summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:16:14 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:16:14 -0700
commitadfda4a5c894c1c5c68b3c8965654702cc6858f7 (patch)
tree35f684b9bf1466e77fce8ae77ec17adeff9294aa
initial commit of ebook 980HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--980-0.txt10652
-rw-r--r--980-0.zipbin0 -> 191671 bytes
-rw-r--r--980-h.zipbin0 -> 202662 bytes
-rw-r--r--980-h/980-h.htm13152
-rw-r--r--980.txt10651
-rw-r--r--980.zipbin0 -> 189946 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/aladm10.txt11298
-rw-r--r--old/aladm10.zipbin0 -> 189174 bytes
11 files changed, 45769 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/980-0.txt b/980-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..53b4f7c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/980-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,10652 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Alice Adams
+
+Author: Booth Tarkington
+
+Posting Date: July 21, 2008 [EBook #980]
+Release Date: July, 1997
+Last Updated: March 3, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALICE ADAMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller
+
+
+
+
+
+ALICE ADAMS
+
+By Booth Tarkington
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+The patient, an old-fashioned man, thought the nurse made a mistake in
+keeping both of the windows open, and her sprightly disregard of his
+protests added something to his hatred of her. Every evening he told her
+that anybody with ordinary gumption ought to realize that night air was
+bad for the human frame. “The human frame won't stand everything,
+Miss Perry,” he warned her, resentfully. “Even a child, if it had just
+ordinary gumption, ought to know enough not to let the night air blow on
+sick people yes, nor well people, either! 'Keep out of the night air, no
+matter how well you feel.' That's what my mother used to tell me when I
+was a boy. 'Keep out of the night air, Virgil,' she'd say. 'Keep out of
+the night air.'”
+
+“I expect probably her mother told her the same thing,” the nurse
+suggested.
+
+“Of course she did. My grandmother----”
+
+“Oh, I guess your GRANDmother thought so, Mr. Adams! That was when all
+this flat central country was swampish and hadn't been drained off yet.
+I guess the truth must been the swamp mosquitoes bit people and gave 'em
+malaria, especially before they began to put screens in their windows.
+Well, we got screens in these windows, and no mosquitoes are goin' to
+bite us; so just you be a good boy and rest your mind and go to sleep
+like you need to.”
+
+“Sleep?” he said. “Likely!”
+
+He thought the night air worst of all in April; he hadn't a doubt it
+would kill him, he declared. “It's miraculous what the human frame WILL
+survive,” he admitted on the last evening of that month. “But you and
+the doctor ought to both be taught it won't stand too dang much! You
+poison a man and poison and poison him with this April night air----”
+
+“Can't poison you with much more of it,” Miss Perry interrupted him,
+indulgently. “To-morrow it'll be May night air, and I expect that'll be
+a lot better for you, don't you? Now let's just sober down and be a good
+boy and get some nice sound sleep.”
+
+She gave him his medicine, and, having set the glass upon the center
+table, returned to her cot, where, after a still interval, she snored
+faintly. Upon this, his expression became that of a man goaded out of
+overpowering weariness into irony.
+
+“Sleep? Oh, CERTAINLY, thank you!”
+
+However, he did sleep intermittently, drowsed between times, and even
+dreamed; but, forgetting his dreams before he opened his eyes, and
+having some part of him all the while aware of his discomfort, he
+believed, as usual, that he lay awake the whole night long. He was
+conscious of the city as of some single great creature resting fitfully
+in the dark outside his windows. It lay all round about, in the damp
+cover of its night cloud of smoke, and tried to keep quiet for a few
+hours after midnight, but was too powerful a growing thing ever to
+lie altogether still. Even while it strove to sleep it muttered with
+digestions of the day before, and these already merged with rumblings
+of the morrow. “Owl” cars, bringing in last passengers over distant
+trolley-lines, now and then howled on a curve; faraway metallic
+stirrings could be heard from factories in the sooty suburbs on the
+plain outside the city; east, west, and south, switch-engines chugged
+and snorted on sidings; and everywhere in the air there seemed to be
+a faint, voluminous hum as of innumerable wires trembling overhead to
+vibration of machinery underground.
+
+In his youth Adams might have been less resentful of sounds such as
+these when they interfered with his night's sleep: even during
+an illness he might have taken some pride in them as proof of his
+citizenship in a “live town”; but at fifty-five he merely hated them
+because they kept him awake. They “pressed on his nerves,” as he put it;
+and so did almost everything else, for that matter.
+
+He heard the milk-wagon drive into the cross-street beneath his windows
+and stop at each house. The milkman carried his jars round to the “back
+porch,” while the horse moved slowly ahead to the gate of the next
+customer and waited there. “He's gone into Pollocks',” Adams thought,
+following this progress. “I hope it'll sour on 'em before breakfast.
+Delivered the Andersons'. Now he's getting out ours. Listen to the darn
+brute! What's HE care who wants to sleep!” His complaint was of the
+horse, who casually shifted weight with a clink of steel shoes on the
+worn brick pavement of the street, and then heartily shook himself in
+his harness, perhaps to dislodge a fly far ahead of its season. Light
+had just filmed the windows; and with that the first sparrow woke,
+chirped instantly, and roused neighbours in the trees of the small yard,
+including a loud-voiced robin. Vociferations began irregularly, but were
+soon unanimous.
+
+“Sleep? Dang likely now, ain't it!”
+
+Night sounds were becoming day sounds; the far-away hooting of
+freight-engines seemed brisker than an hour ago in the dark. A cheerful
+whistler passed the house, even more careless of sleepers than the
+milkman's horse had been; then a group of coloured workmen came by, and
+although it was impossible to be sure whether they were homeward bound
+from night-work or on their way to day-work, at least it was certain
+that they were jocose. Loose, aboriginal laughter preceded them afar,
+and beat on the air long after they had gone by.
+
+The sick-room night-light, shielded from his eyes by a newspaper propped
+against a water-pitcher, still showed a thin glimmering that had grown
+offensive to Adams. In his wandering and enfeebled thoughts, which
+were much more often imaginings than reasonings, the attempt of the
+night-light to resist the dawn reminded him of something unpleasant,
+though he could not discover just what the unpleasant thing was. Here
+was a puzzle that irritated him the more because he could not solve it,
+yet always seemed just on the point of a solution. However, he may have
+lost nothing cheerful by remaining in the dark upon the matter; for
+if he had been a little sharper in this introspection he might have
+concluded that the squalor of the night-light, in its seeming effort
+to show against the forerunning of the sun itself, had stimulated some
+half-buried perception within him to sketch the painful little synopsis
+of an autobiography.
+
+In spite of noises without, he drowsed again, not knowing that he did;
+and when he opened his eyes the nurse was just rising from her cot. He
+took no pleasure in the sight, it may be said. She exhibited to him a
+face mismodelled by sleep, and set like a clay face left on its cheek in
+a hot and dry studio. She was still only in part awake, however, and by
+the time she had extinguished the night-light and given her patient his
+tonic, she had recovered enough plasticity. “Well, isn't that grand!
+We've had another good night,” she said as she departed to dress in the
+bathroom.
+
+“Yes, you had another!” he retorted, though not until after she had
+closed the door.
+
+Presently he heard his daughter moving about in her room across the
+narrow hall, and so knew that she had risen. He hoped she would come
+in to see him soon, for she was the one thing that didn't press on his
+nerves, he felt; though the thought of her hurt him, as, indeed, every
+thought hurt him. But it was his wife who came first.
+
+She wore a lank cotton wrapper, and a crescent of gray hair escaped to
+one temple from beneath the handkerchief she had worn upon her head for
+the night and still retained; but she did everything possible to make
+her expression cheering.
+
+“Oh, you're better again! I can see that, as soon as I look at you,” she
+said. “Miss Perry tells me you've had another splendid night.”
+
+He made a sound of irony, which seemed to dispose unfavourably of Miss
+Perry, and then, in order to be more certainly intelligible, he added,
+“She slept well, as usual!”
+
+But his wife's smile persisted. “It's a good sign to be cross; it means
+you're practically convalescent right now.”
+
+“Oh, I am, am I?”
+
+“No doubt in the world!” she exclaimed. “Why, you're practically a well
+man, Virgil--all except getting your strength back, of course, and that
+isn't going to take long. You'll be right on your feet in a couple of
+weeks from now.”
+
+“Oh, I will?”
+
+“Of course you will!” She laughed briskly, and, going to the table in
+the center of the room, moved his glass of medicine an inch or two,
+turned a book over so that it lay upon its other side, and for a few
+moments occupied herself with similar futilities, having taken on the
+air of a person who makes things neat, though she produced no such
+actual effect upon them. “Of course you will,” she repeated, absently.
+“You'll be as strong as you ever were; maybe stronger.” She paused for a
+moment, not looking at him, then added, cheerfully, “So that you can fly
+around and find something really good to get into.”
+
+Something important between them came near the surface here, for though
+she spoke with what seemed but a casual cheerfulness, there was a
+little betraying break in her voice, a trembling just perceptible in the
+utterance of the final word. And she still kept up the affectation of
+being helpfully preoccupied with the table, and did not look at her
+husband--perhaps because they had been married so many years that
+without looking she knew just what his expression would be, and
+preferred to avoid the actual sight of it as long as possible.
+Meanwhile, he stared hard at her, his lips beginning to move with little
+distortions not lacking in the pathos of a sick man's agitation.
+
+“So that's it,” he said. “That's what you're hinting at.”
+
+“'Hinting?'” Mrs. Adams looked surprised and indulgent. “Why, I'm not
+doing any hinting, Virgil.”
+
+“What did you say about my finding 'something good to get into?'” he
+asked, sharply. “Don't you call that hinting?”
+
+Mrs. Adams turned toward him now; she came to the bedside and would have
+taken his hand, but he quickly moved it away from her.
+
+“You mustn't let yourself get nervous,” she said. “But of course when
+you get well there's only one thing to do. You mustn't go back to that
+old hole again.”
+
+“'Old hole?' That's what you call it, is it?” In spite of his weakness,
+anger made his voice strident, and upon this stimulation she spoke more
+urgently.
+
+“You just mustn't go back to it, Virgil. It's not fair to any of us, and
+you know it isn't.”
+
+“Don't tell me what I know, please!”
+
+She clasped her hands, suddenly carrying her urgency to plaintive
+entreaty. “Virgil, you WON'T go back to that hole?”
+
+“That's a nice word to use to me!” he said. “Call a man's business a
+hole!”
+
+“Virgil, if you don't owe it to me to look for something different,
+don't you owe it to your children? Don't tell me you won't do what we
+all want you to, and what you know in your heart you ought to! And if
+you HAVE got into one of your stubborn fits and are bound to go back
+there for no other reason except to have your own way, don't tell me so,
+for I can't bear it!”
+
+He looked up at her fiercely. “You've got a fine way to cure a sick
+man!” he said; but she had concluded her appeal--for that time--and
+instead of making any more words in the matter, let him see that there
+were tears in her eyes, shook her head, and left the room.
+
+Alone, he lay breathing rapidly, his emaciated chest proving itself
+equal to the demands his emotion put upon it. “Fine!” he repeated, with
+husky indignation. “Fine way to cure a sick man! Fine!” Then, after a
+silence, he gave forth whispering sounds as of laughter, his expression
+the while remaining sore and far from humour.
+
+“And give us our daily bread!” he added, meaning that his wife's little
+performance was no novelty.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+In fact, the agitation of Mrs. Adams was genuine, but so well under her
+control that its traces vanished during the three short steps she
+took to cross the narrow hall between her husband's door and the one
+opposite. Her expression was matter-of-course, rather than pathetic, as
+she entered the pretty room where her daughter, half dressed, sat before
+a dressing-table and played with the reflections of a three-leafed
+mirror framed in blue enamel. That is, just before the moment of
+her mother's entrance, Alice had been playing with the mirror's
+reflections--posturing her arms and her expressions, clasping her hands
+behind her neck, and tilting back her head to foreshorten the face in a
+tableau conceived to represent sauciness, then one of smiling weariness,
+then one of scornful toleration, and all very piquant; but as the door
+opened she hurriedly resumed the practical, and occupied her hands in
+the arrangement of her plentiful brownish hair.
+
+They were pretty hands, of a shapeliness delicate and fine. “The best
+things she's got!” a cold-blooded girl friend said of them, and meant
+to include Alice's mind and character in the implied list of possessions
+surpassed by the notable hands. However that may have been, the rest
+of her was well enough. She was often called “a right pretty
+girl”--temperate praise meaning a girl rather pretty than otherwise,
+and this she deserved, to say the least. Even in repose she deserved
+it, though repose was anything but her habit, being seldom seen upon
+her except at home. On exhibition she led a life of gestures, the unkind
+said to make her lovely hands more memorable; but all of her usually
+accompanied the gestures of the hands, the shoulders ever giving them
+their impulses first, and even her feet being called upon, at the same
+time, for eloquence.
+
+So much liveliness took proper place as only accessory to that of the
+face, where her vivacity reached its climax; and it was unfortunate that
+an ungifted young man, new in the town, should have attempted to define
+the effect upon him of all this generosity of emphasis. He said that
+“the way she used her cute hazel eyes and the wonderful glow of her
+facial expression gave her a mighty spiritual quality.” His actual
+rendition of the word was “spirichul”; but it was not his pronunciation
+that embalmed this outburst in the perennial laughter of Alice's girl
+friends; they made the misfortune far less his than hers.
+
+Her mother comforted her too heartily, insisting that Alice had “plenty
+enough spiritual qualities,” certainly more than possessed by the other
+girls who flung the phrase at her, wooden things, jealous of everything
+they were incapable of themselves; and then Alice, getting more
+championship than she sought, grew uneasy lest Mrs. Adams should repeat
+such defenses “outside the family”; and Mrs. Adams ended by weeping
+because the daughter so distrusted her intelligence. Alice frequently
+thought it necessary to instruct her mother.
+
+Her morning greeting was an instruction to-day; or, rather, it was
+an admonition in the style of an entreaty, the more petulant as Alice
+thought that Mrs. Adams might have had a glimpse of the posturings to
+the mirror. This was a needless worry; the mother had caught a thousand
+such glimpses, with Alice unaware, and she thought nothing of the one
+just flitted.
+
+“For heaven's sake, mama, come clear inside the room and shut the door!
+PLEASE don't leave it open for everybody to look at me!”
+
+“There isn't anybody to see you,” Mrs. Adams explained, obeying. “Miss
+Perry's gone downstairs, and----”
+
+“Mama, I heard you in papa's room,” Alice said, not dropping the note of
+complaint. “I could hear both of you, and I don't think you ought to get
+poor old papa so upset--not in his present condition, anyhow.”
+
+Mrs. Adams seated herself on the edge of the bed. “He's better all the
+time,” she said, not disturbed. “He's almost well. The doctor says so
+and Miss Perry says so; and if we don't get him into the right frame
+of mind now we never will. The first day he's outdoors he'll go back to
+that old hole--you'll see! And if he once does that, he'll settle down
+there and it'll be too late and we'll never get him out.”
+
+“Well, anyhow, I think you could use a little more tact with him.”
+
+“I do try to,” the mother sighed. “It never was much use with him. I
+don't think you understand him as well as I do, Alice.”
+
+“There's one thing I don't understand about either of you,” Alice
+returned, crisply. “Before people get married they can do anything they
+want to with each other. Why can't they do the same thing after they're
+married? When you and papa were young people and engaged, he'd have done
+anything you wanted him to. That must have been because you knew how to
+manage him then. Why can't you go at him the same way now?”
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed again, and laughed a little, making no other response;
+but Alice persisted. “Well, WHY can't you? Why can't you ask him to do
+things the way you used to ask him when you were just in love with each
+other? Why don't you anyhow try it, mama, instead of ding-donging at
+him?”
+
+“'Ding-donging at him,' Alice?” Mrs. Adams said, with a pathos somewhat
+emphasized. “Is that how my trying to do what I can for you strikes
+you?”
