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you found out you were a woman after all,”
+he said solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>She stirred restlessly beneath the coverlet. “I
+found out that my body is a woman’s body,” she
+said. “And that still seems queer to me. Yes,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p63">63</span>apparently it’s true that this body of mine is a
+baby-factory, just like other girls’ bodies. And
+what a strange and cumbersome process it is, Norman!
+I’ve a good chance to observe it, you see. I
+was under ether during the final crisis, so I can’t
+speak of that. But I saw and felt enough to make
+me wonder at women—why they stand for it, being
+made use of this way as baby-producers. I suppose
+Nature traps them into it—and then they accept
+their fate. But I’m not going to! My body
+has been used nine months for a purpose that I never
+consented to—used and occupied and then torn and
+mangled—but I’m free now at last, and I’m going to
+stay free. My body may be a woman’s body, but my
+thoughts are not a woman’s thoughts. I have something
+else to do than take care of a baby! And even
+my silly body seems to know that at last.—I’m supposed
+to be a milk-producing animal now, a kind
+of contented cow with bloated udders. But my milk
+is drying up. Dr. Zerneke says it is because of my
+mental conflict. My mind, you see, is resuming possession
+of my body. Soon it will be all mine again.
+And then I shall be a painter once more, and never
+a woman again, Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“And yet,” she continued, “there has been one
+good thing about it. It has set me free from my
+family. They’ve repudiated me, thank God!—let
+me go my own way at last. I suppose that was why
+I could be so calm about it, and practically think
+nothing about it for so many months. I had nothing
+<span class="pagenum" id="p64">64</span>to lose when the truth came out—except my respectability.
+Nothing to lose but my chains, and a
+world to gain, as the soap-box orators say. And it
+was worth it. I comforted myself with that thought,
+Norman, when the pain came—that I was giving
+birth to a bastard child, and my shocked family
+would never lay loving hands on me again to drag
+me back into the fold. I was buying my freedom
+at last by going through that torture.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t!” said Norman involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry!” she laughed and reached out a white
+hand and patted his bent head as though he were a
+child. “I shouldn’t have talked that way. Poor
+boy, I’ve shocked you again. I suppose you came
+here to see a Madonna. I never could live up to
+your romantic expectations, Norman. You’d better
+stop trying to understand me. There’s no reason
+why you should be bothered. It’s no concern of
+yours.”</p>
+
+<p>“It seems to me,” said Norman, choking a little
+as he tried to speak, “that it—is—a concern of
+mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t intend that it should be. Did it upset
+you when you heard about it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Naturally it upset me. But Dr. Zerneke’s letter
+was so diplomatic that at first I didn’t know what it
+was all about.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s my fault. I made her promise to write
+very diplomatically. I thought of you in the bosom
+of your family there in Vickley—you might have
+<span class="pagenum" id="p65">65</span>forgotten the girl who led you astray back in Cambridge.
+I told her to say that I was the girl who
+took you to Springer’s studio.”</p>
+
+<p>“She mentioned Springer,” said Norman, and he
+thought of all the trouble that mention had caused—old
+Gilbert’s surmises of double-dealing. How
+far away that coil of respectability seemed now!</p>
+
+<p>“I saw him at Steinbach’s this morning,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Springer? Yes, he has a show on at Steinbach’s
+next week. He’s done some very fine things. You
+ought to see them.”</p>
+
+<p>“He spoke of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“He and Roberta have been very good to me. I
+don’t know what I’d have done without them. It’s
+nice, too, his being in Chicago now. I have somebody
+to talk to. And he’s got me a place to stay, in
+Michigan, until I’m able to stand the trip across.
+You’ve heard of my luck, I suppose? I’m going to
+study in Paris! I owe that to them, too. They’ve
+found me the sort of patron every young artist
+dreams about. A rich woman in Boston is giving me
+my traveling expenses and fifteen dollars a week for
+a year. With three hundred francs a week in Paris,
+I shall feel that I own the world!”</p>
+
+<p>“Does Springer approve of—your plans?”</p>
+
+<p>She frowned. “Springer is a dear,” she said,
+“but he can’t forget that I am a woman, and he
+doesn’t believe that women <em>can</em> be artists in a serious
+way. See what he’s done to Roberta—”</p>
+
+<p>“Roberta is his wife, I take it?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p66">66</span></p>
+
+<p>She nodded. “Roberta had a great deal of
+promise as a painter. But she’s settled down to just
+being a painter’s wife. I think that’s why she has
+done all these things for me—to give me my chance.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then <em>he</em> doesn’t think you ought to go to Paris?”</p>
+
+<p>“He doesn’t say anything about it. But he’s not
+very enthusiastic.”</p>
+
+<p>“What does he want you to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. Secretly, I suppose, he thinks I
+ought to give up my career and live for my child.
+Something of that sort.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you consider that—quite out of the question,
+I suppose.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Norman. I’ve tried to tell you why. And
+I don’t think any sort of compromise would do—such
+as keeping the baby and going on with my
+career. I’d not be a good mother. It just wouldn’t
+work out. It wouldn’t be good for the child to have
+a mother like that. The only sensible thing is to
+have the baby adopted by people who do want one.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even if you know nothing of these people,
+Isabel?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dr. Zerneke knows them. And I’m sure they
+couldn’t be worse parents than I should be!”</p>
+
+<p>“Suppose,” said Norman, “they should be conventional
+people—and the boy should inherit your
+talent. They wouldn’t understand him. They’d try
+to discourage him.”</p>
+
+<p>“If he were an artist, that wouldn’t keep him from
+being one.” Then Isabel smiled. “But why not suppose
+<span class="pagenum" id="p67">67</span>that he will inherit your traits, Norman?
+That’s quite as likely. And then he’d get along perfectly
+well in his bourgeois environment.”</p>
+
+<p>“So that’s what you think of me—as a perfectly
+bourgeois person,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve managed to make terms with the world
+you live in,” she said, “I thought you got along with
+it very comfortably.”</p>
+
+<p>“So I did,” he said, “until yesterday—when this
+thing came up. This has knocked the foundations
+of my old life to pieces.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” said Isabel. “I hope it’s not as bad
+as that. This needn’t affect your life.”</p>
+
+<p>“It does,” said Norman. “There’s no use pretending.
+Isabel, won’t you marry me?”</p>
+
+<p>She took his hand between both of hers for a
+moment. “It’s terribly sweet of you to want to,
+Norman. But we’ve already discussed that, back at
+Cambridge. You remember.”</p>
+
+<p>“I remember that you didn’t want to marry a
+bourgeois young lawyer and settle down to a life of
+teas and bridge in Vickley,” he said. “But now—I’m
+afraid you’d not be marrying a prosperous lawyer in
+Vickley, Isabel. You’d be marrying”—he smiled—“a
+ruined man and an outcast.”</p>
+
+<p>“You make it very attractive, Norman,” she said.
+“It’s a temptation to marry you, just to ruin you.
+But the trouble is, the marriage which would be
+your ruin would make me a respectable woman again.
+I can’t venture that. I’ve too recently escaped from
+<span class="pagenum" id="p68">68</span>prison to give up my freedom. I won’t marry you,
+Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that your real reason?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Marriage is marriage, Norman. I’m going to
+Paris to paint. You want to keep me here, looking
+after your baby. No, thank you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that the real reason?” he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>“What else? Oh, I suppose you mean, do I love
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps that’s what I do mean. But I suppose I
+know the answer already.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I weren’t going to be a painter, I could love
+you, Norman. If I were a real girl, I’d be proud to
+have your babies. I’m sorry, for your sake—and
+perhaps for my own—that I’m such a queer monster
+as I am, and—and not a nice girl for you, Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>She turned her head away from him and flung her
+arm up to cover her face. She was crying.</p>
+
+<p>“Go away,” she said, after a moment.</p>
+
+<p>He thought with a thrill that this wild girl might
+yet be conquered.... And then he remembered
+that he mustn’t upset Dr. Zerneke’s patient.</p>
+
+<p>He rose, contritely.</p>
+
+<p>She found a handkerchief under her pillow, and
+wiped her eyes, and turned toward him. He was
+fumbling with the tissue wrappings of the bouquet.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, flowers!” she cried. And then, as he unwrapped
+them: “Jonquils! I love them! How
+nice of you to remember!”</p>
+
+<p>She is a girl, after all! thought Norman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p69">69</span></p>
+
+<p>“Put them in the water pitcher,” she told him.</p>
+
+<p>He did so.</p>
+
+<p>“And now come here and kiss me.”</p>
+
+<p>He bent over her, and their lips touched. What
+did that kiss mean? Gratitude, to be sure. A lonely
+girl in a hospital.... He wished he could believe
+it was more.</p>
+
+<p>“Norman, dear,” she said softly, “will you forgive
+me for being—what I am?”</p>
+
+<p>“But are you that, really?” he asked. “I wish I
+knew!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—yes—yes!” she cried, raising herself up
+from her pillow. “Don’t be fooled by a few silly
+tears, Norman. The real me is in Paris now, sitting
+before an easel in a paint-smeared smock. You’ve
+found me weak and helpless, but I’ve that hope.
+And if I didn’t have it, as God knows I mightn’t
+have—if I didn’t have Paris to look forward to and
+three hundred francs a week for a year and no questions
+asked—if I had been penniless and scared, I
+might have married you, Norman. But you’d only
+have had my woman’s body—my thoughts would
+never have stayed with you. That’s the truth, and
+we’re both lucky to have escaped such a trap. Think!
+if you’d given up everything for me, and then found
+you could never really have me—and if I had given
+up my dreams for food and shelter—we’d have hated
+each other, Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t just us,” he said. “Isabel, it’s our son.
+Couldn’t we—”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p70">70</span></p>
+
+<p>She bit her lip and shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>“Besides,” she said, “you’re engaged to another
+girl. Hal told me so.”</p>
+
+<p>“What does that matter, now?”</p>
+
+<p>“She’ll give you another son.”</p>
+
+<p>“Doesn’t,” he asked desperately, “doesn’t it mean
+anything to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why,” she asked wonderingly, “should our child
+mean so much to you? You’ve never even seen
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to see him.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can. But don’t you understand—”</p>
+
+<p>“I understand that he would interfere with your
+career, yes,” said Norman harshly.</p>
+
+<p>“Hate me if you want to. But I am what I am.
+And if I’ve nursed this baby at my breast, and still
+think of myself as an artist and not as a mother—”
+She paused.... “Norman—I fought out this wife
+and mother business once before—when I was
+eighteen. I was engaged. And I was really in love
+... more than I ever will be again. But I saw
+what marriage would do to me, and I wouldn’t go
+through with it. My mother tried to make me.
+But I wouldn’t—I couldn’t. I settled it for myself
+then that I was going to be an artist, and not a
+wife and mother. I don’t suppose you’ll ever understand.
+But there’s no use arguing with me. I’ve
+my own road to go.”</p>
+
+<p>“But to give your child away to strangers—!”
+he protested bitterly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p71">71</span></p>
+
+<p>She sank back on her pillow. “I can’t talk to you
+any more,” she said wearily. “You’d better go.”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to see my son,” he said stubbornly.</p>
+
+<p>“The nurse will show you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” he said. “I didn’t mean to upset
+you. And—I’ll try to understand your point of
+view....”</p>
+
+<p>“Good-by,” she said. “And thank you for the
+flowers.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a tap at the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” said Isabel. “I think,” she said to Norman,
+“that’s the baby now.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p72">72</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_IX_The_Baby">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter IX</span>: The Baby
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>THE door opened, and an angular, old-maidish-looking
+nurse entered with a baby in her arms.
+“Feeding time,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>She went to the bed and laid the baby down beside
+Isabel. “I’ll bring the bottle,” she said, and
+went out.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a good thing,” said Isabel, “that this is a
+bottle feeding. I’m not supposed to go through
+scenes like this—it’s not good for my milk.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman looked down at the baby in a kind of
+terrified curiosity. It was a very tiny thing, with a
+round face, and some blond hair like his own on the
+queer-shaped skull. The blue eyes blinked up at him
+sleepily.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Isabel, “this is what we have been
+rowing about.” She turned to the baby. “This man
+thinks I ought to take care of you,” she said. “But
+you know better, don’t you? I’m a very poor mother,
+I haven’t even enough milk for you, and the little I
+have is not up to standard. You won’t be sorry to
+see the last of me.” She smiled at Norman.
+“Well,” she said, “he’s a healthy little bastard, isn’t
+he?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman flinched at the word.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, he is, you know,” said Isabel. “And he’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="p73">73</span>too young to have his feelings hurt by mentioning it.
+You and I ought to be able to face the fact. After
+all, Norman, it’s the sort of thing that happens quite
+regularly and inevitably in every civilized country on
+the globe. Do you happen to know the statistics for
+illegitimacy? I made Dr. Zerneke give me something
+to read about it. It’s very interesting. It
+seems that in the United States about one in every
+forty-two births is illegitimate. I’ve been figuring it
+out. Sixty thousand illegitimate births a year comes
+to about a hundred and sixty-four a day, or seven an
+hour, or one every eight minutes and twenty seconds.
+Statistics are very consoling. They take away the
+uniqueness of one’s discomforts.”</p>
+
+<p>He was looking at the baby. Gradually it had become
+thoroughly awake. It stretched its arms, and
+yawned magnificently. Its lips began to make sucking
+movements. Its face grew red, and broke into
+a wrinkled grimace of anger.</p>
+
+<p>Isabel went on talking. “Every year—you see,
+I’ve had nothing to do for days except to study statistics—out
+of every hundred and fifty-nine unmarried
+females of childbearing age, one gives birth to an
+illegitimate child. This year it so happened that the
+lot fell to me.”</p>
+
+<p>A loud wail came from the little bundle.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve nothing for you,” said Isabel. “You’ll have
+to wait for your bottle.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why is his head such a queer shape?” asked
+Norman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p74">74</span></p>
+
+<p>“You ought to have seen it at first. It was pulled
+out of shape getting into the world. It’s getting to
+look all right now.”</p>
+
+<p>The baby’s wails grew more insistent.</p>
+
+<p>“Just a minute, young man,” said Isabel.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you—named him?” asked Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Isabel, a little embarrassed, “it
+really makes no difference—the people who are going
+to have him will never know, and they’ll name
+him all over again. But when I first saw him, he did
+look so much like you! Do you mind?”</p>
+
+<p>“You named him Norman?”</p>
+
+<p>“When the doctor was making out the birth certificate,
+she told me I’d have to give him some sort
+of first name—the first one that came into my head
+would do, she said. And that was the first one that
+came into my head. I know I shouldn’t have done
+it. But it doesn’t really implicate you, Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why the devil,” asked Norman, “should you be
+so considerate of <em>me</em>?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because it wasn’t your fault, Norman. You
+didn’t know you were going to be let in for anything
+like this. You’ve your own life to live. It wouldn’t
+be fair.”</p>
+
+<p>“If—for any reason—” he said, “you had decided
+to keep the baby, what would you have done then—about
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d never have told you anything about it at all.
+It would have been my baby. I don’t see why you
+should be asked to support it, in any case.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p75">75</span></p>
+
+<p>“But I think that’s silly,” said Norman. “Because
+I could support it—and you couldn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, I could. Girls do, you know. And
+I’ll tell you this. I didn’t intend to, but I will....
+You see, when a girl is going to give up her baby
+for adoption, she doesn’t nurse it at all, and never
+sees it—except just once, before she signs the papers.
+They manage it that way for fear of arousing the
+maternal instinct. Because usually, after a girl has
+nursed a baby, she wants to keep it. But that
+seemed to me a cowardly thing to do. I told Dr.
+Zerneke I’d nurse my baby, and take my chances of
+my maternal instinct being aroused. I didn’t explain
+to her, but I can tell <em>you</em>—it was a kind of test of
+myself: whether I was destined to be a mother or a
+painter. I decided that if I felt like keeping the
+baby, I would—I’d get a job of some kind and give
+up my year in Paris and everything—stop painting,
+and be a regular female.... Well, you see, my
+milk is drying up! And I don’t feel at all like a
+mother—I still want to paint! So that’s why—”</p>
+
+<p>“I see,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, he thought bitterly, if she were a real mother,
+she’d be interested in comforting that crying baby,
+instead of explaining her psychology!</p>
+
+<p>The spinsterish-looking nurse came in efficiently
+with the bottle.</p>
+
+<p>“I think your visitor has been here long enough,”
+she said firmly.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p76">76</span></p>
+
+<p>He gathered up his hat and stick. “I’ll see you
+again, if I may.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, do,” said Isabel.</p>
+
+<p>“Here, precious!” said the nurse, cooingly,
+“here’s your itsie bottsie-wottsie.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman heard her crooning over his child as he
+went out the door.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p77">77</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_X_Art_Alone_Endures">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter X</span>: Art Alone Endures
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>OUTSIDE of the hospital he hailed a taxi, and
+gave the name of his hotel.</p>
+
+<p>Coming out of some reverie too deep to remember,
+he looked out of the window and saw that he
+was on Michigan Boulevard, passing the Art Institute.
+On an impulse, he stopped the taxi, and went
+in.</p>
+
+<p>He climbed the wide stair to the large room in
+which the treasures of the place were on view—a
+miscellaneous lot of treasures: some of them, like
+Bougereau’s bather, cheapened by time’s changes in
+the realm of taste; none but the ignorant now
+stopped to admire the high lights on those perfect
+and polished toe-nails. And poor Gilbert Stuart—what
+an irony for a painter to be cherished because
+of the historical importance of one of his subjects!
+But here was, at least, a Van Dyck. Norman paused
+in front of it.... And from somewhere out of a
+memory whose leisure hours for some years had
+been given to connoisseurship in the art of painting,
+there leaped out the irrelevant fact that Van Dyck
+had had an illegitimate child in the Netherlands; the
+mother being unknown to history.... He passed
+on.</p>
+
+<p>He did not know what he was looking for....
+Possibly for some proof that art was as important
+<span class="pagenum" id="p78">78</span>as he had always taken for granted that it was.
+These artists starved and painted, attained—if they
+were lucky—the heights of fame, and left pictures
+that eventually found their way to some American
+gallery. That seemed to be the final, ironic goal of
+all their striving. It was, no doubt, very improbable
+that this willful girl would ever achieve any sort of
+fame. But if she did, beyond her wildest dreams—then,
+some day, a troubled young man would stand
+in front of some picture of hers, and remember that
+she was said to have had an illegitimate child in
+America.</p>
+
+<p>“The father,” he murmured half aloud, “being
+unknown to history.”</p>
+
+<p>Yes, times were changing. Women were taking
+the privileges of men. And that careless masculine
+privilege of leaving behind an illegitimate child or
+so in the course of one’s career—that, too. Van
+Dyck hadn’t been stopped in his painter’s progress
+by a mere illegitimate child: why should Isabel
+Drury be?</p>
+
+<p>Oh, no doubt there was something to be said for
+her attitude. And it was important, doubtless, that
+she have her chance to paint a picture that would
+be bought after her death for a fabulous sum by an
+American millionaire. Just why it was important
+he could not at the moment seem to be able to tell
+himself. But he had always known that it was
+important....</p>
+
+<p>A fragment of a poem of Gautier’s flickered into
+<span class="pagenum" id="p79">79</span>his mind. “<i>Tout passe. La vers souveraine demeurent.</i>”
+That had impressed him greatly when
+he read it at college. All passes; sovereign verse—or,
+as in this case, painting—lasts....</p>
+
+<p>To be sure. Children grow up; become old; die.
+Paint on canvas stays young. More or less. Less
+rather than more, to tell the truth. Paint ages, too.
+The gloom into which Whistler’s paintings are
+already fading.... An accident, perhaps. Isabel
+didn’t use that kind of a palette. She was a post-Impressionist....
+But styles decay, too. <i lang="fr">Pointillisme</i>—how
+quaint it looks already! Picasso—will
+he and all his manners seem to another generation as
+futile as Meissonier?... This whole age: was it
+perhaps afflicted, as some said, with a spiritual sickness?
+Was it because of something morbid in his
+own mind that he had ever been drawn to it?...
+A bourgeois thing to think!</p>
+
+<p>But then, he was a bourgeois: no doubt of that.
+What did he know about art? He had enjoyed the
+belief that he knew a great deal. And that did no
+harm—it would encourage him to buy some poor
+devil’s pictures; and if he guessed right, he could
+present them to a museum. That was his function—to
+buy pictures.... Some day he might have the
+privilege of buying some of Isabel’s.</p>
+
+<p>When he was dead, his widow would call in an
+expert and ask, “Are these worth anything?” If
+they weren’t, she would burn them up as trash—the
+mere record of a girl’s vain dreams. If the expert
+<span class="pagenum" id="p80">80</span>said, “Oh, yes, indeed, madam, those are very fine
+early Drurys!”—then they would pass into the possession
+of some millionaire. They would fetch a
+good price.... But the man who bought them
+wouldn’t know how cheap they were at any price....
+He would be getting, not just paint and canvas
+and a name, but the milk that had dried up in Isabel’s
+breasts, the love that she had kept from her baby,
+the hope that she had refused to squander on a mere
+living child—all that she had saved up and put into
+her masterpieces rather than waste in motherhood:
+that’s what he would be getting for his money. And
+when after dinner he took his guests for a stroll
+through his gallery, and— But this was mere sentimentality....</p>
+
+<p>Norman awoke from his reverie, in front of
+Millet’s picture of the new-born calf being brought
+home by two peasants on a straw-covered litter, the
+mother cow following along and licking her baby....
+Silly sentimentalists, cows. Didn’t they know
+their real business was to produce cream for the
+tables of the bourgeoisie? And Millet—a damned
+sentimentalist, himself. Any post-impressionist
+would say so....</p>
+
+<p>Norman remembered suddenly his luncheon engagement
+with old Gilbert. They were to meet at
+the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>He hurried out.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p81">81</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XI_Common_Sense">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XI</span>: Common Sense
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>“WELL,” said old Gilbert, at the table in the
+corner of the hotel dining room, “how
+have <em>you</em> been spending your morning?”</p>
+
+<p>“I went to see Dr. Zerneke,” said Norman. “I
+couldn’t wait.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Gilbert stopped wiping his mouth and threw
+his napkin violently on the table.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll be damned!” he said. “I suppose I ought to
+have known it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I couldn’t stay away,” said Norman. “I had to
+know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, and what did you find out?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your guess was true, of course. It’s Isabel
+Drury. She had her baby eleven days ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve had time to find out that much myself,” said
+Gilbert. “I had some one call up all the hospitals
+in town for me. What I want to know is what kind
+of mess you’ve got yourself into.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I haven’t got myself into a mess,” said Norman,
+“it’s not my fault, I’m afraid. I didn’t try to
+deny anything. But all that this doctor wanted—”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, what did she want?”</p>
+
+<p>“She wanted to find out whether the baby has a
+healthy father. The people who are planning to
+adopt the child wished to be sure of that, it seems.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p82">82</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes—and what else?”</p>
+
+<p>“That appears to be all. She was at great pains
+to assure me that I had no further responsibility in
+the matter. When I’ve furnished her with some
+more medical data, I can dismiss the matter from my
+mind entirely, I gather.”</p>
+
+<p>“The girl makes no claim on you?”</p>
+
+<p>“None at all.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Gilbert looked immensely relieved.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me,” said Norman, “have you ever heard
+of the Thecla Child Adoption Society?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Gilbert. “I’ve looked that up too.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it a reputable organization?”</p>
+
+<p>“Perfectly. And I had Dr. Zerneke looked up,
+too.”</p>
+
+<p>“You found her to be all right?” asked Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Professional reputation unimpeachable, it seems.
+Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well—about the adoption matter.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right. They’ll handle it in the right
+way. I found out something about their work. And
+if you’ve been assured that your secret will be kept,
+you’ve nothing to fear from them.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t mean that, precisely.”</p>
+
+<p>“What, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“I was thinking—of the child.”</p>
+
+<p>“They know their business. The child will be put
+in good hands. You needn’t worry about that.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Gilbert once more gave to his lunch the attention
+it deserved. “You see,” he said comfortably
+<span class="pagenum" id="p83">83</span>between mouthfuls, “things have turned out all right
+after all—just as I said they would. And now that
+you’ve had your mind put at ease, I think you’d better
+go right home. There’s no point in your hanging
+around Chicago.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why do you want me to go home?” asked Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Because I think well enough is best left alone,”
+said Gilbert. “Everything is all right now, and
+that’s a good way to leave it.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean that you’re afraid I might go to see
+Isabel?”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re safer, I think, back in Vickley.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well—I might as well tell you that I saw her,
+too. And the baby.”</p>
+
+<p>“You <em>have</em> taken this case into your own hands,
+with a vengeance,” said old Gilbert in discouragement.
+“I was a damned fool ever to bring you here.
+Well, tell me the worst at once. Did you offer to
+marry her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I asked her to, and she refused.”</p>
+
+<p>“You asked her to!—and she refused? You certainly
+have fool’s luck. But why did she refuse
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“For the same reasons as before. It would interfere
+with her career.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s beyond me. But I suppose she has her
+reasons. Lord, what a tight squeak! You don’t
+know how lucky you are! But I suppose you thought
+that was the noble thing to do—offer to marry her!
+<span class="pagenum" id="p84">84</span>You didn’t happen to remember, I suppose, that you
+were engaged to another girl.”</p>
+
+<p>“It didn’t seem to make any difference.”</p>
+
+<p>“Boy, she might have taken you up. You were
+putting your head into the lion’s mouth!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I knew what I was doing. And it wasn’t
+just a noble gesture. I was quite ready to let everything
+else go to hell.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord, you’re as much infatuated with her
+as all that?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I’m not even sure that I love her at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean to say that you offered to marry
+her just to make an honest woman of her?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman laughed. “Nothing like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then why in the name of God did you offer to
+marry her? Can you tell me that?”</p>
+
+<p>“That seemed the simplest thing to do,” said
+Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“I think you’re a little mad,” said old Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” said Norman. “I suppose it
+was foolish. Any way, she wouldn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Fortunately,” said Gilbert, “she seems to be just
+as crazy as you are! What would your father think
+of me if I took you here to Chicago and let you get
+into a mess like that, right under my nose!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you needn’t worry about it,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“I shan’t ask her again.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should hope not!” said old Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>“I saw Springer this morning.” And then Norman
+<span class="pagenum" id="p85">85</span>was sorry he had mentioned it. Gilbert would
+commence again on his suspicions.</p>
+
+<p>“What is <em>he</em> doing here?” asked Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>“Getting ready for his exhibit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you went to see him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, what did <em>he</em> say?”</p>
+
+<p>“He didn’t know me. He said Isabel had appendicitis.
+His wife has found her a rich patron, and
+she’s going to Paris to study.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve been wondering who was paying her expenses,”
+said Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you still wish to think that Springer is
+mixed up in this affair,” said Norman, “and that
+something is being put over on me. But I am convinced
+that you are wrong. And I have acknowledged
+the child as my own.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve only been trying to act as your friend in
+this matter, Norman. Of course, if you are convinced
+that the child is yours, there’s nothing more
+to say on that score. The only question is, what
+do you propose to do about it? Publish the fact from
+the housetops? I appreciate your honorable scruples.
+They seem to me excessive, I must admit. But
+you have acted upon them—you have offered to
+marry the girl; and she has declined your offer.
+The question of money does not seem to be involved.
+If it were a matter of paying the girl’s expenses—or
+if she wanted to keep the child herself—I’m sure
+<span class="pagenum" id="p86">86</span>you would wish to be generous. As it is, there seems
+to be nothing more that you can do. Dr. Zerneke
+will find a good home for the child. The girl will
+go ahead and paint pictures. And you will go back
+to Vickley and resume the practice of law. That is
+the situation as I see it. The matter is closed. It
+has been very exciting, and no doubt instructive.
+But it’s all over.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Norman, and sighed. “I suppose it
+is all over.” All except remembering, and thinking,
+and wondering—and he’d have the rest of his
+life for that.</p>
+
+<p>A picture flashed into his mind. An absurd picture—a
+melodramatic picture. He was older, and
+driving a car slowly through a Chicago street at
+night. A young man, with a revolver in his hand,
+stepped in front of the car and called, “Stop!” But
+he bent his head and stepped hard on the gas. A
+bullet grazed his cheek like a knife, and then he
+became aware that the car was dragging a dead,
+mangled body. And somehow he knew that it was
+his son’s....</p>
+
+<p>He pulled himself back to reality, and smiled
+wanly at the absurdity of his fancies.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” old Gilbert was saying, “this business has
+turned out remarkably well, considering everything.
+We can go back to the status quo ante without a
+qualm. We take the eleven o’clock train to-night.
+You’ll be here at ten ready to go?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Norman, “I’ll be ready.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p87">87</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XII_Bad_Dreams">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XII</span>: Bad Dreams
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>BUT what could he do that afternoon?...</p>
+
+<p>Two o’clock found him back in Dr. Zerneke’s
+waiting room.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you looked us up?” asked Dr. Zerneke
+cheerfully, when he was admitted to her office.</p>
+
+<p>“If I were a poor devil of a soda-fountain clerk,”
+said Norman, “and Isabel a stenographer I had got
+into trouble—what would you do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Just what I have done in this case,” said Dr.
+Zerneke. “The rest, so far as I am concerned,
+would be up to you and her. Did you ask her to
+marry you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Norman. “And she refused.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought that was what would happen,” said
+the doctor. “She’s a very determined young
+woman. And all women are not to be forced into
+a single mold. She wants her career. So we must
+find the child a proper home.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I understand that,” said Norman. “But
+what I object to is this business of turning the baby
+over to strangers!”</p>
+
+<p>“They are not strangers to the Society,” said Dr.
+Zerneke. “We have more applicants than we have
+babies, and as I told you, they are very thoroughly
+investigated. We know all about them.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p88">88</span></p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t,” said Norman stubbornly.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid that can’t be helped,” said Dr.
+Zerneke. And then she repeated her question:
+“Have you made inquiries about the work of our
+Society?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” said Norman, “I’ve no doubt your Society
+is all right. But—” He paused helplessly.</p>
+
+<p>“I was sure you would come to that conclusion,”
+said Dr. Zerneke. And then, as he sat there, silent
+and troubled, she added: “I don’t wish to take advantage
+of your situation, Mr. Overbeck, but if it
+would help to ease your feelings the Society would
+be glad to accept a check to help carry on its work.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said, “I’ll be glad to do that.”</p>
+
+<p>He took out his check-book and his fountain-pen,
+and started to write. But suddenly he laid down his
+pen.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he said, “I can’t buy them off that way.”</p>
+
+<p>He spoke softly, as if to himself, but Dr. Zerneke
+asked sharply:</p>
+
+<p>“Buy who off?”</p>
+
+<p>“The bad dreams—the pictures,” he said. “The
+things that come into my mind.”... A frightful
+vision had visited him as he held the pen poised
+over the check. It was like the one that had come
+to him at lunch, with Gilbert—only worse, this time.
+Its misty fringes still clung to his mind and afflicted
+him with horror.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor seemed to understand. She reached
+out and put her hand for a moment on one of his
+<span class="pagenum" id="p89">89</span>stooped, miserable shoulders. “I’m sorry,” she said.
+“What do you want to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I—I don’t know,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>That vision— No, of course nothing like that
+would ever really happen. But was he to be tormented
+with such pictures all his life? In every
+handcuffed youth being taken to prison—in every
+poster offering a reward for a young murderer—was
+he to seek for the features of his unknown son?</p>
+
+<p>“If you have any practical alternative to offer—”
+the doctor was saying.</p>
+
+<p>His mind was still grappling with the thought of
+a life haunted by such visions.... His wife would
+say, “Dearest, you’re positively morbid about crime-news!”
+He would have legitimate sons. “Dad,
+don’t you think I’m old enough to have a car of my
+own?” And then he would have to think about his
+other son, the one nobody knew about—a tramp,
+perhaps, freezing on the rods of a freight-train.
+He would be like a man haunted.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think your own family would care to
+adopt the child?” Dr. Zerneke asked. “Is that what
+you would like to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I hadn’t thought of that!” he said. “Of course—that’s
+what I’ll do!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the doctor thoughtfully, “you can
+consult them about it, and let me know.”</p>
+
+<p>Some dim apprehension of the actualities of that
+proposal came to him, clouding his relief. “Yes,”
+he said, “I’ll have to put it up to them....”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p90">90</span></p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said the doctor, “they may not take
+kindly to the idea.”</p>
+
+<p>“They’ll—<em>have</em> to do it!” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll see,” said the doctor. “But I hope there
+will not be too much delay in settling the matter, one
+way or another.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll go back home to-night,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“And do you think you’ll be able to give me the
+decision within, say, two weeks?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>She rose. “I’ll expect to see or hear from you
+in a fortnight, then.”</p>
+
+<p>“In two weeks from to-day,” he said, “I shall
+come here to get my son,” and he walked out like
+some one in a dream.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p91">91</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XIII_En_Route">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XIII</span>: En Route
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>THERE was no use in waiting for old Gilbert.
+He would take the next train to Vickley.</p>
+
+<p>He packed, and left a message, and caught a train
+which would get him home at midnight.</p>
+
+<p>The train had barely left the environs of Chicago
+when he realized abruptly the folly of his errand.
+What! Propose to his father and mother that they
+should adopt and bring up his illegitimate child!
+It was too preposterous.</p>
+
+<p>He felt an impulse to get up and jump from the
+slowly moving train. He would go to Dr. Zerneke
+and ... And what? Give her a check?</p>
+
+<p>He sank back in his chair. The train slid more
+swiftly out past the little towns, gathered momentum,
+hurled itself on toward Vickley. The song of
+the wheels on the rails was a mocking one. It
+seemed to say, over and over, “You’re in for it
+now! You’re in for it now!”</p>
+
+<p>He could get off at Aurora, of course.</p>
+
+<p>No, he’d have to see it through, somehow.</p>
+
+<p>Was it so preposterous? He wished he had
+asked Dr. Zerneke for some statistics about this situation!