+
+“Never mind that; it's nothing to hurt your feelings.” Alice disposed of
+the pathos briskly. “Why don't you answer my question? What's the matter
+with using a little more tact on papa? Why can't you treat him the way
+you probably did when you were young people, before you were married? I
+never have understood why people can't do that.”
+
+“Perhaps you WILL understand some day,” her mother said, gently. “Maybe
+you will when you've been married twenty-five years.”
+
+“You keep evading. Why don't you answer my question right straight out?”
+
+“There are questions you can't answer to young people, Alice.”
+
+“You mean because we're too young to understand the answer? I don't see
+that at all. At twenty-two a girl's supposed to have some intelligence,
+isn't she? And intelligence is the ability to understand, isn't it?
+Why do I have to wait till I've lived with a man twenty-five years to
+understand why you can't be tactful with papa?”
+
+“You may understand some things before that,” Mrs. Adams said,
+tremulously. “You may understand how you hurt me sometimes. Youth
+can't know everything by being intelligent, and by the time you could
+understand the answer you're asking for you'd know it, and wouldn't need
+to ask. You don't understand your father, Alice; you don't know what it
+takes to change him when he's made up his mind to be stubborn.”
+
+Alice rose and began to get herself into a skirt. “Well, I don't think
+making scenes ever changes anybody,” she grumbled. “I think a little
+jolly persuasion goes twice as far, myself.”
+
+“'A little jolly persuasion!'” Her mother turned the echo of this phrase
+into an ironic lament. “Yes, there was a time when I thought that, too!
+It didn't work; that's all.”
+
+“Perhaps you left the 'jolly' part of it out, mama.”
+
+For the second time that morning--it was now a little after seven
+o'clock--tears seemed about to offer their solace to Mrs. Adams. “I
+might have expected you to say that, Alice; you never do miss a chance,”
+ she said, gently. “It seems queer you don't some time miss just ONE
+chance!”
+
+But Alice, progressing with her toilet, appeared to be little concerned.
+“Oh, well, I think there are better ways of managing a man than just
+hammering at him.”
+
+Mrs. Adams uttered a little cry of pain. “'Hammering,' Alice?”
+
+“If you'd left it entirely to me,” her daughter went on, briskly, “I
+believe papa'd already be willing to do anything we want him to.”
+
+“That's it; tell me I spoil everything. Well, I won't interfere from now
+on, you can be sure of it.”
+
+“Please don't talk like that,” Alice said, quickly. “I'm old enough to
+realize that papa may need pressure of all sorts; I only think it makes
+him more obstinate to get him cross. You probably do understand him
+better, but that's one thing I've found out and you haven't. There!”
+ She gave her mother a friendly tap on the shoulder and went to the door.
+“I'll hop in and say hello to him now.”
+
+As she went, she continued the fastening of her blouse, and appeared in
+her father's room with one hand still thus engaged, but she patted his
+forehead with the other.
+
+“Poor old papa-daddy!” she said, gaily. “Every time he's better somebody
+talks him into getting so mad he has a relapse. It's a shame!”
+
+Her father's eyes, beneath their melancholy brows, looked up at her
+wistfully. “I suppose you heard your mother going for me,” he said.
+
+“I heard you going for her, too!” Alice laughed. “What was it all
+about?”
+
+“Oh, the same danged old story!”
+
+“You mean she wants you to try something new when you get well?” Alice
+asked, with cheerful innocence. “So we could all have a lot more money?”
+
+At this his sorrowful forehead was more sorrowful than ever. The deep
+horizontal lines moved upward to a pattern of suffering so familiar to
+his daughter that it meant nothing to her; but he spoke quietly. “Yes;
+so we wouldn't have any money at all, most likely.”
+
+“Oh, no!” she laughed, and, finishing with her blouse, patted his cheeks
+with both hands. “Just think how many grand openings there must be for
+a man that knows as much as you do! I always did believe you could get
+rich if you only cared to, papa.”
+
+But upon his forehead the painful pattern still deepened. “Don't you
+think we've always had enough, the way things are, Alice?”
+
+“Not the way things ARE!” She patted his cheeks again; laughed again.
+“It used to be enough, maybe anyway we did skimp along on it--but the
+way things are now I expect mama's really pretty practical in her ideas,
+though, I think it's a shame for her to bother you about it while you're
+so weak. Don't you worry about it, though; just think about other things
+till you get strong.”
+
+“You know,” he said; “you know it isn't exactly the easiest thing in the
+world for a man of my age to find these grand openings you speak of. And
+when you've passed half-way from fifty to sixty you're apt to see some
+risk in giving up what you know how to do and trying something new.”
+
+“My, what a frown!” she cried, blithely. “Didn't I tell you to stop
+thinking about it till you get ALL well?” She bent over him, giving
+him a gay little kiss on the bridge of his nose. “There! I must run to
+breakfast. Cheer up now! Au 'voir!” And with her pretty hand she waved
+further encouragement from the closing door as she departed.
+
+Lightsomely descending the narrow stairway, she whistled as she went,
+her fingers drumming time on the rail; and, still whistling, she came
+into the dining-room, where her mother and her brother were already at
+the table. The brother, a thin and sallow boy of twenty, greeted her
+without much approval as she took her place.
+
+“Nothing seems to trouble you!” he said.
+
+“No; nothing much,” she made airy response. “What's troubling yourself,
+Walter?”
+
+“Don't let that worry you!” he returned, seeming to consider this to be
+repartee of an effective sort; for he furnished a short laugh to go
+with it, and turned to his coffee with the manner of one who has
+satisfactorily closed an episode.
+
+“Walter always seems to have so many secrets!” Alice said, studying
+him shrewdly, but with a friendly enough amusement in her scrutiny.
+“Everything he does or says seems to be acted for the benefit of some
+mysterious audience inside himself, and he always gets its applause.
+Take what he said just now: he seems to think it means something, but
+if it does, why, that's just another secret between him and the secret
+audience inside of him! We don't really know anything about Walter at
+all, do we, mama?”
+
+Walter laughed again, in a manner that sustained her theory well enough;
+then after finishing his coffee, he took from his pocket a flattened
+packet in glazed blue paper; extracted with stained fingers a bent and
+wrinkled little cigarette, lighted it, hitched up his belted trousers
+with the air of a person who turns from trifles to things better worth
+his attention, and left the room.
+
+Alice laughed as the door closed. “He's ALL secrets,” she said. “Don't
+you think you really ought to know more about him, mama?”
+
+“I'm sure he's a good boy,” Mrs. Adams returned, thoughtfully. “He's
+been very brave about not being able to have the advantages that are
+enjoyed by the boys he's grown up with. I've never heard a word of
+complaint from him.”
+
+“About his not being sent to college?” Alice cried. “I should think you
+wouldn't! He didn't even have enough ambition to finish high school!”
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed. “It seemed to me Walter lost his ambition when nearly
+all the boys he'd grown up with went to Eastern schools to prepare for
+college, and we couldn't afford to send him. If only your father would
+have listened----”
+
+Alice interrupted: “What nonsense! Walter hated books and studying, and
+athletics, too, for that matter. He doesn't care for anything nice that
+I ever heard of. What do you suppose he does like, mama? He must like
+something or other somewhere, but what do you suppose it is? What does
+he do with his time?”
+
+“Why, the poor boy's at Lamb and Company's all day. He doesn't get
+through until five in the afternoon; he doesn't HAVE much time.”
+
+“Well, we never have dinner until about seven, and he's always late for
+dinner, and goes out, heaven knows where, right afterward!” Alice shook
+her head. “He used to go with our friends' boys, but I don't think he
+does now.”
+
+“Why, how could he?” Mrs. Adams protested. “That isn't his fault, poor
+child! The boys he knew when he was younger are nearly all away at
+college.”
+
+“Yes, but he doesn't see anything of 'em when they're here at
+holiday-time or vacation. None of 'em come to the house any more.”
+
+“I suppose he's made other friends. It's natural for him to want
+companions, at his age.”
+
+“Yes,” Alice said, with disapproving emphasis. “But who are they? I've
+got an idea he plays pool at some rough place down-town.”
+
+“Oh, no; I'm sure he's a steady boy,” Mrs. Adams protested, but her tone
+was not that of thoroughgoing conviction, and she added, “Life might
+be a very different thing for him if only your father can be brought to
+see----”
+
+“Never mind, mama! It isn't me that has to be convinced, you know; and
+we can do a lot more with papa if we just let him alone about it for a
+day or two. Promise me you won't say any more to him until--well, until
+he's able to come downstairs to table. Will you?”
+
+Mrs. Adams bit her lip, which had begun to tremble. “I think you can
+trust me to know a FEW things, Alice,” she said. “I'm a little older
+than you, you know.”
+
+“That's a good girl!” Alice jumped up, laughing. “Don't forget it's the
+same as a promise, and do just cheer him up a little. I'll say good-bye
+to him before I go out.”
+
+“Where are you going?”
+
+“Oh, I've got lots to do. I thought I'd run out to Mildred's to see what
+she's going to wear to-night, and then I want to go down and buy a
+yard of chiffon and some narrow ribbon to make new bows for my
+slippers--you'll have to give me some money----”
+
+“If he'll give it to me!” her mother lamented, as they went toward the
+front stairs together; but an hour later she came into Alice's room with
+a bill in her hand.
+
+“He has some money in his bureau drawer,” she said. “He finally told me
+where it was.”
+
+There were traces of emotion in her voice, and Alice, looking shrewdly
+at her, saw moisture in her eyes.
+
+“Mama!” she cried. “You didn't do what you promised me you wouldn't, did
+you--NOT before Miss Perry!”
+
+“Miss Perry's getting him some broth,” Mrs. Adams returned, calmly.
+“Besides, you're mistaken in saying I promised you anything; I said I
+thought you could trust me to know what is right.”
+
+“So you did bring it up again!” And Alice swung away from her, strode
+to her father's door, flung it open, went to him, and put a light hand
+soothingly over his unrelaxed forehead.
+
+“Poor old papa!” she said. “It's a shame how everybody wants to trouble
+him. He shan't be bothered any more at all! He doesn't need to have
+everybody telling him how to get away from that old hole he's worked in
+so long and begin to make us all nice and rich. HE knows how!”
+
+Thereupon she kissed him a consoling good-bye, and made another gay
+departure, the charming hand again fluttering like a white butterfly in
+the shadow of the closing door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Mrs. Adams had remained in Alice's room, but her mood seemed to have
+changed, during her daughter's little more than momentary absence.
+
+“What did he SAY?” she asked, quickly, and her tone was hopeful.
+
+“'Say?'” Alice repeated, impatiently. “Why, nothing. I didn't let him.
+Really, mama, I think the best thing for you to do would be to just keep
+out of his room, because I don't believe you can go in there and not
+talk to him about it, and if you do talk we'll never get him to do the
+right thing. Never!”
+
+The mother's response was a grieving silence; she turned from her
+daughter and walked to the door.
+
+“Now, for goodness' sake!” Alice cried. “Don't go making tragedy out of
+my offering you a little practical advice!”
+
+“I'm not,” Mrs. Adams gulped, halting. “I'm just--just going to dust the
+downstairs, Alice.” And with her face still averted, she went out into
+the little hallway, closing the door behind her. A moment later she
+could be heard descending the stairs, the sound of her footsteps
+carrying somehow an effect of resignation.
+
+Alice listened, sighed, and, breathing the words, “Oh, murder!” turned
+to cheerier matters. She put on a little apple-green turban with a dim
+gold band round it, and then, having shrouded the turban in a white
+veil, which she kept pushed up above her forehead, she got herself into
+a tan coat of soft cloth fashioned with rakish severity. After that,
+having studied herself gravely in a long glass, she took from one of
+the drawers of her dressing-table a black leather card-case cornered in
+silver filigree, but found it empty.
+
+She opened another drawer wherein were two white pasteboard boxes of
+cards, the one set showing simply “Miss Adams,” the other engraved in
+Gothic characters, “Miss Alys Tuttle Adams.” The latter belonged to
+Alice's “Alys” period--most girls go through it; and Alice must have
+felt that she had graduated, for, after frowning thoughtfully at the
+exhibit this morning, she took the box with its contents, and let the
+white shower fall from her fingers into the waste-basket beside her
+small desk. She replenished the card-case from the “Miss Adams”
+ box; then, having found a pair of fresh white gloves, she tucked an
+ivory-topped Malacca walking-stick under her arm and set forth.
+
+She went down the stairs, buttoning her gloves and still wearing
+the frown with which she had put “Alys” finally out of her life. She
+descended slowly, and paused on the lowest step, looking about her with
+an expression that needed but a slight deepening to betoken bitterness.
+Its connection with her dropping “Alys” forever was slight, however.
+
+The small frame house, about fifteen years old, was already inclining
+to become a new Colonial relic. The Adamses had built it, moving into it
+from the “Queen Anne” house they had rented until they took this step in
+fashion. But fifteen years is a long time to stand still in the midland
+country, even for a house, and this one was lightly made, though the
+Adamses had not realized how flimsily until they had lived in it for
+some time. “Solid, compact, and convenient” were the instructions to the
+architect, and he had made it compact successfully. Alice, pausing
+at the foot of the stairway, was at the same time fairly in the
+“living-room,” for the only separation between the “living room” and the
+hall was a demarcation suggested to willing imaginations by a pair of
+wooden columns painted white. These columns, pine under the paint,
+were bruised and chipped at the base; one of them showed a crack that
+threatened to become a split; the “hard-wood” floor had become uneven;
+and in a corner the walls apparently failed of solidity, where the
+wall-paper had declined to accompany some staggerings of the plaster
+beneath it.
+
+The furniture was in great part an accumulation begun with the wedding
+gifts; though some of it was older, two large patent rocking-chairs and
+a footstool having belonged to Mrs. Adams's mother in the days of hard
+brown plush and veneer. For decoration there were pictures and vases.
+Mrs. Adams had always been fond of vases, she said, and every year
+her husband's Christmas present to her was a vase of one sort or
+another--whatever the clerk showed him, marked at about twelve or
+fourteen dollars. The pictures were some of them etchings framed in
+gilt: Rheims, Canterbury, schooners grouped against a wharf; and Alice
+could remember how, in her childhood, her father sometimes pointed out
+the watery reflections in this last as very fine. But it was a long time
+since he had shown interest in such things--“or in anything much,” as
+she thought.
+
+Other pictures were two water-colours in baroque frames; one being the
+Amalfi monk on a pergola wall, while the second was a yard-wide display
+of iris blossoms, painted by Alice herself at fourteen, as a birthday
+gift to her mother. Alice's glance paused upon it now with no great
+pride, but showed more approval of an enormous photograph of the
+Colosseum. This she thought of as “the only good thing in the room”;
+it possessed and bestowed distinction, she felt; and she did not regret
+having won her struggle to get it hung in its conspicuous place of
+honour over the mantelpiece. Formerly that place had been held for
+years by a steel-engraving, an accurate representation of the Suspension
+Bridge at Niagara Falls. It was almost as large as its successor, the
+“Colosseum,” and it had been presented to Mr. Adams by colleagues in
+his department at Lamb and Company's. Adams had shown some feeling when
+Alice began to urge its removal to obscurity in the “upstairs hall”; he
+even resisted for several days after she had the “Colosseum” charged
+to him, framed in oak, and sent to the house. She cheered him up, of
+course, when he gave way; and her heart never misgave her that there
+might be a doubt which of the two pictures was the more dismaying.
+
+Over the pictures, the vases, the old brown plush rocking-chairs and
+the stool, over the three gilt chairs, over the new chintz-covered easy
+chair and the gray velure sofa--over everything everywhere, was the
+familiar coating of smoke grime. It had worked into every fibre of
+the lace curtains, dingying them to an unpleasant gray; it lay on
+the window-sills and it dimmed the glass panes; it covered the walls,
+covered the ceiling, and was smeared darker and thicker in all corners.
+Yet here was no fault of housewifery; the curse could not be lifted, as
+the ingrained smudges permanent on the once white woodwork proved. The
+grime was perpetually renewed; scrubbing only ground it in.
+
+This particular ugliness was small part of Alice's discontent, for
+though the coating grew a little deeper each year she was used to it.
+Moreover, she knew that she was not likely to find anything better in
+a thousand miles, so long as she kept to cities, and that none of
+her friends, however opulent, had any advantage of her here. Indeed,
+throughout all the great soft-coal country, people who consider
+themselves comparatively poor may find this consolation: cleanliness has
+been added to the virtues and beatitudes that money can not buy.
+
+Alice brightened a little as she went forward to the front door, and
+she brightened more when the spring breeze met her there. Then all
+depression left her as she walked down the short brick path to the
+sidewalk, looked up and down the street, and saw how bravely the maple
+shade-trees, in spite of the black powder they breathed, were flinging
+out their thousands of young green particles overhead.
+
+She turned north, treading the new little shadows on the pavement
+briskly, and, having finished buttoning her gloves, swung down her
+Malacca stick from under her arm to let it tap a more leisurely
+accompaniment to her quick, short step. She had to step quickly if she
+was to get anywhere; for the closeness of her skirt, in spite of its
+little length, permitted no natural stride; but she was pleased to be
+impeded, these brevities forming part of her show of fashion.
+
+Other pedestrians found them not without charm, though approval may have
+been lacking here and there, and at the first crossing Alice suffered
+what she might have accounted an actual injury, had she allowed herself
+to be so sensitive. An elderly woman in fussy black silk stood there,
+waiting for a streetcar; she was all of a globular modelling, with
+a face patterned like a frost-bitten peach; and that the approaching
+gracefulness was uncongenial she naively made too evident. Her round,
+wan eyes seemed roused to bitter life as they rose from the curved high
+heels of the buckled slippers to the tight little skirt, and thence with
+startled ferocity to the Malacca cane, which plainly appeared to her as
+a decoration not more astounding than it was insulting.
+
+Perceiving that the girl was bowing to her, the globular lady hurriedly
+made shift to alter her injurious expression. “Good morning, Mrs.
+Dowling,” Alice said, gravely. Mrs. Dowling returned the salutation with
+a smile as convincingly benevolent as the ghastly smile upon a Santa
+Claus face; and then, while Alice passed on, exploded toward her a
+single compacted breath through tightened lips.
+
+The sound was eloquently audible, though Mrs. Dowling remained unaware
+that in this or any manner whatever she had shed a light upon her
+thoughts; for it was her lifelong innocent conviction that other people
+saw her only as she wished to be seen, and heard from her only what she
+intended to be heard. At home it was always her husband who pulled down
+the shades of their bedroom window.
+
+Alice looked serious for a few moments after the little encounter, then
+found some consolation in the behaviour of a gentleman of forty or
+so who was coming toward her. Like Mrs. Dowling, he had begun to show
+consciousness of Alice's approach while she was yet afar off; but his
+tokens were of a kind pleasanter to her. He was like Mrs. Dowling again,
+however, in his conception that Alice would not realize the significance
+of what he did. He passed his hand over his neck-scarf to see that it
+lay neatly to his collar, smoothed a lapel of his coat, and adjusted
+his hat, seeming to be preoccupied the while with problems that kept
+his eyes to the pavement; then, as he came within a few feet of her,
+he looked up, as in a surprised recognition almost dramatic, smiled
+winningly, lifted his hat decisively, and carried it to the full arm's
+length.
+
+Alice's response was all he could have asked. The cane in her right
+hand stopped short in its swing, while her left hand moved in a pretty
+gesture as if an impulse carried it toward the heart; and she smiled,
+with her under lip caught suddenly between her teeth. Months ago she had
+seen an actress use this smile in a play, and it came perfectly to Alice
+now, without conscious direction, it had been so well acquired; but the
+pretty hand's little impulse toward the heart was an original bit all
+her own, on the spur of the moment.
+
+The gentleman went on, passing from her forward vision as he replaced
+his hat. Of himself he was nothing to Alice, except for the gracious
+circumstance that he had shown strong consciousness of a pretty girl. He
+was middle-aged, substantial, a family man, securely married; and
+Alice had with him one of those long acquaintances that never become
+emphasized by so much as five minutes of talk; yet for this inconsequent
+meeting she had enacted a little part like a fragment in a pantomime of
+Spanish wooing.
+
+It was not for him--not even to impress him, except as a messenger.
+Alice was herself almost unaware of her thought, which was one of the
+running thousands of her thoughts that took no deliberate form in words.
+Nevertheless, she had it, and it was the impulse of all her pretty
+bits of pantomime when she met other acquaintances who made their
+appreciation visible, as this substantial gentleman did. In Alice's
+unworded thought, he was to be thus encouraged as in some measure a
+champion to speak well of her to the world; but more than this: he was
+to tell some magnificent unknown bachelor how wonderful, how mysterious,
+she was.
+
+She hastened on gravely, a little stirred reciprocally with the
+supposed stirrings in the breast of that shadowy ducal mate, who must be
+somewhere “waiting,” or perhaps already seeking her; for she more often
+thought of herself as “waiting” while he sought her; and sometimes this
+view of things became so definite that it shaped into a murmur on her
+lips. “Waiting. Just waiting.” And she might add, “For him!” Then, being
+twenty-two, she was apt to conclude the mystic interview by laughing at
+herself, though not without a continued wistfulness.
+
+She came to a group of small coloured children playing waywardly in a
+puddle at the mouth of a muddy alley; and at sight of her they gave over
+their pastime in order to stare. She smiled brilliantly upon them, but
+they were too struck with wonder to comprehend that the manifestation
+was friendly; and as Alice picked her way in a little detour to keep
+from the mud, she heard one of them say, “Lady got cane! Jeez'!”
+
+She knew that many coloured children use impieties familiarly, and she
+was not startled. She was disturbed, however, by an unfavourable hint in
+the speaker's tone. He was six, probably, but the sting of a criticism
+is not necessarily allayed by knowledge of its ignoble source, and
+Alice had already begun to feel a slight uneasiness about her cane. Mrs.
+Dowling's stare had been strikingly projected at it; other women more
+than merely glanced, their brows and lips contracting impulsively; and
+Alice was aware that one or two of them frankly halted as soon as she
+had passed.
+
+She had seen in several magazines pictures of ladies with canes, and on
+that account she had bought this one, never questioning that fashion is
+recognized, even in the provinces, as soon as beheld. On the contrary,
+these staring women obviously failed to realize that what they were
+being shown was not an eccentric outburst, but the bright harbinger of
+an illustrious mode. Alice had applied a bit of artificial pigment to
+her lips and cheeks before she set forth this morning; she did not
+need it, having a ready colour of her own, which now mounted high with
+annoyance.
+
+Then a splendidly shining closed black automobile, with windows of
+polished glass, came silently down the street toward her. Within it, as
+in a luxurious little apartment, three comely ladies in mourning sat
+and gossiped; but when they saw Alice they clutched one another. They
+instantly recovered, bowing to her solemnly as they were borne by, yet
+were not gone from her sight so swiftly but the edge of her side glance
+caught a flash of teeth in mouths suddenly opened, and the dark glisten
+of black gloves again clutching to share mirth.
+
+The colour that outdid the rouge on Alice's cheek extended its area and
+grew warmer as she realized how all too cordial had been her nod and
+smile to these humorous ladies. But in their identity lay a significance
+causing her a sharper smart, for they were of the family of that Lamb,
+chief of Lamb and Company, who had employed her father since before she
+was born.
+
+“And know his salary! They'd be SURE to find out about that!” was her
+thought, coupled with another bitter one to the effect that they had
+probably made instantaneous financial estimates of what she wore though
+certainly her walking-stick had most fed their hilarity.
+
+She tucked it under her arm, not swinging it again; and her breath
+became quick and irregular as emotion beset her. She had been enjoying
+her walk, but within the space of the few blocks she had gone since she
+met the substantial gentleman, she found that more than the walk was
+spoiled: suddenly her life seemed to be spoiled, too; though she did not
+view the ruin with complaisance. These Lamb women thought her and her
+cane ridiculous, did they? she said to herself. That was their parvenu
+blood: to think because a girl's father worked for their grandfather
+she had no right to be rather striking in style, especially when the
+striking WAS her style. Probably all the other girls and women would
+agree with them and would laugh at her when they got together, and,
+what might be fatal, would try to make all the men think her a silly
+pretender. Men were just like sheep, and nothing was easier than for
+women to set up as shepherds and pen them in a fold. “To keep out
+outsiders,” Alice thought. “And make 'em believe I AM an outsider.
+What's the use of living?”
+
+All seemed lost when a trim young man appeared, striding out of a
+cross-street not far before her, and, turning at the corner, came
+toward her. Visibly, he slackened his gait to lengthen the time of his
+approach, and, as he was a stranger to her, no motive could be ascribed
+to him other than a wish to have a longer time to look at her.
+
+She lifted a pretty hand to a pin at her throat, bit her lip--not with
+the smile, but mysteriously--and at the last instant before her shadow
+touched the stranger, let her eyes gravely meet his. A moment later,
+having arrived before the house which was her destination, she halted
+at the entrance to a driveway leading through fine lawns to the
+intentionally important mansion. It was a pleasant and impressive
+place to be seen entering, but Alice did not enter at once. She paused,
+examining a tiny bit of mortar which the masons had forgotten to scrape
+from a brick in one of the massive gate-posts. She frowned at this tiny
+defacement, and with an air of annoyance scraped it away, using the
+ferrule of her cane an act of fastidious proprietorship. If any one had
+looked back over his shoulder he would not have doubted that she lived
+there.
+
+Alice did not turn to see whether anything of the sort happened or not,
+but she may have surmised that it did. At all events, it was with
+an invigorated step that she left the gateway behind her and went
+cheerfully up the drive to the house of her friend Mildred.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Adams had a restless morning, and toward noon he asked Miss Perry to
+call his daughter; he wished to say something to her.
+
+“I thought I heard her leaving the house a couple of hours ago--maybe
+longer,” the nurse told him. “I'll go see.” And she returned from the
+brief errand, her impression confirmed by information from Mrs. Adams.
+“Yes. She went up to Miss Mildred Palmer's to see what she's going to
+wear to-night.”
+
+Adams looked at Miss Perry wearily, but remained passive, making no
+inquiries; for he was long accustomed to what seemed to him a kind of
+jargon among ladies, which became the more incomprehensible when they
+tried to explain it. A man's best course, he had found, was just to let
+it go as so much sound. His sorrowful eyes followed the nurse as she
+went back to her rocking-chair by the window, and her placidity showed
+him that there was no mystery for her in the fact that Alice walked
+two miles to ask so simple a question when there was a telephone in
+the house. Obviously Miss Perry also comprehended why Alice thought it
+important to know what Mildred meant to wear. Adams understood why Alice
+should be concerned with what she herself wore “to look neat and tidy
+and at her best, why, of course she'd want to,” he thought--but he
+realized that it was forever beyond him to understand why the clothing
+of other people had long since become an absorbing part of her life.
+
+Her excursion this morning was no novelty; she was continually going to
+see what Mildred meant to wear, or what some other girl meant to wear;
+and when Alice came home from wherever other girls or women had been
+gathered, she always hurried to her mother with earnest descriptions of
+the clothing she had seen. At such times, if Adams was present, he might
+recognize “organdie,” or “taffeta,” or “chiffon,” as words defining
+certain textiles, but the rest was too technical for him, and he
+was like a dismal boy at a sermon, just waiting for it to get itself
+finished. Not the least of the mystery was his wife's interest: she was
+almost indifferent about her own clothes, and when she consulted Alice
+about them spoke hurriedly and with an air of apology; but when Alice
+described other people's clothes, Mrs. Adams listened as eagerly as the
+daughter talked.
+
+“There they go!” he muttered to-day, a moment after he heard the front
+door closing, a sound recognizable throughout most of the thinly built
+house. Alice had just returned, and Mrs. Adams called to her from the
+upper hallway, not far from Adams's door.
+
+“What did she SAY?”
+
+“She was sort of snippy about it,” Alice returned, ascending the stairs.
+“She gets that way sometimes, and pretended she hadn't made up her mind,
+but I'm pretty sure it'll be the maize Georgette with Malines flounces.”
+
+“Didn't you say she wore that at the Pattersons'?” Mrs. Adams inquired,
+as Alice arrived at the top of the stairs. “And didn't you tell me she
+wore it again at the----”
+
+“Certainly not,” Alice interrupted, rather petulantly. “She's never worn
+it but once, and of course she wouldn't want to wear anything to-night
+that people have seen her in a lot.”
+
+Miss Perry opened the door of Adams's room and stepped out. “Your father
+wants to know if you'll come and see him a minute, Miss Adams.”
+
+“Poor old thing! Of course!” Alice exclaimed, and went quickly into the
+room, Miss Perry remaining outside. “What's the matter, papa? Getting
+awful sick of lying on his tired old back, I expect.”
+
+“I've had kind of a poor morning,” Adams said, as she patted his hand
+comfortingly. “I been thinking----”
+
+“Didn't I tell you not to?” she cried, gaily. “Of course you'll have
+poor times when you go and do just exactly what I say you mustn't. You
+stop thinking this very minute!”
+
+He smiled ruefully, closing his eyes; was silent for a moment, then
+asked her to sit beside the bed. “I been thinking of something I wanted
+to say,” he added.
+
+“What like, papa?”
+
+“Well, it's nothing--much,” he said, with something deprecatory in his
+tone, as if he felt vague impulses toward both humour and apology. “I
+just thought maybe I ought to've said more to you some time or other
+about--well, about the way things ARE, down at Lamb and Company's, for
+instance.”
+
+“Now, papa!” She leaned forward in the chair she had taken, and
+pretended to slap his hand crossly. “Isn't that exactly what I said you
+couldn't think one single think about till you get ALL well?”
+
+“Well----” he said, and went on slowly, not looking at her, but at the
+ceiling. “I just thought maybe it wouldn't been any harm if some time or
+other I told you something about the way they sort of depend on me down
+there.”
+
+“Why don't they show it, then?” she asked, quickly. “That's just what
+mama and I have been feeling so much; they don't appreciate you.”
+
+“Why, yes, they do,” he said. “Yes, they do. They began h'isting my
+salary the second year I went in there, and they've h'isted it a little
+every two years all the time I've worked for 'em. I've been head of the
+sundries department for seven years now, and I could hardly have more
+authority in that department unless I was a member of the firm itself.”
+
+“Well, why don't they make you a member of the firm? That's what they
+ought to've done! Yes, and long ago!”
+
+Adams laughed, but sighed with more heartiness than he had laughed.
+“They call me their 'oldest stand-by' down there.” He laughed again,
+apologetically, as if to excuse himself for taking a little pride in
+this title. “Yes, sir; they say I'm their 'oldest stand-by'; and I guess
+they know they can count on my department's turning in as good a report
+as they look for, at the end of every month; but they don't have to take
+a man into the firm to get him to do my work, dearie.”
+
+“But you said they depended on you, papa.”
+
+“So they do; but of course not so's they couldn't get along without me.”
+ He paused, reflecting. “I don't just seem to know how to put it--I
+mean how to put what I started out to say. I kind of wanted to tell
+you--well, it seems funny to me, these last few years, the way your
+mother's taken to feeling about it. I'd like to see a better
+established wholesale drug business than Lamb and Company this side the
+Alleghanies--I don't say bigger, I say better established--and it's kind
+of funny for a man that's been with a business like that as long as
+I have to hear it called a 'hole.' It's kind of funny when you think,
+yourself, you've done pretty fairly well in a business like that, and
+the men at the head of it seem to think so, too, and put your salary
+just about as high as anybody could consider customary--well, what I
+mean, Alice, it's kind of funny to have your mother think it's mostly
+just--mostly just a failure, so to speak.”
+
+His voice had become tremulous in spite of him; and this sign of
+weakness and emotion had sufficient effect upon Alice. She bent over him
+suddenly, with her arm about him and her cheek against his. “Poor papa!”