+Was it often done? He smiled, after a
+fashion, at the thought of saying to his father:
+“Every year, in the United States, six hundred respectable
+families (or sixty, or whatever it might
+<span class="pagenum" id="p92">92</span>be) take a son’s illegitimate child to raise. You see,
+this has plenty of precedent.” Yes, doubtless it did
+sometimes happen in the United States: but not in
+Vickley. Not with people like the Overbecks.</p>
+
+<p>He simply couldn’t involve his family in a thing
+like that.</p>
+
+<p>(Well, nobody asked him to! Why didn’t he get
+off at Aurora—go back and sign the check which let
+him off scot-free?)</p>
+
+<p>The train stopped presently at Aurora. Here
+was his chance. He’d better take it.</p>
+
+<p>But he was still in his chair when the train pulled
+out of Aurora.</p>
+
+<p>He simply couldn’t decide this thing by himself.
+It was too overwhelming—too full of lifelong consequences.
+It needed a wiser head than his own.
+And his father was the wisest man he knew.</p>
+
+<p>He would tell his father. His father might know
+what to do.</p>
+
+<p>He envisaged in imagination that interview with
+his father.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you seduce this girl under promise of marriage?”</p>
+
+<p>And “Was she a virgin?” Yes, that would be
+terribly important to his father. If she had been a
+virgin, if he had seduced her, if he had promised
+marriage, his father’s stern sense of justice might
+prevail though the heavens fell.... But it wasn’t
+a question of marrying Isabel. It was a question of
+what should become of her child.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p93">93</span></p>
+
+<p>There had been a time, many years ago, when
+Norman not merely admired and feared his father,
+but loved and trusted him. When he was in trouble
+he could come to his father, though in fear and
+trembling, and tell the truth. He wished he could
+be that little boy again.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it, Son? Tell your father.”</p>
+
+<p>“I—I had a sweetheart at college, Father, and
+now she has a baby, and doesn’t want to keep it,
+and I don’t want it given away to strangers, and I
+don’t know what to do!”</p>
+
+<p>“Was she a good girl?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Father.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you’d better marry her, Son. It will hurt
+us all, but you must do what is right.”</p>
+
+<p>“But she won’t marry me, Father.”</p>
+
+<p>“Send her to me. I’ll talk with her about it.
+She’ll <em>have</em> to marry you, Son.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman smiled. It would be wonderful to believe
+again in his father’s omnipotence.</p>
+
+<p>Well, what would his father say to Isabel? He
+imagined that, in the same boyish mood.</p>
+
+<p>“How old are you, Isabel?”</p>
+
+<p>“Twenty-six, sir.”</p>
+
+<p>“You were a year older than Norman when this
+happened. You can have no cause for resentment
+against him such as would justify you in refusing to
+marry him.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I want to be a painter!”</p>
+
+<p>“We cannot always have what we want. My son
+<span class="pagenum" id="p94">94</span>wanted to be a lawyer. Now he can’t be—and you
+must take your punishment along with him. I will
+buy a pants-pressing establishment for the two of
+you, down on Commerce Street. By faithfully pressing
+creases in the trousers of our best citizens for
+the rest of your life, you will expiate your sin. And
+now off to the preacher with you!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir!” (Exit Isabel, crying.)</p>
+
+<p>He frowned, and imagined it again, in a slightly
+more realistic vein.</p>
+
+<p>“You seem to be a well-brought-up young woman.
+I really can’t understand this at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid nothing I could say would make it any
+clearer to you, Mr. Overbeck.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, we won’t go into that. The fact is that
+you and Norman have brought a child into the
+world. I have told him that he must marry you.”</p>
+
+<p>“And I have told him that I won’t marry him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense! Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because I am going to Paris to paint.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can paint just as well in Vickley. The landscapes
+here along the Mississippi are as beautiful as
+any in the world. I have traveled, and I know.
+I’m sure Norman would have no objection to your
+doing water-color sketches in your spare time.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid that wouldn’t do, Mr. Overbeck.
+I’ve already explained to your son how I feel about
+it. It’s very good of you to trouble yourself in
+the matter, but quite unnecessary. My mind is fully
+made up.” Very cool Isabel was, in this interview.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p95">95</span>“And now, if you’ll excuse me, I have another engagement.”</p>
+
+<p>No, it wouldn’t be like that <em>at all</em>. His father had
+emotions—and so had Isabel. There would be a
+battle. He would almost crush, almost overwhelm
+her—but not quite. She would be defiant, stubborn
+to the last. It would be rather a magnificent
+spectacle, that struggle between them—between the
+world as it always had been and the world as it was
+perhaps coming to be—between the old dispensation
+and the new.</p>
+
+<p>(Why was he so sure his father would want them
+to marry? He might take old Gilbert’s practical
+and cynical view of the situation.... No, he
+wouldn’t do that. He was a good man, in his stern
+way. And in that thought there was some obscure
+comfort for Norman.)</p>
+
+<p>He rose restlessly and went into the smoking
+compartment.</p>
+
+<p>In all his experience of smoking cars and smoking
+compartments, he had never heard there what was
+known as a “typical smoking-car story.” But this
+time, as it chanced, one was being told. It was just
+finished as he entered, and there was a burst of
+laughter. He recognized the story from the final
+lines. It was the one about the young couple who
+had been caught in the storm while driving in the
+country, and had stayed overnight at a farmhouse.
+His entrance put a damper on the others, and they
+shifted self-consciously to the subject of automobiles.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p96">96</span>Norman sat down in a corner, lighted a cigarette,
+and picked up a discarded magazine that lay
+on the leather seat beside him. It was an obscure
+magazine devoted to the more humorous aspects of
+sex. Norman reflected that the aspects of sex with
+which he was now becoming personally acquainted
+rather took the humor out of stories about casual
+sexual encounters. He had once thought they were
+funny, too; but just now it seemed to him that these
+things were too serious to laugh about. Some time
+he might recover his sense of sexual humor, but just
+now it was at a low ebb.</p>
+
+<p>The world, however, had not changed because of
+an incident in the life of Norman Overbeck. Sex
+continued to seem funny to other people. The three
+other men in the smoking-compartment, encouraged
+by his apparent absorption in his reading, verged
+closer to that delectable topic, and presently one of
+them began to tell another story. “If I had secretly
+committed a murder,” thought Norman, “I suppose
+I would find them talking about murders!” For by
+a painful coincidence this story was the one about the
+eight girls in Scotland who had illegitimate children
+and all named the same boy as the father. The doctor’s
+curiosity was aroused, and he went to see the
+boy to find out how it could happen....</p>
+
+<p>Norman, feeling a little sick, threw down his cigarette,
+dropped his magazine and went out. As he
+went, he heard, in bad Scotch dialect, the tag line,
+“Wull, ye see, doctor, Oi’ve a bicycle!” And the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p97">97</span>robust laughter of the three followed him into the
+corridor.... Was he never going to be able to
+listen to a dirty story again with normal masculine
+gusto?</p>
+
+<p>The porter came through the car. “First call
+for dinner!”</p>
+
+<p>The man sitting across from him at the little table
+in the dining-car was a salesman. Norman roused
+himself and they talked about automobiles. If it
+had been anything else, he might have lost himself
+in the conversation for a few minutes at least. But
+one can talk about automobiles without having to
+think of what one is saying....</p>
+
+<p>He stopped in the smoking-compartment for a cigarette.
+The magazine devoted to funny stories
+about sex was gone. In its place was a copy of the
+New Republic. He turned the pages. At another
+time he would not have noticed it, but there staring
+him in the face was an article on “Unmarried
+Mothers.” The illegitimacy rate for Scotland, he
+noted, was 66 per thousand births, for England and
+Wales 42, for France (before the war) 88, the
+United States 23.8.... He studied the tables
+guiltily. Isabel had found these statistics comforting,
+so she said. He did not find them so. “A considerable
+proportion of the mothers are girls in
+their teens, while what data is available indicates
+that a large majority of them are working in unskilled
+or semi-skilled occupations, with an undue
+proportion in factory work and domestic service.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p98">98</span></p>
+
+<p>But there wasn’t anything about girls who wanted
+to go to Paris and paint, and wouldn’t marry the
+fathers of their children....</p>
+
+<p>“Contrary, however, to prevalent ideas on the
+subject, European statistics show that illegitimacy
+rates tend to increase rather than decrease with the
+spread of education; they are lower in cities than in
+rural districts; and comparisons of the poorest parts
+of London with certain well-to-do parts show the
+richer districts as having an illegitimacy rate of
+nearly six times the poorest districts.”</p>
+
+<p>Well, there was a grain of comfort in that....</p>
+
+<p>But why must he, now, find the subject of illegitimacy
+everywhere he turned?</p>
+
+<p>Damn these coincidences!</p>
+
+<p>He took one more glance at the article, and read:
+“In Austria, about a quarter of all births are illegitimate;
+in some rural districts nearly a half.”</p>
+
+<p>Yes—but why had <em>Isabel</em> had a baby? Perhaps
+simply because, after all, she was a girl. It seemed
+to be the sort of thing that quite generally happened
+to girls, in or out of marriage. Mere ignorance
+couldn’t account for all those illegitimate babies!
+Girls must <em>want</em> to have babies, in spite of the frightful
+penalties that are attached to having them except
+in accordance with the rules. Nature laughs at
+the solemn rules of marriage, and the babies come
+at her bidding. Not accident, not carelessness, but
+some profound wish, deeper than their conscious
+fears, for this fulfillment of their natural destiny!
+<span class="pagenum" id="p99">99</span>In Isabel, too? He had to believe that. The
+woman in her had wanted—not merely that hour of
+delirium in the woods—but motherhood. Yet her
+nature was divided against itself. Something else
+in her was in revolt against being a woman. She
+was running away from her fate. That was the
+truth.... And he, in this internal battle between
+woman and artist, was the victim, along with her
+child. The woman that was in Isabel had chosen
+him to be her child’s father. The artist that was in
+Isabel was deserting them both with a brutal indifference.
+But here they were, father and child, made
+so at her deep wish, the wish she now repudiated.
+Nothing she might do could destroy the bond she
+had created between him and her child. She had
+given him a son. Let her run away to Paris, and
+forget. He couldn’t forget. He was caught in a
+trap of Nature’s. It was real. It was damnable.
+But it was true. He had a son. And what was he
+going to do about it?</p>
+
+<p>He looked at his watch. Still an hour and a half
+from Vickley.</p>
+
+<p>Would his father understand?</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p100">100</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XIV_Homecoming">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XIV</span>: Homecoming
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HE decided to walk home from the station. A
+soft breeze tossed him its faint, acrid, earthy
+scents. The stars were hidden and revealed by the
+fleecy scud of clouds. The moon, dwindling to its
+last quarter, had just lifted itself above the hills.
+Back in those hills, among the trees, was his home.
+All was peaceful there. They didn’t know the trouble
+he was bringing them....</p>
+
+<p>The moon had been large and low when he and
+Isabel had gone together into the wood, last year.
+What was there about the moon that made people
+think they had to make love? And afterward the
+moon sailed on serenely, not giving a damn, leaving
+them to worry about the consequences. Usually,
+though, it was the girl who did the worrying....</p>
+
+<p>If he were a girl—would his folks understand?
+Better, perhaps, than as it was now. They’d have
+to take the baby....</p>
+
+<p>He had passed the old brick building where he
+used to go to school as a boy. And here was the
+house where the Snyders had lived. He had not
+noticed the house for years. He had forgotten the
+mystery that it once contained for him. But now he
+remembered. The little boy playing about the
+Snyder yard was really (it was whispered on the way
+<span class="pagenum" id="p101">101</span>home from school) not Sally Snyder’s little brother
+but her own bastard child. Norman had occasionally
+caught a glimpse of Sally Snyder—a tall, pale,
+quiet girl. She never went anywhere, it was
+said....</p>
+
+<p>That secret hadn’t been very well kept. And now
+Norman wondered how the little Snyder boy had got
+along in school. He himself had gone on to high
+school, ceasing to pass the house, and had forgotten
+the story. But had the other boys referred to
+Sally’s son, behind his back, as a bastard? (Or to
+his face?...) Norman counted up the years.
+Sally’s boy would be about eighteen now. Did he
+still live here? Did this dark house still shelter him
+and his tall, pale, silent sister-mother? Or had the
+family moved to some other town, where the story
+wasn’t known?</p>
+
+<p>That was one good thing about being poor.
+Poverty gave you, in a new town, a kindly obscurity....
+But it wouldn’t be any use for the Overbecks
+to move away. (Or so it seemed to Norman, accustomed
+as he was to being a member of one of
+the chief families of Vickley.) They would have to
+stay and face what they would call their shame....</p>
+
+<p>He turned the corner. There was a light in his
+father’s study. Was his father waiting up for him?
+That would not be unlikely, if his father had known
+he was coming to-night. Anyway, it would be a
+good chance to tell his father everything. The
+sooner the better.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p102">102</span></p>
+
+<p>He ran up the steps and went in. His father’s
+voice from the study asked in surprise and disapproval:
+“Who’s that?”</p>
+
+<p>So he wasn’t expected. But who of the family
+could be out at this hour? “Early to bed” was a
+rule strictly enforced in the Overbeck household.
+“It’s me,” he answered, and went into the study,
+where his father was sitting at a table, somewhat
+ostentatiously waiting. He sat stiffly in his chair,
+with an upright, severe bearing. People spoke with
+admiration of the old man’s soldierly carriage.
+Well, he had been a soldier, back in the years before
+Norman was born, in the Spanish war. But anybody
+else would have forgotten that. Not that that
+had anything to do with it. He must always have
+been a martinet—born with discipline in his blood.
+Here he was, the General, seeing that the little
+Overbeck army got safely to bed.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” said his father, “it’s you. I am waiting up
+for Doris.”</p>
+
+<p>Doris? Oh, yes, of course. This was the night
+of the spring “hop” of her high-school sorority.
+She had a new frock for the occasion. She had
+brought it in to show him the other day while he
+was packing to go to Chicago....</p>
+
+<p>“There she is now,” said his father, as a car
+stopped noisily at the curb.</p>
+
+<p>Doris! He hadn’t taken her into his calculations
+at all.... No, he had simply not thought of her—and
+his baby here in the house. Would they talk
+<span class="pagenum" id="p103">103</span>at school about her being the aunt of a ——? Or
+(Good God!) would they think it was really <em>hers</em>?
+His fists clenched, and his forehead was suddenly
+wet with perspiration....</p>
+
+<p>Out on the porch Doris and her boy friend were
+giggling....</p>
+
+<p>No—that was absurd. But just the same she
+would be involved in the scandal. It would poison
+her friendships, humiliate and hurt her. It might
+spoil her whole life. Oh, it was altogether out of
+the question. He couldn’t inflict that on her....</p>
+
+<p>“Good night, Peter!”</p>
+
+<p>“Good night, Doris!”</p>
+
+<p>Young voices....</p>
+
+<p>The front door opened and shut, and Doris came
+straight to the lighted room, saying in exasperated
+protest: “I <em>do</em> wish, Father, you wouldn’t wait up
+for me! I can—”</p>
+
+<p>She paused in the doorway, seeing her brother.
+“Oh, <em>you’re</em> home!” she cried. Then she walked in,
+with a little self-conscious swagger. She was showing
+herself off in her new frock to her big brother.</p>
+
+<p>“You look,” he said, “like a million dollars! How
+was the dance?”</p>
+
+<p>“I had a swell time,” she answered.</p>
+
+<p>There was a time when Mr. Overbeck would have
+reproved any child of his for using such vulgar expressions.
+But not even J. J. Overbeck could sweep
+back the rising tide. All he said was: “Doris, go
+up to bed. It’s nearly one o’clock.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p104">104</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, all rightie!” she replied, and swaggered out.</p>
+
+<p>“How did you come out with the supreme court?”
+asked Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“I think my arguments may have impressed
+them,” his father admitted. And then he asked:
+“How did you come to go to Chicago so suddenly?”</p>
+
+<p>Now, if ever, was the time to confess. But what
+was the use?</p>
+
+<p>And so Norman repeated what he had already
+told Medway to tell his father: “Old Gilbert got
+it into his head that I could help him—seeing some
+people in a will case. I didn’t think I’d really be of
+much use, but he insisted on my going along.”</p>
+
+<p>His father nodded. “That’s all right,” he said.
+“It won’t do you any harm to work with Gilbert
+Rand. There’s a good deal you can learn from
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman’s chance had passed....</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll lock up,” said his father.</p>
+
+<p>“Good night,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Good night.”</p>
+
+<p>Upstairs, a door opened as he passed, and a whisper
+called him. “Norman!”</p>
+
+<p>It was his sister Lucinda, in wrapper and archaic
+curl-papers. He paused.</p>
+
+<p>“I just wanted to ask you—did you look at my
+puppy for me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your puppy?” said Norman, wrenching his mind
+loose from his own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—you know you promised to go and look at
+<span class="pagenum" id="p105">105</span>him yesterday—the one with the black spot over his
+left eye. And I wasn’t here when you came home
+to pack, so I didn’t know whether you had or not.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” he said. “I was so rushed I couldn’t
+get around to Schwartz’s. I’ll go to-morrow if you
+want me to.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I wish you would, Norman! I just can’t
+decide by myself!”</p>
+
+<p>How, he asked himself, as he went into his room,
+could he bring the truth into such a world as this?
+It couldn’t be done!</p>
+
+<p>But what was he going to do?</p>
+
+<p>He felt suddenly very tired—too tired to think....
+He would decide to-morrow.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p106">106</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XV_Family_Breakfast">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XV</span>: Family Breakfast
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>AT eight o’clock a bell sounded through the
+Overbeck house, to tell everybody to get up.
+At eight-thirty it would sound again, telling them
+to come to breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>It had been so as long as Norman could remember—except
+that on week-days the bell sounded an
+hour earlier. And that bell, like the voice of J. J.
+Overbeck himself, had always been obeyed. But
+this morning, though the bell struck into his sleeping
+consciousness, he did not want to wake up. He
+wanted to hold fast to the dream he was dreaming....
+Something about being off on a ship,
+alone....</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later his mother shook him gently
+by the shoulder, saying: “Norman, you’d better get
+up. It’s eight-forty. And you know how Father
+feels about having us all at the breakfast table.”</p>
+
+<p>“All—right!” he said reluctantly, opening his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He watched her go out of the room—the little,
+sensible, practical wife of the great J. J. Overbeck....</p>
+
+<p>What was that dream? It had vanished completely.</p>
+
+<p>He sprang out of bed. And then he remembered
+<span class="pagenum" id="p107">107</span>yesterday—Isabel—the baby—Dr. Zerneke—his errand
+here. It seemed unreal.</p>
+
+<p>He shaved hurriedly, so as not to be late to
+breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>Doris came down a little late, sleepy and petulant.
+“I don’t see why I can’t be allowed to have
+my sleep out when I’m at a party the night before,”
+she said, as she dug her spoon into her grapefruit.
+“Everybody else sleeps on Sunday morning!”</p>
+
+<p>“You should have thought of that last night,” said
+Lucinda vindictively.</p>
+
+<p>“You know,” said her mother placatingly, “that
+Father likes us all to be at the breakfast table with
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I know,” said Doris, “but I don’t see the
+sense of it. It’s a darn silly rule, if you ask me.”</p>
+
+<p>They all waited for J. J. Overbeck’s quiet thunders
+and lightnings to descend upon the rebel.</p>
+
+<p>“If that’s the effect that late hours have on your
+temper,” said her father gravely, “I think perhaps
+this had better be the last of them, until you are
+old enough to have learned some self-control.”</p>
+
+<p>Doris struggled with her tears for a moment,
+and then jumped up and ran crying from the room.</p>
+
+<p>Norman looked down at his plate, ashamed.
+What a home!...</p>
+
+<p>It was always like this—meaningless tyrannies,
+with which they all made such terms as they could.
+Their mother didn’t seem to notice it. Lucinda had
+been crushed by it into what she was. He himself
+<span class="pagenum" id="p108">108</span>had learned how to get along with his father. Doris
+was stubborn, but she would have to learn....
+And he had taken it all for granted.</p>
+
+<p>He had known that other homes were not like
+this. But as a boy he had accepted it as one accepts
+the climate. Away at college, he had preferred to
+forget it. But coming back to Vickley again, he had
+begun to take it for granted once more.</p>
+
+<p>His way of getting along with his father was to
+acquiesce publicly in his authority, but to retain a
+secret independence of opinion. It occurred to him
+now that this was rather cowardly. Even Doris’s
+undignified outbreaks were more honest. He had
+always sympathized with her in silence. Now he
+wanted to break that pattern and speak up in her
+defense. And so he said abruptly in the silence that
+followed his sister’s departure from the room:</p>
+
+<p>“I think Isabel is quite right.”</p>
+
+<p>He realized the slip of his tongue as they stared
+at him.</p>
+
+<p>“Who’s Isabel?” asked Lucinda.</p>
+
+<p>He flushed. “I meant Doris. She should be allowed
+to sleep after a late party. Especially on
+Sunday.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who is Isabel?” Lucinda repeated.</p>
+
+<p>His defiance, such as it was, had been completely
+spoiled by that silly slip of the tongue. They would
+all be wondering who Isabel was....</p>
+
+<p>He ignored Lucinda’s question and spoke sharply,
+forgetting his accustomed dignity:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p109">109</span></p>
+
+<p>“Father has no right to punish her that way—for
+a mere trifle!”</p>
+
+<p>His father was surprised, and for a moment or
+two said nothing at all. At last he remarked
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>“Late hours don’t seem to agree with you, either,
+Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucinda’s lips were framing the question:
+“Who—?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” Norman demanded of his father belligerently,
+“are you going to send <em>me</em> to bed at ten
+o’clock?”</p>
+
+<p>“Norman!” said his mother in sensible, practical
+disapproval of such nonsense.</p>
+
+<p>“If you are going to behave like a child,” said
+his father, “I ought to send you from the table like
+one.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d prefer to go,” said Norman. He rose and
+marched out of the room—feeling as though he were
+ten years old.</p>
+
+<p>In the hall he saw Doris coming downstairs. He
+waited for her.</p>
+
+<p>“What are you going to do?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I’m going back and apologize,” she said
+lightly. “It’s the only thing to do.”</p>
+
+<p>Their mother’s practical voice floated out from
+the breakfast room.</p>
+
+<p>“Norman, if you’re going out, take your overcoat.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where are you running off to?” asked Doris.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p110">110</span></p>
+
+<p>She was helping him on with his overcoat. “To
+see Madge, I suppose!”</p>
+
+<p>“Madge? Oh—why—yes.”</p>
+
+<p>He had managed to forget Madge....</p>
+
+<p>“Wait a moment,” said Doris. “I’ll bring you a
+fresh handkerchief.” She snatched the old one out
+of his breast pocket, ran up the stairs, came back and
+tucked the clean one in. “There!” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, he glanced over next door at the new
+frame building—the home his father was building
+for him and Madge—almost finished.... That
+was just like his father—to put them next door,
+where he could run their affairs for them, as if they
+were children.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p111">111</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XVI_Aubade">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XVI</span>: Aubade
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>MADGE! Yes, he had to go to see her. But—could
+he tell her? What was the use!
+He couldn’t bring his son to Vickley. He realized
+that now.... Perhaps he ought to be sensible
+about the thing.</p>
+
+<p>He wished Hal were here. Hal, at Cambridge,
+was the first real friend he had ever had since childhood.
+Hal wouldn’t argue with him, wouldn’t tell
+him what he ought to do. Hal would listen to him.
+That was what he needed. Maybe if he could talk
+to somebody—somebody who didn’t represent
+Vickley—he would feel better.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate, there was no sense in telling Madge.
+Old Gilbert had been quite right about that....
+He would have to act a part.</p>
+
+<p>He would just behave as if nothing had happened.</p>
+
+<p>As Gilbert had said, she would be thinking
+about other things.... She would never need to
+know....</p>
+
+<p>His life stretched out in front of him—a long
+vista of bridge-parties, as it seemed at this moment,
+with Madge as a handsome young matron presiding
+over them. He would live all his life with that
+pretty stranger—for so now she seemed. She would
+<span class="pagenum" id="p112">112</span>be called his wife. Perhaps people would speak approvingly
+of their happy marriage....</p>
+
+<p>Here he was, already, at the Ferris house.</p>
+
+<p>He hadn’t thought what he was going to say.</p>
+
+<p>Just behave naturally—that was it.</p>
+
+<p>He gave the bell his customary long ring followed
+abruptly by two short ones—the signal that Madge
+said sounded like “<em>O</em>-ver-beck!”</p>
+
+<p>No one came immediately, and he had to fight
+an impulse to go away. He rang again, and waited.</p>
+
+<p>A sound of feet running down the stairs quickly.
+Madge! He felt a sick qualm in his stomach.
+Madge calling to the maid who came tardily hurrying
+from the back: “I’ll answer the bell, Katie!”</p>
+
+<p>She opened the door. “Hello, Toodles!” she
+said. In the hall she flung herself into his arms....
+It seemed queer to be so passionately kissing a
+stranger....</p>
+
+<p>“Let little me help him off with his overcoat,” she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>She led him into the “den” off the hall. It was a
+place of memories of their courtship. But these
+memories seemed curiously alien to him now. Was
+it he that had read poetry to her, sitting on that
+sofa? Was it he who had asked her, one winter
+night, to be his wife?</p>
+
+<p>“She’s not dressed,” she said, drawing her flowery
+negligée about her, and bending her bobbed
+golden head toward him. “Her hair’s not dry!
+<span class="pagenum" id="p113">113</span>When your imperious ring came, she was just finishing
+her bath!”</p>
+
+<p>These childish mannerisms of speech had once enchanted
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“When did the old bum get home?” she demanded,
+drawing him down on the couch beside her.</p>
+
+<p>“Last night—late,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“How late?”</p>
+
+<p>“My train got in at midnight.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s not late. She was waiting for you—hoping
+you’d be back. She couldn’t get to sleep,
+thinking of you. And she had a queer dream....”</p>
+
+<p>He asked, with a pang of superstitious dread:
+“A dream—about me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind,” she said. “She never tells her
+dreams before breakfast.” And then: “Why
+doesn’t he act as if he were glad to see me?”</p>
+
+<p>He kissed her again.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter, Norman?” she asked abruptly,
+drawing away from him. “Has anything
+happened?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said. (Why did he say that?)</p>
+
+<p>“What is it, dear?” she asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>He must not tell her.... And he spoke at random,
+saying the first thing that came into his mind—just
+to be saying something: “I looked at our
+house....”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Norman?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s much too close to my father’s....”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p114">114</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’ve known that all along,” she said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you?” That little remark of hers astonished
+him infinitely. He realized that he had never
+known this girl at all. “I didn’t,” he said, “until
+this morning.”</p>
+
+<p>“What happened this morning? Have you been
+quarreling with your family?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said. “How did you know?”</p>
+
+<p>“What were you quarreling about?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Why—nothing, really. About getting up on
+Sunday.” He laughed nervously. “You’d have to
+get up at eight on Sunday—if you lived there!”</p>
+
+<p>“You think I’d let your family run <em>me</em>?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know how you’d help yourself.” (But
+why were they talking about that house?)</p>
+
+<p>“Trust me!” she answered. “Norman—we
+haven’t talked about it: but you and I are going to
+live our own lives, when we are married. We can
+live anywhere we like.”</p>
+
+<p>He didn’t say anything.</p>
+
+<p>“Have they been criticizing me?” she demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Who?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well—your sister Lucinda.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no—of course not!” he said. But the
+stream of memory began to flow back into its old
+channels. And he could remember that there had
+been a time, months ago, when Lucinda had been
+spiteful about Madge. She had called her “frivolous”
+and “giddy.” Nor, what was somewhat more
+important, had Madge’s Aunt Julia approved at all
+<span class="pagenum" id="p115">115</span>of him. She had thought of him, for some reason,
+as irresponsible. He and Madge had enjoyed all the
+sensations of being misunderstood, of defying their
+families, of being leagued together in love and faith
+against a hostile world.... And then the criticisms
+had changed to blessings. Within a few
+months, all their world was anxious to get them
+married and settled down. But to Madge, it would
+seem, their romantic defiance of the world was still
+real. That was the only thing she could imagine
+as shadowing their happiness—the opinion of his
+family.</p>
+
+<p>“Then what’s the matter?” she was asking.</p>
+
+<p>He couldn’t bring realities into that doll-world of
+hers.... “Nothing,” he answered—too evasively.</p>
+
+<p>“I know there is,” she insisted.</p>
+
+<p>It would be like hurting a child.... But he
+ought to give her some warning....</p>
+
+<p>“Madge,” he said, “I may have to give up my
+position in my father’s office—and go away—” He
+stopped. He hadn’t intended to say that....</p>
+
+<p>“Norman!”</p>
+
+<p>The trouble was that he kept forgetting his purpose.
+A purpose implies a conviction, and a stable
+sense of realities. His world fluctuated and changed
+about him from moment to moment....</p>
+
+<p>This puzzled, incredulous girl at his side—she
+wasn’t a child, but a woman. It was he who felt like
+a child.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m in trouble, Madge,” he said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p116">116</span></p>
+
+<p>Her arms were around him. “What is it, Norman?”
+she asked quietly.</p>
+
+<p>He wanted terribly to tell her. There was some
+reason why he shouldn’t—but he couldn’t remember
+exactly what it was.</p>
+
+<p>“I never told you,” he said, “about a girl I knew
+at Cambridge. We were—sweethearts. And—I
+didn’t know until the other day—when she sent for
+me—in Chicago—there’s a baby.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean—yours?” Her voice was very cool,
+remote, far away. He didn’t look at her. But he
+was aware that her arms had slipped away from
+him, that her body no longer touched his.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, mine,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>She rose, slowly. “I’m glad you told me,” she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>He didn’t look at her face, but he saw her body
+convulsed by a shiver, and her hands were fumbling
+together. Then a ring dropped to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>He stooped to pick it up, and rose. Now he remembered
+the reason why he must not tell her. She
+wouldn’t want to marry him—of course.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re free now,” she said, “to go to her.”</p>
+
+<p>They were struck silent in their tableau by a sense
+of people coming. The maid. And footsteps descending
+the stair. That would be Aunt Julia.</p>
+
+<p>But the maid came first.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Overbeck is wanted on the telephone.”</p>
+
+<p>“Me?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p117">117</span></p>
+
+<p>“It’s your sister, Miss Lucinda, Mr. Overbeck.
+It’s something about a dog.”</p>
+
+<p>It was too absurd.... “Yes—please ask her to
+wait one moment.” He would have to greet
+Madge’s aunt.</p>
+
+<p>The maid went away....</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunt Julia.</p>
+
+<p>“Good morning, Norman.” She offered her cheek
+to be kissed. “You’d better go and put some
+clothes on, Madge. I’ll entertain Norman while you
+dress. You’ll stay to breakfast, Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>Madge went out, and slowly up the stairs....
+He hadn’t had a chance to explain anything to her.
+Why did Aunt Julia have to interrupt them just
+now? He smouldered with helpless anger.</p>
+
+<p>“When did you get back from Chicago?” Aunt
+Julia asked affably, seating herself on the sofa.</p>
+
+<p>“Last night.” Damn this silly woman!</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t walk up and down the room, Norman.
+Sit down. And tell me what’s the matter.”</p>
+
+<p>Oh, he’d have to tell her something.</p>
+
+<p>“Madge,” he said, “has just broken our engagement.”
+And as he spoke he seemed to realize for
+the first time what he had done. Of course she
+wouldn’t marry him. He had smashed everything....</p>
+
+<p>“What!” said Aunt Julia, in amused incredulity.
+“No, not really? You mustn’t take these lovers’
+quarrels too seriously, Norman.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p118">118</span></p>
+
+<p>“Lovers’ quarrels! I wish that were all!” he
+said bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, is it so bad as all that, really?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Mrs. Ferris.”</p>
+
+<p>Her face took on an expression of sympathy, and
+after a moment’s thought she said reassuringly:</p>
+
+<p>“I know, Madge is a very high-spirited girl. But
+it’s a little late in the day to change her mind. If
+you’ll only tell me what the trouble is, I’ll be glad to
+talk with her. An older woman, you know, Norman,
+has a more reasonable point of view. If it’s really so
+serious, it must be a question of—well, another girl.
+Have you been philandering, Norman?”</p>
+
+<p>He saw what she was thinking, and reluctantly
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>“No—not exactly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not exactly? But she thinks so! I see. Has it
+anything to do with your Chicago trip?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—in a way,” he said evasively.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you want to tell me about it, Norman?
+I’m sure it’s nothing that can’t be smoothed out.
+I know Madge will be reasonable when she’s had a
+chance to think things over.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman felt a sudden unreasonable anger. She
+was so comfortable—so sure that nothing could go
+seriously wrong in her little world. He wanted to
+shatter that complacency of hers....</p>
+
+<p>But it was not necessary for him to speak. At
+that moment they both heard a sound of sobbing
+upstairs. It was like no woman’s crying that he had
+<span class="pagenum" id="p119">119</span>ever heard. It had a strange note of animal pain in
+it.... Then silence.... Norman felt himself
+transfixed by pity as by a spear thrust through his
+body. He realized what he had done to Madge....
+Aunt Julia rose, startled.</p>
+
+<p>The maid returned to say: “Miss Lucinda is still
+on the wire, Mr. Overbeck.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes. Excuse me.” What a nightmare!</p>
+
+<p>Lucinda’s voice. “Oh, Norman, Mr. Schwartz
+called up, and said that somebody else wants to buy
+that puppy. He wants to know whether I want it.
+Won’t you go and look at it right away, and tell me
+what you think? It’s the one with the black spot
+over his left eye!”</p>
+
+<p>“All right. I’ll go.”</p>
+
+<p>When he came back, the room was empty. Aunt
+Julia had gone upstairs to comfort Madge. He listened,
+and he heard the sound of voices....</p>
+
+<p><em>Why</em> had he done it? But it was too late to ask
+that....</p>
+
+<p>Anyway, he <em>had</em> done it....</p>
+
+<p>It was all over....</p>
+
+<p>He stood there irresolutely for a moment, then
+took his things from the hall, and went quietly out
+of the house.</p>
+
+<p>Madge had been a good sport about it. But it
+was a little too much like committing murder.</p>
+
+<p>And <em>now</em> to face the folks at home....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p120">120</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XVII_Flight">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XVII</span>: Flight
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>BUT he did not go home. He walked down
+town.</p>
+
+<p>He had keys to the Overbeck building. He would
+go there and think.</p>
+
+<p>Why had he told Madge? There wasn’t any
+sense to it. Yes, why?...</p>
+
+<p>But that wasn’t the question, either. The question
+was what to do now—now that he had told
+Madge....</p>
+
+<p>He walked up and down in the outer office, trying
+to think. It was no use. His mind wouldn’t work.</p>
+
+<p>He lay down on one of the leather-upholstered
+benches, exhausted, and fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>When he woke up it was dark. He looked at his
+watch. Ten o’clock. Had he slept all day?</p>
+
+<p>He had certainly made a frightful mess of things....
+He reached for a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>When he had smoked all his cigarettes, he went
+out for more. He had not been able to make any
+decisions at all.</p>
+
+<p>On an impulse, he stepped into the telephone
+booth at the cigar store, and called up Madge’s
+house. He was going to ask how she was. But
+when he heard her voice answering him, he lost his
+nerve. What could he say to her?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p121">121</span></p>
+
+<p>“Sorry,” he muttered, and hung up the receiver.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment’s thought, he reached for his
+pocketbook. It wasn’t there, and he remembered
+that he had left it in the bureau in his room.</p>
+
+<p>He came out of the booth, and went up to the
+counter, taking out his check-book. “Jack,” he said,
+“how’s your cash to-night? Can you let me have
+twenty-five dollars?”</p>
+
+<p>“Fifty, if you like, Mr. Overbeck,” said Jack.</p>
+
+<p>“All right—I could use fifty. Or a hundred.
+Could you let me have a hundred?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll see, Mr. Overbeck.”</p>
+
+<p>He looked in the cash-register, and took some
+bills from his pocket. “I’m afraid I haven’t got a
+hundred here. I could let you have seventy. Or,
+if you don’t mind taking some silver, I could give
+you—let’s see—eighty. Eighty-five. Would that
+do?”</p>
+
+<p>“That will be fine.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman wrote out a check, pushed it across the
+counter, and stuffed the money in his pocket. “Do
+you happen to know what time the St. Louis train
+leaves?”</p>
+
+<p>Jack thought there was just about time to make it.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p122"></a><a id="p123"></a>[123]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_TWO">
+ BOOK TWO
+ <br>
+ In Exile
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p124"></a><a id="p125"></a>[125]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_I_The_Prodigal">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter I</span>: The Prodigal
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>ON a certain Saturday afternoon, Norman Overbeck
+called up Dr. Zerneke’s office, asking if
+he might see her. The girl answered without hesitation,
+“Come right over, please!”</p>
+
+<p>When he arrived, the girl gazed at him curiously.
+He looked quite the same as she remembered him,
+with his little stick, his soft hat, his light wavy hair,
+his polite manner—and his courteous voice, by now
+familiar to her from hearing it daily over the telephone.
+It had been her duty during the last two
+weeks to send a telegram to Gilbert Rand in Vickley,
+saying, “Telephoned to-day as usual.” For this young
+man had called up every day, refusing to give any
+name, and imperiously demanding news of the health
+of Isabel Drury’s baby. At first she had argued
+with him about it; but when she had referred the
+matter to Dr. Zerneke, the doctor had smiled and
+said: “It’s all right. Tell him. He happens to be
+the baby’s father.” This week he had shown some
+anxiety when he heard that the baby had been sent
+to a “boarding home.” She had assured him that
+there was nothing to worry about....</p>
+
+<p>The waiting-room to-day was full of women patients,
+but Norman was ushered immediately into
+the doctor’s office.</p>
+
+<p>Norman felt rather like a fool—and at the same
+<span class="pagenum" id="p126">126</span>time quite pleased with himself. Dr. Zerneke, he
+felt, if anybody, would understand. At any rate,
+he hoped she would!...</p>
+
+<p>“Well!” said Dr. Zerneke, shaking hands with
+him. “What have you been doing, these last two
+weeks?”</p>
+
+<p>“I—why—I’ve been here in Chicago, as a matter
+of fact,” he said. “Has anybody been looking for
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Everybody has been looking for you,” said Dr.
+Zerneke. “Your friend Gilbert Rand is here in
+town looking for you right now. And I’ve been
+bombarded with telegrams about you. The police
+would have been looking for you, if you hadn’t
+turned up pretty quick. What do you mean by disappearing
+from the world like that?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” said Norman. “Were my family
+worried?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course they were worried. They didn’t know
+whether you were alive or dead.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I sent a letter—”</p>
+
+<p>“So I heard. And it seems to have sounded to
+your family as if you were intending to commit
+suicide.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord!” He had left Vickley out of his
+calculations. In fact, he had managed to keep from
+thinking very much of the folks at home during
+these two weeks. It was just like them to act as
+though he were a runaway child! Why couldn’t
+they let him alone for once?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p127">127</span></p>
+
+<p>“But what have you been up to, all this time?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, I’ve been getting a job.” He masked his
+secret pride with an air of casualness.</p>
+
+<p>“A job here in Chicago?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. In an advertising office. Wilkins and
+Freeman.”</p>
+
+<p>“So that’s what you’ve been doing!” She looked
+at him curiously.</p>
+
+<p>“Well—as a matter of fact that only took me a
+week. But I wanted to see whether I could hold
+the job before I said anything to any one about it.
+And you gave me two weeks, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>That was by way of reminding her of her promise.
+He had told her he would be back in two
+weeks. He hadn’t known, then, what it would mean
+to come back—over what débris of a wrecked career
+he would have to clamber.... But here he was.</p>
+
+<p>“The two weeks are up to-day,” he added.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke said reflectively: “As I remember,
+I gave you two weeks to find out if your family
+would take the baby.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you see—I made rather a mess of
+that,” he confessed.</p>
+
+<p>“I was afraid you might find it difficult to persuade
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>“To tell you the truth, I didn’t really try. I saw
+it would be no use. I decided that I’d have to take
+care of the baby myself.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p128">128</span></p>
+
+<p>“You?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly. That’s why I came here and got
+a job.”</p>
+
+<p>He took out a cigarette, tapped it, and put it back
+in the case....</p>
+
+<p>“But you must realize,” said Dr. Zerneke, “that
+this is an entirely new proposal. Last week, it was
+a question of having the child adopted by a responsible
+family. Now you make it a question of turning
+the child over to an irresponsible young man of
+very uncertain prospects.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think my prospects are so bad, really,
+Dr. Zerneke,” he protested.</p>
+
+<p>“Would you mind telling me—it’s a question you
+oblige me to ask—what you are now making, Mr.
+Overbeck, at your new job?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m starting in at thirty dollars a week. I know
+that’s not very much. But it’s merely while I’m on
+trial. As soon as I show that I can do the work,
+I’ll get a raise to fifty or sixty. And so on. If I’m
+any good at all, I’ll be getting eighty-five or ninety
+in the course of the year. And the rest is up to me.—I’m
+repeating what my boss told me when I got
+the job. And, if you can take my word for it, I
+have some real ability at this kind of work. I ought
+to be getting my raise within a month or so.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not entirely a question of money,” said Dr.
+Zerneke. “It’s partly a matter of character.”</p>
+
+<p>He hadn’t expected to have to argue about it
+<span class="pagenum" id="p129">129</span>like this. But he would defend himself if he had
+to....</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—I know you called me irresponsible. Because
+I changed my job, I suppose. But you make it
+sound as if I were a drunkard or a thief. Haven’t
+I a right to stop being a lawyer if I want to?”</p>
+
+<p>“Look at the thing impersonally for a moment,
+Mr. Overbeck. Do you really think it is a recommendation
+of a young man’s character and stability,
+that he disappears from home for two weeks, allows
+his family to think him dead—”</p>
+
+<p>“But I didn’t know they were going to think any
+such idiotic thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, why did you do it? That’s what I don’t
+understand.”</p>
+
+<p>“Because it was the only way I could be free to—to
+go ahead with this. I <em>had</em> to cut loose from my
+family.”</p>
+
+<p>“You wish to acknowledge the child as your son?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do, certainly.”</p>
+
+<p>“And make him your heir?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should think you could do that without so much
+melodrama, Mr. Overbeck. You do not need to
+have left home for that, surely. Your family would
+have had to reconcile themselves to the fact. If they
+refused to do so, that would be another matter.”</p>
+
+<p>“But—that isn’t all. I want to have my son with
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are hardly in a position to take care of him,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p130">130</span>are you? You have no home at present—I take it
+that on thirty dollars a week you are living in a furnished
+room. And you have no one to look after the
+baby—you’re not married,—and you can scarcely
+afford to set up an establishment with a housekeeper
+and nurse. We don’t turn babies over to bachelors,
+Mr. Overbeck.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that a rule, Dr. Zerneke? Even when the
+bachelor happens to be the baby’s father?”</p>
+
+<p>“I admit that precisely such a situation has never
+come up before in my experience. But there’s another
+thing—it wouldn’t be fair to the child to pitch
+him into the middle of a family row. A baby is a
+baby, Mr. Overbeck. He needs regular meals and
+sleep, in an atmosphere of peace and affection. He
+is getting that now. We’ve put him in a boarding
+home, as it’s called—a private family.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, so I heard. What’s—become of Isabel?”</p>
+
+<p>“She has left town.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!”</p>
+
+<p>He wouldn’t let himself think about Isabel....
+That was all over....</p>
+
+<p>With an effort he put his attention on what Dr.
+Zerneke was saying:</p>
+
+<p>“If you want to act for the best interests of your
+child, Mr. Overbeck, you will go back home and
+straighten things out with your family. And then
+you will make a will acknowledging the child as your
+son and naming him as your heir. There is no reason
+why he should not inherit your share of your
+<span class="pagenum" id="p131">131</span>father’s estate some day. That is why I suggest that
+you make up with your family—so that you, and
+consequently your child, will not be disinherited.
+Now that you have a child, you must think of such
+things, and behave sensibly. This is not a matter
+for histrionics—defiance of your family, and all
+that.” She paused.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I can see your point of view,” said Norman
+doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“In the meantime—I assure you that the Society
+is glad enough to turn over its financial responsibilities—you
+can pay for the child’s care. You will
+be able to see him whenever you like. And later,
+when you marry, your wife will be prepared to take
+the child into your home. I believe that I have
+heard something about your being engaged?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but that’s off. I told her about the baby,
+and she broke the engagement.”</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt it would be a shock to a girl, coming
+without warning. Well, if she won’t marry you,
+some other girl will. Then you can have your child
+to bring up.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not until then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly not now. What would you do with
+a four-weeks-old baby, Mr. Overbeck?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman realized with a shock of surprise that
+the part of his mind which had been taking some
+satisfaction in the thought of having a son at his
+side, was picturing this son sometimes as a boy of
+eighteen and sometimes as a boy of five. His
+<span class="pagenum" id="p132">132</span>fantasies had all concerned the future, not the
+present....</p>
+
+<p>“I—I hadn’t worked all that out,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought not. Tell me, Mr. Overbeck—if you
+saw a roomful of babies, could you pick out your
+own child?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman reflected. “I think so,” he said. “He
+has light hair, like mine, and a queer-shaped head.”</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke smiled. “Would you like to see him
+again?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. I would.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I can feel safe that you’re not going to do
+something idiotic, I’ll let you see him.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean, idiotic?”</p>
+
+<p>“Such as trying to kidnap him....”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but really—you don’t think I’m as crazy as
+all that!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I don’t. That’s why I’m going to let you see
+him. And as soon as the situation clears up satisfactorily,
+as I trust it will, we can take the next
+step.”</p>
+
+<p>“I ought to tell you, Dr. Zerneke, that I have no
+intention of trying to make up with my family,”
+said Norman firmly.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, perhaps they will do the making up,” said
+Dr. Zerneke easily. “And in the meantime the child
+can stay with Mrs. Czermak. I’ll give you a note
+to her.”</p>
+
+<p>She took pen and paper, and wrote. Looking up,
+she said: “You’ll find her a very capable foster-mother.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p133">133</span>She has an interesting story that I’ll tell
+you some time. This is the third baby she’s taken
+care of for me.”</p>
+
+<p>“What,” asked Norman, “happened to the
+others?” His tone was anxious. He had heard of
+“baby-farms.”...</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke smiled. “They came back to their
+mothers fat and rosy. You needn’t worry about
+what happens to babies in Mrs. Czermak’s care.”</p>
+
+<p>She handed him the note.</p>
+
+<p>“And by the way,” she said, “we must make up
+a story for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“A story for me?”</p>
+
+<p>“To account for the baby. You don’t want everybody
+in Chicago to know the peculiar state of your
+affairs, do you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I’ve had enough of trying to explain it in
+Vickley.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now when a girl has a fatherless baby, we
+always advise a wedding ring and a dead husband
+to simplify matters. But I don’t think you ought to
+be a widower, Mr. Overbeck.” She paused thoughtfully.
+“A widower with a baby is the natural prey
+of womankind. You’ll have a hard enough time as
+it is. You ought to have a wife, even though an
+absent one, to scare them off. Now how should we
+account for her absence? She might be ill—but then
+people would be sympathetic and inquiring. Can
+you think of a good story—simple, convincing, and
+not too interesting?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p134">134</span></p>
+
+<p>“It does seem a rather difficult problem, doesn’t
+it?” said Norman, trying hard to think.</p>
+
+<p>“T.B. is the only thing I can think of.”</p>
+
+<p>“T.B.?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Your wife has been ordered to Colorado
+for the sake of her health. She’s in a sanitarium—you
+can be vague about that: or you can say Dr.
+Rublee’s sanitarium—there isn’t any such place, but
+there might be. She’ll have to stay there six months
+or a year. Yes, I think that will do. You understand
+just why I advise this story, don’t you? It’s
+simply to keep you from being married off to the
+first unattached woman you come across.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you really think there’s any great likelihood
+of any one being willing to marry me?”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear man, you don’t know what you’re up
+against. Well, you can start in practicing your story
+on Mrs. Czermak, if you like. I told her the mother
+was ill. You can elaborate it. She’ll be glad enough
+of the prospect of keeping the baby longer.”</p>
+
+<p>The telephone rang, and Dr. Zerneke turned to
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, connect him, please.... Mr. Rand?...
+Yes, indeed—your young friend is right here. I’ll
+let you speak to him.”</p>
+
+<p>She handed the telephone to Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Hello, Gilbert.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good God, is it really you, Norman?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s all right, Gilbert. Where are you?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p135">135</span></p>
+
+<p>“At the Annex. What the devil have you been
+doing?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll tell you all about it. I’ll be with you in
+about an hour.... Keep your shirt on. Good-by!”</p>
+
+<p>He turned to Dr. Zerneke. “You don’t quite
+realize what I’m in for,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke smiled. “I don’t know your family,”
+she said, “but I’ve been in communication with your
+friend Mr. Rand, and you’ll find him quite reasonable,
+I think.”</p>
+
+<p>“Just the same, I want to make my first visit
+to—my son. Before I see any one from Vickley.”</p>
+
+<p>“If that will make you feel better, go ahead,”
+said Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>She dismissed him with a warm hand-shake.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p136">136</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_II_A_Man_Has_Some_Rights">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter II</span>: A Man Has Some Rights
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>MRS. CZERMAK’S address was on the North
+side, not far away.... He really couldn’t
+afford a taxi. But this was a special occasion—and
+Gilbert was waiting. He hailed one.</p>
+
+<p>One in a row of dingy three-story brick houses.
+He rang the bell. A young woman came to the door.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to see Mrs. Czermak.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m Mrs. Czermak. Did you want a room?”</p>
+
+<p>She was younger than he had expected Mrs. Czermak
+to be—not a responsible-looking middle-aged
+matron, but a girl in her middle twenties—not
+at all what he had pictured as a child’s nurse....
+And her speech did not have the foreign accent that
+her name suggested.</p>
+
+<p>“No—I—here’s a letter from Dr. Zerneke,” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>She stood there, leaving him waiting on the doorstep,
+while she opened and read it. Then she looked
+up quickly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh—so you’re my baby’s father?” and she
+opened the door wider to admit him. “Do you
+want to see him now? He’s asleep. You can look
+at him, though.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d like to,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>She led him upstairs, through a bedroom, very
+<span class="pagenum" id="p137">137</span>clean and orderly, into a small room which was the
+nursery. There was the crib. They went up to it,
+and she drew back a coverlet.</p>
+
+<p>Norman felt no particular emotion at the sight of
+the sleeping child. He wondered why. He was
+moving heaven and earth to have that child for his
+own. He had broken Madge’s heart. It would
+make his family terribly unhappy. He had thrown
+away a career. And here was what it was all about—a
+baby with soft fair hair, and a queer-shaped
+head. No—the head wasn’t so queer-shaped to-day.
+And the face was pinker.... He was a little disappointed
+at his lack of any deep feeling....</p>
+
+<p>The baby stirred in its sleep, and flung up a tiny
+fist.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Czermak put back the coverlet, and Norman
+turned away. As they went back into the larger
+room, the picture of that small fist lingered in his
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>He realized that Mrs. Czermak was expecting
+him to say something. He felt embarrassed—as if
+it were somebody else’s baby he were being called
+upon to praise.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s awfully little, isn’t it!” he said awkwardly.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s a fine baby!” said Mrs. Czermak defensively.</p>
+
+<p>Norman was conscious of having said “it” instead
+of “he.” Was she offended by that? Did she
+think he didn’t appreciate the baby?</p>
+
+<p>“If you come just before six, you can see him
+<span class="pagenum" id="p138">138</span>awake,” she said. “That’s his feeding time. Or
+on Sundays you could come at a little before two.”</p>
+
+<p>Well, that was all. What had he expected? He
+had come to see his son. And he had seen him.
+Now he would go.</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert was waiting for him....</p>
+
+<p>Somehow, he had expected something more—something
+to fortify him against Gilbert’s reproaches—Gilbert’s
+news of the havoc he had left behind
+him in Vickley. He had run away from Vickley.
+He hadn’t permitted himself to think about what
+he had done to Madge—to his family. He’d hear
+about it all. And Gilbert would have some new,
+slick, plausible scheme.</p>
+
+<p>“Sundays at two, you say?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. That’s when he gets his bottle. You
+might come a little before then—fifteen minutes
+before.”</p>
+
+<p>He’d never get acquainted with his son, at that
+rate.... It was more of a job than he had realized.
+First he had to get reconciled to his family—and
+then, apparently, get married! Good Lord!
+And meanwhile the baby would stay here....</p>
+
+<p>As he started to leave, an idea came brilliantly.
+Yes, why not? He turned to Mrs. Czermak.</p>
+
+<p>“You say you have rooms for rent here?”</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated, and then answered reluctantly:</p>
+
+<p>“Sometimes.”</p>
+
+<p>He vaguely sensed some opposition to his plan.
+But he asked in a determined way:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p139">139</span></p>
+
+<p>“Have you any vacant now?”</p>
+
+<p>Again she hesitated. “Not any suitable for two.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want a room for two. I want a room
+for one.” He had the feeling of putting something
+over on Dr. Zerneke. Wait until he was married, to
+be with the baby? He would show her!</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” said Mrs. Czermak. “Well, I have a hall
+bedroom on the next floor.”</p>
+
+<p>“May I see it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it for yourself or your wife?” asked Mrs.
+Czermak.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered abruptly what Dr. Zerneke had
+told him to say.</p>
+
+<p>“My wife has been ordered to Colorado for her
+health. She started to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh—and without the baby!”</p>
+
+<p>“It will be quite out of the question for her to
+have the baby with her for another six months—possibly
+more,” said Norman solemnly. “She’s going
+to Dr. Rublee’s sanitarium.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where is that—in Denver?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said. He was anxious to get off a
+subject on which further questions would be embarrassing.
+“May I see the room?”</p>
+
+<p>Her manner, which had become hostile for a
+minute or two, had changed to friendliness again.
+“Now that I come to think of it,” she said, “there’s
+the large front room downstairs. It was promised,
+but the people haven’t come. I’ll show it to you.”
+She took him there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p140">140</span></p>
+
+<p>He looked around. It was much larger, lighter,
+cleaner, than the one he had been living in.</p>
+
+<p>“How much is it?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>She thought a moment. “We could let you have
+it for eight dollars, I guess.”</p>
+
+<p>Remarkably cheap! He had been paying eight
+for the hole he had been living in.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take it,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, if a baby couldn’t live with a bachelor father,
+there was nothing to keep a bachelor father from
+coming to live with his baby! Norman smiled, with
+a sense of triumphing over a hostile universe.</p>
+
+<p>Then he looked about the room again, with a
+practical glance. He went to the center-table. It
+was rickety under his touch, like the one upon which
+during his evenings for two weeks he had been computing
+and recomputing the statistics of illegitimate
+parenthood—a peculiar consolation which he had
+learned from Isabel. With the figures he had found
+at the Crerar library, and the further assistance of
+the population tables in the World Almanac, all
+sorts of interesting things could be worked
+out....</p>
+
+<p>“Could I have a small, solid table to write on?
+An unpainted kitchen table would do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, yes,” said Mrs. Czermak. “When do you
+want to move in?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll move to-night.” There wasn’t, as a matter
+of fact, anything to move, except his overcoat and
+his alarm clock. And the two weeks for which he
+<span class="pagenum" id="p141">141</span>had paid in advance were about up. He might as
+well make the change without delay, and get settled.
+He took out some bills.</p>
+
+<p>“By the way,” he said, “how much has Dr. Zerneke
+been paying you for taking care of the baby?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ten dollars a week. With Grade A milk, and
+clothes, it comes to about twelve dollars, not counting
+extras.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman calculated silently. Twelve dollars for
+the baby; eight for his room; nine, say, for his
+meals; a dollar for laundry; that was exactly thirty
+dollars, and left him nothing for carfare or cigarettes.
+But he would manage somehow—and it
+would be only a few weeks until he got a raise.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take care of that from now on,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Suppose I pay a week in advance for the room,
+and a week for the baby,” he said. “Will that be
+all right?”</p>
+
+<p>He handed her the money.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at it. “There’s supposed to be a deposit
+for the keys,” she said, “but we won’t bother
+about that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?” he said, and offered her another
+dollar.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she shook her head. “You’ll need every
+dollar you can save. With a sick wife in Colorado.”</p>
+
+<p>He somewhat guiltily put the dollar back in his
+pocket.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll get you your keys,” she said, turning to go.</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind,” he said, “give them to me to-night.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p142">142</span>I’m in a hurry now.” He looked at his watch.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid I can’t promise the table till Monday,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll try to make you comfortable.”</p>
+
+<p>Well, that was settled! And now for old Gilbert....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p143">143</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_III_An_Ambassador_from_Vickley">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter III</span>: An Ambassador from Vickley
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>GILBERT was standing in the door of his room.
+“You crazy loon,” he cried. “My God, I’m
+glad to see you.” He threw his arms around Norman,
+and pulled him inside the door. “You’ve aged
+me ten years in the last two weeks, you son-of-a-gun.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry I’ve given you so much trouble, Gilbert,”
+said Norman stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it’s all right,” said Gilbert. “Now that it’s
+turned out this way, it’s perfectly all right. Couldn’t
+be better. But tell me just one thing—what have
+you been doing these last two weeks?”</p>
+
+<p>“Looking for work.” And he told Gilbert briefly
+of his new job.</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert slapped him on the shoulder. “I thought
+so. That’s exactly what I’ve been telling them.
+Sit tight, I said, and trust me.—But I tell you, if
+you hadn’t shown up to-day or to-morrow, my hair
+would have gone white. Two weeks is a long time to
+wait.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I wrote in my letter to my mother, from the
+station, not to worry—”</p>
+
+<p>“I know what you wrote. And that there’d be
+news of you in two weeks. That’s what I counted on.
+That’s been my job—getting them to wait, instead
+of notifying the police.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p144">144</span></p>
+
+<p>“But really—why all this nonsense about suicide?
+Perhaps my letter wasn’t as tactful as I thought it
+was—but after all—”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, that’s all right,” said Gilbert. “The suicide
+part and everything. It fitted in fine. You did
+everything just right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’m glad to hear that. I thought I had
+done everything just wrong. I’ve realized that my
+behavior must have seemed very queer to the folks
+at home. But even so—suicide!”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s just the point, my boy. People can forgive
+anything to a man who’s probably committed
+suicide. And when it turns out that you haven’t,
+they’re so glad, that nothing else matters. You
+framed the thing just right—that quarrel with your
+father, the mysterious references to the unknown
+girl, everything down to cashing that check at the
+cigar store and asking about the St. Louis train.
+Couldn’t have been better.”</p>
+
+<p>These remarks were evidently intended to be reassuring;
+but they reminded Norman uncomfortably
+of what a fool he had behaved like in Vickley.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you think I did it on purpose?” he
+said. “Well, I didn’t. I was in a state of mind. I
+hardly knew what I was doing, Gilbert. But I still
+don’t understand why you’re so happy about it all.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m happy, you son-of-a-gun, because you’re
+alive. Here, have a drink.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert opened his suitcase and took out a bottle.
+“No? Well, I will. My nerves have gone to pieces
+<span class="pagenum" id="p145">145</span>over this.” He poured some whiskey into a tumbler,
+and drank.</p>
+
+<p>“You know, Norman, you let me down something
+awful. That’s no way to treat your lawyer. You
+ought to have told me what you were going to do.
+Here I arrived in Vickley with the thing all settled—and
+when I called up your house Sunday afternoon,
+hell was popping. I had to think fast.”</p>
+
+<p>“Gilbert—I know. I should have told you. I
+suppose I was afraid to. The truth is, I wasn’t
+capable of reasonable thought.”</p>
+
+<p>“I gathered that something had gone wrong, so
+I went over to your house. And there I was, sweating
+blood while the thing came out bit by bit that
+evening.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman felt uncomfortable. He had expected
+Gilbert to scold him. He had been prepared for
+that.... But he wasn’t prepared to hear all about
+just what had been happening in Vickley.... He
+really didn’t want to know.... But Gilbert would
+want to tell him. He would have to listen. There
+was no way of getting out of it....</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know exactly what you’d done, Norman,
+but I knew you were running amuck somehow,”
+Gilbert went on, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>“You knew I had told Madge, at least,” said
+Norman unhappily.</p>
+
+<p>“Not at first. In fact, when I arrived, all that
+was known was that you hadn’t come home to dinner,
+and that you had quarreled with your father at the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p146">146</span>breakfast table. If I hadn’t been on the inside of
+your affairs, I should have thought they were damned
+fools to be making so much fuss about nothing. And
+then they asked me if I had ever heard you mention
+a girl named Isabel!”</p>
+
+<p>“But didn’t Madge—or her aunt—tell them anything
+about—about the engagement being broken?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve no doubt they supposed your family knew.
+And a silly thing happened there. It seems that
+your sister Lucinda had called up the Ferris house
+three or four times that morning, asking for you—”</p>
+
+<p>“I know—about a dog.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. About a dog. I imagine that Madge made
+some reference to what had happened, but Lucinda
+didn’t take it in. She kept talking about the dog.
+And at last Madge said, ‘Oh, damn your dog!’ So
+Lucinda cried, and wouldn’t let your mother call up
+the Ferrises any more, even to ask about you. The
+first any of us in the house heard about the engagement
+being broken was when some kind neighbors
+came in to inquire if it were true. Your sister Lucinda
+seemed to rather hope it was, but she wouldn’t
+let your mother call up and ask. I was the only one
+who had any notion of what had happened. All they
+were worried about was that their darling boy hadn’t
+come home to dinner. Even when the neighbors said
+that Madge’s aunt had taken to bed with nervous
+prostration, they didn’t begin to suspect anything
+serious might be the matter—anything that would
+affect them. And there was I, knowing the dynamite
+<span class="pagenum" id="p147">147</span>you were carrying around, and surer every minute
+that you had set it off.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman sighed. Must Gilbert go into all these
+painful details? Why not let the dead past be forgotten?</p>
+
+<p>“I tell you,” said Gilbert, “I was sweating blood!”</p>
+
+<p>“It didn’t occur to you, I suppose, to tell them the
+truth?” Norman asked with some asperity.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s where you do me an injustice, my boy.
+I’m more versatile than you think. I figured it all
+out—and this seemed to be one of those rare situations
+in which the truth might be better than the
+best lie that the mind of man could invent. Of
+course, I didn’t want to do anything rash. If I gave
+the show away, and then you walked in with some
+other story—that <em>would</em> be a pretty mess! But I
+had a hunch that you weren’t going to walk in. My
+hunches were mostly right, that day. I didn’t understand
+what you were up to, all at once—not, in
+fact, till next day, when I got an answer to my wire
+to Dr. Zerneke. But I wasn’t far wrong in my first
+guess.”</p>
+
+<p>“What <em>was</em> your first guess?” Norman asked, as
+patiently as he could. Of course, all this was interesting
+to Gilbert. The least he could do was to
+listen....</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you had come back in good faith,
+intending to keep your mouth shut and preserve the
+status quo—but that your damned honesty had got
+the best of you, and you had told Madge about the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p148">148</span>baby, and then lit out for Chicago when she threw
+you over. Not a bad guess, either. And for my
+purposes it was as good as the whole story. The
+point was that you had probably spilled the beans.
+They say a good lawyer is one that can take advantage
+of a defeat. Well, I was defeated, all
+right. My plans were all smashed to hell—and
+there wasn’t any use trying to patch them up. So I
+made new plans then and there. This has been one
+of the most interesting cases I ever handled, Norman—and
+if it had been tried in court I’d have made a
+great reputation on it. I figured that the whole
+town was my jury, or would be in twenty-four hours.
+There was no use trying to frame up any more
+alibis for you. I had to get the truth before the
+jury, and get you off that way. That’s what I was
+thinking when the clock commenced to strike midnight.
+We all knew what time it was, but we sat
+still and listened—your mother and father, Lucinda
+and I. It finished striking. You hadn’t come. And
+then there was a ring at the bell. We knew you
+wouldn’t have rung, you’d have walked in. It
+might be anything—your dead body. Waiting under
+an emotional strain for somebody for a few hours
+will do that to people’s minds! Well, it was your
+special delivery letter. Your mother was afraid to
+open it. Your father opened it. In that atmosphere,
+you see, your words weren’t as cheerful as
+you intended them to be. News of you in two
+<span class="pagenum" id="p149">149</span>weeks!—Not news <em>from</em> you, but news <em>of</em> you. It
+sounded like grim death itself.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman twisted uncomfortably in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>“I never thought of that, Gilbert. But <em>you</em>
+knew—”</p>
+
+<p>“What did I know? Nothing. I didn’t guess
+until next day, when I heard from Dr. Zerneke
+about what you came home for. All I could think of
+then was that you were going to Chicago and make
+that girl marry you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course—you didn’t know,” Norman murmured.</p>
+
+<p>“But you were out of town—I knew that. And
+then we heard more about that. Somebody told
+the clerk at the cigar-store that your girl had jilted
+you. And he got worried, and confided to a policeman
+what he knew—the check, and the St. Louis
+train. And then some one recalled seeing a light
+in the Overbeck building. The police and the nightwatchman
+had gone to your office, and found cigarette
+stubs all over the floor. So along towards one
+o’clock we heard from the police. Then your father
+called up the Ferrises. Madge answered the telephone.
+Yes, she said, it was true that she’d broken
+the engagement that morning. No, she hadn’t seen
+you since. But she’d had a telephone call from you
+at about eleven o’clock. You’d said something about
+being sorry, and hung up. No, she’d prefer not to
+say why she had broken the engagement. She was
+cool enough about it.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p150">150</span></p>
+
+<p>“Cool?” Norman asked in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Your sister Lucinda called it heartless. She kept
+on talking about how heartless Madge Ferris was.
+Finally she came out with something about poor
+Norman possibly lying dead at this very moment.
+Your mother ssh’d her, and told her not to be silly.
+But the thing had been said—the thing that was in
+everybody’s mind. After all, when a man disappears
+like that, one of the possibilities <em>is</em> suicide.”</p>
+
+<p>“You keep harping on that, Gilbert. It’s not a
+pleasant thought.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m telling you just what happened.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course. Go on.”</p>
+
+<p>“As a matter of fact, I was glad it had come to
+that. It put your family where I wanted them. It
+made the possibility of your being alive the only
+thing of any importance. And my mind was made
+up. You had told Madge about the baby, I was
+sure of that. The whole thing would come out.
+And now was the time to spring the truth. At the
+time, you see, I thought you were going to try to
+pull off a marriage with the other girl. It would be
+a sort of happy ending. But I looked at your sister
+Lucinda, and I thought again. I didn’t want my
+effect spoiled by any discordant notes. And I didn’t
+think she’d take so kindly to a happy ending that
+involved the mysterious Isabel. Your mother—it
+wouldn’t hurt her to do a little worrying. Your
+father—he was the one that had to be told. Only
+not in that house. There was something else, if it
+<span class="pagenum" id="p151">151</span>came to that, I was going to remind him of. So I
+suggested that he and I go down to the office where
+you had been camping all day. You might have left
+something there that the police hadn’t found—a letter,
+or something of the sort. He was glad to go.
+Norman, if you ever had any doubt whether your
+father loves you— He was nearly crazy with anxiety.
+He had been trying to keep up a front with
+his women-folk, but alone with me in the office he
+was beginning to break down. He commenced to
+blame himself for a thousand things—including the
+way he had persuaded you against your wishes to
+go into the law.... Well, I told him the whole
+story.”</p>
+
+<p>“So he knows....”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.” Gilbert looked into his empty glass, and
+poured himself another drink. “Everybody knows.
+That’s what I’m coming to. The whole damn town.
+And I’m the one that told them. Oh, I had good
+reasons. In the first place—you know what a lot of
+nonsense gets around—there was talk of your having
+embezzled some of the firm’s money. I wanted to
+put a stop to that. But that’s getting too far ahead.