+ she murmured. “Poor papa!”
+
+“No, no,” he said. “I didn't mean anything to trouble you. I just
+thought----” He hesitated. “I just wondered--I thought maybe it wouldn't
+be any harm if I said something about how things ARE down there. I
+got to thinking maybe you didn't understand it's a pretty good place.
+They're fine people to work for; and they've always seemed to think
+something of me;--the way they took Walter on, for instance, soon as I
+asked 'em, last year. Don't you think that looked a good deal as if they
+thought something of me, Alice?”
+
+“Yes, papa,” she said, not moving.
+
+“And the work's right pleasant,” he went on. “Mighty nice boys in our
+department, Alice. Well, they are in all the departments, for that
+matter. We have a good deal of fun down there some days.”
+
+She lifted her head. “More than you do at home 'some days,' I expect,
+papa!” she said.
+
+He protested feebly. “Now, I didn't mean that--I didn't want to trouble
+you----”
+
+She looked at him through winking eyelashes. “I'm sorry I called it a
+'hole,' papa.”
+
+“No, no,” he protested, gently. “It was your mother said that.”
+
+“No. I did, too.”
+
+“Well, if you did, it was only because you'd heard her.”
+
+She shook her head, then kissed him. “I'm going to talk to her,” she
+said, and rose decisively.
+
+But at this, her father's troubled voice became quickly louder: “You
+better let her alone. I just wanted to have a little talk with you. I
+didn't mean to start any--your mother won't----”
+
+“Now, papa!” Alice spoke cheerfully again, and smiled upon him. “I want
+you to quit worrying! Everything's going to be all right and nobody's
+going to bother you any more about anything. You'll see!”
+
+She carried her smile out into the hall, but after she had closed the
+door her face was all pity; and her mother, waiting for her in the
+opposite room, spoke sympathetically.
+
+“What's the matter, Alice? What did he say that's upset you?”
+
+“Wait a minute, mama.” Alice found a handkerchief, used it for eyes and
+suffused nose, gulped, then suddenly and desolately sat upon the bed.
+“Poor, poor, POOR papa!” she whispered.
+
+“Why?” Mrs. Adams inquired, mildly. “What's the matter with him?
+Sometimes you act as if he weren't getting well. What's he been talking
+about?”
+
+“Mama--well, I think I'm pretty selfish. Oh, I do!”
+
+“Did he say you were?”
+
+“Papa? No, indeed! What I mean is, maybe we're both a little selfish to
+try to make him go out and hunt around for something new.”
+
+Mrs. Adams looked thoughtful. “Oh, that's what he was up to!”
+
+“Mama, I think we ought to give it up. I didn't dream it had really hurt
+him.”
+
+“Well, doesn't he hurt us?”
+
+“Never that I know of, mama.”
+
+“I don't mean by SAYING things,” Mrs. Adams explained, impatiently.
+“There are more ways than that of hurting people. When a man sticks to a
+salary that doesn't provide for his family, isn't that hurting them?”
+
+“Oh, it 'provides' for us well enough, mama. We have what we need--if I
+weren't so extravagant. Oh, _I_ know I am!”
+
+But at this admission her mother cried out sharply. “'Extravagant!'
+You haven't one tenth of what the other girls you go with have. And
+you CAN'T have what you ought to as long as he doesn't get out of that
+horrible place. It provides bare food and shelter for us, but what's
+that?”
+
+“I don't think we ought to try any more to change him.”
+
+“You don't?” Mrs. Adams came and stood before her. “Listen, Alice: your
+father's asleep; that's his trouble, and he's got to be waked up. He
+doesn't know that things have changed. When you and Walter were little
+children we did have enough--at least it seemed to be about as much
+as most of the people we knew. But the town isn't what it was in those
+days, and times aren't what they were then, and these fearful PRICES
+aren't the old prices. Everything else but your father has changed, and
+all the time he's stood still. He doesn't know it; he thinks because
+they've given him a hundred dollars more every two years he's quite a
+prosperous man! And he thinks that because his children cost him more
+than he and I cost our parents he gives them--enough!”
+
+“But Walter----” Alice faltered. “Walter doesn't cost him anything at
+all any more.” And she concluded, in a stricken voice, “It's all--me!”
+
+“Why shouldn't it be?” her mother cried. “You're young--you're just at
+the time when your life should be fullest of good things and happiness.
+Yet what do you get?”
+
+Alice's lip quivered; she was not unsusceptible to such an appeal, but
+she contrived the semblance of a protest. “I don't have such a bad time
+not a good DEAL of the time, anyhow. I've got a good MANY of the things
+other girls have----”
+
+“You have?” Mrs. Adams was piteously satirical. “I suppose you've got
+a limousine to go to that dance to-night? I suppose you've only got
+to call a florist and tell him to send you some orchids? I suppose
+you've----”
+
+But Alice interrupted this list. Apparently in a single instant all
+emotion left her, and she became businesslike, as one in the midst of
+trifles reminded of really serious matters. She got up from the bed
+and went to the door of the closet where she kept her dresses. “Oh, see
+here,” she said, briskly. “I've decided to wear my white organdie if you
+could put in a new lining for me. I'm afraid it'll take you nearly all
+afternoon.”
+
+She brought forth the dress, displayed it upon the bed, and Mrs. Adams
+examined it attentively.
+
+“Do you think you could get it done, mama?”
+
+“I don't see why not,” Mrs. Adams answered, passing a thoughtful hand
+over the fabric. “It oughtn't to take more than four or five hours.”
+
+“It's a shame to have you sit at the machine that long,” Alice said,
+absently, adding, “And I'm sure we ought to let papa alone. Let's just
+give it up, mama.”
+
+Mrs. Adams continued her thoughtful examination of the dress. “Did you
+buy the chiffon and ribbon, Alice?”
+
+“Yes. I'm sure we oughtn't to talk to him about it any more, mama.”
+
+“Well, we'll see.”
+
+“Let's both agree that we'll NEVER say another single word to him about
+it,” said Alice. “It'll be a great deal better if we just let him make
+up his mind for himself.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+With this, having more immediately practical questions before them, they
+dropped the subject, to bend their entire attention upon the dress; and
+when the lunch-gong sounded downstairs Alice was still sketching repairs
+and alterations. She continued to sketch them, not heeding the summons.
+
+“I suppose we'd better go down to lunch,” Mrs. Adams said, absently.
+“She's at the gong again.” “In a minute, mama. Now about the
+sleeves----” And she went on with her planning. Unfortunately the
+gong was inexpressive of the mood of the person who beat upon it. It
+consisted of three little metal bowls upon a string; they were unequal
+in size, and, upon being tapped with a padded stick, gave forth
+vibrations almost musically pleasant. It was Alice who had substituted
+this contrivance for the brass “dinner-bell” in use throughout her
+childhood; and neither she nor the others of her family realized that
+the substitution of sweeter sounds had made the life of that household
+more difficult. In spite of dismaying increases in wages, the Adamses
+still strove to keep a cook; and, as they were unable to pay the higher
+rates demanded by a good one, what they usually had was a whimsical
+coloured woman of nomadic impulses. In the hands of such a person the
+old-fashioned “dinner-bell” was satisfying; life could instantly be
+made intolerable for any one dawdling on his way to a meal; the bell was
+capable of every desirable profanity and left nothing bottled up in the
+breast of the ringer. But the chamois-covered stick might whack upon
+Alice's little Chinese bowls for a considerable length of time and
+produce no great effect of urgency upon a hearer, nor any other effect,
+except fury in the cook. The ironical impossibility of expressing
+indignation otherwise than by sounds of gentle harmony proved
+exasperating; the cook was apt to become surcharged, so that explosive
+resignations, never rare, were somewhat more frequent after the
+introduction of the gong.
+
+Mrs. Adams took this increased frequency to be only another
+manifestation of the inexplicable new difficulties that beset all
+housekeeping. You paid a cook double what you had paid one a few years
+before; and the cook knew half as much of cookery, and had no gratitude.
+The more you gave these people, it seemed, the worse they behaved--a
+condition not to be remedied by simply giving them less, because you
+couldn't even get the worst unless you paid her what she demanded.
+Nevertheless, Mrs. Adams remained fitfully an optimist in the matter.
+Brought up by her mother to speak of a female cook as “the girl,” she
+had been instructed by Alice to drop that definition in favour of one
+not an improvement in accuracy: “the maid.” Almost always, during
+the first day or so after every cook came, Mrs. Adams would say, at
+intervals, with an air of triumph: “I believe--of course it's a little
+soon to be sure--but I do really believe this new maid is the treasure
+we've been looking for so long!” Much in the same way that Alice dreamed
+of a mysterious perfect mate for whom she “waited,” her mother had
+a fairy theory that hidden somewhere in the universe there was the
+treasure, the perfect “maid,” who would come and cook in the Adamses'
+kitchen, not four days or four weeks, but forever.
+
+The present incumbent was not she. Alice, profoundly interested herself,
+kept her mother likewise so preoccupied with the dress that they were
+but vaguely conscious of the gong's soft warnings, though these were
+repeated and protracted unusually. Finally the sound of a hearty voice,
+independent and enraged, reached the pair. It came from the hall below.
+
+“I says goo'-BYE!” it called. “Da'ss all!”
+
+Then the front door slammed.
+
+“Why, what----” Mrs. Adams began.
+
+They went down hurriedly to find out. Miss Perry informed them.
+
+“I couldn't make her listen to reason,” she said. “She rang the gong
+four or five times and got to talking to herself; and then she went up
+to her room and packed her bag. I told her she had no business to go out
+the front door, anyhow.”
+
+Mrs. Adams took the news philosophically. “I thought she had something
+like that in her eye when I paid her this morning, and I'm not
+surprised. Well, we won't let Mr. Adams know anything's the matter till
+I get a new one.”
+
+They lunched upon what the late incumbent had left chilling on the
+table, and then Mrs. Adams prepared to wash the dishes; she would “have
+them done in a jiffy,” she said, cheerfully. But it was Alice who washed
+the dishes.
+
+“I DON'T like to have you do that, Alice,” her mother protested,
+following her into the kitchen. “It roughens the hands, and when a girl
+has hands like yours----”
+
+“I know, mama.” Alice looked troubled, but shook her head. “It can't be
+helped this time; you'll need every minute to get that dress done.”
+
+Mrs. Adams went away lamenting, while Alice, no expert, began to splash
+the plates and cups and saucers in the warm water. After a while, as
+she worked, her eyes grew dreamy: she was making little gay-coloured
+pictures of herself, unfounded prophecies of how she would look and what
+would happen to her that evening. She saw herself, charming and demure,
+wearing a fluffy idealization of the dress her mother now determinedly
+struggled with upstairs; she saw herself framed in a garlanded archway,
+the entrance to a ballroom, and saw the people on the shining floor
+turning dramatically to look at her; then from all points a rush of
+young men shouting for dances with her; and she constructed a superb
+stranger, tall, dark, masterfully smiling, who swung her out of the
+clamouring group as the music began. She saw herself dancing with him,
+saw the half-troubled smile she would give him; and she accurately
+smiled that smile as she rinsed the knives and forks.
+
+These hopeful fragments of drama were not to be realized, she knew; but
+she played that they were true, and went on creating them. In all of
+them she wore or carried flowers--her mother's sorrow for her in this
+detail but made it the more important--and she saw herself glamorous
+with orchids; discarded these for an armful of long-stemmed, heavy
+roses; tossed them away for a great bouquet of white camellias; and
+so wandered down a lengthening hothouse gallery of floral beauty, all
+costly and beyond her reach except in such a wistful day-dream. And upon
+her present whole horizon, though she searched it earnestly, she could
+discover no figure of a sender of flowers.
+
+Out of her fancies the desire for flowers to wear that night emerged
+definitely and became poignant; she began to feel that it might be
+particularly important to have them. “This might be the night!” She was
+still at the age to dream that the night of any dance may be the vital
+point in destiny. No matter how commonplace or disappointing other
+dance nights have been this one may bring the great meeting. The unknown
+magnifico may be there.
+
+Alice was almost unaware of her own reveries in which this being
+appeared--reveries often so transitory that they developed and passed in
+a few seconds. And in some of them the being was not wholly a stranger;
+there were moments when he seemed to be composed of recognizable
+fragments of young men she knew--a smile she had liked, from one; the
+figure of another, the hair of another--and sometimes she thought
+he might be concealed, so to say, within the person of an actual
+acquaintance, someone she had never suspected of being the right seeker
+for her, someone who had never suspected that it was she who “waited”
+ for him. Anything might reveal them to each other: a look, a turn of the
+head, a singular word--perhaps some flowers upon her breast or in her
+hand.
+
+She wiped the dishes slowly, concluding the operation by dropping a
+saucer upon the floor and dreamily sweeping the fragments under the
+stove. She sighed and replaced the broom near a window, letting her
+glance wander over the small yard outside. The grass, repulsively
+besooted to the colour of coal-smoke all winter, had lately come to life
+again and now sparkled with green, in the midst of which a tiny shot of
+blue suddenly fixed her absent eyes. They remained upon it for several
+moments, becoming less absent.
+
+It was a violet.
+
+Alice ran upstairs, put on her hat, went outdoors and began to search
+out the violets. She found twenty-two, a bright omen--since the number
+was that of her years--but not enough violets. There were no more; she
+had ransacked every foot of the yard.
+
+She looked dubiously at the little bunch in her hand, glanced at
+the lawn next door, which offered no favourable prospect; then went
+thoughtfully into the house, left her twenty-two violets in a bowl
+of water, and came quickly out again, her brow marked with a frown of
+decision. She went to a trolley-line and took a car to the outskirts of
+the city where a new park had been opened.
+
+Here she resumed her search, but it was not an easily rewarded one,
+and for an hour after her arrival she found no violets. She walked
+conscientiously over the whole stretch of meadow, her eyes roving
+discontentedly; there was never a blue dot in the groomed expanse; but
+at last, as she came near the borders of an old grove of trees, left
+untouched by the municipal landscapers, the little flowers appeared, and
+she began to gather them. She picked them carefully, loosening the earth
+round each tiny plant, so as to bring the roots up with it, that it
+might live the longer; and she had brought a napkin, which she
+drenched at a hydrant, and kept loosely wrapped about the stems of her
+collection.
+
+The turf was too damp for her to kneel; she worked patiently, stooping
+from the waist; and when she got home in a drizzle of rain at five
+o'clock her knees were tremulous with strain, her back ached, and she
+was tired all over, but she had three hundred violets. Her mother moaned
+when Alice showed them to her, fragrant in a basin of water.
+
+“Oh, you POOR child! To think of your having to work so hard to get
+things that other girls only need lift their little fingers for!”
+
+“Never mind,” said Alice, huskily. “I've got 'em and I AM going to have
+a good time to-night!”
+
+“You've just got to!” Mrs. Adams agreed, intensely sympathetic. “The
+Lord knows you deserve to, after picking all these violets, poor thing,
+and He wouldn't be mean enough to keep you from it. I may have to get
+dinner before I finish the dress, but I can get it done in a few minutes
+afterward, and it's going to look right pretty. Don't you worry about
+THAT! And with all these lovely violets----”
+
+“I wonder----” Alice began, paused, then went on, fragmentarily: “I
+suppose--well, I wonder--do you suppose it would have been better policy
+to have told Walter before----”
+
+“No,” said her mother. “It would only have given him longer to grumble.”
+
+“But he might----”
+
+“Don't worry,” Mrs. Adams reassured her. “He'll be a little cross, but
+he won't be stubborn; just let me talk to him and don't you say anything
+at all, no matter what HE says.”
+
+These references to Walter concerned some necessary manoeuvres which
+took place at dinner, and were conducted by the mother, Alice having
+accepted her advice to sit in silence. Mrs. Adams began by laughing
+cheerfully. “I wonder how much longer it took me to cook this dinner
+than it does Walter to eat it?” she said. “Don't gobble, child! There's
+no hurry.”