+The next person I told the truth to was your fiancée.”</p>
+
+<p>“Madge? But she knew!”</p>
+
+<p>“She knew what you told her, which wasn’t much,
+I gather. Enough to give her the wrong slant on the
+whole thing. Well, somebody had to talk to her—and
+your sister Lucinda had taken to bed over what
+I had told your father the night before. Your
+<span class="pagenum" id="p152">152</span>mother was busy looking after her. And your father
+was pretty much shot to pieces. So that left me,
+to attend to all these little things. The impression
+your sister Lucinda got of what I had told your
+father was that you were eloping with an artist’s
+model. And, of course, with my connivance. The
+baby she simply didn’t believe in. She would have
+it that you had been victimized by some designing
+female. Well, I didn’t argue with her. I went to
+see Madge.”</p>
+
+<p>He would rather not hear that part of it. But
+he felt obliged to ask:</p>
+
+<p>“What did Madge say?”</p>
+
+<p>“At first she practically told me it was none of
+my business why she had broken the engagement. I
+said I could guess why it was, and reminded her that
+I had been with you in Chicago. She said, if I
+knew, there was no use discussing it. I admit I was
+pretty much stumped by her coolness. I wondered
+if she were really heartless, as your sister Lucinda
+said. But that wasn’t it. She was really trying to
+be a good sport, as I found out afterward. She
+was trying not to hate the girl who had taken you
+away from her. She wasn’t thinking about a baby
+at all. In fact, she didn’t know about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I told her about the baby!” he protested.</p>
+
+<p>“You didn’t get it straight, Norman—or she
+didn’t hear it. Or maybe her aunt mixed her up
+about it. You seem to have talked to her, too.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not about the baby, I think,” said Norman,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p153">153</span>making an effort to remember these things that
+seemed to have happened so many thousands of
+years ago.</p>
+
+<p>“So Madge said. But between what you told the
+girl and what her aunt imagined, she got it wrong.”</p>
+
+<p>“What in the world did she think I had told her?”</p>
+
+<p>“She didn’t say in so many words. But I realized
+that I knew more about it than she did, so I started
+in to tell her the whole thing. And she was surprised
+from beginning to end. She was under the
+impression that you had been carrying on an affair
+with the other girl while being engaged to <em>her</em>.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t have a chance to go into details. But
+I’m sure I told her about the baby!”</p>
+
+<p>“Not that the baby was already born. You
+neglected that detail. And so naturally she thought
+of a pregnant girl that you had to marry.”</p>
+
+<p>“So—that’s what she meant.... She told me
+I was free—to go to her!”</p>
+
+<p>“Exactly. I tell you, Norman, she’s a good
+sport!”</p>
+
+<p>“I see that I blundered the thing frightfully.”</p>
+
+<p>“You made it seem even worse than it was. But
+that’s a good way of breaking bad news. She’d
+already suffered the worst. And what I told her—it
+took the poison out of the wound, so to speak.”</p>
+
+<p>“She’ll think a little more kindly of me, perhaps,”
+said Norman wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>“She’s sorry for you. And she’s interested in
+your wanting the baby. I told her why you had
+<span class="pagenum" id="p154">154</span>come home—to see if your people would take it. I
+had learned that from Dr. Zerneke over the long-distance.
+‘Well, Madge,’ I asked, ‘can you hate him
+for a thing like that?’ And she said: ‘How could
+I hate him? I feel very humble.’”</p>
+
+<p>“Humble!”</p>
+
+<p>“To tell the truth, Norman, she thinks of you
+as a kind of saint.”</p>
+
+<p>“Gilbert, don’t razz me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Women are queer, Norman. Of course, there’s
+some credit due me as your advocate. I didn’t
+neglect my opportunities. And it <em>is</em> rather dramatic,
+you know—your throwing up a career and respectability,
+for the sake of your son. It’s the sort of
+thing women can understand.”</p>
+
+<p>(Perhaps—but how did old Gilbert understand?)</p>
+
+<p>“The only trouble is,” Gilbert went on, “it leaves
+her out. She’d rather be the other girl, I think.
+She can’t understand Isabel—why she won’t marry
+you. But then, as I told her, I don’t either.”</p>
+
+<p>“You told her I had offered to marry Isabel?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—and that you didn’t love her. That’s correct,
+I think?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. How did Madge take that?”</p>
+
+<p>“She seemed to understand it perfectly. It made
+you all the more saintlike.”</p>
+
+<p>“Please lay off that, Gilbert.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you depart from the beaten track, Norman,
+you have to take the consequences. You can’t do
+<span class="pagenum" id="p155">155</span>what you’ve done without being regarded either as a
+scoundrel or a saint.”</p>
+
+<p>“I was prepared to be regarded as a scoundrel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ve fixed that up for you, too. A saint
+to the women.... All except your mother and
+sister, Norman. They both, in their different ways,
+regard you as a child.”</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t mentioned my kid sister—Doris. I
+was really trying to protect her.”</p>
+
+<p>“So did we all. She was sent away to the neighbors
+or up to bed during all the family conferences,
+and told some sort of transparent fib about your
+being called out of town on business. But she
+strolled into our conference Monday night—I had
+just got through telling them my revised story about
+you—and announced with a bored air that we needn’t
+trouble to keep the secret from her any longer.
+She knew all about Norman’s baby, she said. As a
+matter of fact, she heard this new story before the
+family did. It appears that the news, coming from
+some girl friend of Madge’s, had spread like wildfire
+among the younger generation. They all knew
+it by evening.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think it will—hurt her much?” Norman
+asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>“Doris? On the contrary, she’s quite a heroine
+on account of it. Times are changing, Norman!”</p>
+
+<p>“In Vickley!” said Norman incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert looked at him gravely.</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t intended to deceive you, Norman. You
+<span class="pagenum" id="p156">156</span>know perfectly well that you’ve cooked your goose,
+as far as the law business goes. If you wanted to
+set up as a romantic poet, it might be all right for
+you to come back. But not as a lawyer. You knew
+that, didn’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank God for that!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, be that as it may, Norman, your career in
+Vickley is gone completely and absolutely to smash.
+There’s not a moment’s doubt about that. And
+there’s not a thing I or anybody else can do about
+that. You had me beaten there. The only thing I
+could gain was what is called a moral victory. And
+since that’s all I have to boast of, Norman, I’m
+boasting of that. Let me go ahead and tell you
+about my speech to the jury!”</p>
+
+<p>“All right.”</p>
+
+<p>“But first I’ll help myself to another drink.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p157">157</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_IV_Speech_to_the_Jury">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter IV</span>: Speech to the Jury
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>“AND now,” said Norman, “what about this
+alleged moral victory? You didn’t by any
+chance tell people the real truth about me?”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert put his feet up on a chair. He, at any
+rate, was enjoying these reminiscences.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. This business of telling the truth is like
+any other drug habit. It grows on you. That same
+Monday night, after I left your house, I dropped in
+at Sam’s place for a drink. There were half a dozen
+men there—and Sam, behind the bar. One of the
+men was Davis of the Herald and another was
+Quinn of the Whig. I won’t name the others, but
+they are pillars of Vickley society. Well, Quinn
+came up to me and asked if I had heard the rumor
+that you were in financial difficulties when you left
+town—not that they would print anything about
+it, unless something came up so that they would be
+obliged to. Well, I had an inspiration. ‘Boys,’ I
+said, ‘I’m going to tell you the truth about the disappearance
+of Norman Overbeck. You can decide
+for yourself whether it can be printed.’—And not
+a word has been in the papers since. They couldn’t
+have printed the story anyway—not in Vickley. But
+it was a magnificent gesture. ‘This is for all of you
+<span class="pagenum" id="p158">158</span>to hear,’ I said. And so I made my speech to the
+jury right there at Sam’s bar. The doors were
+locked—Sam saw to that—so there wouldn’t be any
+interruptions. I’d had two or three rehearsals of
+my speech already, between your family and Madge,
+but this time it was for a different audience. These
+men were hard-boiled guys, and not in love with
+you....”</p>
+
+<p>“You—you didn’t—I mean—all that stuff about
+it’s being somebody else—some other man—you
+didn’t suggest that?” Norman asked painfully.</p>
+
+<p>“I cast no doubts on the paternity of your son,
+Norman, if that’s what you mean. I wasn’t out to
+make a fool of you. On the contrary. A scoundrel.
+It came to me in a flash. A saint—that was all very
+well for the women. But men don’t like saints. I
+had to make you out a villain—but a magnificent
+villain, such as men secretly envy. And I had
+learned something, Norman. I had learned
+that the paternal passion is repressed in our
+polite species—repressed, I believe, is the word—but
+not extinct. I was depending on that. I looked
+at my jury, and I said: ‘It isn’t embezzlement, gentlemen.
+It’s a baby.’ One fellow snickered. I
+thought: ‘All right—I’ll have <em>you</em> crying before I’ve
+finished!’ And I did, too....”</p>
+
+<p>“What in God’s name did you tell them, Gilbert?”</p>
+
+<p>“The story of a respectable man and his illegitimate
+son. I must admit that I embroidered it a little.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p159">159</span>You know you dropped that hint about St. Louis—and
+several people saw you get on that train. Which
+shows the value of evidence. Well, I followed up
+that hint—saying that it was only a guess of mine.
+I said you had been talking to me about South
+America. I said I thought you had gone there. And
+why South America? Because it’s a Man’s Country.
+I’d been reading a story about it in Mencken’s
+Mercury, and I laid in on thick. There a man
+begets his children by all the girls he takes a fancy to.
+And he doesn’t have to sneak out of his responsibilities—the
+country isn’t run by a lot of old-maid
+Sunday-school teachers. When he gets tired of a
+girl he gives her a present and tells her to get out.
+But she leaves her baby behind. A South American
+gentleman, I gave them to understand, has a
+dozen bright and happy illegitimate children, and a
+big house in the country where he raises them, and
+visits them, and plays with them—and everybody,
+including the lawful wife, knows all about it. I pictured
+you, Norman, as a fellow that wasn’t going to
+be bluffed out of his natural feelings by our hypocritical
+civilization. If you couldn’t have your son
+with you in Vickley, you were going to South America,
+where such things are understood. Mind you,
+I said, I’m not defending the young man, I’m only
+trying to explain him. But I could see that the idea
+appealed to the crowd. There’s something of the
+Turk and the Mormon in us all. The truth is, we’d
+like not only to go to bed with all the pretty girls
+<span class="pagenum" id="p160">160</span>we take a fancy to, but we’d like to have them go
+right ahead and have their babies. And you
+needn’t tell me the girls don’t feel the same way
+about it. If polygamy wasn’t so damned expensive,
+that’s the way we’d do it, too. The aristocracy has
+always had its bastards without shame and apparently
+to the satisfaction of all concerned. It’s only
+our middle-class economy that has made us a race of
+hypocrites.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman looked at old Gilbert in astonishment.
+“I hope you don’t expect me to live up to your romantic
+stories!”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Norman—don’t go back on me now.
+You’re planning to adopt the boy, aren’t you? I
+made sure of that when Dr. Zerneke said you were
+calling up every day about him.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman flushed. “Of course I’m going to adopt
+him. But I don’t feel in the least like a Mormon or
+a Turk. Or a saint either.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you’ve made a good start in both directions.
+Norman, my boy”— Gilbert emptied the
+bottle into his tumbler—“you’ve done what every
+man at some time in his life wishes he dared to do—and
+what every woman feels instinctively that a real
+man ought to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Gilbert—all this excitement has gone to your
+head. You’re talking bosh. Every man in America
+doesn’t beget a child out of wedlock. You see, I
+happen to know the statistics. It comes to only
+<span class="pagenum" id="p161">161</span>about—I’ve figured it out for Vickley: let me think.
+If Vickley runs true to statistical averages, there
+are only about twenty new illegitimate fathers there
+per year. And there are nearly twelve thousand
+males in Vickley between the ages of fifteen and sixty-five.
+So you see it’s really quite the exception, Gilbert.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your statistics, my boy, apply only to the illegitimate
+children that are actually born. I’m talking of
+the others. There may be men in Vickley who have
+never in all their lives sent a girl to the abortionist—but
+I’d not bet on any of them being there at Sam’s
+bar that night. And that’s what they were all thinking
+of—the girls who had cried because they
+couldn’t go ahead and have their babies—the girls
+whose abortions they had paid for—the girls who,
+as they damn well knew, despised them for being the
+dirty cowards that we respectable men have to be!”</p>
+
+<p>Norman looked at him curiously—wonderingly....
+What did old Gilbert know about such
+things?</p>
+
+<p>The telephone rang. Gilbert took up the receiver.</p>
+
+<p>“A telegram? Yes, send it up.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned to Norman. “That will be from your
+father. I wired him that the lost was found and in
+good shape.”</p>
+
+<p>They waited. There was a knock at the door, and
+the boy with the telegram. Gilbert read it and
+handed it to Norman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p162">162</span></p>
+
+<p>In the stiff, reticent phrases that were so like his
+father, it read:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>PLEASED AND GRATEFUL WILL ARRIVE CHICAGO
+SUNDAY MORNING AS PLANNED</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+ OVERBECK
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Ten words.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p163">163</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_V_The_Older_Generation">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter V</span>: The Older Generation
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>LATE that evening they were talking in Norman’s
+new room.... They had dined together,
+going over the whole situation. Gilbert
+wasted no time in vain regrets. He accepted the
+new state of Norman’s affairs, and was anxious to
+help him make the best of his Chicago career. He
+took Norman’s job seriously, and discussed its future
+possibilities. And Gilbert had readily come
+with him to see the baby. He remarked upon its
+resemblance to Norman. They met Mrs. Czermak’s
+mother, whose name was Mrs. Case, and
+another daughter named Monica, a young stenographer.
+Also Mr. Victor, an elderly violinist, one of
+the boarders, just then out of a job.... Everybody,
+it seemed, was interested in the baby....</p>
+
+<p>“You know,” said Norman awkwardly, “he was
+named for me—by his mother.”</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert nodded. “Queer girl!” he said.</p>
+
+<p>They talked of Isabel. She had left town, said
+Norman; had probably gone to Michigan, he
+thought. It was just as well, he said coldly. He
+hadn’t wanted to see her again....</p>
+
+<p>Then they talked of Norman’s father—of whom
+Norman had been secretly and painfully thinking all
+the while....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p164">164</span></p>
+
+<p>It was all very well to have gained what old Gilbert
+called a moral victory over the hard-boiled
+reprobates at Sam’s bar; over romantic Vickley matrons
+who wished to believe in a remarkable young
+male saint engaged in expiating his youthful sin by
+self-sacrifice; over a sensation-loving younger generation:
+over even that girl whose love and pride
+his destiny had driven him to trample upon so
+cruelly: but there remained J. J. Overbeck. No
+moral victory was possible over him!</p>
+
+<p>His father simply would not be able to understand
+what had happened. How could he? A man
+like that! No, this sort of thing might be comprehensible
+to a cynical philosopher like old Gilbert.
+But it would be outside the range of his father’s
+imaginative sympathy. That was what was going
+to make this meeting so hard. He couldn’t help
+wanting to make his father understand. And that
+would be impossible.</p>
+
+<p>“Still afraid of the old man?” asked Gilbert, smiling,
+as he read Norman’s thoughts, so plain to see in
+his troubled face.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t help it,” said Norman. “No, it’s not
+exactly that I’m afraid of him. But I know that he
+won’t be able to understand this at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“No?” said Gilbert. “Well, I wouldn’t worry
+about that, if I were you.”</p>
+
+<p>“His whole life,” said Norman, “has gone to
+building up his family. He thinks in terms of the
+family. You say he loves me—but it’s just because
+I’m part of the family. I was to take his place in
+<span class="pagenum" id="p165">165</span>Vickley. I’ve hurt him in a way he never can
+forgive.”</p>
+
+<p>“Norman,” said Gilbert, “maybe I know your
+father better than you do. We were in Cuba together,
+you know. Before you were born.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you hinting at something, Gilbert?” Norman
+asked in astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>“I never hint, Norman. I’m going to tell you a
+story. Because I think you ought to know it before
+your father comes. He won’t say a word to you
+about it. But he’ll know I’ve told you. He couldn’t
+do it. Just as I couldn’t tell my own son. But I
+know he’d like you to know.”</p>
+
+<p>“My—father!” Norman whispered incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>“Listen, Norman. That Sunday night, after midnight,
+when your father and I sat in his office—after
+I’d told him about your baby—he broke down. And
+... well, you see I’ve known something about your
+father for a long time. He didn’t know I knew it.
+I’d never have told you, but it’s all right now. So
+I’ll begin with that.—You think of your father as an
+old man, don’t you? Just as you think of me as ‘old
+Gilbert.’ Yes, it’s true he’s fifty-five and wears side-whiskers....
+It’s hard to go on, Norman, with
+you looking at me like that. I know how you feel.
+But he’s not <em>my</em> father—so it didn’t so much shock
+me to learn, as I did a good many years ago by accident,
+that he had—well, a secret life. Don’t look so
+God-damn’ solemn. It all happened before you
+were born. A rather plain woman in her thirties.
+A widow. I knew her name, but that meant nothing
+<span class="pagenum" id="p166">166</span>to me at the time. She is dead, now. This is all ancient
+history. She left Vickley about the time you
+were born, went out West to visit some relatives;
+and, as I learned the other night, came back to Vickley
+some years later—but it was all over then—and
+died.... Well, are you wishing I wouldn’t tell
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I—it does upset me, rather,” Norman confessed.
+“I’ve no right to feel like that, I know. But—”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course. One’s own father. And that’s the
+true origin of our conventional morality, my boy. I
+hear stuff about the hypocrisy of the older generation.
+It’s true enough—but whose fault is it? Who
+puts us up on a pedestal? Who refuses to believe
+that we are merely human? You wait! You’ve a
+son now. He’ll have an ideal of you—and you
+won’t dare shatter it. You’ll lie, like all the rest of
+us. You’ll be a hypocrite, too. Oh, it’s a
+joke!...</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I knew this thing about your father. And
+I smiled a little. But I didn’t know the real story
+till that night.... It goes back to the time we
+were in Cuba together, in the Spanish war. I don’t
+know why your father enlisted. He was married,
+and had a child. I guess your mother was all taken
+up with the child—your sister Lucinda. I know
+that I went for fun. I was married, too. Anyway,
+we were both old enough to know better, but there
+we were.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, there was another Vickley boy in our company,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p167">167</span>named Tom. Tom had never been any good
+at making money. Some new scheme he had put his
+hopes in went to smash—I guess he couldn’t bear
+to face his wife. He thought he was a failure, so
+he enlisted. And Tom and Jim—your father—got
+to be great friends in the army. Chums was the
+word in those days. I knew about their friendship.
+But I hadn’t thought of poor Tom in all these
+years....</p>
+
+<p>“Your father, that night, began to talk about
+Tom. And he began to cry. Then I remembered
+about their being chums. But all the rest was new
+to me, as your father told it. I never had known
+about Tom’s wife....</p>
+
+<p>“Jim and Tom were both wounded at El Caney—Tom
+badly. He was going to die, and he knew it.
+And there on the battlefield where they lay together
+he talked to Jim about Sally. Would Jim look after
+Sally when he got back? And Jim promised his
+chum that he would. And Tom died in the hospital,
+and Jim came home to Vickley.</p>
+
+<p>“That was twenty-eight years ago, Norman.
+Sally must have been about thirty, then. Tom had
+written her a lot about Jim, and she was prepared
+to like him. And of course she must have been
+terribly grateful for the help he gave her. But
+Jim didn’t tell his wife about it. And he went to
+see Sally in the evenings when he was supposed to
+be working at the office. He would bring something
+for a late supper. She was a jolly little woman, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p168">168</span>her house was comfortable. He got to be more at
+ease there than at home. And so it began.</p>
+
+<p>“And so it went on. As such things do. Till you
+were born, and then he sent Sally out West, and
+that was the end of it. She came back later, and
+died.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all. Except ... You belong to a hard,
+unsentimental generation, Norman. It will seem
+silly to you.... But there’s her grave, in a Vickley
+cemetery. He sometimes visits it alone. He
+goes at night. Do you—do you get the picture,
+Norman?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman saw, in the moonlight, a cemetery with
+its marble memorials of Vickley’s respectable dead.
+And over in an unkempt corner, a place that meant
+nothing except to the one who kept its secret tight-locked
+in his breast. And thither he saw that old
+man come, stealthily, with a posy—an old man, looking
+down at his lost youth, buried there in that secret
+grave. And Norman saw him slink away furtively
+in the moonlight, back to his home, his family, his
+career, his respectability, home from that secret,
+ridiculous, pitiful tryst. Symbol of an age that
+passes....</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—I get the picture,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll know I’ve told you,” said Gilbert. “He
+wants you to know. But he’ll not want anything
+said about it—not a word.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course not,” said Norman.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p169">169</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VI_J_J_Overbeck">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VI</span>: J. J. Overbeck
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HIS father was due to arrive on an early train
+Sunday morning, and Norman, having forgotten
+his alarm clock, had asked Mrs. Case that
+night if there was one about the house he could
+borrow. He explained that he had to meet his
+father at seven. “Rose will be up at six to give
+the baby his bottle,” she told him. “She’ll knock
+on your door at half-past six, and leave you a cup of
+coffee, if you like.” Norman protested that he
+couldn’t think of putting her to that trouble. But
+Mrs. Case said it would be no trouble; she made it
+for herself anyway.</p>
+
+<p>When the knock came, he sleepily answered
+“Yes.” And not Mrs. Czermak’s but her younger
+sister’s voice answered cheerfully: “Here’s your coffee,
+Mr. Overbeck. And would you like to have me
+call you a taxi?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, please do!” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“All right. It’ll be here when you’re ready.”</p>
+
+<p>He opened the door when she had gone, and
+brought in the tray she had left on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>There was toast, too!</p>
+
+<p>“What a nice family!” he thought gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>He was at the station in plenty of time. Gilbert,
+it was agreed, would stay at his hotel until called
+for, or they would all meet for lunch. Norman
+<span class="pagenum" id="p170">170</span>watched the gate, and the stream of passengers.
+There was his father.... Gilbert’s story seemed
+perfectly incredible.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Father,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let me take your grip. Did you manage to get
+any sleep?”</p>
+
+<p>“I slept pretty well. Where are you taking me?”</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll have breakfast, and then I’ll take you to
+my room.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not breakfast time for me yet. This is Sunday,
+you know. You’d better take me to your room
+first.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly.”</p>
+
+<p>In the taxi he said: “Does your job permit of your
+taking taxis like this?”</p>
+
+<p>It was his kind of humor.</p>
+
+<p>“Only for very distinguished visitors,” said
+Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know why Chicago is supposed to be such
+an ugly city,” said Norman’s father, presently. “I
+think it can hold up its head.”</p>
+
+<p>“Michigan Avenue isn’t bad-looking,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>They passed the Art Institute.</p>
+
+<p>“Been buying any more pictures?” asked J. J.
+Overbeck.</p>
+
+<p>That was probably humor, too.</p>
+
+<p>“Not on my present salary. I get thirty a week
+at present,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p171">171</span></p>
+
+<p>“Thirty a week is not bad to start with,” said
+J. J. Overbeck. “I know young lawyers in Vickley
+who make less.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence.</p>
+
+<p>“What are you working at? If you don’t mind
+my knowing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not at all. Advertising. Wilkins and Freeman.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve heard of them.”</p>
+
+<p>Silence again.</p>
+
+<p>“You neglected to pack a trunk when you left
+home. Your mother attended to it last night. It
+ought to be here to-morrow.” He took a stub out
+of his vest pocket and gave it to his son.</p>
+
+<p>“Thanks.”</p>
+
+<p>He would have liked to have his father say something
+more about his mother, and how she felt about
+all this. But he would not ask. And his father
+made no further reference to the family.</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” thought Norman, “who cares?”</p>
+
+<p>The taxi drew up presently at the curb.</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s where I live.”</p>
+
+<p>He took his father to his room. The bed had
+been made, and there was a vase of flowers on the
+table. To be sure, a visit from the baby’s grandfather
+was an important occasion. They were being
+damn’ nice to him, these people.... Tears came
+into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Father and son sat down.</p>
+
+<p>“Comfortable place,” said Norman’s father.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p172">172</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Very.”</p>
+
+<p>“And—where do you keep the baby?”</p>
+
+<p>So his father assumed—for Gilbert hadn’t told
+him—that the baby would be here! Of course—since
+that was what Norman had left home for....
+Well, he was right....</p>
+
+<p>“Upstairs,” said Norman. “I’ll find out if we
+can see him now.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out in search of Mrs. Czermak. The
+younger sister was in the hall, apparently waiting.</p>
+
+<p>“Is he ready to see the baby now?” she asked
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, if he may.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s in our room—the big room. You can go
+on up, any time.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you.”</p>
+
+<p>He went back. “We can go right up,” he told
+his father.</p>
+
+<p>He led the way to the upstairs room. Outside
+the door he started to say something, in an ordinary
+tone of voice, but his father silenced him with an
+abrupt, authoritative gesture. “You’ll wake him
+up,” he said in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p>J. J. Overbeck opened the door quietly, and went
+in. Mrs. Czermak was there, with a white cap and
+apron on. She came forward pleasantly, but J. J.
+Overbeck ignored her. He went past her straight
+to the crib, stooped over and looked at the sleeping
+baby. The morning sunlight, pouring in, lighted up
+his pink face with its grey side-whiskers, bent over
+<span class="pagenum" id="p173">173</span>the crib. Norman came closer. His father remained
+stooped in that way for a full minute. Then
+he uncovered the baby’s plump hand, and felt of it.
+Then the feet, in their tiny socks. Norman looked
+up to see whether Mrs. Czermak approved of these
+liberties. Apparently she did. She was looking on
+with quiet satisfaction. Her mother, and the
+younger sister, who had slipped into the room, were
+beaming.</p>
+
+<p>Then, deliberately and with assurance, J. J. Overbeck
+lifted the baby from the crib and held it in his
+arms. It slept on. J. J. Overbeck, not paying any
+attention to the others, marched slowly around the
+room, twice. Then he went back to the crib, and
+laid the baby down gently, and covered it up. Then
+he turned and walked quietly out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>Norman followed him.</p>
+
+<p>In Norman’s room, his father took out a cigar,
+and offered one, saying: “Not that it’s good for any
+one’s digestion, to smoke before breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d rather have a cigarette, if you don’t mind,”
+said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>They sat down.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you made a new will?” his father asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, no,” said Norman,—remembering what
+Dr. Zerneke had told him as to the sensible way of
+proceeding in this affair.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d better, right away. That’s the thing to
+do. We can get Gilbert Rand to help us draw it
+up to-day.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p174">174</span></p>
+
+<p>Yes, Dr. Zerneke had said that he was to make
+up with his father, and then make the child his
+heir....</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose I’d better,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you named him?”</p>
+
+<p>“His mother—named him Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless it would be politic to suggest calling
+him James Norman.... But he wasn’t going to.</p>
+
+<p>“Norman.” His father nodded thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>There was a long silence, while J. J. Overbeck
+smoked.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not going to change the firm name,” he said,
+with an air of finality.</p>
+
+<p>Norman frowned in a puzzled way.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not expecting to come back,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I wasn’t suggesting that precisely,” said his
+father. “I hope you will find the advertising business
+agreeable. But I still think I shall let the firm
+name stand as it is. To do otherwise would seem a
+concession to vulgar prejudice.”</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, he glanced thoughtfully over Norman’s
+head. At the ceiling, one would have said.
+But Norman’s mind followed that glance through
+plaster and flooring to the upstairs room and the
+cradle. Was that what his father was thinking of?
+A day in the future when, if he lived that long, he
+should see another Overbeck in the firm?</p>
+
+<p>(“Not if I know it!” thought Norman.)</p>
+
+<p>“Now, as to financial arrangements,” said his
+father. “Of course, I expect you to take care of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p175">175</span>yourself. But for the child—and for any emergencies—there’ll
+be a thousand dollars in the bank
+that you can draw on this year if you should need
+it. It will be put in a savings account, in your son’s
+name, you understand.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman resolved never to touch it.... But he
+must not offend his father.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s very good of you,” he said stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>J. J. Overbeck rose. “It’s time for breakfast,” he
+said. “We’ll go to the hotel and rout out Gilbert
+Rand.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p176">176</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VII_Home">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VII</span>: Home
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HIS father had gone, taking the night train for
+Vickley. Gilbert Rand had gone with him.
+Norman went back to his room on the elevated.</p>
+
+<p>Now that it was all over, he could permit himself
+to realize what a frightful strain his father’s
+visit had been.... Old Gilbert’s romantic yarn
+about him still seemed incredible. Oh, no doubt it
+was true enough—but it hadn’t changed his feelings
+about his father. Nothing, it seemed, could change
+those feelings—not even his father’s extraordinary
+generosity about the baby.... Gilbert had
+thought that his story of that lonely grave in the
+moonlight was a touch of nature which would make
+him feel that his father was made of the same human
+stuff as himself. It should have done so, but it
+didn’t. The gulf of generation was between them.
+His father was still—his father. And he was tremendously
+glad that it was all over.</p>
+
+<p>Things had gone to the satisfaction of everybody
+concerned—except, perhaps, of Norman himself.
+A will had been drawn up; even a codicil to J. J.
+Overbeck’s will, leaving Norman’s share of his
+father’s property, in case of Norman’s death, to “my
+grandson, Norman Overbeck, the natural son of my
+son Norman.” They visited Dr. Zerneke at her
+<span class="pagenum" id="p177">177</span>office; she said that of course the Society would be
+glad to have the child adopted by its father; it would
+be formally arranged within a few days, she promised.
+And J. J. Overbeck made out a check to the
+Society which far more than covered the expenses
+to which it had been put in this matter. He also
+offered casually to pay any outstanding surgical or
+hospital bills....</p>
+
+<p>This was the only reference to Isabel’s part in
+the matter. And for some reason that fact gave
+Norman an inward satisfaction. He had been
+treated that way on his first visit to Dr. Zerneke’s
+office—as a mere biological instrumentality connected
+with the production of a child! Now it was
+her turn. And she deserved it, he thought vindictively.
+Yet it did not escape him that he was still
+being treated, himself, in something of the same
+impersonal fashion. The interests of the child alone
+were being considered—which was quite all right.
+Yet he vaguely felt it as a conspiracy to fasten upon
+this child the network of Vickley.... True, they
+were only doing, with a generosity which he had not
+expected, and a practical care exceeding his own impulsive
+efforts, what he himself had sought to do by
+marrying the child’s mother. They were undertaking
+merely to secure to his son, in so far as that
+could be done by legal means, all those rights which
+would otherwise be lost by the accident of birth outside
+of marriage. It was damned fine of them!
+Why, then, must he feel all the while as though
+<span class="pagenum" id="p178">178</span>there were something sinister in these proceedings?
+He remembered that glance of his father’s at the
+ceiling.... Oh, doubtless he was being unduly
+sensitive! His feelings as a parent were not being
+taken sufficient account of. It was too abrupt a
+change from the heroic and rebellious rôle he had
+been playing for two weeks! It was as if Vickley
+said:</p>
+
+<p>“A child is the tribe’s concern. Either a child
+does not officially exist for us, or it does. It would
+have been simpler for you to have let this child
+remain, so far as we are concerned, non-existent.
+But if you force the matter upon our attention, we
+shall take your child into the tribe. But it is we
+who give sanction to its existence—not you.”</p>
+
+<p>Well, it was over, for the time being. It now
+remained only for the Adoption Society to take formal
+action. The child would be his.... He wondered
+if Isabel knew.... But there was no reason
+why she should know. It was a matter of indifference
+to her what happened to the child....
+So long as she didn’t have to bother with it herself....</p>
+
+<p>Norman abruptly realized that he was at his
+station.</p>
+
+<p>He would try to put these legalistic matters out
+of his mind. After all, he was living in the same
+house with his son.... Dr. Zerneke had been
+rather surprised when he told her that. But they
+couldn’t take that privilege away from him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p179">179</span></p>
+
+<p>He had just entered his room when there was a
+knock at the door. It was the elderly musician, Mr.
+Victor.</p>
+
+<p>“Pardon me,” he said with a smile, “but I’d like
+to hear the news, if I may.”</p>
+
+<p>“The news?”</p>
+
+<p>“You see, we can’t help all being interested in the
+little drama. We’d like to see it turn out right—for
+the sake of the little fellow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh—come in.”</p>
+
+<p>Of course—it would be a drama to them. They
+had seen his father—quite evidently somebody of
+consequence in his own world—they couldn’t help
+seeing that. And a son in evident poverty and disgrace.
+The family hadn’t approved of the marriage,
+they would think. But the sight of the baby
+conquers the grandfather’s stony heart—Abie’s Irish
+Rose, in fact. Well, they ought to be satisfied with
+the dénouement. That glance of his father’s at the
+ceiling had been a promise (or a threat, if one were
+so unreasonable as to take it so!) that this child
+should be one of the lords of Vickley! He might
+tell this romantic old bird that. It was what he
+wanted to hear—what every one, including Dr.
+Zerneke, seemed to be hoping for....</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t you sit down,” said Norman. “And as
+to the little drama, I think I can say that I have received
+assurances that my own follies will not be
+held against the child.” That was sufficiently nineteenth-century
+to suit the occasion, he thought.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p180">180</span></p>
+
+<p>“The girls will be pleased,” said the old man.
+“They are very fond of the baby.”</p>
+
+<p>There was another knock at the door.</p>
+
+<p>“I think it’s them,” said Mr. Victor, with a smile.
+“Wanting to hear.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman opened the door. It was the younger
+sister, Monica.</p>
+
+<p>“Excuse me, Mr. Overbeck,” she said eagerly.
+“But what did he think of the baby?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman was touched at her interest, but he replied
+casually:</p>
+
+<p>“Well—he seemed favorably impressed. Didn’t
+you think so?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes! we both thought so. Did he say anything?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman smiled. “My father doesn’t say much,”
+he told her. “I mean, when he’s pleased. One has
+to judge by the way he acts.”</p>
+
+<p>“He certainly acted pleased.”</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t you sit down?”</p>
+
+<p>“No—I just came in to ask. You don’t mind my
+asking? We couldn’t help being anxious.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it’s all right,” he said reassuringly.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m so glad!” she said, and was about to go
+when he remembered:</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t thanked you for the flowers—and the
+coffee. It was terribly nice of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh—the coffee,” she said. “We’d be very glad
+to bring you your coffee every morning, if you’d like
+it. You get to work at eight, don’t you? We’re
+<span class="pagenum" id="p181">181</span>having our own at seven, and it would be no trouble
+at all!”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you must let me pay you for it,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t think my sister would want that,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll discuss that later, then,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-night, then.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good-night.”</p>
+
+<p>“A nice family,” he remarked to Mr. Victor.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Mr. Victor. “A very nice family.
+Not the usual type of people who keep rooming-houses.
+I know.”</p>
+
+<p>“They’ve been so friendly,” said Norman. “I
+don’t feel as though I were among strangers at
+all.”</p>
+
+<p>“We tried to make it homelike,” said Mr. Victor
+ingenuously. “I may say that the idea of Mrs.
+Czermak wearing her nurse’s costume was my own
+contribution, or suggestion. I thought it would help
+to impress your father favorably.”</p>
+
+<p>“Has Mrs. Czermak been a nurse-maid?” asked
+Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Babies of her own—that’s what she
+needs,” said Mr. Victor wisely.</p>
+
+<p>“She’s not a widow, is she?” asked Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“No. But she isn’t living with her husband,
+you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it’s not exactly a secret. He ran away.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p182">182</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh!”</p>
+
+<p>“I might as well tell you,” said Mr. Victor. “He
+was a very young man, and a poet. Vladimir Czermak
+was his name. He also tried to write music.
+Very modern music.” Mr. Victor shook his head.
+“As to his poetry, I am perhaps not so well qualified
+to judge. But I have read some of it....”</p>
+
+<p>“He wrote in English?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. If it could be called English. He used
+to show me his things. He had a room here. That
+was how it began. But he looked like a genius.
+She has his picture—you must get her to show it to
+you some time. The Irish, if you have noticed,
+have a tenderness for genius. Mrs. Case allowed
+him to get behind in his rent. And then he married
+her daughter. She was a nurse-maid then. To
+tell you the truth, I think what she wanted was a
+baby of her own. But that wasn’t his idea at all.
+He was afraid of the responsibility. As a matter of
+fact he couldn’t very well afford to have a family.
+A young genius who is an unskilled worker and odd-job
+man is a poor stick as a husband and father.
+He wanted her not to have the baby, and when she
+went ahead having it he cleared out.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what happened to her baby?”</p>
+
+<p>“It was prematurely born, and it died very soon
+afterward.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hard luck,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think she or the baby had the right kind
+of care,” said Mr. Victor. “Poor people go to poor
+<span class="pagenum" id="p183">183</span>doctors. But Dr. Zerneke has been very good to
+her. She performed some kind of operation that
+was needed, and she gave her a baby to nurse. Your
+child is the third she has taken care of for Dr.
+Zerneke. She gets very much attached to them, and
+feels very bad at having to give them up. I understand,”
+he added, “that you may leave your baby
+here for some time.”</p>
+
+<p>“I probably shall,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“She’s hoping so,” said Mr. Victor. “She’s devoted
+to it.”</p>
+
+<p>“And she hasn’t heard from her husband since he
+went away?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. She’s going to get a divorce shortly.”</p>
+
+<p>“The family isn’t Catholic, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Their father was Protestant Irish, and the girls
+have broken away from the Church. And Dr. Zerneke
+seems to have persuaded the mother that it
+wasn’t a real marriage in the Catholic sense, on account
+of his not wanting to have a baby—something
+like that. At any rate, her scruples have been more
+or less overcome. She isn’t sure it’s quite right, but
+she’s making no protest. She realizes that Rose
+ought to be married again and having her own
+babies.”</p>
+
+<p>“How old is she—Mrs. Czermak?”</p>
+
+<p>“Twenty-seven. That was one of the difficulties
+about her marriage. The boy was three or four
+years younger.”</p>
+
+<p>“And her sister—how old is she?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p184">184</span></p>
+
+<p>“Monica is twenty.”</p>
+
+<p>“A nice kid,” said Norman, thinking of his sister
+Doris, and remembering Monica’s offer to bring
+him coffee every morning. He couldn’t help being
+moved by the sisterly kindnesses he was finding in his
+new home.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a very pleasant place here,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Your wife is in Colorado for her health, I understand?”
+said Mr. Victor.</p>
+
+<p>They discussed the state of health of Norman’s
+alleged wife.</p>
+
+<p>“You mustn’t be discouraged,” said Mr. Victor
+encouragingly. “Everything will come out all
+right.” He rose to go.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” said Norman, “I’m sure it will.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the right spirit!” said Mr. Victor.</p>
+
+<p>It was a little embarrassing to be sympathized
+with on such fictitious grounds. Nevertheless, after
+old Mr. Victor had taken his friendly leave, Norman
+found himself wondering why all homes couldn’t be
+as pleasant and comfortable as this one.</p>
+
+<p>He said to himself that his new life had really
+begun.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p185">185</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VIII_Apron_Strings">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VIII</span>: Apron Strings
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>DURING that protracted Sunday conference
+Dr. Zerneke had suggested to Norman that
+he come to her home some evening that week, to
+clear up the situation in a talk of a less formal and
+legalistic sort. The engagement had been made
+for Monday evening.</p>
+
+<p>But on Monday morning, when Monica brought
+his coffee, he was up, and they conversed for a moment
+at the door; and she reminded him that this
+was the baby’s birthday. At that age, it appeared,
+birthdays came every month, and this was his first.
+It was to be a sort of special occasion; and it would
+be the first time (not counting that time at the hospital)
+that he had seen his son awake.</p>
+
+<p>He called up the doctor that afternoon and, explaining
+his reasons, postponed the engagement.
+It was arranged that he should call Wednesday evening
+instead.</p>
+
+<p>Junior’s birthday party—for now the girls called
+the baby by that name—was the pleasantest sort of
+contrast to Isabel’s impersonal indifference that day
+in the hospital. It was infinitely agreeable to Norman,
+the sight of these girls bending over his child—cooing
+to him, and triumphantly eliciting his smile.
+They knew every dimple by heart. And unquestionably
+<span class="pagenum" id="p186">186</span>the baby was rosier, plumper, happier, than
+he had been with that unnatural mother of his. It
+ministered to some deep need in Norman’s heart,
+the picture of maternal solicitude which these girls
+presented—Rose with her grave motherly preoccupation,
+and Monica with her joyous young excitement
+over every detail of this budding life. It made
+him very happy. He sat in the room on those evenings
+with his child and its young nurses, enchanted.
+Their mother, Mrs. Case, was there, too, sometimes—and
+occasionally he felt a little embarrassed by
+her Rabelaisian comments on babies and some of
+their natural functions; but the girls paid no attention,
+and he soon learned not to mind her way
+of talking.... Mr. Victor would drop in, too,
+to enjoy the spectacle.</p>
+
+<p>“You can see him bathed Sunday morning,” said
+Monica enthusiastically.</p>
+
+<p>And on Tuesday evening, after the ceremony of
+the bottle was over, and Mr. Victor was chatting
+with him in his room, Monica came in. “My sister
+doesn’t like to ask,” she said, “but you see—she and
+Ma have to be out to-morrow evening. It’s about
+Rose’s divorce. There’s some witnesses we have to
+see. Of course, I could stay and look after the baby,
+but I’m the one who has been talking to the lawyers,
+and I really know more about it than they do. I
+ought to go along. And we wondered—I wondered—if
+you were going to be in that evening. Because
+if you were, I thought you wouldn’t mind staying up
+<span class="pagenum" id="p187">187</span>in our room, next to the nursery. Of course, if
+you’re going to be out, I can stay at home just as
+well. It’s only for a couple of hours. We’ll be
+home in time to give him his ten o’clock bottle. I
+thought maybe you’d like to!”</p>
+
+<p>This was an occasion much too important to be
+sacrificed to a mere conference with Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>“I’d be very glad to,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>He called up Dr. Zerneke the next day, and the
+engagement was postponed until Friday.</p>
+
+<p>On Friday evening, then, a little before ten, not
+without regrets at having to miss the important occasion
+of the day, he walked over to Dr. Zerneke’s
+home.</p>
+
+<p>It was an apartment some blocks away from her
+office, in a less imposing building. He had been told
+to ring the janitor’s bell, and “if I’m not there, the
+key’s on the lintel above the door.” Having passed
+the inspection of the janitress, he climbed the stairs,
+to the top floor. There was no answer to his knock,
+so he let himself in according to instructions.</p>
+
+<p>The ceilings at the front were low, with a garret-like
+slant. There were easy chairs, a large couch
+heaped with cushions, a little table with a coffee-bulb
+and cups set out, large bookcases filled with
+books. The rest of the wall space was occupied with
+etchings, lithographs, and oils. Here was one of
+Nordfeldt’s New Mexico etchings—he had several
+of that series himself. A lithograph by Picasso.
+And here was a Springer.... He hadn’t gone to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p188">188</span>Springer’s exhibit. Well, he was a workingman
+now. Not an art patron any more....</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke entered, carrying her medicine case.</p>
+
+<p>“You let yourself in—good. I’ll make some
+coffee in a moment.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman asked: “Can I do anything?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. Sit down.”</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke went into another room, put away
+her things, and came back. She carried the coffee-bulb
+into the kitchen, returned with it filled with
+water, and lighted the alcohol lamp.</p>
+
+<p>“Why,” she asked, “didn’t you consult me before
+going to live at Mrs. Czermak’s?”</p>
+
+<p>“It didn’t occur to me that it was a matter to
+consult anybody about,” Norman answered, a little
+defiantly. After all, he had not left home to take
+orders on every little thing from Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>“Is there,” he asked, “any reason why I should
+not live there?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s merely,” said Dr. Zerneke, “that it will make
+it more difficult for her to give up the baby.”</p>
+
+<p>“That won’t be necessary for some time, I presume,”
+said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“I had not planned to leave the baby there more
+than a few weeks,” said Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>“But why?” asked Norman in surprise. “I
+thought it was a fine place.”</p>
+
+<p>“It has its merits. But I should prefer to put
+your baby in another boarding-home, where there
+are other children, so that he won’t be spoiled by
+<span class="pagenum" id="p189">189</span>too much devotion. And you can see that your being
+there makes it unnecessarily embarrassing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I can see that. But what I can’t see is why
+the baby should be taken away.” It really seemed
+to him as though Dr. Zerneke were saying that to
+annoy him.</p>
+
+<p>“I think,” he added, “I might be allowed to be
+the judge of that. I was going to ask you if the
+Adoption Society hadn’t passed on the matter of
+the adoption, by the way.”</p>
+
+<p>“And I was going to tell you that the Society has
+decided that the proper procedure in this case would
+be for the mother to turn over the child to you
+herself.”</p>
+
+<p>“But she’s already given it up to the Society!”
+said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“That would be cancelled. It may be a legal
+quibble, but for some reason this procedure is preferable.
+I’ve written to your father about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where is Isabel—in Paris?”</p>
+
+<p>“No—she doesn’t sail till the eleventh of May,
+according to her plans. She’s still in Michigan, resting.
+There won’t be much of a delay. As soon as
+she signs the papers we’ve sent her, the child will
+be your own. And for that reason, I think I ought
+to explain to you why you should not leave him at
+Mrs. Czermak’s indefinitely. The atmosphere of
+the place is all wrong. That kind of neurotic devotion
+is all right for a few weeks, but you don’t
+want the child to get too accustomed to it.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p190">190</span></p>
+
+<p>“Would you call them neurotic?” Norman asked
+defensively. “I should have said they were a very
+healthy lot.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s the situation that is unhealthy. I’m thinking
+particularly of Mrs. Czermak herself. The obvious
+thing to say is that she needs babies of her own—and
+it’s quite true. She let her maternal instincts
+be exploited for a long time in a nurse-maid’s job.
+Then, when she did get married, it was to a no-account
+young genius who wanted to be the baby of
+the family himself. And since her baby died, I’ve
+been exploiting her for the benefit of other women’s
+babies. No, I don’t call it healthy to break her heart
+over children that don’t belong to her. Just because
+it’s your child that she’s in love with doesn’t mean
+that everything’s all right. And when she does have
+to give him up, you can thank yourself for making
+it worse for her.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how have I made it any the worse?”</p>
+
+<p>“A man around the house—her baby’s father—why,
+it’s almost like being married! I’m not suggesting
+that she’s necessarily in love with you, Mr.
+Overbeck—and if she were, it would not be so much
+a tribute to your own charms as to the fact that you
+are the baby’s father. Her baby’s, as she wishes to
+feel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Am I to take this as a warning?” Norman asked
+coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“Stranger things have happened. Of course, if
+you wish to settle down there permanently”—Dr.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p191">191</span>Zerneke smiled—“you’d find her an excellent wife
+in many respects.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good heavens!” said Norman, horrified. “I
+never realized that these things were so frightfully
+complicated. I only wanted to get acquainted with
+my son. I’ve only seen him five times—awake, that
+is.”</p>
+
+<p>“And to-night it was my fault that you were
+dragged away from the happy scene, wasn’t it?”
+said Dr. Zerneke. “Thoughtless of me!”</p>
+
+<p>The boiling water plunged upward through the
+glass tube furiously, and Dr. Zerneke put out the
+flame beneath.</p>
+
+<p>“Things came off very well Sunday, didn’t they?”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“My father,” he replied uncomfortably, “was
+more than kind.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—he was sensible, which is more to the point.
+When is your mother coming?”</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated. “No definite date has been set,”
+he told her.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you asked her?”</p>
+
+<p>“She knows where I am. She can come if she
+wants to.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you written to her at all?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he said reluctantly.</p>
+
+<p>“Nor to any of your family?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. Why should I?”</p>
+
+<p>“You must remember that you repudiated them,
+when you left home without telling them about the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p192">192</span>baby. Don’t you suppose families have feelings?
+They won’t come to see the baby till you invite
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I suppose I should.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I think you’d better. And I also think it
+might be just as well if you were living somewhere
+else when your mother and sisters come to see you,
+if you don’t mind my saying so.”</p>
+
+<p>He realized what she meant—they wouldn’t like
+his being so much at home there. And his sister
+Lucinda would be suspicious of Mrs. Czermak. It
+was perfectly absurd, but she would. She thought
+every woman had designs on him.... He
+sighed....</p>
+
+<p>“It’s been a very comfortable place,” he said. “I
+should be sorry to have to leave.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Dr. Zerneke tartly, as she poured
+the coffee, “a man with a fond mother and sisters
+does get in the habit of letting women-folk wait on
+him. Sugar?”</p>
+
+<p>“Black, please,” he said, flushing. Had she heard
+of Monica’s bringing him his morning coffee? But
+that wasn’t his fault! They had all insisted on it.
+He couldn’t have refused without being rude....</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll stop scolding you,” she said, handing him the
+cup. “How is your work going?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not brilliantly, I’m afraid.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, the adoption matter ought to be settled
+soon, and then you can settle down to a normal life.”</p>
+
+<p>Something in her tone made him ask: “What, exactly,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p193">193</span>is your idea of a normal life for me, Dr.
+Zerneke?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I don’t mind saying that it isn’t hanging
+over a cradle in your spare evenings. You ought
+to be having some kind of ordinary social life. You
+ought to be making friends. Men friends and girl
+friends. If I heard that you were caught drinking
+and dancing, I wouldn’t be shocked. Even if you
+were seen kissing a pretty girl. I know, this may
+seem precipitate to you. You’ve only been mooning
+over your baby for a week. Just the same, it’s time
+you began to form other habits.—Your habits would
+be admirable enough, if you were a husband, and
+one of those girls your wife. That’s how a home
+is built up. But you are a bachelor. And you ought
+to behave as such. It would be bad enough, the way
+you’re acting, if they were your own mother and
+sisters. I want you to snap out of it.... The
+truth is that something fell on you three weeks ago,
+and hit you like a ton of brick. Nevertheless, you’ve
+got to get over it. You can’t let time stop still for
+you at the moment when you found you had a baby.
+After all, staying in the cave and cooing to babies
+is a maternal occupation. Going out and killing
+bears is the paternal job. How long, if I may ask,
+are you going to work for thirty dollars a week?
+Or is your son going to be supported by his grandfather?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman set down his coffee cup and rose
+haughtily.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p194">194</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry my conduct doesn’t please you,” he
+said. “Thank you for your advice. I will call on
+you when I want more of it.”</p>
+
+<p>And so saying, thoroughly outraged, he left Dr.
+Zerneke’s home abruptly.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p195">195</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_IX_It_Was_Bound_to_Happen">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter IX</span>: It Was Bound to Happen
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>THAT was on Friday evening. And on Saturday
+morning he had a telephone call from
+Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve heard from Isabel,” she said. “The papers
+are signed. If you can get off this afternoon to go
+to the courthouse, the thing will be settled for good.”</p>
+
+<p>He would be at her office at two, he said.</p>
+
+<p>The legal red-tape would soon be unwound, now—his
+son would be all his own!...</p>
+
+<p>Going back to his desk, he found a note there, saying
+formally that Mr. Wilkins wished to see him.</p>
+
+<p>He walked buoyantly into Mr. Wilkins’ office,
+thinking to himself that this would be his promised
+raise.</p>
+
+<p>“My luck is with me!” he said to himself.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, he came out of Mr. Wilkins’
+office saying to himself over and over:</p>
+
+<p>“Of course. It was bound to happen. I’ve had
+too easy a time. It was bound to happen.”</p>
+
+<p>He had in his hand an order on the cashier for
+his week’s pay, and another week’s in advance.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wilkins had observed his work carefully,
+he said, during these two weeks. Not everybody
+had the makings of an advertising man in him. He
+felt sure that Mr. Overbeck would do better in some
+other field. Et cetera.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p196">196</span></p>
+
+<p>Fired!</p>
+
+<p>He tried to persuade himself to take it lightly.
+After all, there were other advertising agencies in
+Chicago. He had got this job without any experience
+at all. With what he had picked up of the lingo
+of the profession, he ought to be able to get a better
+job. Yes, he was no longer a mere beginner. He
+would strike the next place for sixty-five dollars a
+week at least....</p>
+
+<p>While he felt that way, as soon as he had cleaned
+up his desk and got his money from the cashier, he
+walked over to the H. H. Warner agency and asked
+for a job. He did not get it.</p>
+
+<p>Then he tried the Simpson agency. There was
+nothing there for him, either.</p>
+
+<p>Well, it had taken him some little time to get that
+first job. It would take more than a day to get
+another.... And in the meantime he had to go
+to see Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>What an irony! That it should be at such a moment
+that he should be given his son!</p>
+
+<p>With Dr. Zerneke, in her office, he was stiff and
+formal. He had decided not to tell her about losing
+his job—until he had found another.</p>
+
+<p>She wasted no words, but pushed a document
+across her desk.</p>
+
+<p>“That is the mother’s consent. And here”—she
+glanced at another paper, and handed it over—“is
+your petition. Sign it before a notary, and take it
+to Judge Hummel in the County Court, at three
+<span class="pagenum" id="p197">197</span>o’clock; our legal representative will be there. His
+name is Starrett.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you.”</p>
+
+<p>He took his departure stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>There was a notary’s office down the street. He
+had noticed it in coming. He stopped there, signed
+his name, and held up his hand while the notary
+mumbled a formula.</p>
+
+<p>At the courthouse he found Mr. Starrett waiting
+for him. They went into Judge Hummel’s chambers.
+The judge looked at him curiously. It was
+not every day, it seemed, that a man adopted his
+illegitimate child....</p>
+
+<p>It was over at last. And now to look for a job.</p>
+
+<p>But no—he must wait till Monday for that....</p>
+
+<p>He would have nothing to do over Sunday except
+think.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered what Dr. Zerneke had said about
+the child’s being supported by his grandfather. It
+was as if she had known he was going to lose his
+job....</p>
+
+<p>It was true that he had been slack at his desk all
+week. Not like the week before, when he had been
+living by himself, and calling up Dr. Zerneke’s office
+once a day to see whether the baby was all right....
+He had been working for his son, then. Ever
+since he had come to Mrs. Czermak’s, he had been
+lapped in a soft, sentimental dream of fatherhood....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p198">198</span></p>
+
+<p>He realized that he had had no lunch. He must
+eat, even if he was out of a job.</p>
+
+<p>He went home early in the evening and picked up
+a book to read, to keep his thoughts off his situation.
+He had decided he would say nothing to the
+people here about losing his job. Not until he had
+got another. He would go out early in the morning
+as usual, and keep looking for a job all day....</p>
+
+<p>The book was one that had been in the room when
+he rented it, a novel of Dumas’. He had read it
+when he was a boy. He started to read it again,
+with the hope that in this cheerful swashbuckling romance
+he would find something to take his mind entirely
+away from his problems. It was about Athos—and,
+as he presently noted, about an illegitimate
+son of that worthy. And Norman vaguely remembered,
+from his boyhood, the story of how it had
+all come about. The young man had found upon
+his doorstep a bassinet containing the newborn child—a
+souvenir sent by a young lady of quality in memory
+of the jocund night of love which they had enjoyed
+the year before. So, it appeared, were such
+matters handled in those romantic days. And, as
+Norman remembered, the young hero had suffered
+no pangs of conscience; he had taken it as a matter
+of course, and sent the child away to be nursed and
+educated. Such, as well as Norman could remember,
+were the origins and early circumstances of the
+Vicompte de Bragelonne....</p>
+
+<p>Norman threw the book aside fretfully. Dumas
+<span class="pagenum" id="p199">199</span>had played him false—had merely reminded him of
+his own troubles....</p>
+
+<p>He looked at his watch. It was ten o’clock.
+Time for the feeding. But he did not want to go to
+see it.... He would feel ashamed, knowing that
+he had lost his job....</p>
+
+<p>What was it that Dr. Zerneke had said about the
+clock stopping for him? When he found that he
+had a baby. Yes, he hadn’t thought of much else
+since then.</p>
+
+<p>When Dumas’ hero found that bassinet on his
+doorstep, he didn’t moon over it. He took it in his
+stride....</p>
+
+<p>Well, when he had another job, he would begin
+to live what Dr. Zerneke called a normal life. He
+would make friends. He would meet girls. He
+would not hang over his son’s cradle every evening.
+He would be a normal young bachelor....</p>
+
+<p>But first he had to find a job—and work hard to
+keep it this time.</p>
+
+<p>What a fool he had been, to lose that job! It
+might be hard enough to get another.... But he
+wasn’t going to let his son be supported by J. J.
+Overbeck....</p>
+
+<p>There was a knock at the door. It sounded like
+Mr. Victor’s. He ignored it. And Mr. Victor took
+the hint of his silence and went away. But presently
+there came another tap that sounded like
+Monica’s. He ignored that, too. He sat slumped
+in his chair, thinking of his inadequacies. He was
+<span class="pagenum" id="p200">200</span>sitting thus, with his head drooped on his chest miserably,
+when the door opened slightly, and Monica’s
+voice uttered a surprised and apologetic “Oh!”</p>
+
+<p>Norman did not look up even then. For he became
+aware of the tears of self-anger and self-pity
+in his eyes. He did not want this girl to see him
+crying.</p>
+
+<p>But girls are stupid about such things. She stayed
+there in the doorway, and said “Oh!” again, this
+time in a sympathetic tone. Then she came timidly
+into the room, approached him, touched his arm with
+her hand. “Please—is anything the matter, Mr.
+Overbeck? Have you—have you had bad news
+from Colorado?”</p>
+
+<p>She stooped over him in a kind sisterly way.</p>
+
+<p>Colorado?</p>
+
+<p>“No!” he said. And he added roughly: “Go
+away and leave me alone!”</p>
+
+<p>She fled.</p>
+
+<p>He shouldn’t have said that, he thought regretfully.
+She wasn’t his sister, to be talked to in such
+a fashion. She had a right to ask—she had thought
+his wife was dying or something. That was what
+any one would think, to see him sitting there crying.</p>
+
+<p>Stricken with remorse, he went to the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Monica!” he called, for she was not in sight.
+She appeared abruptly at the head of the stairs.
+“Yes, Mr. Overbeck?”</p>
+
+<p>“I—I’m sorry, Monica,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it’s all right.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p201">201</span></p>
+
+<p>She was coming down. She stood there before
+him, with a queer frightened look on her face.</p>
+
+<p>He didn’t know that he was holding out his arms
+to her in the doorway. He didn’t know until she
+melted into his clasp, and they were kissing one
+another.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” she said at last, “we mustn’t do this. Your
+wife—”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said Norman, infinitely astonished
+at himself. “I forgot!”</p>
+
+<p>There they were, in the doorway; and at the head
+of the stairs, as they both suddenly became aware,
+was Monica’s mother. They released each other
+abruptly. Monica ran out into the hall. Norman
+closed the door, and sat down to think.</p>
+
+<p>Now what?</p>
+
+<p>He couldn’t imagine why he had done such a foolish
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, he was supposed to have a wife in
+Colorado. Monica wouldn’t expect him to marry
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But what would her mother say?</p>
+
+<p>He wasn’t left long in doubt. A firm rap at the
+door was Mrs. Case’s. He rose to let her in.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p202">202</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_X_Mrs_Case">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter X</span>: Mrs. Case
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>“I’M very sorry, Mrs. Case,” he began, but she
+interrupted him.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right,” she said, “you would be,
+caught as you were, and I’m not worrying about
+what’s past. It’s the girl’s fault as much as your
+own, and natural enough on both sides, with small
+blame to either of you. It’s the days and nights to
+come I’m thinking of. A man with a wife away is
+bound to be kissing some girl, and if it’s not one it
+will be another, so another it shall be. We’ve trouble
+enough in our family, and it will be some other
+than my Monica that you philander with from now
+on. I’m not blaming you, Mr. Overbeck, you understand,
+but the way it is, with you a married man,
+I’ll just ask you to find another room, and take temptation
+out of harm’s way.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s very kind of you to look at it in that way,
+Mrs. Case,” said Norman, much relieved. “I’ll
+move to-morrow.—I don’t know how it happened,”
+he began to explain.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I know how it happened,” said Mrs. Case.
+“There was you, and there was she, and that’s how
+it happened. I’m not saying a word against human
+nature. I can’t have it go on in <em>my</em> house, that’s all.
+I’ll be sorry to see you go, but you know how it is. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="p203">203</span>can’t be staying awake all night to see that my
+daughter sleeps in her own bed.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman blushed. “I assure you,” he said, “that
+we—that I—”</p>
+
+<p>“You can save your assurances for your wife when
+she comes back, it’s then you’ll need them,” said
+Mrs. Case. “I know the world of men and women,
+and I’ve no great quarrel with the way they’re made.
+It’s all right with me, but you can just be leaving
+your door unlocked at night for the other girl at
+your new place, when it comes to that.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman, not quite following her meaning, asked
+in bewilderment and some indignation:</p>
+
+<p>“What other girl do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“Whatever one it chances to be, and I wish you
+good luck, too,” said Mrs. Case. “There’ll be one.
+You’re not the sort of young man the girls will let
+sleep single long, but I’d rather, as I say, it would
+be some other woman’s daughter that kept you company
+when the lights are out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really, Mrs. Case,” said Norman in embarrassment.
+“You mustn’t think—”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it’s only human nature,” said Mrs. Case,
+“and nothing to apologize for. I think none the less
+of you, but I have to look after my own as best I
+may.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think you’re quite right, Mrs. Case,” said
+Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll all miss you, I say, and we’ll all be glad
+to see you when you come to visit your boy. You
+<span class="pagenum" id="p204">204</span>mustn’t think we’ve any grudge against you, Mr.
+Overbeck. That’s why I’m asking you to go now,
+before that happens which we’ll all be sorry for.”</p>
+
+<p>There was more to the same effect, and it was
+arranged that Norman should find another room
+and move to-morrow, on the excuse that he had to be
+nearer to his office.</p>
+
+<p>It was just as well all around, thought Norman;
+he would take a cheaper room while he was looking
+for work. He paid Mrs. Case two weeks in advance
+for the baby; that at least was secure....</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t mind saying I’ll sleep better when you’ve
+gone, and I don’t have to wonder is every creak a
+girl’s bare feet on the stairs,” she said, at which
+Norman blushed again.</p>
+
+<p>Was <em>that</em>—he wondered when she had gone—what
+everybody in this house thought of their
+brother-and-sisterly friendship?... Well—that
+kiss hadn’t been very brother-and-sisterly! After
+all, what did he know about himself? Or Monica?
+Perhaps this brassy-tongued old woman was right.
+Anyway, he gathered that these reflections upon his
+character were not intended by Monica’s mother as
+uncomplimentary.</p>
+
+<p>As he went to bed, he glanced at the lock on his
+door. Yes, perhaps it was just as well he was going
+to leave this place.... What did he really know
+about girls?</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p205">205</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XI_Paradise_Lost">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XI</span>: Paradise Lost
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>ON Sunday morning he found a small room on
+the North side, not far away, a narrow hall
+bedroom on the top floor—a hole in the wall that
+cost him only four dollars a week.</p>
+
+<p>He went back to Mrs. Case’s to pack up. Mr.
+Victor came in. He had heard, he said, that Norman
+was leaving.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody else came in. They seemed to be avoiding
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He asked Mr. Victor to tell Mrs. Case that the
+corner expressman would come for his trunk. He
+looked around the room regretfully, and wondered
+again at that inexplicable kiss which had forfeited
+for him this comfort.... Well, unless he got a job
+right away, he couldn’t have stayed there anyway.</p>
+
+<p>“Say good-by for me to Mrs. Case, and Mrs.
+Czermak—and Monica,” he bade Mr. Victor.
+“Tell them how grateful I am and always will be
+to them, for the way they’ve looked after my child.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Victor raised his eyebrows. “But you’ll be
+coming here regularly to see the boy, won’t you?” he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>Norman felt rather foolish. To Mr. Victor, of
+course, it was not a farewell to a lost paradise.</p>
+
+<p>“My work is going to keep me terribly busy for
+<span class="pagenum" id="p206">206</span>a while,” he said stiffly. “I shan’t be able to get
+here very often.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve been almost one of the family,” said
+Mr. Victor regretfully.</p>
+
+<p>Just a little too darned near, thought Norman....
+That kiss still astonished him whenever he
+thought of it.</p>
+
+<p>But he didn’t like to go away as though he were
+sneaking off in disgrace. He wished he could see
+Monica for a moment.... An idea occurred to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He unlocked his trunk. In the till were all sorts of
+trifles which his mother had collected from his chiffonier.
+He searched among them, looking for something
+appropriate.... Yes, girls wore cuff-links
+sometimes. He selected a handsome green jade
+pair with silver mountings.</p>
+
+<p>“May I entrust you with a little commission?” he
+asked Mr. Victor formally. “I would like you to
+give these to little Monica.”</p>
+
+<p>“She’ll be pleased as Punch,” said Mr. Victor,
+admiring them.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know when I’ll be here again,” said
+Norman, “so I’ll say good-by,” and shook hands
+with Mr. Victor.</p>
+
+<p>He went over to his new room and awaited the
+trunk. He was afraid at first that there would be
+no room for it. But he found that if it were set
+at the end of the narrow iron bedstead, it left space
+enough for the door to open half way—and that
+<span class="pagenum" id="p207">207</span>was enough.... He reflected that if the worst
+came to the worst, all those suits of clothes his
+mother had sent him ought to fetch something at a
+pawnshop.</p>
+
+<p>But that was no way to be thinking at a time like
+this....</p>
+
+<p>He dined as inexpensively as possible, and came
+back to his hole in the wall.... At Mrs. Czermak’s
+there had been a tree in front of the house.
+Here he looked out over a chaos of grimy roofs.
+Well, he might as well get used to it! This might
+be his life for some time now.</p>
+
+<p>All the rest of the day he stayed in his tiny room.
+He remembered that he had promised Dr. Zerneke
+to write to his mother. But he did not want her
+to come while he was out of a job. He would
+have to postpone that indefinitely.</p>
+
+<p>Well, what was he going to do? Look for a
+job, of course. But suppose he couldn’t find one?</p>
+
+<p>But he could. He would. He must!</p>
+
+<p>He hadn’t been discouraged when he started in
+to look for a job three weeks before. But this was
+different, somehow. Being a father, with a baby to
+support—that had been then a strange dream, a daring
+wish, a rebellious aspiration. Now it was a
+grim reality. He had to keep on paying that twelve
+dollars a week.... And he began with pencil and
+paper to figure out how long his money would last,
+computing his own expenses at the lowest rate. Less
+than three weeks! Scarcely more than two, in fact.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p208">208</span>He had that much time to find a job in. Then there
+was that trunkful of clothes to pawn.... Of
+course, his father’s money was there in the bank,
+waiting for such emergencies as this. But that
+would be a confession of failure....</p>
+
+<p>Why was he thinking of failure now? Three
+weeks ago he hadn’t worried about that possibility....
+But three weeks ago he hadn’t just been fired
+from a job that he thought he was doing pretty
+well at.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday he had formally adopted his and Isabel’s
+child. He, a man without a job, who could
+assure a child no more than three weeks’ food and
+shelter. What would Isabel think, if she knew?
+Would she be sorry she hadn’t given her baby to
+some well-to-do strangers?</p>
+
+<p>He found it difficult to get to sleep that night.
+The future stretched out before him, grim and
+frightening.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p209">209</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XII_Out_of_a_Job">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XII</span>: Out of a Job
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HE had intended to get up early Monday morning;
+but a troubled sleep, filled with a long,
+anxious, childish dream concerning an attempt to
+find the right train in a huge and bewildering railway
+station, held him fast in its grip. Apparently
+he was waiting for Monica’s knock to awaken him.
+But no knock came, and it was ten o’clock before he
+opened his eyes. A bad start! He would have to
+get an alarm clock.</p>
+
+<p>He called on an advertising agency that day, and
+was not surprised to be told that they needed no
+one.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the day he spent in an aimless wandering
+about the streets.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, again rising late from the enthrallment
+of an anxiety-dream, he called on another
+advertising agency, and again used his further
+time in meaningless perambulation. The fact was
+that the experience of being refused a job robbed
+him of his courage for the rest of the day. And in
+addition there was a half-conscious conviction of the
+hopelessness of his search, which made him want to
+stretch out the effort over a period of days or weeks,
+and postpone as long as possible the inevitable conclusion
+of failure....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p210">210</span></p>
+
+<p>What occupied his thoughts during these long
+days was a monotonous series of trifles which had
+assumed for him a heavy and grave importance.
+One, which took all week to decide about, concerned
+the buying of an alarm clock. He certainly needed
+one—there was no doubt of that. He was rising
+later and later from his poisonous fear-dreams....