+
+In contact with his own family Walter was no squanderer of words.
+
+“Is for me,” he said. “Got date.”
+
+“I know you have, but there's plenty of time.”
+
+He smiled in benevolent pity. “YOU know, do you? If you made any
+coffee--don't bother if you didn't. Get some down-town.” He seemed
+about to rise and depart; whereupon Alice, biting her lip, sent a
+panic-stricken glance at her mother.
+
+But Mrs. Adams seemed not at all disturbed; and laughed again. “Why,
+what nonsense, Walter! I'll bring your coffee in a few minutes, but
+we're going to have dessert first.”
+
+“What sort?”
+
+“Some lovely peaches.”
+
+“Doe' want 'ny canned peaches,” said the frank Walter, moving back his
+chair. “G'-night.”
+
+“Walter! It doesn't begin till about nine o'clock at the earliest.”
+
+He paused, mystified. “What doesn't?”
+
+“The dance.”
+
+“What dance?”
+
+“Why, Mildred Palmer's dance, of course.”
+
+Walter laughed briefly. “What's that to me?”
+
+“Why, you haven't forgotten it's TO-NIGHT, have you?” Mrs. Adams cried.
+“What a boy!”
+
+“I told you a week ago I wasn't going to that ole dance,” he returned,
+frowning. “You heard me.”
+
+“Walter!” she exclaimed. “Of COURSE you're going. I got your clothes all
+out this afternoon, and brushed them for you. They'll look very nice,
+and----”
+
+“They won't look nice on ME,” he interrupted. “Got date down-town, I
+tell you.”
+
+“But of course you'll----”
+
+“See here!” Walter said, decisively. “Don't get any wrong ideas in your
+head. I'm just as liable to go up to that ole dance at the Palmers' as I
+am to eat a couple of barrels of broken glass.”
+
+“But, Walter----”
+
+Walter was beginning to be seriously annoyed. “Don't 'Walter' me! I'm no
+s'ciety snake. I wouldn't jazz with that Palmer crowd if they coaxed me
+with diamonds.”
+
+“Walter----”
+
+“Didn't I tell you it's no use to 'Walter' me?” he demanded.
+
+“My dear child----”
+
+“Oh, Glory!”
+
+At this Mrs. Adams abandoned her air of amusement, looked hurt, and
+glanced at the demure Miss Perry across the table. “I'm afraid Miss
+Perry won't think you have very good manners, Walter.”
+
+“You're right she won't,” he agreed, grimly. “Not if I haf to hear any
+more about me goin' to----”
+
+But his mother interrupted him with some asperity: “It seems very
+strange that you always object to going anywhere among OUR friends,
+Walter.”
+
+“YOUR friends!” he said, and, rising from his chair, gave utterance to
+an ironical laugh strictly monosyllabic. “Your friends!” he repeated,
+going to the door. “Oh, yes! Certainly! Good-NIGHT!”
+
+And looking back over his shoulder to offer a final brief view of his
+derisive face, he took himself out of the room.
+
+Alice gasped: “Mama----”
+
+“I'll stop him!” her mother responded, sharply; and hurried after the
+truant, catching him at the front door with his hat and raincoat on.
+
+“Walter----”
+
+“Told you had a date down-town,” he said, gruffly, and would have opened
+the door, but she caught his arm and detained him.
+
+“Walter, please come back and finish your dinner. When I take all the
+trouble to cook it for you, I think you might at least----”
+
+“Now, now!” he said. “That isn't what you're up to. You don't want to
+make me eat; you want to make me listen.”
+
+“Well, you MUST listen!” She retained her grasp upon his arm, and
+made it tighter. “Walter, please!” she entreated, her voice becoming
+tremulous. “PLEASE don't make me so much trouble!”
+
+He drew back from her as far as her hold upon him permitted, and looked
+at her sharply. “Look here!” he said. “I get you, all right! What's the
+matter of Alice GOIN' to that party by herself?”
+
+“She just CAN'T!”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“It makes things too MEAN for her, Walter. All the other girls have
+somebody to depend on after they get there.”
+
+“Well, why doesn't she have somebody?” he asked, testily. “Somebody
+besides ME, I mean! Why hasn't somebody asked her to go? She ought to be
+THAT popular, anyhow, I sh'd think--she TRIES enough!”
+
+“I don't understand how you can be so hard,” his mother wailed, huskily.
+“You know why they don't run after her the way they do the other girls
+she goes with, Walter. It's because we're poor, and she hasn't got any
+background.
+
+“'Background?'” Walter repeated. “'Background?' What kind of talk is
+that?”
+
+“You WILL go with her to-night, Walter?” his mother pleaded, not
+stopping to enlighten him. “You don't understand how hard things are for
+her and how brave she is about them, or you COULDN'T be so selfish! It'd
+be more than I can bear to see her disappointed to-night! She went clear
+out to Belleview Park this afternoon, Walter, and spent hours and hours
+picking violets to wear. You WILL----”
+
+Walter's heart was not iron, and the episode of the violets may have
+reached it. “Oh, BLUB!” he said, and flung his soft hat violently at the
+wall.
+
+His mother beamed with delight. “THAT'S a good boy, darling! You'll
+never be sorry you----”
+
+“Cut it out,” he requested. “If I take her, will you pay for a taxi?”
+
+“Oh, Walter!” And again Mrs. Adams showed distress. “Couldn't you?”
+
+“No, I couldn't; I'm not goin' to throw away my good money like that,
+and you can't tell what time o' night it'll be before she's willin' to
+come home. What's the matter you payin' for one?”
+
+“I haven't any money.”
+
+“Well, father----”
+
+She shook her head dolefully. “I got some from him this morning, and
+I can't bother him for any more; it upsets him. He's ALWAYS been so
+terribly close with money----”
+
+“I guess he couldn't help that,” Walter observed. “We're liable to go to
+the poorhouse the way it is. Well, what's the matter our walkin' to this
+rotten party?”
+
+“In the rain, Walter?”
+
+“Well, it's only a drizzle and we can take a streetcar to within a block
+of the house.”
+
+Again his mother shook her head. “It wouldn't do.”
+
+“Well, darn the luck, all right!” he consented, explosively. “I'll get
+her something to ride in. It means seventy-five cents.”
+
+“Why, Walter!” Mrs. Adams cried, much pleased. “Do you know how to get a
+cab for that little? How splendid!”
+
+“Tain't a cab,” Walter informed her crossly. “It's a tin Lizzie, but you
+don't haf' to tell her what it is till I get her into it, do you?”
+
+Mrs. Adams agreed that she didn't.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+Alice was busy with herself for two hours after dinner; but a little
+before nine o'clock she stood in front of her long mirror, completed,
+bright-eyed and solemn. Her hair, exquisitely arranged, gave all she
+asked of it; what artificialities in colour she had used upon her face
+were only bits of emphasis that made her prettiness the more distinct;
+and the dress, not rumpled by her mother's careful hours of work, was a
+white cloud of loveliness. Finally there were two triumphant bouquets
+of violets, each with the stems wrapped in tin-foil shrouded by a bow of
+purple chiffon; and one bouquet she wore at her waist and the other she
+carried in her hand.
+
+Miss Perry, called in by a rapturous mother for the free treat of a look
+at this radiance, insisted that Alice was a vision. “Purely and simply
+a vision!” she said, meaning that no other definition whatever would
+satisfy her. “I never saw anybody look a vision if she don't look one
+to-night,” the admiring nurse declared. “Her papa'll think the same I do
+about it. You see if he doesn't say she's purely and simply a vision.”
+
+Adams did not fulfil the prediction quite literally when Alice paid a
+brief visit to his room to “show” him and bid him good-night; but he
+chuckled feebly. “Well, well, well!” he said.
+
+“You look mighty fine--MIGHTY fine!” And he waggled a bony finger at her
+two bouquets. “Why, Alice, who's your beau?”
+
+“Never you mind!” she laughed, archly brushing his nose with the violets
+in her hand. “He treats me pretty well, doesn't he?”
+
+“Must like to throw his money around! These violets smell mighty sweet,
+and they ought to, if they're going to a party with YOU. Have a good
+time, dearie.”
+
+“I mean to!” she cried; and she repeated this gaily, but with an
+emphasis expressing sharp determination as she left him. “I MEAN to!”
+
+“What was he talking about?” her mother inquired, smoothing the rather
+worn and old evening wrap she had placed on Alice's bed. “What were you
+telling him you 'mean to?'”
+
+Alice went back to her triple mirror for the last time, then stood
+before the long one. “That I mean to have a good time to-night,” she
+said; and as she turned from her reflection to the wrap Mrs. Adams held
+up for her, “It looks as though I COULD, don't you think so?”
+
+“You'll just be a queen to-night,” her mother whispered in fond emotion.
+“You mustn't doubt yourself.”
+
+“Well, there's one thing,” said Alice. “I think I do look nice enough to
+get along without having to dance with that Frank Dowling! All I ask is
+for it to happen just once; and if he comes near me to-night I'm going
+to treat him the way the other girls do. Do you suppose Walter's got the
+taxi out in front?”
+
+“He--he's waiting down in the hall,” Mrs. Adams answered, nervously; and
+she held up another garment to go over the wrap.
+
+Alice frowned at it. “What's that, mama?”
+
+“It's--it's your father's raincoat. I thought you'd put it on over----”
+
+“But I won't need it in a taxicab.”
+
+“You will to get in and out, and you needn't take it into the Palmers'.
+You can leave it in the--in the--It's drizzling, and you'll need it.”
+
+“Oh, well,” Alice consented; and a few minutes later, as with Walter's
+assistance she climbed into the vehicle he had provided, she better
+understood her mother's solicitude.
+
+“What on earth IS this, Walter?” she asked.
+
+“Never mind; it'll keep you dry enough with the top up,” he returned,
+taking his seat beside her. Then for a time, as they went rather jerkily
+up the street, she was silent; but finally she repeated her question:
+“What IS it, Walter?”
+
+“What's what?”
+
+“This--this CAR?”
+
+“It's a ottomobile.”
+
+“I mean--what kind is it?”
+
+“Haven't you got eyes?”
+
+“It's too dark.”
+
+“It's a second-hand tin Lizzie,” said Walter. “D'you know what that
+means? It means a flivver.”
+
+“Yes, Walter.”
+
+“Got 'ny 'bjections?”
+
+“Why, no, dear,” she said, placatively. “Is it yours, Walter? Have you
+bought it?”
+
+“Me?” he laughed. “_I_ couldn't buy a used wheelbarrow. I rent this
+sometimes when I'm goin' out among 'em. Costs me seventy-five cents and
+the price o' the gas.”
+
+“That seems very moderate.”
+
+“I guess it is! The feller owes me some money, and this is the only way
+I'd ever get it off him.”
+
+“Is he a garage-keeper?”
+
+“Not exactly!” Walter uttered husky sounds of amusement. “You'll be just
+as happy, I guess, if you don't know who he is,” he said.
+
+His tone misgave her; and she said truthfully that she was content not
+to know who owned the car. “I joke sometimes about how you keep things
+to yourself,” she added, “but I really never do pry in your affairs,
+Walter.”
+
+“Oh, no, you don't!”
+
+“Indeed, I don't.”
+
+“Yes, you're mighty nice and cooing when you got me where you want me,”
+ he jeered. “Well, _I_ just as soon tell you where I get this car.”
+
+“I'd just as soon you wouldn't, Walter,” she said, hurriedly. “Please
+don't.”
+
+But Walter meant to tell her. “Why, there's nothin' exactly CRIMINAL
+about it,” he said. “It belongs to old J. A. Lamb himself. He keeps it
+for their coon chauffeur. I rent it from him.”
+
+“From Mr. LAMB?”
+
+“No; from the coon chauffeur.”
+
+“Walter!” she gasped.
+
+“Sure I do! I can get it any night when the coon isn't goin' to use it
+himself. He's drivin' their limousine to-night--that little Henrietta
+Lamb's goin' to the party, no matter if her father HAS only been dead
+less'n a year!” He paused, then inquired: “Well, how d'you like it?”
+
+She did not speak, and he began to be remorseful for having imparted
+so much information, though his way of expressing regret was his own.
+“Well, you WILL make the folks make me take you to parties!” he said. “I
+got to do it the best way I CAN, don't I?”
+
+Then as she made no response, “Oh, the car's CLEAN enough,” he said.
+“This coon, he's as particular as any white man; you needn't worry about
+that.” And as she still said nothing, he added gruffly, “I'd of had a
+better car if I could afforded it. You needn't get so upset about it.”
+
+“I don't understand--” she said in a low voice--“I don't understand how
+you know such people.”
+
+“Such people as who?”
+
+“As--coloured chauffeurs.”
+
+“Oh, look here, now!” he protested, loudly. “Don't you know this is a
+democratic country?”
+
+“Not quite that democratic, is it, Walter?”
+
+“The trouble with you,” he retorted, “you don't know there's anybody in
+town except just this silk-shirt crowd.” He paused, seeming to await
+a refutation; but as none came, he expressed himself definitely: “They
+make me sick.”
+
+They were coming near their destination, and the glow of the big,
+brightly lighted house was seen before them in the wet night. Other
+cars, not like theirs, were approaching this center of brilliance; long
+triangles of light near the ground swept through the fine drizzle; small
+red tail-lights gleamed again from the moist pavement of the street;
+and, through the myriads of little glistening leaves along the curving
+driveway, glimpses were caught of lively colours moving in a white glare
+as the limousines released their occupants under the shelter of the
+porte-cochere.
+
+Alice clutched Walter's arm in a panic; they were just at the driveway
+entrance. “Walter, we mustn't go in there.”
+
+“What's the matter?”
+
+“Leave this awful car outside.”
+
+“Why, I----”
+
+“Stop!” she insisted, vehemently. “You've got to! Go back!”
+
+“Oh, Glory!”
+
+The little car was between the entrance posts; but Walter backed it out,
+avoiding a collision with an impressive machine which swerved away
+from them and passed on toward the porte-cochere, showing a man's face
+grinning at the window as it went by. “Flivver runabout got the wrong
+number!” he said.
+
+“Did he SEE us?” Alice cried.
+
+“Did who see us?”
+
+“Harvey Malone--in that foreign coupe.”
+
+“No; he couldn't tell who we were under this top,” Walter assured her as
+he brought the little car to a standstill beside the curbstone, out in
+the street. “What's it matter if he did, the big fish?”
+
+Alice responded with a loud sigh, and sat still.
+
+“Well, want to go on back?” Walter inquired. “You bet I'm willing!”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Well, then, what's the matter our drivin' on up to the porte-cochere?
+There's room for me to park just the other side of it.”
+
+“No, NO!”
+
+“What you expect to do? Sit HERE all night?”
+
+“No, leave the car here.”
+
+“_I_ don't care where we leave it,” he said. “Sit still till I lock her,
+so none o' these millionaires around here'll run off with her.” He got
+out with a padlock and chain; and, having put these in place, offered
+Alice his hand. “Come on, if you're ready.”
+
+“Wait,” she said, and, divesting herself of the raincoat, handed it to
+Walter. “Please leave this with your things in the men's dressing-room,
+as if it were an extra one of your own, Walter.”
+
+He nodded; she jumped out; and they scurried through the drizzle.
+
+As they reached the porte-cochere she began to laugh airily, and spoke
+to the impassive man in livery who stood there. “Joke on us!” she
+said, hurrying by him toward the door of the house. “Our car broke down
+outside the gate.”
+
+The man remained impassive, though he responded with a faint gleam
+as Walter, looking back at him, produced for his benefit a cynical
+distortion of countenance which offered little confirmation of Alice's
+account of things. Then the door was swiftly opened to the brother and
+sister; and they came into a marble-floored hall, where a dozen sleeked
+young men lounged, smoked cigarettes and fastened their gloves, as they
+waited for their ladies. Alice nodded to one or another of these, and
+went quickly on, her face uplifted and smiling; but Walter detained her
+at the door to which she hastened.