+But a clock cost money. He looked at clocks in the
+windows of drug stores as he passed, noted their
+prices, and figured out in his mind how many hours
+of his money the cheapest of them would set him
+back. For he had his money computed now in terms
+of hours. Every dollar, as he had calculated it,
+gave him and his child eight hours and some forty-eight
+minutes of food and shelter. A forty-five cent
+clock might seem cheap enough, but it robbed them
+of four hours’ security! And figured in that fashion,
+its cost was so stupendous that its purchase must be
+postponed and reconsidered pro and con at great
+length.</p>
+
+<p>Again there was the matter of his meals. He
+had for this period set down the meager sum of
+fifty cents a day for food. That had seemed small
+enough, but when one ate only two meals a day at
+very cheap restaurants it was possible to cut down
+that figure. He could get a breakfast of doughnuts
+and coffee for ten cents, and a dinner of hash or
+spaghetti for thirty. The consideration of these
+items, and the sense of saving occupied much of his
+time and thought.... And yet, after a few days,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p211">211</span>when he came to balance his budget one evening, he
+found that he had spent more money than he should
+have done. Two dollars, or seventeen hours and a
+half, had vanished without trace....</p>
+
+<p>And there were items he had not reckoned on—cigarettes
+he could do without (he smoked a kind
+that went out, and he saved the stubs of his last
+box and had a luxurious puff or two from one of
+those before going to bed), but laundry was a necessity;
+and so, after butchering his face with his last
+dull blade, was a new supply of blades for his safety
+razor; though the soap on the washstand was as
+good for shaving, he found, as what comes in a
+tube. And even the small item of carfare seriously
+disarranged his estimates; at a minimum of ten
+cents a day for three weeks, it shortened his time of
+security by nineteen hours. And he had quite forgotten
+about having to pay for laundry.</p>
+
+<p>In truth, he knew these estimates were an absurd
+folly; yet he spent hours of time every evening going
+over his figures, working them out in decimals.
+There was this comfort in his preposterous mathematics,
+that it kept his mind precariously balanced
+on the edge of the abyss of fear along which he
+seemed to walk. It was as if he must keep his
+eyes fixed upon these figures, lest he should look
+down into that gulf and become dizzy....</p>
+
+<p>He did not go to see his child; he could not face
+the people there—yet. He called up every evening,
+and Mrs. Case or Mrs. Czermak reported that the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p212">212</span>baby was—of course—all right. Once it was Monica
+who answered the telephone; in a queer, constrained
+voice she gave him the information he
+wanted, and then, still in a reserved tone, thanked
+him for the cuff-links. (He had forgotten them.)
+He explained that he was very busy, but hoped to
+have time soon for a visit....</p>
+
+<p>Every day that week he went to an advertising
+agency. There were only two, besides the one from
+which he had been discharged, where he would have
+cared to work; one of them he had gone to last
+Saturday, and the other he held in reserve, going
+first to the smaller and negligible ones. On Saturday
+morning he would go to McCullough’s, the one
+he was holding in reserve.</p>
+
+<p>That day he rose early, having bought an alarm
+clock at last—recklessly paying seventy-nine cents
+for it. He indulged in the luxury of having his shoes
+shined. He bought a newspaper, and read about
+the preparations for the General Strike in England,
+and the sports news, so as not to be too out of
+touch conversationally with the outside world. Thus
+prepared, he went to McCullough’s.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. McCullough himself was not in, but somebody
+in charge told him flatly that there was no opening
+there just now for anybody....</p>
+
+<p>That afternoon, when going into a cheap restaurant
+to brace himself with another meal of doughnuts
+and coffee, he noticed a sign in the window: “Dishwasher
+<span class="pagenum" id="p213">213</span>Wanted.” He went up to the man at the
+cashier’s desk and asked about the job.</p>
+
+<p>The man looked at him doubtfully and said: “I
+don’t think it’s the kind of a job you want.”</p>
+
+<p>“How much does it pay?” asked Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Go and see the boss. He’s in the back.”</p>
+
+<p>“Whom shall I ask for?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ask for the boss.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman went back into the greasy, steaming
+kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to see the boss,” he said to a fat man
+in an apron.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m the boss. What do you want?”</p>
+
+<p>“How about that dishwashing job?”</p>
+
+<p>The man looked at him. “My God, what next?”
+he said disgustedly.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, what’s the matter with me?” Norman
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d last about an hour,” said the man.</p>
+
+<p>“How much is the pay?” Norman demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Twelve dollars and meals. You have the day
+shift for two weeks and then the night shift—seven
+to seven.”</p>
+
+<p>Twelve dollars—and meals. That was enough
+for the baby. And he could pawn his trunkful of
+clothes to pay for his room.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take it,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“If you’re here at six-thirty to-morrow morning
+and nobody else has turned up, I’ll try you out,”
+said the man.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p214">214</span></p>
+
+<p>“All right,” said Norman. “I’ll be here.”</p>
+
+<p>“The hell you will,” said the man doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>As Norman went by the cashier’s desk the man
+there asked: “Get it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think so,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Working for a paper?” asked the man. “Going
+to write us up?” And he smiled knowingly.</p>
+
+<p>Norman shook his head and went out. Why were
+they so suspicious of him? Just because of his
+clothes? Well, a week’s dishwashing would change
+that....</p>
+
+<p>He would have no time to call up Mrs. Czermak
+to-night. He’d better call up now.</p>
+
+<p>Monica answered the telephone.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” she said. “Dr. Zerneke wants very particularly
+to see you to-night. She said to go to her
+home at ten o’clock. Yes, Junior’s all right. When
+are you coming to see him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Soon, I hope,” said Norman vaguely.</p>
+
+<p>What did Dr. Zerneke want to see him about?
+Had she found out about his losing his job?</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p215">215</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XIII_The_Dreamer_Wakes">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XIII</span>: The Dreamer Wakes
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>DR. ZERNEKE was not in when he arrived at
+her home at ten o’clock, and he let himself
+in as before.</p>
+
+<p>Waiting for her, he turned to the book-shelves.
+He caught the name of Freud on the back of certain
+imposing volumes.... Ferenczi.... Flexner....
+Frazer.... Fabre....</p>
+
+<p>All very informative, no doubt.... Sanger....
+Spencer and Gillen.... Stendhal’s <i lang="fr">L’Amour</i>....
+Stopes.... If he read all those large books,
+he might understand his own situation better. But
+it was a little late to begin his education. Perhaps a
+younger generation, that babbled of sex and psychoanalysis
+instead of nursery rhymes, as it was
+reputed to do, would find clear sailing. And maybe
+not. He had thought he knew something, himself.
+He had had a smattering of modern ideas. He had
+thought of himself as a liberal.</p>
+
+<p>Goethe.... Godwin.... Groos.... Remy
+de Gourmont. Guyot’s <i lang="fr">Breviare de l’amour experimentale</i>....
+All about sex, it seemed.... Janet....
+James Joyce.... Ernest Jones.... Jung....
+Kammerer.... Kempf.... Ellen Key....
+The Koran.... Krafft-Ebing.... An omnium
+gatherum of biology, sociology, psychiatry,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p216">216</span>poetry, plays, and what not.... Adler....
+Grant Allen’s “The Woman Who Did”—a novel
+Norman vaguely remembered having read in his
+’teens; it was about a woman who deliberately and
+on theory had an illegitimate child; the child, as
+Norman recalled, did not thank her mother for conferring
+upon her that heroic but embarrassing distinction....
+Aretino.... The Apocrypha....</p>
+
+<p>Norman took down the Apocrypha, and looking
+into it at random was interested to see there the
+name Thecla. He had wondered who was the St.
+Thecla for whom the Adoption Society was named.
+He would read the Apocrypha some time and find
+out.... He put the book back at the sound of
+some one coming up the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke entered, and greeted him cordially.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Mr. Overbeck,” she said, “I suppose you
+are feeling pretty good about everything?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman was disconcerted.</p>
+
+<p>“What about?” he asked suspiciously. Was she
+making fun of him?</p>
+
+<p>“Why, you have your son,” she said. “That
+hasn’t palled already, has it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” he said. “I thought—”</p>
+
+<p>“You thought what?”</p>
+
+<p>“I hadn’t intended to tell you,” he said. “But the
+fact is, I’ve lost my job.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s too bad,” she said sympathetically. “As
+a matter of fact,” she added, “I knew.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh’you did?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p217">217</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes. I happened to call up Wilkins and Freeman,
+and they said you weren’t there any more.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course.... It was foolish to think I could
+keep it a secret.”</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t another yet, I suppose?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he admitted. “I’ve been looking for another
+all week without any success. I—I seem to
+have lost my nerve. I’m frightfully discouraged.
+To tell the truth, I took a job of dishwashing to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dishwashing?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. So as to keep up my payments to Mrs.
+Czermak, while I’m looking for a real job....
+Oh, things will turn out all right, I know, but this
+week my prospects haven’t looked so cheerful. It
+was something of a shock, losing that job at Wilkins
+and Freeman’s. And looking for a job and being
+turned down every day—it’s hard to keep up one’s
+courage.”</p>
+
+<p>“So now,” Dr. Zerneke commented, “you know
+how a good many other young fathers feel. Well,
+it may be good for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“It may take me, of course,” said Norman, “several
+weeks to find another job.”</p>
+
+<p>“Or several months, even,” said the doctor. “Do
+you know Mr. Victor, at Mrs. Case’s rooming-house?
+He’s been out of work since New Year’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do they keep up?”</p>
+
+<p>“Some of them don’t. Others have a little money
+<span class="pagenum" id="p218">218</span>put by for hard times. When you were a prosperous
+lawyer, didn’t you save anything?”</p>
+
+<p>“I had a bank account, yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not draw on it, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not really mine, any longer, since I’ve quit
+the firm.”</p>
+
+<p>“Suit yourself. But I hope you’re not going to
+be silly.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve broken with my life in Vickley. I’d rather
+stay broken—not go back for help. Is that so
+foolish?”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you engaged in some private quarrel with
+your father? Or are you trying to make a career for
+yourself here in Chicago? If your son, when he
+grows up, goes to New York to look for a job, don’t
+you think he will need some money to live on before
+he gets started? Of course, you can do dishwashing
+jobs in cheap restaurants if you want to. It may
+be good for your soul. But I doubt it. I think
+you’re ashamed of having lost your job.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why shouldn’t I be?”</p>
+
+<p>“Shame is a luxury no sensible person can afford.
+Do you want to stay in the advertising business?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do. Very much. That’s really what I’m afraid
+of—that I’ll have to fall back on something else.”</p>
+
+<p>“Would you consent to let me do you a favor?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you might be too proud. Well—first
+of all, how much money have you in the bank at
+Vickley?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p219">219</span></p>
+
+<p>“Of my own—something like a thousand dollars.
+I was going to spend it on my honeymoon.”</p>
+
+<p>“Write out a check for it and deposit it in some
+Chicago bank. How much are you paying for your
+new room?”</p>
+
+<p>“Four dollars a week.”</p>
+
+<p>“Rent a small apartment. You can get one, furnished,
+for the summer, in this neighborhood, for
+fifty or sixty dollars a month. Give my name as a
+reference. You will need such a place to entertain
+your family in, anyway. Do that Monday.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what then?” Norman asked curiously.</p>
+
+<p>“You are fond of buying pictures, aren’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve confined myself to etchings, chiefly. I have
+a small collection of moderns in Vickley.”</p>
+
+<p>“Send for them. Or go to the galleries and buy
+something new that you’ll want to put on your walls.
+Do that on Tuesday. Also, go to a department
+store and buy some cups and saucers or hangings
+that please you. Do you dance?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will send you tickets for a ball next Wednesday,
+for which you will please remit ten dollars. If you
+don’t find a girl to take, come alone, and I’ll introduce
+you. It’s a masquerade, but evening clothes
+will do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that all?” Norman asked grimly.</p>
+
+<p>“Thursday I leave to your own devices. And on
+Friday go to see Mr. McCullough, of the McCullough
+Advertising Agency, and ask for a job.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p220">220</span></p>
+
+<p>“I was in there this morning. They haven’t got a
+job to give me.”</p>
+
+<p>“They will probably have one next Friday.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why should they have one next Friday?” he
+asked suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>“Because there is such a thing in this wicked world
+as ‘pull,’ and I use unscrupulously the little I have
+for the benefit of my friends. How do you suppose
+people get jobs?”</p>
+
+<p>“But what do you know about my ability?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing. After you get the job, it will be up to
+you to keep it. That’s not my affair. All I promise
+you is a two weeks’ trial. But it just happens that
+the last young man I rashly recommended to Mr.
+McCullough turned out to be pretty good. If you’re
+a flop, I’ll merely lose my reputation for intuition,
+that’s all. Only, if I were you, I’d ask for sixty a
+week to start on. They’ll not respect you otherwise.
+Remember that you’ve a baby to support....
+And don’t, please, be angry at me for keeping you
+from conquering the world by your own unaided
+efforts.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll be everlastingly grateful,” he said. “But—I
+thought poverty was supposed to be an incentive.
+Evidently you don’t think so. Why should you want
+me to pretend to myself that I’m rich?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because you’ve always been well-to-do. You are,
+still, as a plain matter of fact. Your poverty is a
+fake poverty—a neurotic lie, to please yourself.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p221">221</span></p>
+
+<p>“It didn’t feel so to me. It seemed real enough.
+And it wasn’t at all pleasing!”</p>
+
+<p>“It was an exercise of your imagination, nevertheless.
+A dream. I’ve merely waked you up.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was a nightmare,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“A grim little poetic fantasy. Write a poem about
+it, and send it to the Daily Worker. It will all be
+true enough—for others. Not for you! Be honest
+about this, if you can.”</p>
+
+<p>“I admit I feel better than I did when I came in.
+But why—aside from the job you’ve more or less
+promised me—why should the <em>facts</em> seem different
+now? Because they do!”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re facing realities now. Not fighting shadows
+any more. The question isn’t whether you can
+conquer the world with your bare hands. It’s merely
+whether you can succeed in the advertising business.
+Maybe you can’t, you know!”</p>
+
+<p>Norman laughed, and thanked her warmly.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you asked your mother to come to see
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, the sooner the better.”</p>
+
+<p>As Norman walked back to his room, he had a
+startling apprehension of the fact that what she
+had said about keeping a job was a really important
+truth.... There had perhaps been something
+grimly romantic about the thought of washing dishes
+and pawning his clothes to pay that twelve dollars a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p222">222</span>week for his son’s care. This problem of keeping a
+job after it had been given him—there was, he knew,
+nothing very romantic about that. It was a quite
+realistic problem that he had to face now....</p>
+
+<p>“Am I,” he wondered, “a perfectly incorrigible
+ass?”</p>
+
+<p>If it would help to do the things that Dr. Zerneke
+advised—if it would keep him from flying off on
+some preposterous new emotional tangent (he had
+Monica’s kiss in mind) he would do as she said.</p>
+
+<p>He would get an apartment.... And then he
+would ask his mother to come....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p223">223</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_THREE">
+ BOOK THREE
+ <br>
+ The Dominant Sex
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p224"></a><a id="p225"></a>[225]</span></p>
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_I_Vita_Nova">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter I</span>: Vita Nova
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HIS mother was coming. He had wired, inviting
+her, and she had wired back the date of
+her arrival....</p>
+
+<p>Ten days had passed since his talk with Dr. Zerneke,
+and in the meantime he had done most of the
+things outlined in her program. He had transferred
+his bank account to Chicago. He had rented a good-sized
+furnished apartment on the North side for the
+summer. He had even, according to instructions,
+picked up an etching, a satiric thing by Peggy Bacon,
+and put it on the wall, to make the place more his
+own....</p>
+
+<p>He had in other respects dutifully carried out Dr.
+Zerneke’s commands, day by day. He had obediently
+gone to the dance for which she had sent him
+tickets (he thought of taking Monica, but rejected
+that idea as distinctly out of place); and rather to
+his surprise, he had found on that occasion that he
+was capable of enjoying himself like anybody
+else....</p>
+
+<p>And finally, with some uneasiness and considerable
+doubt, he had applied to Mr. McCullough for
+a job—and had been taken on at forty dollars a
+week, which was all he had the nerve to ask.</p>
+
+<p>He ought, he knew, to feel at ease now, in his
+<span class="pagenum" id="p226">226</span>comfortable apartment, and with his new job. But
+he had lost his sense of security. His experience of
+being out of a job had taught him something he
+could not so quickly forget. Some time he might be
+able to feel again that the world was made for him;
+but it seemed still a difficult and dangerous place,
+and he a somewhat helpless stranger in it. He was
+determined not to lose his new job. Never did a
+young man work at his tasks more earnestly and
+humbly....</p>
+
+<p>He had been to Mrs. Czermak’s to see his son
+twice in those ten days—formal visits, different
+enough from the warm intimacy of his former association
+with the family. He felt under constraint,
+and so did the girls. Monica was distant and resentful,
+though she was rather obviously wearing his
+present—the cuff-links.</p>
+
+<p>Well, at any rate, he was being sensible. With
+his mother coming to see him, he must not get involved
+in any more messes. But he felt a little guilty
+about Monica.... It wasn’t quite the thing to do
+to kiss a girl and then drop her cold....</p>
+
+<p>When he was settled in his apartment, and at
+work on his new job, with no further excuse for
+delay, he had wired his mother the invitation to visit
+him. Her answering wire had said she would arrive
+Sunday morning; and this had been followed by a
+letter, a friendly and casual letter, taking everything
+as a matter of course. And Doris had scribbled a
+postscript saying that she’d love to see the baby....
+<span class="pagenum" id="p227">227</span>Lucinda, it appeared, was still suffering from
+“nerves.” He gathered that she had taken it all
+pretty hard....</p>
+
+<p>And there had been a letter from Gilbert Rand,
+giving him the town gossip. They were still talking
+about him in Vickley. Nothing like that had ever
+happened there.... Considering everything, Norman
+thought it was pretty sporting of his mother to
+be so calm and matter-of-fact about it.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, with the approach of his mother’s
+visit, he began to feel a sense of filial constraint.
+His new apartment was associated with the thought
+of her visit: it was not so much his own place, as one
+in which to entertain her. He felt that with her
+visit he would lose the liberty he had gained in leaving
+home and coming to Chicago. And he began to
+regret more keenly the pleasures of his stay at Mrs.
+Czermak’s, and to recall the delightful details of
+that period—the friendly midnight chats with old
+Mr. Victor, the morning coffee brought by Monica,
+and the delightful half hours with the girls in the
+nursery. Even Mrs. Case’s Rabelaisian conversation
+was something which he missed with regret....
+Mrs. Case had not felt any of the constraint
+which had marked his visits since his departure from
+her roof; and last Sunday, when he had seen his son
+bathed, she had in her frank way commented upon
+one feature of the baby’s anatomy which is usually
+avoided in polite conversation. “Ah!” she had said,
+addressing the baby, “little do you know, young
+<span class="pagenum" id="p228">228</span>man, how much trouble you’re going to make in
+the world with that!” A realist, she.... Norman
+grinned, remembering.</p>
+
+<p>He had lived there only a week altogether. And
+he had been rather longer than that installed here
+in his apartment. Yet that week would always live
+in his memory, full of warmth and color and homely
+sweetness. This week in his apartment had been
+merely barren.</p>
+
+<p>Sitting there in his living room, he looked about
+with a vague dissatisfaction. Polite comforts evidently
+did not suffice a man. The fact was that he
+was lonely....</p>
+
+<p>And his mother was coming in four days.</p>
+
+<p>He really ought to make the best of those four
+days....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p229">229</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_II_Waste_Not_Your_Hour">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter II</span>: Waste Not Your Hour
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>YES, he was lonely, that was the trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke had told him to make friends.
+But he had made friends already, and had had to
+drop them....</p>
+
+<p>Well, he must make some new friends.</p>
+
+<p>He took out his memo-book, in which he had
+written the names, addresses and telephone numbers
+of two girls he had met last week at that dance.</p>
+
+<p>They had been very interesting girls. One of
+them was a field-worker for some sort of agency
+which looked after delinquent children; she had snapping
+black eyes and curly black hair, and she had
+talked very interestingly about her work, in the intervals
+between dances. Her name was Jennie Michaelson;
+a very intelligent girl, whom he had been eager
+to know further. And she liked him. He wondered
+that he had let so long a time slip by—more than
+a week—without calling her up. He looked at his
+watch. It was only eight-thirty. She might be in
+from dinner, and they could go to a restaurant and
+talk. She lived on the West side....</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated, at the moment of going to the telephone,
+and sat there in the big chair beneath the
+bridge-lamp, looking at his memo-book. There was
+<span class="pagenum" id="p230">230</span>another new girl in it somewhere. Louise—he
+couldn’t remember her last name: a fine, healthy,
+lovely blonde, and a wonderful dancer. Yes—there
+she was: Louise Van Strohm. She was a student
+at the University of Chicago, majoring in biology.
+It was her idea of adventure to go around the world
+and down into deep seas seeing strange and curious
+forms of life, like Will Beebe. She would, too, some
+time, she said. She lived near the University. She
+was fond of music, and the concerts in Jackson Park
+were commencing. She had mentioned it herself.
+There was one to-night. Or they could go somewhere
+and dance—better still! He looked at her
+’phone number....</p>
+
+<p>Again he hesitated, wondering whether what he
+most wanted to do was talk or dance. If he wanted
+to talk, Jennie would be the more interesting; if to
+dance, Louise danced like a dream. It was difficult
+to decide which girl he most wanted to see to-night....</p>
+
+<p>He sat there in his easy chair under the lamp, trying
+to decide between Jennie and Louise.</p>
+
+<p>The clock on the mantel chimed the hour of nine.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, he had no assurance that either Jennie
+or Louise would be in at this hour. Girls had
+other things to do with their evenings than sit
+around in a furnished room waiting for the’phone
+to ring—especially girls like these. It was no way
+to go about it, to call them up at that hour. Girls
+had to be dated up beforehand. He’d be a fool
+<span class="pagenum" id="p231">231</span>to think he could get them at a moment’s notice.
+In fact, he should have dated them up for some
+evening there at the dance. By now they had forgotten
+all about him. After all, if a man asked a
+girl for her telephone number, and then didn’t call
+up for a week, she would naturally conclude that
+he couldn’t be very much interested in continuing the
+acquaintance. It would be rather embarrassing to
+call up now....</p>
+
+<p>And if he did go to see one of these girls, what
+would he say to her? A year ago, at college, he’d
+have known what to say. But he was a thousand
+years older, now. Louise was twenty, Jennie twenty-two;
+Dr. Zerneke had told him their ages. They
+were only kids. He didn’t know how to get along
+with girls of that age any more....</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, he had got along with them well
+enough that night at the dance. But that was because
+of the stimulus of the music, the costumes, and
+the drink or two that everybody had under his and
+her belt. But to see these girls again in cold blood
+... His spirit faltered at the frightful difficulties
+of talking to a strange girl....</p>
+
+<p>Well, no doubt it could be done. People did,
+somehow, get acquainted with each other.... And
+his imagination flew on to envisage a time when he
+and these girls might be better friends.... The
+trouble was, it would be awkward to be always pretending
+to have a sick wife in Colorado. Maybe
+they wouldn’t want to play around with a man who
+<span class="pagenum" id="p232">232</span>had a sick wife in Colorado. Of course, he could
+be a recent widower, if he preferred. Or a divorced
+man—one whose wife had run away: that was near
+enough to the truth.... And he speculated upon
+just what Jennie and Louise would think of a young
+divorced man with an infant child. When they knew
+him better, they would ask to see the baby. Girls
+seemed to be interested in babies—almost all girls.
+They might like him none the worse for having a
+baby.... But there was the rub. He couldn’t
+ever tell them the truth about that baby. There
+would be always an invisible barrier, in his relations
+with them, from the very beginning. It would spoil
+any friendship he might try to have with them....
+Things would come up in conversation about illegitimacy—things
+like that did come up in conversation
+with girls nowadays!—and he would have to hide
+his own thoughts. Because he couldn’t go around
+telling everybody his story. And he would be
+ashamed of having to treat these girls as if they
+were enemies from whom his thoughts must needs
+be concealed. Their friendship would be a farce
+from the outset....</p>
+
+<p>The clock chimed the half-hour.</p>
+
+<p>It was really too late to call up those girls to-night.
+Besides, he didn’t want to go out. He
+wasn’t in the mood for girls. He would stay at
+home and read a book.</p>
+
+<p>He went to the book-case, took one down at random,
+glanced through its pages, and threw it aside.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p233">233</span>After a few restless turns up and down the room he
+abruptly put on his hat.</p>
+
+<p>It was too beautiful an evening to stay indoors.
+He would take a walk in the park.</p>
+
+<p>He found himself accidentally on the street where
+he had lived at Mrs. Czermak’s.... He walked
+past the house, looking at the lighted windows. His
+old room was dark. Had they rented it to somebody
+else yet? He hadn’t asked, and they hadn’t told
+him.... The upstairs room, next to the nursery,
+showed a glow of light at the edges of the curtains.
+That was the girls’ room—Rose Czermak’s and
+Monica’s....</p>
+
+<p>What did Monica think of him?</p>
+
+<p>He turned, and walked back, on the other side
+of the street, looking at the house.</p>
+
+<p>He could make some inquiry about the baby, as an
+excuse for coming. Yes, he hadn’t told them that
+his mother was coming. He ought to do that. He
+halted.... No, it wouldn’t be very sensible to go
+to see them in his present mood. Monica might
+be there. Better let well enough alone.... He
+could telephone them about his mother.... He
+went on....</p>
+
+<p>Walking through Lincoln Park, he reached the
+Lake front. The full white moon was lifting itself
+out of the waters of the lake. He stood and watched
+it....</p>
+
+<p>What was Monica doing?</p>
+
+<p>But he reminded himself that he was supposed to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p234">234</span>have a sick wife in Colorado. Monica wouldn’t
+be thinking of him. Besides, to a girl nowadays, a
+kiss meant nothing. She had doubtless forgotten all
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>And besides, his mother was coming in four days.
+He had best keep out of trouble....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p235">235</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_III_His_Mother">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter III</span>: His Mother
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>IT was Saturday evening. His mother was coming
+in the morning. Norman looked anxiously
+about his apartment, and spent an hour emptying
+ash-trays, picking up cigarette stubs from the hearth,
+and getting his bureau drawers in order. He found
+that he had forgotten to send off his laundry this
+week. Well, he could buy some new shirts on Monday....</p>
+
+<p>He sat down, seeing his apartment with his
+mother’s eyes. She would probably find fault with
+the work of his cleaning-woman. She would smile
+when she saw that bureau drawer full of bright
+chintz which he had bought for curtains, forgetting
+that there was nobody he could ask to sew them for
+him.... Mrs. Case, it was true, had asked if there
+was anything they could do to help him get settled in
+his new place. But he couldn’t have asked them to
+make his curtains....</p>
+
+<p>He had telephoned Mrs. Czermak to let her know
+that his mother was coming, and would probably be
+over to see the baby in the morning. The news had
+seemed to upset her....</p>
+
+<p>Well, there was nothing else to do to-night. He
+would read a while and then go to bed and get some
+<span class="pagenum" id="p236">236</span>sleep. His mother was arriving on the early
+train....</p>
+
+<p>He had happened to see a copy of the Apocrypha
+in a bookshop window, and had bought it out of
+curiosity, to see who St. Thecla was. But for some
+absurd reason that apocryphal girl saint had reminded
+him in a perverse way of Isabel. He
+did not want to be reminded of Isabel.... To-night
+he opened the book, read a little of the story
+of Thecla, and fell to wondering about Isabel. She
+had been going to sail for France on the eleventh.
+That was four days ago. (It was curious what a
+perfect calendar his mind unconsciously was in these
+matters: it was four days ago that he had bought
+this book, too.) Was she on shipboard now? Or
+had she impatiently gone long before, and was she
+in Paris at this moment?</p>
+
+<p>Not that it made any difference to him....</p>
+
+<p>But he had a queer troubled dream that night, in
+which both Isabel and Monica figured—Isabel as
+a dim figure in the background, hiding her face, and
+Monica, warm and near and dear, holding out her
+hands to him appealingly....</p>
+
+<p>The alarm clock sounded.... In an hour he
+must meet his mother at the station. An hour.
+Then he could go on sleeping for five minutes longer....
+He wanted to finish that dream....</p>
+
+<p>He was awakened by an insistent ringing of the
+door-bell, and sprang up in confusion, looking at
+his watch. Good heavens!—he had overslept nearly
+<span class="pagenum" id="p237">237</span>two hours.... Was that his mother now? He
+threw on a dressing-gown and went to the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Mother!” he cried out contritely.</p>
+
+<p>“Good morning, Norman. You always were a
+sleepy-head.” She kissed him. “It’s nice to see you,
+my boy.”</p>
+
+<p>“And I didn’t meet you!” He seized her suitcase
+and packages. “How awful of me! Come in!”</p>
+
+<p>“That was all right,” she said. “What a nice
+place you have. As a matter of fact, I was rather
+glad you didn’t come. I went over to see the baby.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! You did?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. He’s a very nice baby, Norman. He looks
+exactly like you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You—you liked him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course. Now, Norman, go and have your
+bath and get dressed, and I’ll get some breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry, Mother—I’m afraid there’s not a
+thing in the house.”</p>
+
+<p>“I brought everything. I stopped at a delicatessen.
+Go along, I’ll find the kitchen. You’re still
+half asleep. You need a good cup of coffee.”</p>
+
+<p>It wasn’t quite the way he had expected it to be....
+But then, nothing ever was, he reflected as he
+hurried through his bath and into his clothes. She
+had simply and calmly walked in and taken possession....</p>
+
+<p>“Are you almost ready?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Mother. In three minutes.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p238">238</span></p>
+
+<p>He could smell the appetizing odors of bacon and
+coffee.</p>
+
+<p>“All right. I’ll put the eggs in.”</p>
+
+<p>That was just like her....</p>
+
+<p>He felt half admiring and half resentful of such
+a mother.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p239">239</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_IV_Ware_Women">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter IV</span>: ’Ware Women
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>AT breakfast, when Mrs. Overbeck had satisfied
+herself that her son’s stomach was being properly
+ministered to, they talked—Norman with some
+caution and embarrassment, but she with apparent
+ease. It gave Norman a queer feeling. One would
+not have thought from her manner that there was
+anything unusual, let alone irregular, in his situation.
+She inquired briefly and casually about Isabel (whom
+she referred to quite familiarly by that name, instead
+of by any hostile circumlocutions), and Norman was
+relieved to find that he need not make any further
+explanation in regard to her. His mother appeared
+to take Isabel’s going to Paris for granted....
+She commented on Mrs. Case and her daughters.
+“They seemed rather flustered at my visit,” she said.
+“They are all very fond of the baby,” she added.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, they are,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“By the way,” she remarked, “they asked me
+something about your wife’s health.”</p>
+
+<p>To be sure—he hadn’t warned his mother of that
+protective fiction.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” he said, “I’m supposed to be married, you
+know—on account of the baby. I told them I had
+a sick wife in Colorado. You didn’t say anything
+that would give me away, by any chance?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p240">240</span></p>
+
+<p>“Why, no, I think not. I didn’t discuss you with
+them. I just pretended not to notice the question,
+and went on talking about the baby. But you might
+have told me, Norman. You didn’t write me anything.
+All I know is what Dr. Zerneke has told me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh—you’ve seen Dr. Zerneke too?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet. I mean what she wrote to me.”</p>
+
+<p>He might have known. Doubtless his mother and
+Dr. Zerneke had been in correspondence about him
+all along. He seemed to sniff a maternal conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p>“What did she say about me?” he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, just that you were well, and about your
+work.”</p>
+
+<p>“What did she say about my work?”</p>
+
+<p>“She said you’d got a new job that paid more
+money. I was glad to hear that. I didn’t see how
+you could live on thirty dollars a week in Chicago.”</p>
+
+<p>She hadn’t known, then, about his losing that
+other job. He felt relieved.</p>
+
+<p>“How is Lucinda?” he asked. He had already
+inquired about the other members of the family.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you know how Lucinda gets—in a state
+of nerves over every little thing. Her new puppy
+is lost.”</p>
+
+<p>“What!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the new one she got from Schwartz’s. It
+just got out of the house about ten days ago and
+disappeared.”</p>
+
+<p>“I remember. It had a black spot or something.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p241">241</span></p>
+
+<p>So Gilbert Rand was mistaken! It wasn’t concerned
+with him and his baby, Lucinda’s state of
+nerves. Only her dog—of course....</p>
+
+<p>“She’s thinking of coming on while I’m here.”</p>
+
+<p>“No!” said Norman in helpless protest.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, well, you might as well let her, Norman.
+There’s plenty of room here. And your baby will
+take her mind off her lost puppy.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, then, by all means let’s have her,” said Norman
+ironically. “If my baby can assuage her
+grief—!”</p>
+
+<p>His irony was lost on his mother—as usual.
+“Yes,” she said, “I think it would do her good.”</p>
+
+<p>She had brought along her sewing-kit, and after
+breakfast sat down to do the curtains, which she
+had somehow already discovered in his bureau.</p>
+
+<p>“Now don’t let me interfere with your usual program,”
+she said. “Just go ahead and do whatever
+you want to do. And don’t let me keep any of your
+friends away.”</p>
+
+<p>He didn’t like to tell her that he hadn’t made any
+friends.... Really, he ought to bring somebody
+home, or she would think he was hiding them from
+her.... He might bring Charlie Beckett here
+some evening. Charlie was the only one at the office
+that he knew at all....</p>
+
+<p>“I really don’t know many people yet,” he confessed.
+“I’ve been so busy. I did get acquainted
+a little when I was living over at Mrs. Czermak’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="p242">242</span>place—but that’s about all. And of course there’s
+Dr. Zerneke. I’ve invited her to go out to dinner
+with us to-night, by the way.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I’d like to meet her. And now go on out
+somewhere if you want to. These curtains, and the
+dishes, will occupy me till dinner-time.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I can’t have you washing my dishes,
+Mother,” said Norman, scandalized.</p>
+
+<p>“It won’t be the first time I’ve washed your
+dishes,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll do them myself,” he said. “You’re my
+guest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be silly, Norman. Run along and leave
+me alone here for a while.”</p>
+
+<p>And after some feeble protest, he did.... He
+went over to Mrs. Czermak’s.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” he asked her, “what do you think of my
+mother?”</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him in a frightened way.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me,” she begged, “is she going to take the
+baby away?”</p>
+
+<p>“Take the baby away!” Norman echoed. “Why,
+of course not!” And then he added, wonderingly:
+“I never thought of—such a thing.”</p>
+
+<p>No, but now that he did think of it, it didn’t seem
+so impossible. If she wanted to, she would be hard
+to stop.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, did she say anything—when she was
+here?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“It wasn’t what she said. But I’m afraid!” said
+<span class="pagenum" id="p243">243</span>Mrs. Czermak, and led the way to the nursery. She
+lifted the sleeping child from his bed and held him
+close in her arms. “I don’t want her to take him
+away!” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, well,” said Norman reassuringly, “I’m sure
+she hasn’t any such idea.”</p>
+
+<p>But that evening, at dinner with his mother and
+Dr. Zerneke in the quiet restaurant he had selected,
+he was troubled by that thought....</p>
+
+<p>Well, wasn’t it what he had once gone home to
+propose?—that she take his child to raise!...
+Yes, but that was ages ago. It was the last thing
+in the world that he wanted, now, to have his son
+brought up by his family in Vickley.</p>
+
+<p>He was a little shocked to realize how much he
+had changed his mind, in the last six weeks....</p>
+
+<p>And another thing, that evening at dinner,
+bothered him—the sense that his mother and Dr.
+Zerneke were already too well acquainted—that Dr.
+Zerneke was her friend and ally, rather than his....
+There was an air of implicit secret understanding
+between them—an understanding concerning
+him.</p>
+
+<p>What were these two women up to?</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was the first time they had met, and they
+were of such different kinds! They were only trying
+hard to be polite to one another. All they had in
+common, after all, was a feminine conviction of his
+masculine helplessness when it came to babies....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p244">244</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_V_As_Usual">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter V</span>: As Usual
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>WHEN Norman’s mother had been there less
+than a week, he had settled down to a somewhat
+fretful but unprotesting acceptance of her
+presence. She had got him an efficient cleaning
+woman; she had sewed buttons on his shirts, and
+bought him a needed supply of socks and handkerchiefs.
+She waked him in the morning to the kind
+of breakfast he had always had at home. It was
+no use trying to regard her as a guest. She slipped
+easily into the familiar, authoritative, useful and
+neglected rôle of mother.... When Charlie
+Beckett, at the office, suggested to Norman one day,
+as one bachelor to another, that they have dinner
+and go to a musical comedy together that evening,
+he called up his mother and said he wouldn’t be
+home till late—leaving her alone with no more
+thought than if he had been at home in Vickley.</p>
+
+<p>(One incident may be lightly touched upon. Norman
+was not much of a drinking man, but in Charlie
+Beckett’s genial company, at the place where Charlie
+took him to get some real old-fashioned beer after
+the show, he drank enough to become rather tearily
+and beerily confidential; though even then he presented
+his troubles in a somewhat fictional disguise.
+“M’ wife ran away. Lef’ me with a baby. Nice
+little kid, too!”—something like that, and so unlike
+<span class="pagenum" id="p245">245</span>Norman in his sober senses that he preferred to
+forget it....)</p>
+
+<p>His mother had written to Lucinda telling her she
+could come Saturday. “Just for a few days,” she
+explained to Norman.... She herself had not
+said how long she was going to stay; but on Monday
+she had brought home from the station a second
+suitcase which she had checked there on her arrival,
+and he guessed that she intended to remain at least a
+fortnight. Well, there was nothing to complain of,
+surely, in this; he had invited her to come—and he
+couldn’t say that she was in his way. She did make
+him comfortable. Nevertheless her motherly presence
+secretly and unreasonably irritated him. But
+that was no new thing, either. He had been secretly
+irritated at her for the last several years.... So
+that everything was much as it had always been.</p>
+
+<p>Once, only, there flashed into his mind the curious
+tale that Gilbert Rand had told him about his father.
+He hadn’t exactly doubted the story—he had taken
+its truth for granted; but in a certain sense he had
+not really believed it. How can one believe such
+things about one’s parents? He wondered, now, if
+his mother had guessed what was going on? And if
+she had guessed, had she sat there calmly, sewing
+buttons on her husband’s shirts, knowing that he
+would get over what ailed him sooner or later? Or
+had she never dreamed of such a thing? It was
+hard to make his mother out—impossible, now, to
+tell what she knew or thought....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p246">246</span></p>
+
+<p>She saw the baby every day, and one evening
+they went together. If her alien presence exercised
+a constraint on Mrs. Czermak and her family, she
+appeared placidly unaware of it. She was friendly
+enough with them; they were formal with her—still
+suspicious, it seemed, of her intentions regarding
+the baby. Norman was ill at ease too, during
+this visit.... And thereby occurred a second and
+still more disturbing incident in Norman’s relations
+with Monica.</p>
+
+<p>It was a rainy evening, late in the week, and he
+had’phoned for a taxi to take them back home. As
+they were getting into the taxi, his mother remembered
+that she had left her bag in the nursery; and
+he went back to get it. Monica found it for him, and
+came down to the door with him. It was the first time
+they had been alone together since that night of the
+kiss, and they were both embarrassed. Doubtless it
+was this embarrassment which provoked him to a
+silly speech. As they passed the door of his old
+room, he remarked: “I suppose you’re bringing
+morning coffee to somebody else now?”</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him reproachfully, and they halted
+outside the room. “Do you think so?” she said.
+She turned the knob. “See—it’s still empty—waiting
+for you to come back.” And somehow or other
+they were there together in that empty room, with
+the door slowly swinging shut behind them. As it
+swung shut, the shadows closed in and obliterated
+the light from the flickering gas-jet in the hall. In
+<span class="pagenum" id="p247">247</span>the darkness Norman’s hand touched Monica’s
+hungrily. And this time he was not surprised that
+next moment they were in one another’s arms.</p>
+
+<p>No, he was not surprised. Monica no longer
+seemed to him a child. And he knew that he
+wanted this—her arms about him, her kisses on his
+mouth. He wanted it all so much that he couldn’t
+think of anything else at the moment.</p>
+
+<p>“Darling!” he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>Then, in the darkness, she whispered to him: “I
+can’t stand it, Norman! I want you too much! I
+don’t care if you <em>are</em> married!...</p>
+
+<p>“Now you know!” And her mouth passionately
+met his again.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you want me?” she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>And what could a young man answer but—</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, of course I do!”</p>
+
+<p>“Then come back and live with us again—and
+don’t let her take the baby away!” she whispered
+pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll talk about it later,” he said, half brought
+back to sanity by this alien note ... half aware
+that this was all mad folly, until her kiss dizzied his
+senses again....</p>
+
+<p>“You must go, now, dear,” she said presently,
+pushing him gently out.</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord!” thought Norman, as he ran down
+to the waiting taxi.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p248">248</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VI_Night_Thoughts">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VI</span>: Night Thoughts
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HE could not get to sleep for a long time.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, he could not take Monica’s proposal
+seriously. They had both been a little mad.
+She hadn’t known what she was saying. She didn’t
+really mean it. He couldn’t take advantage of a
+young girl’s romantic emotions. It would be simply
+too caddish.... The best thing to do would be to
+ignore the incident. Yes, the next time they met
+he would just behave as though nothing had happened.
+No doubt she would be grateful and relieved....</p>
+
+<p>This mood of chivalry lasted for perhaps three
+quarters of an hour, when abruptly his thoughts
+took another turn. He had a sudden vision of her
+looking at him with scornful eyes. Women didn’t
+appreciate that kind of masculine chivalry. It would
+hurt her pride, and she would despise him....</p>
+
+<p>Well, what could he say to her? Not, after their
+kisses to-night, that he didn’t really care for her
+that much.... It would be a lie....</p>
+
+<p>Well, if he felt that way, why not take her up?</p>
+
+<p>The trouble was that it was impracticable. He
+couldn’t go to live there again. Mrs. Case would
+have something to say about that. She had foreseen
+this very situation. A realistic mother, Mrs.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p249">249</span>Case.... No, it wouldn’t do at all. Agreeable as
+Monica’s proposal was, as a young man of the world
+he had to realize that it must be foregone....</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, he had this apartment. And after his
+mother had gone back to Vickley—</p>
+
+<p>Yes, why not?</p>
+
+<p>Monica, he told himself, was old enough to know
+what she was doing. He wasn’t exactly seducing
+her. She had made the offer herself. And he would
+be a fool to say no....</p>
+
+<p>He played in imagination with the idea, and it
+was infinitely alluring.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, he must not let Monica enter into this
+relationship with any false romantic ideas of its
+seriousness. He would have to make it clear to her
+that it was just—well, a temporary and passing sort
+of thing....</p>
+
+<p>If Monica were older, and had had more experience
+in the ways of the world, she would take all this
+for granted. But that was not the case. And the
+thought of making these explanations to her was
+not very pleasant.</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact, it would all be terribly serious
+to her. She would be committing a sin, for the sake
+of their love. Because she thought he was a married
+man.... It was hardly fair to her....</p>
+
+<p>But if he told her the truth, she would want him to
+marry her....</p>
+
+<p>That, of course, was entirely out of the question.
+The deception would have to be kept up—or else,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p250">250</span>for that idea didn’t please his imagination, he would
+have to make clear to her why he didn’t want to get
+married....</p>
+
+<p>He could imagine her saying reproachfully: “You
+mean—you don’t want to get married to <em>me</em>!”</p>
+
+<p>Well, all right, take it that way. He supposed he
+would get married some day. But he had no intention
+of doing so for a long time....</p>
+
+<p>“But why don’t you want to marry me, Norman?”</p>
+
+<p>What could he answer to that? He might say
+that this wasn’t really love.... But she would indignantly
+deny that. And she would be right, so
+far as she was concerned. It really was love, with
+her.... And what was it with him? He remembered
+how he had walked up and down in front of
+her house, wanting desperately to go in and see her....
+If he had felt that way about a young woman
+of his own social class, would he have doubted
+whether it was love?... Yes—that was why he
+was subjecting his emotions to so brutal an inquisition:
+because she was a stenographer and the daughter
+of a woman who ran a rooming-house! That
+was why he must not permit himself to think of this
+as love! Madness, folly, a young man’s casual
+amusement, a convenience, a chance not to be passed
+up—call it anything but love! But what was the
+truth?</p>
+
+<p>He wanted her. He liked her. He was happy
+in her presence. He thought about her all the
+time ... the curve of her mouth, the tilt of her
+<span class="pagenum" id="p251">251</span>chin, the steady look out of her eyes, the way she
+tossed back her bobbed hair, the smoothness of her
+arms, the poise of her young body—he knew these
+charms by heart.... Wasn’t that love?</p>
+
+<p>Oh, not so romantic and poetic as some sorts of
+love, perhaps. But it was real. Oh, it was real
+enough!</p>
+
+<p>And yet he didn’t want to marry her.</p>
+
+<p>Well, and why didn’t he? Simply because she
+wasn’t the sort of girl he had ever thought of
+marrying. Because she was a stenographer. Because
+her mother ran a rooming-house. Because
+her family was poor. Because she had none of the
+airs and graces of his own familiar middle-class
+world.... And because he was an Overbeck of
+Vickley.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it <em>was</em> mere snobbishness.... But still—could
+he and a girl of such a different background
+get along together as man and wife?</p>
+
+<p>That, however, implied that he still belonged to
+Vickley. He reminded himself that he had actually
+left all that sort of thing behind him. He wasn’t
+his father’s son, any more. He could marry anybody
+he liked.... And what could be a more appropriate
+wife for a struggling young man of uncertain
+prospects than a girl like Monica, able to take
+care of herself and make the best of narrow circumstances?
+It wasn’t at all a question of her fitting
+into his world, but of his fitting into hers! And the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p252">252</span>answer to that seemed to be the fact that he had been
+very happy living there at her house....</p>
+
+<p>He hastily summoned up in his mind the differences
+between them. Her lack of education....
+He was interested in art and ideas, in abstractions
+which she would never be able to understand....
+Not, indeed, that most girls cared much for art and
+ideas; but at least some girls knew how to talk about
+them....</p>
+
+<p>It did not seem to him, just now, to matter
+greatly. After all, one did not marry a wife for the
+sake of intellectual conversation. And Monica was
+no goose, either. She had a sensible little head on
+her young shoulders. And her own struggle with
+poverty had taught her what life was.... When
+she knew the truth about his child—she wouldn’t be
+shocked....</p>
+
+<p>His mother might not like such a match, but she
+would have to accept it.... He was running his
+life to suit himself, not his family.... If he and
+Monica could be happy together, what else mattered?</p>
+
+<p>Abruptly there flashed into his mind what his
+friend Hal would say about such a marriage. “<i lang="fr">Nostalgia
+de la boue.</i>” He had always chaffed Norman
+with having a common, earthy streak in him—just
+because, before he too had fallen under the spell of
+Hal’s ethereal inamorata, he had entertained a sufficiently
+realistic college-boy passion for a pretty
+young waitress in Boston.... Well, his affair with
+<span class="pagenum" id="p253">253</span>that girl had probably been healthier than his and
+Hal’s mooning over that art-struck vixen Isabel....
+Homesickness for the mud? Possibly. If he
+hadn’t been an Overbeck from Vickley, he’d probably
+have married that waitress back in Cambridge.
+It was shame at finding that he couldn’t take that
+affair as lightly as the young-gentlemanly code demanded,
+that had made him break off with her. He
+had never told anybody but Hal how he really felt
+about that girl; and Hal had only laughed at him.
+But she had given him a taste of simple, earthy young
+love, reckless and sweet; and it was the memory,
+somewhere in the back of his mind, of her unhesitating
+and passionate surrender, that had made him so
+afraid of Monica. Well, he had been his father’s
+son at Cambridge; he couldn’t marry his waitress
+sweetheart. But he could marry Monica now—if
+he was really free from Vickley. <i lang="fr">Nostalgia de la
+boue?</i> Say rather homesickness for the honest,
+fragrant earth! In Isabel he had had enough dealings
+with the unattainable stars; and in his Vickley
+fiancée, with the middle region of respectable compromise....</p>
+
+<p>Vickley would hear about his marriage with Monica,
+of course; and Vickley would think it a final degradation.
+Vickley would take it as his surrender
+of any hope of ever making good and coming back.
+Well, let them! He did not want to go back to
+Vickley. And if marrying Monica prevented that,
+so much the better!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p254">254</span></p>
+
+<p>There was nothing about Monica’s family that he
+really need be ashamed of. They were self-respecting,
+hard-working people. He had liked them all....
+Something Dr. Zerneke had said, when she was
+scolding him, came into his mind: “If one of those
+girls were your wife, your behavior would be admirable.”
+Well, why shouldn’t Monica become his
+wife?</p>
+
+<p>Yes, why not tell her the truth and ask her to
+marry him?</p>
+
+<p>But he would rather wait until his mother had
+gone back to Vickley.... And it wasn’t a thing
+to be decided on impulse. He would take the rest
+of the week to think it over....</p>
+
+<p>A week to think it over.... And he fell asleep
+to dream of happiness in Monica’s passionate young
+arms....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p255">255</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VII_A_Letter">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VII</span>: A Letter
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HE was unusually gay at breakfast, and went
+whistling to his office.... Of course, he
+must not tell Monica just yet; but he might manage
+a reassuring touch or word when he went in the
+evening with his mother to see the baby.... His
+imagination was busy with thoughts of their life together....</p>
+
+<p>But something happened that day to disturb the
+happy tenor of his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon there was a telephone call from
+Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve just had a letter from Isabel,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“From Paris?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“No. From Michigan.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I supposed she had sailed a week or more
+ago!”</p>
+
+<p>“It seems that she hasn’t. And this letter concerns
+you. In fact, it’s really intended for you.
+I’m sending it special delivery to your apartment.
+It’s something you’ll probably want to discuss with
+your mother.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what in the world—?”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll find out when you read her letter.” And
+that was all she would say.</p>
+
+<p>What could Isabel have to say to him? She
+<span class="pagenum" id="p256">256</span>256 An Unmarried Father
+hadn’t decided that she wanted to keep the baby
+after all? Girls, he knew, did sometimes change
+their minds about such things. But it was too late—the
+baby was his, now. And it was going to stay his.</p>
+
+<p>But he did not allow himself to think about it.
+He was working with Charlie Beckett on the Pearson
+account—an important job—and it needed all
+his attention. Charlie seemed to like his ideas....</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s a letter for you,” said his mother, when
+he came home that afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, thanks,” he said. “Something from Dr. Zerneke.”</p>
+
+<p>He went into his room, tore open the envelope
+nervously, put aside Dr. Zerneke’s accompanying
+note, and glanced rapidly through the sheets covered
+with Isabel’s tiny handwriting.... But it was a
+long and prolix letter, and this rapid survey told him
+nothing, so he dropped into a comfortable chair,
+lighted a cigarette, and began it again at the beginning
+in a more leisurely manner:</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Dr. Martha—</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve delayed my sailing for a few weeks, because
+I seem to need a longer rest before my ocean trip.
+I should have taken your advice and stayed another
+week in the hospital, I realize now. But I expect
+to be all right in another week or so.</p>
+
+<p>“In the meantime, since signing over the baby to
+Norman, I’ve had plenty of time to think about it,
+and I feel that perhaps I ought to make a suggestion.
+You will, of course, use your own discretion in passing
+<span class="pagenum" id="p257">257</span>it on. If it’s out of place, please throw this
+in the wastebasket and forget about it.</p>
+
+<p>“I hadn’t, of course, realized that Norman was as
+much interested in the baby as all that. When he
+didn’t come to see me at the hospital any more, I
+thought he had gone back to Vickley and dropped
+the matter entirely. It was really quite a shock
+to get those documents. I saw that I had done him
+an injustice. (It really makes me a little ashamed
+of my own lack of the proper parental instincts.
+Norman and my baby! It seems very odd, and
+rather sweet. He will make a nice father.)</p>
+
+<p>“I feel awkward about making my suggestion.
+Not knowing anything about any other plans he may
+have, I can’t be sure my idea is not an unwelcome
+impertinence. If the girl in Vickley, the one he was
+engaged to, is going to marry him anyway and take
+the baby, then of course you won’t say anything to
+him about this. But Roberta writes me that he is
+living in Chicago now, so perhaps the Vickley engagement
+is all off.—You see, I’m very much in the
+dark about it all. You didn’t tell me anything; and
+I suppose it’s really none of my business. But it
+occurs to me that it may be almost as embarrassing
+for a man to have an illegitimate baby as for a girl.
+And I can’t forget that under those circumstances
+he was generous and considerate enough to offer to
+marry me. I appreciated the offer, but since I wasn’t
+going to keep the baby there was no reason for accepting
+it. But now that he has the baby, perhaps
+<span class="pagenum" id="p258">258</span>I ought to make him a similar offer. It would
+be, of course, and you must make that clear to him,
+only a legal fiction for his and the child’s benefit.
+I would go on to Paris immediately, and he could
+divorce me for desertion; or if he wanted the divorce
+more quickly, so as to marry somebody else, then I
+could get a divorce in Paris as soon as I had established
+my residence there. And as a divorced man
+he would be in a less awkward position about the
+baby. I only make it as a suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>“I tried to paint when I first got here, but gave
+it up. I shouldn’t have attempted any work so
+soon. But it was a reaction from the hospital atmosphere,
+and the sense of being a failure when my milk
+gave out—I wanted to do something I was equal to
+doing. But I shall have to wait a while longer—Art
+is off me for the present. The truth is, I feel discouraged.
+But in Paris, I know, it will all come
+back.</p>
+
+<p>“I keep wondering about Norman and the baby.
+I had no idea he was going to be such a Tolstoian
+saint, and atone for the sin of his youth in that
+fashion! And did his family throw him out when
+the scandal broke, the way mine did? You might
+tell a fellow something about it all! Anyway, if my
+suggestion should be accepted, I’ll be glad to stop in
+Chicago for a day on my way to New York, and
+fix it up accordingly with him.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not trying to thank you for all you’ve done
+for me—you and St. Thecla. I’ll try to say it with
+<span class="pagenum" id="p259">259</span>paint in Paris. I hope Norman won’t take too long
+to decide, so I can have it off my mind and go with an
+easy conscience.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+ <span style="margin-right: 3.0em;">“Faithfully yours,</span><br>
+ “<span class="smcap">Isabel Drury</span>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>Norman laid down the letter and whispered bitterly
+to himself:</p>
+
+<p>“She can go to hell!”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p260">260</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_VIII_A_Sociological_Interlude">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter VIII</span>: A Sociological Interlude
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>DR. ZERNEKE had suggested that he would
+want to discuss this matter with his mother.
+But that was just what he did not want to do.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve something to attend to,” he said. “Would
+you mind going to dinner and to see the baby alone
+this evening?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course not. I’ll get myself a bite right here.
+Just run along.”</p>
+
+<p>He hurried out, saying that he would be back late
+that evening.</p>
+
+<p>He tried to get Dr. Zerneke on the telephone,
+but she was not in. Probably she would be, he
+reflected, at ten o’clock. He would go around to see
+her then.</p>
+
+<p>He did not want to go back to his apartment. His
+mother would notice his nervous manner, and wonder
+what was the matter. (Though she never asked
+any questions—that was one comfort.)</p>
+
+<p>He walked in Lincoln Park for an hour or two.
+What he felt like doing was to sit down and write
+Isabel a cold and decisive rejection of her proposal.
+He framed and re-framed that letter in his mind.
+In one of the versions it went like this:</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Isabel—Thank you for your kind offer.
+You had your own reasons for rejecting mine, and I
+<span class="pagenum" id="p261">261</span>have mine for rejecting yours. I wish you success
+in your artistic career. Sincerely yours.”</p>
+
+<p>Another version ran: “Dear Isabel—I have no
+desire to be made respectable. Your offer is declined.”</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact, none of these versions were as
+epigrammatic as he could have wished, or did anything
+like justice to his feelings.</p>
+
+<p>He was, of course, at a disadvantage. She had
+not addressed him directly. He might write an informal
+letter to Dr. Zerneke, and ask her to send
+it on. It might begin: “Dear Dr. Zerneke—You tell
+me that Isabel Drury has offered to marry me, in
+order to simplify matters in regard to my child.
+Well, a great deal of water has flowed under the
+bridge since I made a similar offer to her. In the
+meantime I have the child, and the marital farce
+seems quite unnecessary.” Something as casual and
+unemotional as that....</p>
+
+<p>But he ought to talk to somebody before he wrote
+to her. Not his mother—no. And Dr. Zerneke was
+the only other person he could talk to about it.</p>
+
+<p>Would she urge him—he wondered suddenly—to
+accept Isabel’s proposal? For the sake of the
+child? That had been her reason for everything so
+far. His own feelings were never considered in
+the least....</p>
+
+<p>Of course, marriage with Isabel <em>would</em> (along
+with his acknowledgment of paternity) legitimate
+his son, according to the laws of the State of Illinois.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p262">262</span>He knew that. He had looked it up at the Crerar
+library. In California, subsequent marriage of the
+parents wasn’t necessary for legitimation; the child
+would be legitimated simply by his taking it into his
+home and treating it as if it were legitimate. In
+New Mexico a process in court sufficed. In New
+York, on the other hand, under English common
+law, subsequent marriage did not legitimate the
+child—though perhaps the original relationship
+could be legally construed as a common-law marriage.
+It was all helter-skelter and ridiculous—like
+the divorce laws. But he happened to live in Illinois.
+It <em>would</em> make a difference.</p>
+
+<p>He wondered why his father hadn’t suggested it....
+He had known, of course, that Isabel had refused.
+Had he taken that as final? It wasn’t like
+him, to let anybody’s wishes stand in the way of
+what he thought correct and proper. There must
+have been some other reason.... To be sure,
+now that the scandal was out, marriage with Isabel
+wouldn’t make the thing any more decent in the
+eyes of Vickley. But it would settle the legitimacy
+question. His son could never be called a—— Norman
+choked on the word even in his thoughts....</p>
+
+<p>Irrelevantly and bitterly, he reflected that it might
+have been kinder to his son to let him be adopted in
+the first place by some married couple. He would
+never, then, have known the secret of his birth.
+He would have considered himself the son of Mr.
+and Mrs.——whoever they were....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p263">263</span></p>
+
+<p>But no, he would have found out, some time. And
+then he would always have wondered who his real
+father was.... Yes, and his mother, too, of
+course....</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to Norman that he mustn’t let his son
+grow up with a resentment against his mother for
+deserting him. A story would have to be concocted
+that wouldn’t hurt his feelings.... Norman remembered
+what Gilbert had said that time—about
+hypocrisy. Yes, that was the way it started. Well,
+there was a good deal to be said for hypocrisy, after
+all. It made things so much simpler.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at his watch. He hadn’t had any
+dinner, and it was nearly nine o’clock. That was
+silly. He would go and get something to eat.</p>
+
+<p>But instead, he went to the Crerar library.</p>
+
+<p>Some people, in their troubles, solace themselves
+with drink, others with statistics.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, Norman was a lawyer—or had been.
+What he had so far seen of the legal attempts to
+deal with the problems of illegitimacy only reënforced
+his secret contempt for Law. But in his recent
+reading he had come across approving references
+to recent legislation in Norway and Sweden, by
+which children born out of wedlock were given, entirely
+or almost, the same rights as others. He was
+thumbing over the card catalogue looking for information
+on this Scandinavian Utopia, when he came
+upon the title: “Marriage Laws in Soviet Russia.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, let’s see how the Bolsheviks handle this
+<span class="pagenum" id="p264">264</span>thing,” he said to himself, and turned in a slip for
+the pamphlet.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced through its pages rapidly. Ah! Section
+133. Note I. “Children descending from parents
+who are not married have equal rights with
+those descending from parents living in registered
+marriage.” He read on. Section 140 required an
+unmarried woman who becomes pregnant to give notice
+to the Bureau of Vital Statistics “not later than
+three months before the birth of her child,” together
+with the name and address of the father. Section
+141 provided that upon receipt of the notice, the
+Bureau should issue a citation upon the man named,
+who would have two weeks in which to deny paternity.
+Further sections dealt with the court inquiry
+by which paternity should be established. The man
+held liable as father was to be held responsible for
+his share in the expenses of gestation, delivery, and
+maintenance of the child....</p>
+
+<p>Norman felt a little disappointed. This did not
+seem so frightfully revolutionary. A court process
+to determine paternity was no new thing in the history
+of the world. He remembered one in Vickley
+last winter—he had gone to Magistrate Cooley’s
+court out of curiosity. A girl had charged a neighboring
+storekeeper with being the father of her
+child. Under cross-examination she broke down and
+confessed that it was really not he but a young fellow
+out of a job. She wanted a father for her child
+who could support it properly.... Norman wondered
+<span class="pagenum" id="p265">265</span>if things like that happened in Soviet Russia.
+Human nature being what it was, he didn’t see why
+not!</p>
+
+<p>He turned the pages of the pamphlet idly, and
+his glance rested on this passage: “160. Children
+have no right to the property of their parents, nor
+parents to the property of their children. 161.
+Parents shall be bound to provide board and maintenance
+for their minor children and for children
+who are indigent and unable to work.” That reminded
+him—in Soviet Russia, he had heard, there
+was a different kind of economic system, which left
+nothing much for anybody to inherit. That, of
+course, would simplify this whole matter of legitimacy.
+It was in order to protect the inheritance
+rights of the legal family that illegitimate children
+had been so cruelly penalized the world over. He
+remembered a lecture to that effect at law school.
+And these Bolsheviks weren’t concerned with defending
+property rights. That was the real difference
+between Moscow and Vickley. If there weren’t
+any inheritance rights involved, there wasn’t any
+reason to deny their human rights to children born
+out of wedlock—nothing to make a fuss about at all!</p>
+
+<p>But he wasn’t living in poverty-stricken and revolutionary
+Russia. He was living in prosperous
+America, where the legal family had property rights
+to be defended against the claims of bastards. That
+was, it occurred to him, the real reason why he was
+now an outcast from Vickley respectability. If men
+<span class="pagenum" id="p266">266</span>were permitted to do what he had done, what would
+become of the Family, in its legal, sacred, property-inheriting
+sense? It would mean red ruin and the
+breaking up of close-corporation homes, to be sure....
+And his father—Norman could appreciate now
+the old man’s grim idealism—he was battling stubbornly
+against his own respectable Vickley world,
+attempting to bring his grandson into that close corporation
+in spite of a bar sinister....</p>
+
+<p>“Board and maintenance”—that was all that Norman
+himself, set adrift from family protection, could
+seriously hope to offer his son: that, and his mere
+paternal love and companionship. He had no longer
+any illusions about the possibility of any great success
+in the advertising business—he would do well if
+he hung on to his job. And that was all he really
+wanted to give the boy, if the truth were told—an
+upbringing, and then freedom to make what he
+wanted to of his life! But J. J. Overbeck could
+offer his grandson the prospect not merely of a legal
+career, but of lordship in the small town of Vickley:
+a snug income from rents, mortgages, government
+bonds, and steel securities—and, with these, pride
+and power.</p>
+
+<p>Which would the boy choose?</p>
+
+<p>But at two months of age, the boy had no choice.
+Norman had to choose for him.... He might
+make it easy for his father, by marrying Isabel before
+she sailed for France. That, of course, was
+<span class="pagenum" id="p267">267</span>what Dr. Zerneke would want him to do. For the
+child’s sake.</p>
+
+<p>No!</p>
+
+<p>He would be damned if he would marry that
+girl—to make his son one of the little lords of
+Vickley.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up at the library clock.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes of ten.</p>
+
+<p>He would tell Dr. Zerneke that there were
+limits to what a father should be asked to do.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p268">268</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_IX_On_Taking_a_Girl_at_Her_Word">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter IX</span>: On Taking a Girl at Her Word
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>DR. ZERNEKE was in when he arrived, and
+the coffee was steaming.</p>
+
+<p>“How is your mother enjoying her visit?” she
+asked, pouring him a cup.</p>
+
+<p>“All right, I guess.” He drank his coffee at a
+gulp. “Well, I’ve read Isabel’s letter....”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to know what you think.”</p>
+
+<p>“What does your mother say?”</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t asked her.... And I’m not going
+to.”</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke shrugged her shoulders. “I really
+don’t want to get mixed up in this,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“But you can tell me what you think!”</p>
+
+<p>“And be blamed afterwards....”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve got to talk it over with somebody!”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s your mother,” she reminded him.</p>
+
+<p>“But you know Isabel, and she doesn’t!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, the only thing I feel like advising you is—not
+to do anything rash.”</p>
+
+<p>“Such as what?”</p>
+
+<p>“Such as taking Isabel at her word in a hurry,
+without having a chance to think it all over.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t want me to marry her?” he asked, in
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p269">269</span></p>
+
+<p>“I don’t care whether you marry her or not.
+That’s entirely up to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m glad you feel that way about it,” he said. “I
+thought you’d say I <em>ought</em> to do it.”</p>
+
+<p>His relief was so plain that she went on, with a
+smile: “We don’t advise girls, in similar circumstances,
+to marry the fathers of their children—not,
+I mean, just to be made respectable; I should think
+the same considerations would apply to a man.
+After all, you’ve gone through the worst of it, now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” he said, “it isn’t just me. Marrying
+her would serve to legitimate my son—and
+nothing else, in this state, will.”</p>
+
+<p>“That doesn’t matter so much,” said Dr. Zerneke.
+“In fact, I don’t think it matters at all, the
+way things have been arranged. It’s a mere legal
+quibble. Socially speaking, an illegitimate child is
+one whose father does not give him his name, support
+and protection. Your child is very well provided
+for in all those respects. He’s merely lacking
+a mother. But that is scarcely a reason for your
+marrying Isabel, when there are other girls in the
+world.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then what <em>would</em> be a reason for my marrying
+her?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“If you were in love with each other, that would
+be a fairly good reason,” said Dr. Zerneke.</p>
+
+<p>Norman laughed, a little grimly. “Then it’s entirely
+out of the question,” he said. “Because we’re
+not. Not in the least. Besides, that isn’t the proposition
+<span class="pagenum" id="p270">270</span>to be considered. She says very plainly in
+her letter that it would be only a matter of legal
+form. A marital farce, she calls it. We would
+never live together. She would go on to Paris, and
+get a divorce.”</p>
+
+<p>The argument was not going quite as he had expected.
+In fact, it was almost as if he were arguing
+in favor of Isabel’s plan.</p>
+
+<p>“You would be quite willing that it should be only
+a matter of form?” Dr. Zerneke asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I certainly shouldn’t think of trying to persuade
+her to make it a real marriage—if <em>that’s</em> what you
+mean!”</p>
+
+<p>“You wouldn’t?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course not. We talked all that out, the
+time I went to see her at the hospital. She doesn’t
+want to be a wife and mother.”</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke opened a drawer and took out a
+sheet of paper. “I came across the report of our
+psychiatrist on her,” she said, “and had some of it
+copied. Would you like to see it? It might amuse
+you. We go about these things in a very scientific
+fashion nowadays.”</p>
+
+<p>He read the typewritten sheet.</p>
+
+<p><i>“Case H 15278. Unmarried mother who refuses
+to keep her child.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>“Report of Dr. A. B. Fishwanger, psychiatrist
+(extract):</i></p>
+
+<p>“Her feeling of hostility toward maternity is thus
+<span class="pagenum" id="p271">271</span>accounted for as a repression of the psychic conflict
+originating in her father-complex, and expressing itself
+in her artistic ambitions. She is convinced that
+if she allowed herself to accept the full rôle of
+motherhood, she would never get a chance to be an
+artist. Something might undoubtedly be said for
+this view on strictly realistic grounds. But it would
+be truer to say that if she allowed herself to become
+interested in her child, she might stop wanting to be
+an artist. This is what she is really afraid of. If
+her child had been born in wedlock, she would
+probably have rebelled a little at her fate, and then
+settled down, as the saying goes, and become a sufficiently
+devoted mother. But she has deliberately
+managed the affair so as to keep what she calls her
+freedom.</p>
+
+<p>“A thorough analysis, lasting over several months,
+would probably be required to resolve her psychic
+conflict, which appears to be of a very deep-seated
+nature. (To this conflict is probably due, in view
+of the absence of other findings, the premature drying
+up of her milk.) A briefer analysis might have
+some considerable value, but on account of the resistance
+of the subject even this is out of the question.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t you imagine Isabel being interviewed by
+that psychiatrist?” said Dr. Zerneke, smiling. “I
+must say I rather sympathize with her. Still, it does
+throw some light on her psychology.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose she was in a state of conflict about
+it,” said Norman. “Still, she made up her mind.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p272">272</span>You don’t think anything has happened to change
+it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think she’s probably in a very difficult situation
+just now. Undoubtedly she is finding out that she
+is more of a woman than she was willing to admit.