+
+“Listen here,” he said. “I suppose you want me to dance the first dance
+with you----”
+
+“If you please, Walter,” she said, meekly.
+
+“How long you goin' to hang around fixin' up in that dressin'-room?”
+
+“I'll be out before you're ready yourself,” she promised him; and kept
+her word, she was so eager for her good time to begin. When he came
+for her, they went down the hall to a corridor opening upon three great
+rooms which had been thrown open together, with the furniture removed
+and the broad floors waxed. At one end of the corridor musicians sat in
+a green grove, and Walter, with some interest, turned toward these; but
+his sister, pressing his arm, impelled him in the opposite direction.
+
+“What's the matter now?” he asked. “That's Jazz Louie and his half-breed
+bunch--three white and four mulatto. Let's----?”
+
+“No, no,” she whispered. “We must speak to Mildred and Mr. and Mrs.
+Palmer.”
+
+“'Speak' to 'em? I haven't got a thing to say to THOSE berries!”
+
+“Walter, won't you PLEASE behave?”
+
+He seemed to consent, for the moment, at least, and suffered her to take
+him down the corridor toward a floral bower where the hostess stood with
+her father and mother. Other couples and groups were moving in the
+same direction, carrying with them a hubbub of laughter and fragmentary
+chatterings; and Alice, smiling all the time, greeted people on
+every side of her eagerly--a little more eagerly than most of them
+responded--while Walter nodded in a noncommittal manner to one or two,
+said nothing, and yawned audibly, the last resource of a person who
+finds himself nervous in a false situation. He repeated his yawn and
+was beginning another when a convulsive pressure upon his arm made him
+understand that he must abandon this method of reassuring himself. They
+were close upon the floral bower.
+
+Mildred was giving her hand to one and another of her guests as rapidly
+as she could, passing them on to her father and mother, and at the
+same time resisting the efforts of three or four detached bachelors who
+besought her to give over her duty in favour of the dance-music just
+beginning to blare.
+
+She was a large, fair girl, with a kindness of eye somewhat withheld by
+an expression of fastidiousness; at first sight of her it was clear that
+she would never in her life do anything “incorrect,” or wear anything
+“incorrect.” But her correctness was of the finer sort, and had no air
+of being studied or achieved; conduct would never offer her a problem to
+be settled from a book of rules, for the rules were so deep within her
+that she was unconscious of them. And behind this perfection there was
+an even ampler perfection of what Mrs. Adams called “background.” The
+big, rich, simple house was part of it, and Mildred's father and mother
+were part of it. They stood beside her, large, serene people, murmuring
+graciously and gently inclining their handsome heads as they gave their
+hands to the guests; and even the youngest and most ebullient of these
+took on a hushed mannerliness with a closer approach to the bower.
+
+When the opportunity came for Alice and Walter to pass within this
+precinct, Alice, going first, leaned forward and whispered in Mildred's
+ear. “You DIDN'T wear the maize georgette! That's what I thought you
+were going to. But you look simply DARLING! And those pearls----”
+
+Others were crowding decorously forward, anxious to be done with
+ceremony and get to the dancing; and Mildred did not prolong the
+intimacy of Alice's enthusiastic whispering. With a faint accession of
+colour and a smile tending somewhat in the direction of rigidity, she
+carried Alice's hand immediately onward to Mrs. Palmer's. Alice's own
+colour showed a little heightening as she accepted the suggestion thus
+implied; nor was that emotional tint in any wise decreased, a moment
+later, by an impression that Walter, in concluding the brief exchange
+of courtesies between himself and the stately Mr. Palmer, had again
+reassured himself with a yawn.
+
+But she did not speak of it to Walter; she preferred not to confirm the
+impression and to leave in her mind a possible doubt that he had done
+it. He followed her out upon the waxed floor, said resignedly: “Well,
+come on,” put his arm about her, and they began to dance.
+
+Alice danced gracefully and well, but not so well as Walter. Of all the
+steps and runs, of all the whimsical turns and twirlings, of all the
+rhythmic swayings and dips commanded that season by such blarings as
+were the barbaric product, loud and wild, of the Jazz Louies and their
+half-breed bunches, the thin and sallow youth was a master. Upon his
+face could be seen contempt of the easy marvels he performed as he
+moved in swift precision from one smooth agility to another; and if some
+too-dainty or jealous cavalier complained that to be so much a stylist
+in dancing was “not quite like a gentleman,” at least Walter's style was
+what the music called for. No other dancer in the room could be thought
+comparable to him. Alice told him so.
+
+“It's wonderful!” she said. “And the mystery is, where you ever learned
+to DO it! You never went to dancing-school, but there isn't a man in the
+room who can dance half so well. I don't see why, when you dance like
+this, you always make such a fuss about coming to parties.”
+
+He sounded his brief laugh, a jeering bark out of one side of the mouth,
+and swung her miraculously through a closing space between two other
+couples. “You know a lot about what goes on, don't you? You prob'ly
+think there's no other place to dance in this town except these
+frozen-face joints.”
+
+“'Frozen face?'” she echoed, laughing. “Why, everybody's having a
+splendid time. Look at them.”
+
+“Oh, they holler loud enough,” he said. “They do it to make each other
+think they're havin' a good time. You don't call that Palmer family
+frozen-face berries, I s'pose. No?”
+
+“Certainly not. They're just dignified and----”
+
+“Yeuh!” said Walter. “They're dignified, 'specially when you tried to
+whisper to Mildred to show how IN with her you were, and she moved you
+on that way. SHE'S a hot friend, isn't she!”
+
+“She didn't mean anything by it. She----”
+
+“Ole Palmer's a hearty, slap you-on-the-back ole berry,” Walter
+interrupted; adding in a casual tone, “All I'd like, I'd like to hit
+him.”
+
+“Walter! By the way, you mustn't forget to ask Mildred for a dance
+before the evening is over.”
+
+“Me?” He produced the lop-sided appearance of his laugh, but without
+making it vocal. “You watch me do it!”
+
+“She probably won't have one left, but you must ask her, anyway.”
+
+“Why must I?”
+
+“Because, in the first place, you're supposed to, and, in the second
+place, she's my most intimate friend.”
+
+“Yeuh? Is she? I've heard you pull that 'most-intimate-friend' stuff
+often enough about her. What's SHE ever do to show she is?”
+
+“Never mind. You really must ask her, Walter. I want you to; and I want
+you to ask several other girls afterwhile; I'll tell you who.”
+
+“Keep on wanting; it'll do you good.”
+
+“Oh, but you really----”
+
+“Listen!” he said. “I'm just as liable to dance with any of these
+fairies as I am to buy a bucket o' rusty tacks and eat 'em. Forget it!
+Soon as I get rid of you I'm goin' back to that room where I left my hat
+and overcoat and smoke myself to death.”
+
+“Well,” she said, a little ruefully, as the frenzy of Jazz Louie and his
+half-breeds was suddenly abated to silence, “you mustn't--you mustn't
+get rid of me TOO soon, Walter.”
+
+They stood near one of the wide doorways, remaining where they had
+stopped. Other couples, everywhere, joined one another, forming
+vivacious clusters, but none of these groups adopted the brother and
+sister, nor did any one appear to be hurrying in Alice's direction to
+ask her for the next dance. She looked about her, still maintaining that
+jubilance of look and manner she felt so necessary--for it is to the
+girls who are “having a good time” that partners are attracted--and, in
+order to lend greater colour to her impersonation of a lively belle,
+she began to chatter loudly, bringing into play an accompaniment of
+frolicsome gesture. She brushed Walter's nose saucily with the bunch
+of violets in her hand, tapped him on the shoulder, shook her pretty
+forefinger in his face, flourished her arms, kept her shoulders moving,
+and laughed continuously as she spoke.
+
+“You NAUGHTY old Walter!” she cried. “AREN'T you ashamed to be such a
+wonderful dancer and then only dance with your own little sister! You
+could dance on the stage if you wanted to. Why, you could made your
+FORTUNE that way! Why don't you? Wouldn't it be just lovely to have all
+the rows and rows of people clapping their hands and shouting, 'Hurrah!
+Hurrah, for Walter Adams! Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!”
+
+He stood looking at her in stolid pity.
+
+“Cut it out,” he said. “You better be givin' some of these berries the
+eye so they'll ask you to dance.”
+
+She was not to be so easily checked, and laughed loudly, flourishing her
+violets in his face again. “You WOULD like it; you know you would; you
+needn't pretend! Just think! A whole big audience shouting, 'Hurrah!
+HURRAH! HUR----'”
+
+“The place'll be pulled if you get any noisier,” he interrupted, not
+ungently. “Besides, I'm no muley cow.”
+
+“A 'COW?'” she laughed. “What on earth----”
+
+“I can't eat dead violets,” he explained. “So don't keep tryin' to make
+me do it.”
+
+This had the effect he desired, and subdued her; she abandoned her
+unsisterly coquetries, and looked beamingly about her, but her smile was
+more mechanical than it had been at first.
+
+At home she had seemed beautiful; but here, where the other girls
+competed, things were not as they had been there, with only her mother
+and Miss Perry to give contrast. These crowds of other girls had all
+done their best, also, to look beautiful, though not one of them had
+worked so hard for such a consummation as Alice had. They did not need
+to; they did not need to get their mothers to make old dresses over;
+they did not need to hunt violets in the rain.
+
+At home her dress had seemed beautiful; but that was different,
+too, where there were dozens of brilliant fabrics, fashioned in new
+ways--some of these new ways startling, which only made the wearers
+centers of interest and shocked no one. And Alice remembered that she
+had heard a girl say, not long before, “Oh, ORGANDIE! Nobody wears
+organdie for evening gowns except in midsummer.” Alice had thought
+little of this; but as she looked about her and saw no organdie except
+her own, she found greater difficulty in keeping her smile as arch and
+spontaneous as she wished it. In fact, it was beginning to make her face
+ache a little.
+
+Mildred came in from the corridor, heavily attended. She carried a great
+bouquet of violets laced with lilies of-the-valley; and the violets were
+lusty, big purple things, their stems wrapped in cloth of gold, with
+silken cords dependent, ending in long tassels. She and her convoy
+passed near the two young Adamses; and it appeared that one of the
+convoy besought his hostess to permit “cutting in”; they were “doing it
+other places” of late, he urged; but he was denied and told to console
+himself by holding the bouquet, at intervals, until his third of the
+sixteenth dance should come. Alice looked dubiously at her own bouquet.
+
+Suddenly she felt that the violets betrayed her; that any one who looked
+at them could see how rustic, how innocent of any florist's craft they
+were “I can't eat dead violets,” Walter said. The little wild flowers,
+dying indeed in the warm air, were drooping in a forlorn mass; and it
+seemed to her that whoever noticed them would guess that she had picked
+them herself. She decided to get rid of them.
+
+Walter was becoming restive. “Look here!” he said. “Can't you flag one
+o' these long-tailed birds to take you on for the next dance? You came
+to have a good time; why don't you get busy and have it? I want to get
+out and smoke.”
+
+“You MUSTN'T leave me, Walter,” she whispered, hastily. “Somebody'll
+come for me before long, but until they do----”
+
+“Well, couldn't you sit somewhere?”
+
+“No, no! There isn't any one I could sit with.”
+
+“Well, why not? Look at those ole dames in the corners. What's the
+matter your tyin' up with some o' them for a while?”
+
+“PLEASE, Walter; no!”
+
+In fact, that indomitable smile of hers was the more difficult to
+maintain because of these very elders to whom Walter referred. They
+were mothers of girls among the dancers, and they were there to fend and
+contrive for their offspring; to keep them in countenance through any
+trial; to lend them diplomacy in the carrying out of all enterprises;
+to be “background” for them; and in these essentially biological
+functionings to imitate their own matings and renew the excitement of
+their nuptial periods. Older men, husbands of these ladies and fathers
+of eligible girls, were also to be seen, most of them with Mr. Palmer
+in a billiard-room across the corridor. Mr. and Mrs. Adams had not been
+invited. “Of course papa and mama just barely know Mildred Palmer,”
+ Alice thought, “and most of the other girls' fathers and mothers are old
+friends of Mr. and Mrs. Palmer, but I do think she might have ASKED papa
+and mama, anyway--she needn't have been afraid just to ask them;
+she knew they couldn't come.” And her smiling lip twitched a little
+threateningly, as she concluded the silent monologue. “I suppose she
+thinks I ought to be glad enough she asked Walter!”
+
+Walter was, in fact, rather noticeable. He was not Mildred's only guest
+to wear a short coat and to appear without gloves; but he was singular
+(at least in his present surroundings) on account of a kind of
+coiffuring he favoured, his hair having been shaped after what seemed
+a Mongol inspiration. Only upon the top of the head was actual hair
+perceived, the rest appearing to be nudity. And even more than by any
+difference in mode he was set apart by his look and manner, in which
+there seemed to be a brooding, secretive and jeering superiority and
+this was most vividly expressed when he felt called upon for his loud,
+short, lop-sided laugh. Whenever he uttered it Alice laughed, too, as
+loudly as she could, to cover it.
+
+“Well,” he said. “How long we goin' to stand here? My feet are sproutin'
+roots.”
+
+Alice took his arm, and they began to walk aimlessly through the rooms,
+though she tried to look as if they had a definite destination, keeping
+her eyes eager and her lips parted;--people had called jovially to them
+from the distance, she meant to imply, and they were going to join these
+merry friends. She was still upon this ghostly errand when a furious
+outbreak of drums and saxophones sounded a prelude for the second dance.
+
+Walter danced with her again, but he gave her a warning. “I don't want
+to leave you high and dry,” he told her, “but I can't stand it. I got to
+get somewhere I don't haf' to hurt my eyes with these berries; I'll go
+blind if I got to look at any more of 'em. I'm goin' out to smoke as
+soon as the music begins the next time, and you better get fixed for
+it.”
+
+Alice tried to get fixed for it. As they danced she nodded sunnily to
+every man whose eye she caught, smiled her smile with the under
+lip caught between her teeth; but it was not until the end of the
+intermission after the dance that she saw help coming.
+
+Across the room sat the globular lady she had encountered that morning,
+and beside the globular lady sat a round-headed, round-bodied girl;
+her daughter, at first glance. The family contour was also as evident
+a characteristic of the short young man who stood in front of Mrs.
+Dowling, engaged with her in a discussion which was not without
+evidences of an earnestness almost impassioned. Like Walter, he was
+declining to dance a third time with sister; he wished to go elsewhere.
+
+Alice from a sidelong eye watched the controversy: she saw the globular
+young man glance toward her, over his shoulder; whereupon Mrs. Dowling,
+following this glance, gave Alice a look of open fury, became much more
+vehement in the argument, and even struck her knee with a round, fat
+fist for emphasis.
+
+“I'm on my way,” said Walter. “There's the music startin' up again, and
+I told you----”
+
+She nodded gratefully. “It's all right--but come back before long,
+Walter.”
+
+The globular young man, red with annoyance, had torn himself from
+his family and was hastening across the room to her. “C'n I have this
+dance?”
+
+“Why, you nice Frank Dowling!” Alice cried. “How lovely!”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+They danced. Mr. Dowling should have found other forms of exercise and
+pastime.
+
+Nature has not designed everyone for dancing, though sometimes those
+she has denied are the last to discover her niggardliness. But the round
+young man was at least vigorous enough--too much so, when his knees
+collided with Alice's--and he was too sturdy to be thrown off his feet,
+himself, or to allow his partner to fall when he tripped her. He held
+her up valiantly, and continued to beat a path through the crowd of
+other dancers by main force.
+
+He paid no attention to anything suggested by the efforts of the
+musicians, and appeared to be unaware that there should have been some
+connection between what they were doing and what he was doing; but he
+may have listened to other music of his own, for his expression was of
+high content; he seemed to feel no doubt whatever that he was dancing.
+Alice kept as far away from him as under the circumstances she could;
+and when they stopped she glanced down, and found the execution of
+unseen manoeuvres, within the protection of her skirt, helpful to one of
+her insteps and to the toes of both of her slippers.
+
+Her cheery partner was paddling his rosy brows with a fine handkerchief.
+“That was great!” he said. “Let's go out and sit in the corridor;
+they've got some comfortable chairs out there.”
+
+“Well--let's not,” she returned. “I believe I'd rather stay in here and
+look at the crowd.”
+
+“No; that isn't it,” he said, chiding her with a waggish forefinger.
+“You think if you go out there you'll miss a chance of someone else
+asking you for the next dance, and so you'll have to give it to me.”
+
+“How absurd!” Then, after a look about her that revealed nothing
+encouraging, she added graciously, “You can have the next if you want
+it.”
+
+“Great!” he exclaimed, mechanically. “Now let's get out of here--out of
+THIS room, anyhow.”
+
+“Why? What's the matter with----”
+
+“My mother,” Mr. Dowling explained. “But don't look at her. She keeps
+motioning me to come and see after Ella, and I'm simply NOT going to do
+it, you see!”
+
+Alice laughed. “I don't believe it's so much that,” she said, and
+consented to walk with him to a point in the next room from which Mrs.
+Dowling's continuous signalling could not be seen. “Your mother hates
+me.”
+
+“Oh, no; I wouldn't say that. No, she don't,” he protested, innocently.
+“She don't know you more than just to speak to, you see. So how could
+she?”
+
+“Well, she does. I can tell.”
+
+A frown appeared upon his rounded brow. “No; I'll tell you the way she
+feels. It's like this: Ella isn't TOO popular, you know--it's hard to
+see why, because she's a right nice girl, in her way--and mother thinks
+I ought to look after her, you see. She thinks I ought to dance a whole
+lot with her myself, and stir up other fellows to dance with her--it's
+simply impossible to make mother understand you CAN'T do that, you see.
+And then about me, you see, if she had her way I wouldn't get to dance
+with anybody at all except girls like Mildred Palmer and Henrietta Lamb.
+Mother wants to run my whole programme for me, you understand, but the
+trouble of it is--about girls like that, you see well, I couldn't do
+what she wants, even if I wanted to myself, because you take those
+girls, and by the time I get Ella off my hands for a minute, why, their
+dances are always every last one taken, and where do I come in?”
+
+Alice nodded, her amiability undamaged. “I see. So that's why you dance
+with me.”
+
+“No, I like to,” he protested. “I rather dance with you than I do with
+those girls.” And he added with a retrospective determination which
+showed that he had been through quite an experience with Mrs. Dowling in
+this matter. “I TOLD mother I would, too!”
+
+“Did it take all your courage, Frank?”
+
+He looked at her shrewdly. “Now you're trying to tease me,” he said. “I
+don't care; I WOULD rather dance with you! In the first place, you're
+a perfectly beautiful dancer, you see, and in the second, a man feels a
+lot more comfortable with you than he does with them. Of course I know
+almost all the other fellows get along with those girls all right; but
+I don't waste any time on 'em I don't have to. _I_ like people that are
+always cordial to everybody, you see--the way you are.”
+
+“Thank you,” she said, thoughtfully.
+
+“Oh, I MEAN it,” he insisted. “There goes the band again. Shall we?”
+
+“Suppose we sit it out?” she suggested. “I believe I'd like to go out in
+the corridor, after all--it's pretty warm in here.”
+
+Assenting cheerfully, Dowling conducted her to a pair of easy-chairs
+within a secluding grove of box-trees, and when they came to this
+retreat they found Mildred Palmer just departing, under escort of a
+well-favoured gentleman about thirty. As these two walked slowly away,
+in the direction of the dancing-floor, they left it not to be doubted
+that they were on excellent terms with each other; Mildred was evidently
+willing to make their progress even slower, for she halted momentarily,
+once or twice; and her upward glances to her tall companion's face were
+of a gentle, almost blushing deference. Never before had Alice seen
+anything like this in her friend's manner.
+
+“How queer!” she murmured.
+
+“What's queer?” Dowling inquired as they sat down.
+
+“Who was that man?”
+
+“Haven't you met him?”
+
+“I never saw him before. Who is he?”
+
+“Why, it's this Arthur Russell.”
+
+“What Arthur Russell? I never heard of him.” Mr. Dowling was puzzled.
+“Why, THAT'S funny! Only the last time I saw you, you were telling me
+how awfully well you knew Mildred Palmer.”
+
+“Why, certainly I do,” Alice informed him. “She's my most intimate
+friend.”
+
+“That's what makes it seem so funny you haven't heard anything about
+this Russell, because everybody says even if she isn't engaged to him
+right now, she most likely will be before very long. I must say it looks
+a good deal that way to me, myself.”
+
+“What nonsense!” Alice exclaimed. “She's never even mentioned him to
+me.”
+
+The young man glanced at her dubiously and passed a finger over the tiny
+prong that dashingly composed the whole substance of his moustache.
+
+“Well, you see, Mildred IS pretty reserved,” he remarked. “This Russell
+is some kind of cousin of the Palmer family, I understand.”
+
+“He is?”
+
+“Yes--second or third or something, the girls say. You see, my sister
+Ella hasn't got much to do at home, and don't read anything, or sew, or
+play solitaire, you see; and she hears about pretty much everything that
+goes on, you see. Well, Ella says a lot of the girls have been talking
+about Mildred and this Arthur Russell for quite a while back, you see.
+They were all wondering what he was going to look like, you see; because
+he only got here yesterday; and that proves she must have been talking
+to some of 'em, or else how----”
+
+Alice laughed airily, but the pretty sound ended abruptly with an
+audible intake of breath. “Of course, while Mildred IS my most intimate
+friend,” she said, “I don't mean she tells me everything--and naturally
+she has other friends besides. What else did your sister say she told
+them about this Mr. Russell?”
+
+“Well, it seems he's VERY well off; at least Henrietta Lamb told Ella he
+was. Ella says----”
+
+Alice interrupted again, with an increased irritability. “Oh, never
+mind what Ella says! Let's find something better to talk about than Mr.
+Russell!”
+
+“Well, I'M willing,” Mr. Dowling assented, ruefully. “What you want to
+talk about?”
+
+But this liberal offer found her unresponsive; she sat leaning back,
+silent, her arms along the arms of her chair, and her eyes, moist and
+bright, fixed upon a wide doorway where the dancers fluctuated. She was
+disquieted by more than Mildred's reserve, though reserve so marked had
+certainly the significance of a warning that Alice's definition, “my
+most intimate friend,” lacked sanction. Indirect notice to this effect
+could not well have been more emphatic, but the sting of it was left
+for a later moment. Something else preoccupied Alice: she had just
+been surprised by an odd experience. At first sight of this Mr. Arthur
+Russell, she had said to herself instantly, in words as definite as if
+she spoke them aloud, though they seemed more like words spoken to her
+by some unknown person within her: “There! That's exactly the kind of
+looking man I'd like to marry!”
+
+In the eyes of the restless and the longing, Providence often appears to
+be worse than inscrutable: an unreliable Omnipotence given to haphazard
+whimsies in dealing with its own creatures, choosing at random some
+among them to be rent with tragic deprivations and others to be petted
+with blessing upon blessing.
+
+In Alice's eyes, Mildred had been blessed enough; something ought to
+be left over, by this time, for another girl. The final touch to the
+heaping perfection of Christmas-in-everything for Mildred was that this
+Mr. Arthur Russell, good-looking, kind-looking, graceful, the perfect
+fiance, should be also “VERY well off.” Of course! These rich always
+married one another. And while the Mildreds danced with their Arthur
+Russells the best an outsider could do for herself was to sit with Frank
+Dowling--the one last course left her that was better than dancing with
+him.
+
+“Well, what DO you want to talk about?” he inquired.
+
+“Nothing,” she said. “Suppose we just sit, Frank.” But a moment later
+she remembered something, and, with a sudden animation, began to
+prattle. She pointed to the musicians down the corridor. “Oh, look at
+them! Look at the leader! Aren't they FUNNY? Someone told me they're
+called 'Jazz Louie and his half-breed bunch.' Isn't that just crazy?
+Don't you love it? Do watch them, Frank.”
+
+She continued to chatter, and, while thus keeping his glance away from
+herself, she detached the forlorn bouquet of dead violets from her dress
+and laid it gently beside the one she had carried.
+
+The latter already reposed in the obscurity selected for it at the base
+of one of the box-trees.
+
+Then she was abruptly silent.
+
+“You certainly are a funny girl,” Dowling remarked. “You say you don't
+want to talk about anything at all, and all of a sudden you break
+out and talk a blue streak; and just about the time I begin to get
+interested in what you're saying you shut off! What's the matter with
+girls, anyhow, when they do things like that?”
+
+“I don't know; we're just queer, I guess.”
+
+“I say so! Well, what'll we do NOW? Talk, or just sit?”
+
+“Suppose we just sit some more.”
+
+“Anything to oblige,” he assented. “I'm willing to sit as long as you
+like.”
+
+But even as he made his amiability clear in this matter, the peace was
+threatened--his mother came down the corridor like a rolling, ominous
+cloud. She was looking about her on all sides, in a fidget of annoyance,
+searching for him, and to his dismay she saw him. She immediately made a
+horrible face at his companion, beckoned to him imperiously with a dumpy
+arm, and shook her head reprovingly. The unfortunate young man tried to
+repulse her with an icy stare, but this effort having obtained little to
+encourage his feeble hope of driving her away, he shifted his chair
+so that his back was toward her discomfiting pantomime. He should
+have known better, the instant result was Mrs. Dowling in motion at an
+impetuous waddle.
+
+She entered the box-tree seclusion with the lower rotundities of her
+face hastily modelled into the resemblance of an over-benevolent smile
+a contortion which neglected to spread its intended geniality upward to
+the exasperated eyes and anxious forehead.
+
+“I think your mother wants to speak to you, Frank,” Alice said, upon
+this advent.
+
+Mrs. Dowling nodded to her. “Good evening, Miss Adams,” she said. “I
+just thought as you and Frank weren't dancing you wouldn't mind my
+disturbing you----”
+
+“Not at all,” Alice murmured.
+
+Mr. Dowling seemed of a different mind. “Well, what DO you want?” he
+inquired, whereupon his mother struck him roguishly with her fan.
+
+“Bad fellow!” She turned to Alice. “I'm sure you won't mind excusing him
+to let him do something for his old mother, Miss Adams.”
+
+“What DO you want?” the son repeated.
+
+“Two very nice things,” Mrs. Dowling informed him. “Everybody is so
+anxious for Henrietta Lamb to have a pleasant evening, because it's the
+very first time she's been anywhere since her father's death, and of
+course her dear grandfather's an old friend of ours, and----”
+
+“Well, well!” her son interrupted. “Miss Adams isn't interested in all
+this, mother.”
+
+“But Henrietta came to speak to Ella and me, and I told her you were so
+anxious to dance with her----”
+
+“Here!” he cried. “Look here! I'd rather do my own----”
+
+“Yes; that's just it,” Mrs. Dowling explained. “I just thought it was
+such a good opportunity; and Henrietta said she had most of her dances
+taken, but she'd give you one if you asked her before they were all
+gone. So I thought you'd better see her as soon as possible.”
+
+Dowling's face had become rosy. “I refuse to do anything of the kind.”
+
+“Bad fellow!” said his mother, gaily. “I thought this would be the best
+time for you to see Henrietta, because it won't be long till all her
+dances are gone, and you've promised on your WORD to dance the next with
+Ella, and you mightn't have a chance to do it then. I'm sure Miss Adams
+won't mind if you----”
+
+“Not at all,” Alice said.
+
+“Well, _I_ mind!” he said. “I wish you COULD understand that when I
+want to dance with any girl I don't need my mother to ask her for me. I
+really AM more than six years old!”
+
+He spoke with too much vehemence, and Mrs. Dowling at once saw how
+to have her way. As with husbands and wives, so with many fathers and
+daughters, and so with some sons and mothers: the man will himself be
+cross in public and think nothing of it, nor will he greatly mind a
+little crossness on the part of the woman; but let her show agitation
+before any spectator, he is instantly reduced to a coward's slavery.
+Women understand that ancient weakness, of course; for it is one of
+their most important means of defense, but can be used ignobly.
+
+Mrs. Dowling permitted a tremulousness to become audible in her voice.
+“It isn't very--very pleasant--to be talked to like that by your own
+son--before strangers!”
+
+“Oh, my! Look here!” the stricken Dowling protested. “_I_ didn't
+say anything, mother. I was just joking about how you never get over
+thinking I'm a little boy. I only----”
+
+Mrs. Dowling continued: “I just thought I was doing you a little favour.
+I didn't think it would make you so angry.”
+
+“Mother, for goodness' sake! Miss Adams'll think----”
+
+“I suppose,” Mrs. Dowling interrupted, piteously, “I suppose it doesn't
+matter what _I_ think!”
+
+“Oh, gracious!”
+
+Alice interfered; she perceived that the ruthless Mrs. Dowling meant to
+have her way. “I think you'd better go, Frank. Really.”
+
+“There!” his mother cried. “Miss Adams says so, herself! What more do
+you want?”
+
+“Oh, gracious!” he lamented again, and, with a sick look over his
+shoulder at Alice, permitted his mother to take his arm and propel him
+away. Mrs. Dowling's spirits had strikingly recovered even before the
+pair passed from the corridor: she moved almost bouncingly beside her
+embittered son, and her eyes and all the convolutions of her abundant
+face were blithe.
+
+Alice went in search of Walter, but without much hope of finding him.
+What he did with himself at frozen-face dances was one of his most
+successful mysteries, and her present excursion gave her no clue leading
+to its solution. When the musicians again lowered their instruments
+for an interval she had returned, alone, to her former seat within the
+partial shelter of the box-trees.
+
+She had now to practice an art that affords but a limited variety of
+methods, even to the expert: the art of seeming to have an escort or
+partner when there is none. The practitioner must imply, merely by
+expression and attitude, that the supposed companion has left her for
+only a few moments, that she herself has sent him upon an errand; and,
+if possible, the minds of observers must be directed toward a conclusion
+that this errand of her devising is an amusing one; at all events, she
+is alone temporarily and of choice, not deserted. She awaits a devoted
+man who may return at any instant.
+
+Other people desired to sit in Alice's nook, but discovered her in
+occupancy. She had moved the vacant chair closer to her own, and she
+sat with her arm extended so that her hand, holding her lace kerchief,
+rested upon the back of this second chair, claiming it. Such
+a preemption, like that of a traveller's bag in the rack, was
+unquestionable; and, for additional evidence, sitting with her knees
+crossed, she kept one foot continuously moving a little, in cadence with
+the other, which tapped the floor. Moreover, she added a fine detail:
+her half-smile, with the under lip caught, seemed to struggle against
+repression, as if she found the service engaging her absent companion
+even more amusing than she would let him see when he returned: there was
+jovial intrigue of some sort afoot, evidently. Her eyes, beaming with
+secret fun, were averted from intruders, but sometimes, when couples
+approached, seeking possession of the nook, her thoughts about the
+absentee appeared to threaten her with outright laughter; and though
+one or two girls looked at her skeptically, as they turned away, their
+escorts felt no such doubts, and merely wondered what importantly funny
+affair Alice Adams was engaged in. She had learned to do it perfectly.
+
+She had learned it during the last two years; she was twenty when for
+the first time she had the shock of finding herself without an applicant
+for one of her dances. When she was sixteen “all the nice boys in town,”
+ as her mother said, crowded the Adamses' small veranda and steps, or sat
+near by, cross-legged on the lawn, on summer evenings; and at eighteen
+she had replaced the boys with “the older men.” By this time most of
+“the other girls,” her contemporaries, were away at school or college,
+and when they came home to stay, they “came out”--that feeble revival
+of an ancient custom offering the maiden to the ceremonial inspection of
+the tribe. Alice neither went away nor “came out,” and, in contrast with
+those who did, she may have seemed to lack freshness of lustre--jewels
+are richest when revealed all new in a white velvet box. And Alice may
+have been too eager to secure new retainers, too kind in her efforts to
+keep the old ones. She had been a belle too soon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+The device of the absentee partner has the defect that it cannot be
+employed for longer than ten or fifteen minutes at a time, and it may
+not be repeated more than twice in one evening: a single repetition,
+indeed, is weak, and may prove a betrayal. Alice knew that her present
+performance could be effective during only this interval between
+dances; and though her eyes were guarded, she anxiously counted over the
+partnerless young men who lounged together in the doorways within her
+view. Every one of them ought to have asked her for dances, she thought,
+and although she might have been put to it to give a reason why any of
+them “ought,” her heart was hot with resentment against them.