+Having a baby does something like that—it starts
+all the glandular secretions that create tenderness
+and devotion. She’s done her best to fight those
+feelings down, but they’re there. She can’t escape
+them. After all, it’s nothing unusual. Sometimes
+girls think beforehand that they are going to hate
+their illegitimate babies—but they generally don’t.
+And it’s quite the ordinary thing for a girl who has
+given her baby away to be sorry she’s done it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But she doesn’t say she’s sorry,” Norman objected.</p>
+
+<p>“I think that might possibly be read between the
+lines.”</p>
+
+<p>“It never occurred to me. You think she wants
+her baby?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t pretend to speak for her. But that might
+be one explanation of her offer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not if she were going on to Paris,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“She might not go on to Paris, then.”</p>
+
+<p>“But she says definitely that she would!”</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt she means it. But how do you know
+what would happen to you two young people after
+you get married? You both have families. They
+<span class="pagenum" id="p273">273</span>would have something to say about it. You might
+find yourselves boxed up in a house together the rest
+of your lives. That’s why I suggest that you think
+twice about marrying her.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see what you mean. But if I went up to
+Michigan and we were quietly married there—who
+would know about it?”</p>
+
+<p>“All the newspapers in the United States, I expect.
+And your mother is here, as you seem to
+forget. You couldn’t marry without telling her.”</p>
+
+<p>“I could make some business excuse for my trip
+to Michigan. She wouldn’t know till it was all
+over, and Isabel on the boat. Then it would be
+too late for our families to interfere.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do as you please. But don’t expect me to be
+surprised if Isabel comes back with you from Michigan
+to meet your mother.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aren’t you rather cynical, Dr. Zerneke? I
+think I could trust her. I’m sure of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not suggesting that she has any intention of
+double-crossing you. That’s not the point. If she
+came back with you it would be because you had invited
+her to.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why should I do that?” he asked coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“You were in love with her once. And she’s your
+child’s mother. It would be the most natural thing
+in the world.”</p>
+
+<p>“You really think she’d stay with me if I asked
+her?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p274">274</span></p>
+
+<p>“Do you really want her to stay? Then the only
+way to find out is to ask her. If that’s what you
+want.”</p>
+
+<p>“It wouldn’t really mean giving up her career,”
+said Norman reflectively. “There would be time
+enough for that, later.”</p>
+
+<p>“It would be a decisive step, for her. I doubt if
+she’ll have any career, if she marries you now. But
+that is her own lookout. It’s nothing for you to
+worry about—except as it might mean having a discontented
+wife on your hands in Vickley.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why in Vickley?”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you support a wife on your present job?”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose not. She’d have to work.”</p>
+
+<p>“Has she ever done any work?”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t think I ought to marry her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not trying to run your affairs for you, Norman.
+But I think you ought to understand what
+you may be getting into. Isabel is probably feeling
+much more like a mother than an artist, just now.
+If you want to capture her, this is undoubtedly your
+chance. And in justice to her, I don’t think you
+ought to accept her offer unless you are willing to
+urge her to make it a real marriage. But that is
+not a thing you can do out of mere generosity to her—nor
+is it really necessary to do because of the child.
+It all depends on how you feel about her. Do you
+want her as your wife?—That’s the real question,
+Norman. I don’t know how you feel about that.”</p>
+
+<p>Norman rose and walked up and down the room.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p275">275</span>“All this is new to me,” he said. “I can’t quite believe
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Take your time and think it over. Talk to your
+mother about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“That would mean taking the whole family into
+my confidence. I don’t want any more family conferences.
+And besides, it’s something that can’t be
+delayed indefinitely.”</p>
+
+<p>“She won’t go till she hears from you. I repeat
+that the only question is, do you want her for a
+wife?”</p>
+
+<p>Norman kept on walking back and forth unhappily.</p>
+
+<p>“She’s treated me atrociously,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor smiled. “Now you’ll have a chance to
+revenge yourself—by marrying her.”</p>
+
+<p>He paid no attention to that remark. “She
+doesn’t deserve to ever see her baby again,” he said
+bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>And, after a moment:</p>
+
+<p>“I ought to hate her!”</p>
+
+<p>“And instead, it seems, you still love her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—damn her!”</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Zerneke laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“You think it’s funny, do you?” Norman said indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>“Promise me this,” said Dr. Zerneke, “that you’ll
+take a week to think it over.”</p>
+
+<p>“A week?”</p>
+
+<p>Something clicked in his memory. He realized
+<span class="pagenum" id="p276">276</span>that he had been going to take a week to think about
+marrying Monica....</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Suppose you postpone your decision till
+next Saturday—or Sunday. And then tell me what
+you’ve decided.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” he said meekly.</p>
+
+<p>“Till next Sunday, then.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p277">277</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_X_Which">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter X</span>: Which?
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>HE walked in Lincoln Park for a while before
+going home.</p>
+
+<p>That damned letter from Isabel! Of course it
+had upset him....</p>
+
+<p>Anyway, he oughtn’t to put any confidence in Dr.
+Zerneke’s guesses as to Isabel’s feelings about marriage.
+He knew Isabel as well as Dr. Zerneke did—better!
+She was incapable of being in love with
+anybody or anything except her art. She meant just
+what she had said in her letter. If he married her,
+it would be a mere formality for the child’s benefit.
+Nothing more. Why should he suppose the marriage
+would mean more to her? She had expressed
+herself plainly enough in her letter. Why should
+he give her an opportunity to insult him again?</p>
+
+<p>She might be a little discouraged about her art
+just now—but it was all she really cared anything
+about. She wasn’t human. She wasn’t a woman
+at all. She was what Hal had said about her in a
+poem—she was a pixie ... or a leafy shadow in
+the spring moonlight that seemed like a girl until
+one tried to clasp it in one’s arms....</p>
+
+<p>Monica was real. Monica was a true flesh-and-blood
+girl. Monica could love....</p>
+
+<p>Why was he condemned still to be haunted by this
+ghost of his lost youth? Why couldn’t he forget
+<span class="pagenum" id="p278">278</span>her? Why wouldn’t she let him forget her? How
+like her this letter was!—in offering a stone for
+bread....</p>
+
+<p>Even if in the discouragement of the moment she
+should agree to try being his wife, that would
+mean nothing. That marriage would be foredoomed
+to failure. She had said it herself, that day in the
+hospital. She would never really belong to him.
+He would be clasping her body, but her thoughts,
+her soul, would be far away, in a world he could
+not enter.... They would come to hate each
+other....</p>
+
+<p>Unless—unless what Dr. Zerneke said about her
+was true....</p>
+
+<p>But it wasn’t true. He knew better than to believe
+that....</p>
+
+<p>It wasn’t quite fair to Monica—to think of marrying
+her with that ghost hovering in the background....</p>
+
+<p>And if he were going to moon over Isabel all his
+life, he might as well marry her and be done with
+it....</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps he was so cursed that he would rather be
+miserable with Isabel than happy with Monica....</p>
+
+<p>He would have to give her an answer, one way
+or the other, soon. If he said “no,” he might regret
+it all his life....</p>
+
+<p>If he said “yes,” he was throwing himself into a
+whirlpool of doubt and misery....</p>
+
+<p>But he didn’t have to decide right now. He ought
+<span class="pagenum" id="p279">279</span>to get some sleep. He had a job to go to in the
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>He entered the apartment quietly, so as not to
+wake his mother. But she came to his door in a
+dressing-gown, holding out a telegram.</p>
+
+<p>“Lucinda’s done such a fool thing,” she said.
+“Look at this! And I don’t want you to think it’s
+my fault, because it’s not.”</p>
+
+<p>He took the telegram. It read:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>MADGE COMING TO CHICAGO WITH ME TO DO
+SHOPPING WILL BE AT ANNEX</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>“Madge!” he said in astonishment. “And with
+Lucinda?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes—they’re great friends now. You know
+the way Lucinda is. But she ought to have more
+sense than to bring Madge with her. And Madge
+ought to have more sense than to come.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Norman, “I don’t expect Madge to
+stay away from Chicago on my account. Why
+shouldn’t she come with Lucinda, if she wants to?”</p>
+
+<p>“You know perfectly well why,” said his mother.
+“The shopping is only an excuse. Lucinda will take
+her to see the baby, and then somehow or other
+you’ll run into her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, what of it?” said Norman irritably.
+“Why shouldn’t we meet?”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t talk like a fool, Norman. You know
+that girl’s still in love with you!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p280">280</span></p>
+
+<p>“No, I didn’t,” said Norman, disconcerted. “Is
+she, really?”</p>
+
+<p>His mother did not consider that worth a reply.</p>
+
+<p>She went back to her room, saying as she went:</p>
+
+<p>“Well, don’t blame me, is all I say!”</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord!” said Norman helplessly.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p281">281</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XI_As_Luck_Would_Have_It">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XI</span>: As Luck Would Have It
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>A YOUNG man may expend anguished thought
+upon the question of which of two girls he
+ought to marry; but a third claimant breaks the spell
+of that dilemma. He no longer feels the sense of
+having to make a painful choice; his feeling is
+rather a bewildering one of having no choice at all.
+He loses in imagination the position of embarrassing
+masculine jurisdiction over the fate and happiness
+of the girls, and begins to feel a little like a hunted
+animal.</p>
+
+<p>Abruptly, when left alone by his mother, the color
+of the whole situation changed for Norman. He
+felt as though a horde of women were closing in
+upon him. It was not a dignified situation, and in
+self-defense he felt a burst of resentment against
+them all.</p>
+
+<p>What right had they to make demands upon him?
+They weren’t any of them in love with him, really.
+It was their damned maternal instinct. Even Monica
+had talked about the baby in the midst of their
+love-making.... Everybody seemed to think that
+a man with a baby had to have a wife.... Well,
+he would show them....</p>
+
+<p>He fell asleep in a mood of profound hostility to
+all womankind, and when he awoke it was with the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p282">282</span>grim resolve not to be bullied into marrying anybody.</p>
+
+<p>That Saturday afternoon, when he came back
+from lunch, there was a note on his desk. He knew
+when he saw it afar what it would say. That Mr.
+McCullough wished to see him.... And it did....
+“Fired again!” thought Norman.</p>
+
+<p>He wasn’t surprised; he had thought he was doing
+damn good work on that Pearson account; but evidently
+McCullough knew better.... And it was
+just the time when a thing like this would happen,
+with his mother and sister looking on. He couldn’t
+keep it a secret from Vickley this time....</p>
+
+<p>But there was just one good thing about it: if
+he lost his job and became a bum on a park bench,
+maybe these women would let him alone.... It
+would be a good excuse; he wouldn’t have to marry
+anybody.... Norman brightened, and went in
+cheerfully to get the ax from Mr. McCullough.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. McCullough, as he somewhat gradually
+and rather incredulously discovered, had not sent
+for him in order to fire him—only to tell him that
+he seemed to be getting along pretty well, and that
+he could consider himself a regular member of the
+staff from now on. “Your salary check will be for
+seventy-five this week,” Mr. McCullough added
+casually. “And you can go on working with Charlie
+Beckett on the Pearson account.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, Mr. McCullough,” said Norman,
+gulping down his emotions....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p283">283</span></p>
+
+<p>Of course, one couldn’t be sorry that one hadn’t
+been fired.... But it took away his one avenue of
+escape from the embarrassing situation in which he
+found himself. It left him with no good excuse to
+make to those three girls....</p>
+
+<p>Those three girls—that was the way he put it
+in his conscious thoughts. But in reality it was only
+one of them that he had in mind. Isabel would
+not care—he knew that well enough. And reckless
+little Monica—she had offered her love and demanded
+nothing.... It was Madge that he was
+afraid of. Madge—and Vickley.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p284">284</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XII_The_Fugitive">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XII</span>: The Fugitive
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>AS for Madge, he was determined to keep out
+of her way while she was in Chicago....</p>
+
+<p>Lucinda was at the apartment with his mother
+when he came home that afternoon. She had been
+taken to see the baby, and she expressed herself enthusiastically.
+Norman couldn’t help being touched.
+He had never heard her talk that way even about one
+of her pet dogs.... He was on the alert to ignore
+any reference she might make to Madge.... But
+she said nothing about Madge.</p>
+
+<p>At last, in impatience, he remarked: “I understood
+Madge was coming to Chicago with you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” said Lucinda, and went on talking
+about the baby.</p>
+
+<p>Had Madge seen the baby? He was curious to
+know, but he was determined not to ask....</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless it was the part of a brother to show
+his sister about Chicago—take her to dinner and
+the theater, and so on. But when she had been so
+indiscreet as to come companioned by a girl he did
+not want to see, she would have to go without these
+brotherly attentions. He would let her look after
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>Lucinda seemed not to notice that she was being
+neglected.... After all, she had been in Chicago
+before; and she was accustomed to Norman’s brotherly
+indifference.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p285">285</span></p>
+
+<p>But Norman suspected a plot. How could he not
+suspect it? Lucinda’s friendship with Madge, her
+bringing Madge to Chicago—doubtless she hoped
+to bring about a reconciliation. His mother, in
+spite of her protests, might be in on it. And so
+might even Dr. Zerneke. They all thought of him
+as a helpless male who needed a wife. It was all
+very well-meant—but he’d thank them just to leave
+him alone....</p>
+
+<p>To block any plans they might have for an “accidental”
+meeting at Mrs. Czermak’s, he invented
+business engagements for all his evenings which
+would prevent his going there to see the baby this
+week. (And besides, he didn’t want to face Monica,
+either.) And with the idea that Madge might
+be at the apartment with Lucinda when he came
+home, he stayed away every night until very late....
+At least, he did this until Saturday; and that
+evening, having found nothing better to do than sit
+in the Crerar library, he revolted. After all, his
+apartment belonged to him. It was rather absurd
+for him to be kept out of it that way. He went
+home.</p>
+
+<p>All the week he had been having, in his thoughts
+of Madge, the same experience which he had had so
+often since his life ran off the smooth track of custom
+and habit into the jungle of uncertainty in which he
+had to find out for himself what things were like—the
+experience of seeing facts change their appearance
+before his eyes.... In this changing and surprising
+world, his feeling about Madge had remained
+<span class="pagenum" id="p286">286</span>fixed until now. He had been sorry to have hurt her—but
+glad nevertheless to have escaped from that
+marriage, because of what it would have meant.
+And now that certainty was being undermined.
+Since Madge had come to Chicago, he was remembering
+things about her—no, not things to make him
+regret that she had thrown him over, nothing to
+make him think himself still in love with her—nothing
+like that: yet sweet and brave and tender
+and funny little things, making of her a human girl
+and not a graven image of conventionality, an algebraic
+formula of bourgeois marriage. And in merely
+becoming in his imagination a person rather than a
+formula, she had upset him dreadfully—more than
+he was willing to admit to himself. For his campaign
+of life in Chicago was based implicitly upon
+an obscure but profound conviction that it represented
+a revolt against a system of respectability and
+hypocrisy. He wasn’t a theorist, and he couldn’t, or
+wouldn’t have wished to, put it in words. But there
+it was. And that obscure theory gave him courage
+and faith. But if it was not against the rock-walled
+citadel of Respectability that he had dealt
+his clumsy and cruel blows, but against the naked and
+defenseless breast of a girl—a girl who happened to
+be in love with him—then some of the meaning
+went out of his whole brave adventure. He didn’t
+want to face that possibility. He had tried to put
+aside these inconvenient and unsettling memories.
+But he wondered more and more what Madge was
+<span class="pagenum" id="p287">287</span>really like. Perhaps he would never be sure until he
+saw and talked with her again.</p>
+
+<p>Anyway, what was there to be afraid of? If she
+was at his apartment this evening, well and good.
+He would find out what that respectable young
+woman to whom he had once been engaged to be
+married was really like....</p>
+
+<p>But there was no one at the apartment.</p>
+
+<p>He waited impatiently for his mother to come
+home.</p>
+
+<p>She came at last, with Lucinda. They had been
+to the theater, they said. They did not mention
+Madge. But he knew quite well she had been with
+them. She must have gone on to the hotel alone
+to avoid meeting him. These elaborate evasions
+were rather silly, he thought....</p>
+
+<p>Lucinda, in her exasperating fashion, got started
+on an account of the musical comedy they had seen,
+and could not be stopped until she had described it
+all. It was the same one Norman had seen the week
+before with Charlie Beckett. He heard her wearily
+to the end—noting that she had picked up some
+slangy terms of speech from Doris—and when she
+started to go, he said: “I’ll take you to your hotel.”</p>
+
+<p>She seemed surprised at this offer—and indeed it
+was a trifle unusual for Norman voluntarily to act
+as her escort. “Oh, you needn’t bother,” she said.
+“I can get a bus over on the Avenue.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take you,” said Norman firmly.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p288">288</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XIII_Conversation_in_a_Taxi">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XIII</span>: Conversation in a Taxi
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>IN the taxi he tried hard to think of something
+to talk about to his sister. He couldn’t seem to
+think of anything at all to say.</p>
+
+<p>They were going down Michigan Avenue. In
+another minute or two they would be at her hotel.</p>
+
+<p>“Has Madge seen the baby?” he asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” said Lucinda. “She saw it the first
+thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“One look was enough, I suppose,” said Norman
+bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no,” said Lucinda. “She goes with us every
+day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” said Norman. “She does?”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s no reason,” said Lucinda, “why she
+should bear a grudge against the baby.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose not,” said Norman. “I’m the only
+one to blame. Of course, I couldn’t exactly help
+it—the way I treated her.... I had hoped she
+might understand that—and forgive me a little.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucinda said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps,” said Norman, “I ought to see her.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” said Lucinda doubtfully. “Tell
+me, Norman—have you been carrying on with that
+little Monica Case?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why in the world should you think that?” asked
+Norman indignantly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p289">289</span></p>
+
+<p>“Well, she wears your jade cuff-buttons, and turns
+all colors when your name is mentioned.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what of it?” Norman asked defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing. That’s just the sort of girl you <em>would</em>
+get mixed up with,” said Lucinda. “Your tastes
+always were rather vulgar, Norman.”</p>
+
+<p>“We were speaking of Madge, I believe,” said
+Norman haughtily.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that’s just it. I don’t think it’s very nice
+for Madge.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” said Norman, “but I can’t regulate
+my conduct to suit my ex-fiancée—or you either.
+Why did you bring Madge to Chicago?”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t bring her,” said Lucinda. “But I knew
+she wanted to see the baby—and I thought it might
+help her to get over it all.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re lying, Lucinda,” he said. “You know you
+want Madge and me to make up. And so does
+Mother.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Lucinda, “I think we’d all rather
+you’d marry Madge than—that other girl.”</p>
+
+<p>“What other girl?”</p>
+
+<p>“The one who—deserted the baby. You don’t
+suppose I think you’d marry Monica Case, do you?”
+she added impersonally.</p>
+
+<p>“Why should I marry at all?” he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you’ll have to marry <em>somebody</em>. Because of
+the baby, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>He smiled. “And why not the baby’s mother,
+then?” he asked curiously.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p290">290</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Norman—that <em>would</em> be the absolute limit!
+After the way she’s treated you! You wouldn’t be
+a—a doormat!” she said scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>“Anyway,” he said, “there’s no reason why Madge
+and I shouldn’t understand one another. I’ve no
+wish to hurt her feelings wantonly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you can’t see her to-night,” said Lucinda.
+“She’s gone to bed by now. She went on to the
+hotel so as not to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think it’s rather ridiculous,” said Norman,
+“all this artificial avoidance. Suppose you bring
+her over to the apartment for breakfast. About
+eleven. Will you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll ask her,” said Lucinda.</p>
+
+<p>“Do.”</p>
+
+<p>The taxi stopped at the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve told Lucinda to bring Madge around for
+Sunday breakfast,” he said casually to his mother,
+who was still puttering about the apartment when
+he returned.</p>
+
+<p>She frowned—in disapproval, Norman thought.
+But what she said was only: “I wonder if there are
+enough eggs.”</p>
+
+<p>She went into the kitchen, and came back. “Yes,
+there’s plenty of everything,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>If she saw any dramatic crisis imminent in her
+son’s life, she gave no sign of it....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p291">291</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XIV_A_Farewell">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XIV</span>: A Farewell
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>WHEN his mother had gone to bed, Norman
+sat up smoking and thinking.</p>
+
+<p>So Lucinda—and Vickley in general, no doubt—thought
+he ought not to marry Isabel!</p>
+
+<p>Well, perhaps Vickley was right, at that.</p>
+
+<p>Why should she be given another chance? Why
+should she be allowed to have the son she had
+deserted?</p>
+
+<p>“No, by God—he’s mine!” thought Norman,
+rocked with an emotion of jealous hatred.</p>
+
+<p>He went to bed. But presently he got up and
+turned on the light and brought back to bed with
+him the Apocrypha he had picked up. He turned to
+the story of Thecla.... This apocryphal girl
+saint was to him a queer parable. When he had
+first read its opening sentences he had been reminded
+of something Isabel had told him that day in the
+hospital—how she had broken her engagement, at
+eighteen, for the love of art.... St. Thecla here
+in the Apocrypha had broken hers for the love of
+God.... It was all different enough and yet as
+he read it had seemed to him that Isabel’s rebellious
+career was a queer, perverse, modern echo of that
+old tale. For “the gospel of Paul” one need only
+put “the gospel of Modern Art.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p292">292</span></p>
+
+<p>He read it again, now, to allay his hatred of
+Isabel. For when he thought of Isabel, it was with
+love or hatred, and both were torments. He was
+safer in hating her, safer from the danger of more
+pain; but hating her hurt him. And in this parable
+he found something to make him sorry for her....</p>
+
+<p>The story he read told of how when Paul was
+preaching in Iconium a girl named Thecla, who was
+betrothed to a young man named Thamyris, sat in
+the window of her mother’s house and listened to
+this new gospel; nor would she depart from the
+window. And her mother, when she could not be
+prevailed upon, sent for Thamyris, who came with
+exceeding pleasure, as hoping now to marry her.
+He said to her mother, “Where is my Thecla?”</p>
+
+<p>Her mother replied: “Thamyris, I have a strange
+thing to tell you. For the space of three days my
+daughter has not moved from the window, not so
+much as to eat or drink, but is intent on hearing the
+artful and delusive discourses of a certain foreigner.
+Thamyris, this stranger causes trouble throughout
+the whole city of the Iconians, for the young men
+and girls listen to him and will not marry. And
+my daughter too, caught as in a spider’s web at
+the window, is possessed by a new desire and a fearful
+passion. But go you and speak to her, for she
+is betrothed to you.”</p>
+
+<p>And Thamyris went to her, desiring her, and yet
+alarmed because of her strange ecstasy, and said:
+“Thecla, why do you sit thus? What strange passion
+<span class="pagenum" id="p293">293</span>holds you in its power? Turn to your Thamyris
+and be ashamed of yourself!” And her mother
+likewise: “Thecla, why do you look down and answer
+nothing, as if you had lost your wits?” And
+they mourned, Thamyris for his betrothed and her
+mother for her child, and Thecla paid no heed to
+them but listened only the while to the new gospel.</p>
+
+<p>And Thamyris leapt up and went away ... and
+brought officers with staves to arrest Paul, and
+had him led to the proconsul, saying: “This is the
+stranger who keeps girls from marrying.” And
+Paul was taken to prison.</p>
+
+<p>But Thecla that night took off her bracelets and
+gave them to the doorkeeper and went into the
+prison and sat at Paul’s feet and listened to his
+words, and kissed his chains.</p>
+
+<p>And they were brought before the governor, who
+asked: “Thecla, why will you not marry Thamyris,
+according to the law of the Iconians?” But she
+looked only upon Paul and answered not, and her
+own mother cried: “Burn the lawless one, burn her
+that will not be a bride, so that the women of
+Iconium may be made afraid to follow these new
+teachings!”</p>
+
+<p>And she was brought naked to the stake, but God
+had compassion on her, and sent a rain to quench the
+fire. And she was set free, and went to Paul and
+said: “I will cut my hair, and follow you wherever
+you go.”</p>
+
+<p>But he said: “The time is ill-favored, and you are
+<span class="pagenum" id="p294">294</span>comely. I fear a harder trial may come, which you
+will not be able to withstand.”</p>
+
+<p>But she cut her hair and went with him to Antioch.
+And there a magistrate named Alexander
+saw her and was enamored of her, and sent Paul
+presents....</p>
+
+<p>(Norman thought: “I became interested in pictures
+just to please Isabel.”...)</p>
+
+<p>But Paul said: “I know not this woman of whom
+you speak, neither does she belong to me.”</p>
+
+<p>And Alexander seized her in the street, but she
+rent his cloak and took the wreath from his head,
+and made him a laughing-stock before the whole
+town....</p>
+
+<p>“That’s me,” thought Norman.</p>
+
+<p>He did not go on to read the rest of Thecla’s triumphant
+career. He stopped there with poor Alexander,
+who had been made a laughing-stock before
+the whole town.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody, he reflected, would ever write the inglorious
+story of Alexander. The sympathies of storytellers
+were always with the girl.</p>
+
+<p>Not, to be sure, precisely with a girl like Isabel,
+though. They didn’t understand a girl’s being
+faithful to her art, in spite of a moonstruck moment
+in the woods—in spite of having a baby at her breast—in
+spite of confusion, complications, tormented
+and conflicting emotions. Legend, if she became
+famous, would simplify her story; and he alone
+would know what a troubled soul she had been....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p295">295</span></p>
+
+<p>She was waiting now for her answer. She was
+trusting him to decide her life for her. Too tired,
+sick, discouraged, to know any more what she
+wanted, she was leaving it to him to say whether
+she should be an artist or a mother. He could take
+her in this moment of weakness. But he would
+never be content with what she had to give....</p>
+
+<p>No, he would trouble her no more with his human
+demands for love. He’d let her go on to her own
+destiny....</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to him that he had forgiven her. At
+least, he did not hate her now. And if he still, in a
+way loved her, yet he did not want her for his own.
+He had let her go. She was remote, now, in his
+imagination, above the reach of desire, shining from
+the abode where things that seem eternal find refuge....
+And at the same time, it seemed to him that he
+had put aside his youth for ever.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p296">296</span></p>
+
+
+ <h3 class="nobreak" id="Chapter_XV_The_Inevitable">
+ <span class="smcap">Chapter XV</span>: The Inevitable
+ </h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>SUNDAY morning dawned for Norman—if it
+could be said to dawn at about ten o’clock—with
+a sense of fatality. At first he didn’t know
+why. He lay in bed, hearing his mother stirring in
+the kitchen. Then he remembered. She was getting
+breakfast for Madge. Madge was coming....</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly in his imagination he saw the two of
+them left alone together. She would reproach him.
+Well, she had a right to. And he would feel sorry
+and ashamed. But he would defend himself—he
+would try to make her understand. It would be like
+one of their old-time quarrels. For they had quarreled—and
+made up. They had kissed and made up,
+always, and everything had seemed all right
+again....</p>
+
+<p>Well, perhaps it was inevitable. Everybody
+seemed to think he had to have a wife. Lucinda had
+said so. Dr. Zerneke had said so. His mother had
+as good as said so. A man with a baby was helpless....
+And if Madge would marry him....</p>
+
+<p>He turned, as if for the last time, to the thought
+of Monica.... Reckless little Monica—the rooming
+house—old Mr. Victor—the homely maternal
+airs of Mrs. Czermak—the Rabelaisian conversation
+of Mrs. Case.... He sighed. He knew now
+that those things weren’t for him....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p297">297</span></p>
+
+<p>He rose to face the day and what might come
+of it.... After all, Madge would be a damned
+sight nicer wife than he deserved....</p>
+
+<p>Breakfast was getting ready. He walked slowly
+back and forth.</p>
+
+<p>The bell rang. He went to the door.</p>
+
+<p>Lucinda was there, alone.</p>
+
+<p>“Where’s Madge?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“She wouldn’t come,” said Lucinda. “She’s very
+much upset. I left her at the hotel, packing to go
+back to Vickley.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll go and get her,” said Norman.</p>
+
+<p>“Wait. She wrote this to you last night.”</p>
+
+<p>He took the letter and walked out.</p>
+
+<p>Lucinda ran to the banister and called down to
+him. “The room is 314—you’d better go right up,
+Norman, if you want to see her!”</p>
+
+<p>In the street he opened the envelope, stopped
+short on the corner, and read:</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Norman Overbeck: I came to see your
+child, not to see you. Perhaps it was foolish of me
+to come; but I wanted to, and I’m not sorry I did.
+And I can tell you better in a letter how I feel
+about you, without seeing you.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t blame you for what happened. I mean,
+about the baby. I love your baby. But you
+weren’t fair to me. You never told me about the
+other girl. It wasn’t fair to ask me to marry you
+when you were still in love with her. But I could
+forgive that, because maybe you didn’t know and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p298">298</span>thought you were over it. That isn’t what hurts
+most.</p>
+
+<p>“What hurts is that you should not have trusted
+me to understand about the baby. You never gave
+me a chance. You ran away before we could talk
+it over. You treated me as if I were a conventional
+little fool. That is what you thought of me. You
+never came back to explain. You didn’t try to make
+me understand. You didn’t let me have a chance to
+say whether I would take the baby or not. You just
+assumed that I was a certain sort of person. You
+didn’t trust me, and that’s what I shall never forgive
+you for.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not what you think. I’ll tell you this. If
+it had been I that had had another sweetheart, and
+found I was going to have a baby when I was engaged
+to you—I’d have told you, I’d have trusted
+you, I’d have given you your chance.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I’m not what you think. You never knew
+me. I hate Vickley as much as you do—more. It’s
+you who are conventional at heart.</p>
+
+<p>“You never gave me my chance.</p>
+
+<p>“I would rather not see you. Some time I may
+feel differently, but it is too bitter a subject just
+now. I’m glad I’ve seen Norman Junior. I’m going
+back to Vickley in the morning, and I’m leaving
+with Lucinda some little things I’ve bought for him
+while I’ve been here.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-by.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+ “<span class="smcap">Madge Ferris.</span>”
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p299">299</span></p>
+
+<p>Norman stood there, with tears in his eyes. He
+hadn’t known she was like that.... He had been
+an awful fool. He didn’t understand girls at
+all....</p>
+
+<p>Well, if he got there before she left, it might still
+be all right.... It was plain that she still cared
+for him....</p>
+
+<p>“Taxi?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes!” He climbed in. “The Annex—quick!”
+In his imagination he could see Madge in the hotel
+room, packing.... He saw himself enter ...
+yes, and quarrel, and kiss. Oh, there was no doubt
+that they would make up.... And no doubt,
+either, that that would be the best thing all
+around....</p>
+
+<p>Only one thing bothered him. Madge wasn’t
+what he had thought, at all. She wasn’t a doll. She
+was a real girl, with a heart. She could love, and
+suffer. She wouldn’t mind being poor with him in
+Chicago. She would be a mother to his child.
+There was no reason why he shouldn’t be glad to
+marry her. And in spite of what she wrote, she
+would be hoping in her heart that he would come
+before she packed up and left the hotel. Only one
+thing stood in the way—and that was something a
+loving and tender wife could surely banish—the
+ghost of that girl who was so unaccountably the
+mother of his child ... Oh, he would forget Isabel
+in time....</p>
+
+<p>But he might as well settle that now. He looked
+<span class="pagenum" id="p300">300</span>out, and rapped on the glass. “Stop at that cigar
+store on the corner for a moment!”</p>
+
+<p>He would send her a telegram, and have that off
+his mind. He knew her address in Michigan.</p>
+
+<p>“Western Union, please....</p>
+
+<p>“I want to send a telegram....</p>
+
+<p>“To Miss Isabel Drury.... Yes.... Hawk
+Lake, Michigan.... Just a moment....”</p>
+
+<p>He had known what he was going to say. Something
+polite and final. But suddenly it was as if
+Isabel was at the other end of the wire, listening....
+and the words went out of his head....</p>
+
+<p>“Just a moment,” he repeated, while the world
+rocked dizzily about him....</p>
+
+<p>Couldn’t he say the word that would free them
+both? Couldn’t he let that vain dream go?</p>
+
+<p>It seemed not. A new pattern of words was framing
+itself in his mind, forcing itself to his lips....</p>
+
+<p>Must he forever be a fool? Must he doom himself
+to endless unhappiness? It wouldn’t work out.
+He knew it. He had renounced her. Why couldn’t
+he take what life offered? Madge—and peace....
+Madge—waiting now, ready to forgive him, cherish
+him, be patient with him....</p>
+
+<p>No.... But at least he could send a sane telegram.</p>
+
+<p>He spoke into the telephone to the impatient operator:
+“I have it, now. Here’s the message:</p>
+
+<p>“‘Call me McCullough Advertising Agency when
+<span class="pagenum" id="p301">301</span>you come Chicago this week preferably.’ Signed,
+‘Norman.’</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all. How much is it?”</p>
+
+<p>He dropped in the nickels and dimes....</p>
+
+<p>And Madge?—he couldn’t help it, that was
+all....</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve changed my mind,” he said to the taxi-driver,
+and handed him a dollar bill.</p>
+
+<p>The taxi drove away, leaving him standing there
+on the corner.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, no doubt it was a crazy thing to do. But
+he didn’t care. He had to see this thing through
+with Isabel....</p>
+
+<p>He began to walk slowly back toward the apartment.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2">
+[The End]
+</p>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78732 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/78732-h/images/cover.jpg b/78732-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d8d97f1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/78732-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6c72794
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This book, 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.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ad1f5ff
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #78732
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78732)