+
+For a girl who has been a belle, it is harder to live through these bad
+times than it is for one who has never known anything better. Like a
+figure of painted and brightly varnished wood, Ella Dowling sat against
+the wall through dance after dance with glassy imperturbability; it was
+easier to be wooden, Alice thought, if you had your mother with you, as
+Ella had. You were left with at least the shred of a pretense that you
+came to sit with your mother as a spectator, and not to offer yourself
+to be danced with by men who looked you over and rejected you--not for
+the first time. “Not for the first time”: there lay a sting! Why had you
+thought this time might be different from the other times? Why had you
+broken your back picking those hundreds of violets?
+
+Hating the fatuous young men in the doorways more bitterly for every
+instant that she had to maintain her tableau, the smiling Alice knew
+fierce impulses to spring to her feet and shout at them, “You IDIOTS!”
+ Hands in pockets, they lounged against the pilasters, or faced one
+another, laughing vaguely, each one of them seeming to Alice no more
+than so much mean beef in clothes. She wanted to tell them they were no
+better than that; and it seemed a cruel thing of heaven to let them go
+on believing themselves young lords. They were doing nothing, killing
+time. Wasn't she at her lowest value at least a means of killing time?
+Evidently the mean beeves thought not. And when one of them finally
+lounged across the corridor and spoke to her, he was the very one to
+whom she preferred her loneliness.
+
+“Waiting for somebody, Lady Alicia?” he asked, negligently; and his easy
+burlesque of her name was like the familiarity of the rest of him. He
+was one of those full-bodied, grossly handsome men who are powerful and
+active, but never submit themselves to the rigour of becoming athletes,
+though they shoot and fish from expensive camps. Gloss is the most
+shining outward mark of the type. Nowadays these men no longer use
+brilliantine on their moustaches, but they have gloss bought from
+manicure-girls, from masseurs, and from automobile-makers; and their
+eyes, usually large, are glossy. None of this is allowed to interfere
+with business; these are “good business men,” and often make large
+fortunes. They are men of imagination about two things--women and money,
+and, combining their imaginings about both, usually make a wise first
+marriage. Later, however, they are apt to imagine too much about some
+little woman without whom life seems duller than need be. They run away,
+leaving the first wife well enough dowered. They are never intentionally
+unkind to women, and in the end they usually make the mistake of
+thinking they have had their money's worth of life. Here was Mr. Harvey
+Malone, a young specimen in an earlier stage of development, trying to
+marry Henrietta Lamb, and now sauntering over to speak to Alice, as a
+time-killer before his next dance with Henrietta.
+
+Alice made no response to his question, and he dropped lazily into the
+vacant chair, from which she sharply withdrew her hand. “I might as well
+use his chair till he comes, don't you think? You don't MIND, do you,
+old girl?”
+
+“Oh, no,” Alice said. “It doesn't matter one way or the other. Please
+don't call me that.”
+
+“So that's how you feel?” Mr. Malone laughed indulgently, without much
+interest. “I've been meaning to come to see you for a long time honestly
+I have--because I wanted to have a good talk with you about old times. I
+know you think it was funny, after the way I used to come to your house
+two or three times a week, and sometimes oftener--well, I don't blame
+you for being hurt, the way I stopped without explaining or anything.
+The truth is there wasn't any reason: I just happened to have a lot of
+important things to do and couldn't find the time. But I AM going to
+call on you some evening--honestly I am. I don't wonder you think----”
+
+“You're mistaken,” Alice said. “I've never thought anything about it at
+all.”
+
+“Well, well!” he said, and looked at her languidly. “What's the use of
+being cross with this old man? He always means well.” And, extending his
+arm, he would have given her a friendly pat upon the shoulder but she
+evaded it. “Well, well!” he said. “Seems to me you're getting awful
+tetchy! Don't you like your old friends any more?”
+
+“Not all of them.”
+
+“Who's the new one?” he asked, teasingly. “Come on and tell us, Alice.
+Who is it you were holding this chair for?”
+
+“Never mind.”
+
+“Well, all I've got to do is to sit here till he comes back; then I'll
+see who it is.”
+
+“He may not come back before you have to go.”
+
+“Guess you got me THAT time,” Malone admitted, laughing as he rose.
+“They're tuning up, and I've got this dance. I AM coming around to
+see you some evening.” He moved away, calling back over his shoulder,
+“Honestly, I am!”
+
+Alice did not look at him.
+
+She had held her tableau as long as she could; it was time for her to
+abandon the box-trees; and she stepped forth frowning, as if a little
+annoyed with the absentee for being such a time upon her errand;
+whereupon the two chairs were instantly seized by a coquetting pair
+who intended to “sit out” the dance. She walked quickly down the broad
+corridor, turned into the broader hall, and hurriedly entered the
+dressing-room where she had left her wraps.
+
+She stayed here as long as she could, pretending to arrange her hair
+at a mirror, then fidgeting with one of her slipper-buckles; but the
+intelligent elderly woman in charge of the room made an indefinite
+sojourn impracticable. “Perhaps I could help you with that buckle,
+Miss,” she suggested, approaching. “Has it come loose?” Alice wrenched
+desperately; then it was loose. The competent woman, producing needle
+and thread, deftly made the buckle fast; and there was nothing for Alice
+to do but to express her gratitude and go.
+
+She went to the door of the cloak-room opposite, where a coloured man
+stood watchfully in the doorway. “I wonder if you know which of the
+gentlemen is my brother, Mr. Walter Adams,” she said.
+
+“Yes'm; I know him.”
+
+“Could you tell me where he is?”
+
+“No'm; I couldn't say.”
+
+“Well, if you see him, would you please tell him that his sister, Miss
+Adams, is looking for him and very anxious to speak to him?”
+
+“Yes'm. Sho'ly, sho'ly!”
+
+As she went away he stared after her and seemed to swell with some
+bursting emotion. In fact, it was too much for him, and he suddenly
+retired within the room, releasing strangulated laughter.
+
+Walter remonstrated. Behind an excellent screen of coats and hats, in a
+remote part of the room, he was kneeling on the floor, engaged in a game
+of chance with a second coloured attendant; and the laughter became
+so vehement that it not only interfered with the pastime in hand, but
+threatened to attract frozen-face attention.
+
+“I cain' he'p it, man,” the laughter explained. “I cain' he'p it! You
+sut'n'y the beatin'es' white boy 'n 'is city!”
+
+The dancers were swinging into an “encore” as Alice halted for an
+irresolute moment in a doorway. Across the room, a cluster of matrons
+sat chatting absently, their eyes on their dancing daughters; and Alice,
+finding a refugee's courage, dodged through the scurrying couples,
+seated herself in a chair on the outskirts of this colony of elders,
+and began to talk eagerly to the matron nearest her. The matron seemed
+unaccustomed to so much vivacity, and responded but dryly, whereupon
+Alice was more vivacious than ever; for she meant now to present the
+picture of a jolly girl too much interested in these wise older women to
+bother about every foolish young man who asked her for a dance.
+
+Her matron was constrained to go so far as to supply a tolerant nod, now
+and then, in complement to the girl's animation, and Alice was grateful
+for the nods. In this fashion she supplemented the exhausted resources
+of the dressing-room and the box-tree nook; and lived through two more
+dances, when again Mr. Frank Dowling presented himself as a partner.
+
+She needed no pretense to seek the dressing-room for repairs after that
+number; this time they were necessary and genuine. Dowling waited for
+her, and when she came out he explained for the fourth or fifth time how
+the accident had happened. “It was entirely those other people's fault,”
+ he said. “They got me in a kind of a corner, because neither of those
+fellows knows the least thing about guiding; they just jam ahead and
+expect everybody to get out of their way. It was Charlotte Thom's
+diamond crescent pin that got caught on your dress in the back and made
+such a----”
+
+“Never mind,” Alice said in a tired voice. “The maid fixed it so that
+she says it isn't very noticeable.”
+
+“Well, it isn't,” he returned. “You could hardly tell there'd been
+anything the matter. Where do you want to go? Mother's been interfering
+in my affairs some more and I've got the next taken.”
+
+“I was sitting with Mrs. George Dresser. You might take me back there.”
+
+He left her with the matron, and Alice returned to her picture-making,
+so that once more, while two numbers passed, whoever cared to look was
+offered the sketch of a jolly, clever girl preoccupied with her elders.
+Then she found her friend Mildred standing before her, presenting Mr.
+Arthur Russell, who asked her to dance with him.
+
+Alice looked uncertain, as though not sure what her engagements were;
+but her perplexity cleared; she nodded, and swung rhythmically away with
+the tall applicant. She was not grateful to her hostess for this alms.
+What a young hostess does with a fiance, Alice thought, is to make him
+dance with the unpopular girls. She supposed that Mr. Arthur Russell had
+already danced with Ella Dowling.
+
+The loan of a lover, under these circumstances, may be painful to the
+lessee, and Alice, smiling never more brightly, found nothing to say to
+Mr. Russell, though she thought he might have found something to say to
+her. “I wonder what Mildred told him,” she thought. “Probably she said,
+'Dearest, there's one more girl you've got to help me out with. You
+wouldn't like her much, but she dances well enough and she's having a
+rotten time. Nobody ever goes near her any more.'”
+
+When the music stopped, Russell added his applause to the hand-clapping
+that encouraged the uproarious instruments to continue, and as they
+renewed the tumult, he said heartily, “That's splendid!”
+
+Alice gave him a glance, necessarily at short range, and found his eyes
+kindly and pleased. Here was a friendly soul, it appeared, who probably
+“liked everybody.” No doubt he had applauded for an “encore” when he
+danced with Ella Dowling, gave Ella the same genial look, and said,
+“That's splendid!”
+
+When the “encore” was over, Alice spoke to him for the first time.
+
+“Mildred will be looking for you,” she said. “I think you'd better take
+me back to where you found me.”
+
+He looked surprised. “Oh, if you----”
+
+“I'm sure Mildred will be needing you,” Alice said, and as she took his
+arm and they walked toward Mrs. Dresser, she thought it might be just
+possible to make a further use of the loan. “Oh, I wonder if you----”
+ she began.
+
+“Yes?” he said, quickly.
+
+“You don't know my brother, Walter Adams,” she said. “But he's somewhere
+I think possibly he's in a smoking-room or some place where girls aren't
+expected, and if you wouldn't think it too much trouble to inquire----”
+
+“I'll find him,” Russell said, promptly. “Thank you so much for that
+dance. I'll bring your brother in a moment.”
+
+It was to be a long moment, Alice decided, presently. Mrs. Dresser had
+grown restive; and her nods and vague responses to her young dependent's
+gaieties were as meager as they could well be. Evidently the matron had
+no intention of appearing to her world in the light of a chaperone for
+Alice Adams; and she finally made this clear. With a word or two of
+excuse, breaking into something Alice was saying, she rose and went to
+sit next to Mildred's mother, who had become the nucleus of the cluster.
+So Alice was left very much against the wall, with short stretches
+of vacant chairs on each side of her. She had come to the end of her
+picture-making, and could only pretend that there was something amusing
+the matter with the arm of her chair.
+
+She supposed that Mildred's Mr. Russell had forgotten Walter by this
+time. “I'm not even an intimate enough friend of Mildred's for him to
+have thought he ought to bother to tell me he couldn't find him,” she
+thought. And then she saw Russell coming across the room toward her,
+with Walter beside him. She jumped up gaily.
+
+“Oh, thank you!” she cried. “I know this naughty boy must have been
+terribly hard to find. Mildred'll NEVER forgive me! I've put you to so
+much----”
+
+“Not at all,” he said, amiably, and went away, leaving the brother and
+sister together.
+
+“Walter, let's dance just once more,” Alice said, touching his arm
+placatively. “I thought--well, perhaps we might go home then.”
+
+But Walter's expression was that of a person upon whom an outrage has
+just been perpetrated. “No,” he said. “We've stayed THIS long, I'm goin'
+to wait and see what they got to eat. And you look here!” He turned upon
+her angrily. “Don't you ever do that again!”
+
+“Do what?”
+
+“Send somebody after me that pokes his nose into every corner of the
+house till he finds me! 'Are you Mr. Walter Adams?' he says. I guess he
+must asked everybody in the place if they were Mr. Walter Adams! Well,
+I'll bet a few iron men you wouldn't send anybody to hunt for me again
+if you knew where he found me!”
+
+“Where was it?”
+
+Walter decided that her fit punishment was to know. “I was shootin' dice
+with those coons in the cloak-room.”
+
+“And he saw you?”
+
+“Unless he was blind!” said Walter. “Come on, I'll dance this one more
+dance with you. Supper comes after that, and THEN we'll go home.”
+
+
+Mrs. Adams heard Alice's key turning in the front door and hurried down
+the stairs to meet her.
+
+“Did you get wet coming in, darling?” she asked. “Did you have a good
+time?”
+
+“Just lovely!” Alice said, cheerily, and after she had arranged the
+latch for Walter, who had gone to return the little car, she followed
+her mother upstairs and hummed a dance-tune on the way.
+
+“Oh, I'm so glad you had a nice time,” Mrs. Adams said, as they reached
+the door of her daughter's room together. “You DESERVED to, and it's
+lovely to think----”
+
+But at this, without warning, Alice threw herself into her mother's
+arms, sobbing so loudly that in his room, close by, her father, half
+drowsing through the night, started to full wakefulness.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+On a morning, a week after this collapse of festal hopes, Mrs. Adams
+and her daughter were concluding a three-days' disturbance, the “Spring
+house-cleaning”--postponed until now by Adams's long illness--and Alice,
+on her knees before a chest of drawers, in her mother's room, paused
+thoughtfully after dusting a packet of letters wrapped in worn muslin.
+She called to her mother, who was scrubbing the floor of the hallway
+just beyond the open door,
+
+“These old letters you had in the bottom drawer, weren't they some papa
+wrote you before you were married?”
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed and said, “Yes. Just put 'em back where they were--or
+else up in the attic--anywhere you want to.”
+
+“Do you mind if I read one, mama?”
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed again. “Oh, I guess you can if you want to. I expect
+they're pretty funny!”
+
+Alice laughed in response, and chose the topmost letter of the packet.
+“My dear, beautiful girl,” it began; and she stared at these singular
+words. They gave her a shock like that caused by overhearing some
+bewildering impropriety; and, having read them over to herself several
+times, she went on to experience other shocks.
+
+
+MY DEAR, BEAUTIFUL GIRL:
+
+
+This time yesterday I had a mighty bad case of blues because I had not
+had a word from you in two whole long days and when I do not hear from
+you every day things look mighty down in the mouth to me. Now it is all
+so different because your letter has arrived and besides I have got a
+piece of news I believe you will think as fine as I do. Darling, you
+will be surprised, so get ready to hear about a big effect on our
+future. It is this way. I had sort of a suspicion the head of the firm
+kind of took a fancy to me from the first when I went in there, and
+liked the way I attended to my work and so when he took me on this
+business trip with him I felt pretty sure of it and now it turns out
+I was about right. In return I guess I have got about the best boss in
+this world and I believe you will think so too. Yes, sweetheart, after
+the talk I have just had with him if J. A. Lamb asked me to cut my hand
+off for him I guess I would come pretty near doing it because what he
+says means the end of our waiting to be together. From New Years on he
+is going to put me in entire charge of the sundries dept. and what do
+you think is going to be my salary? Eleven hundred cool dollars a year
+($1,100.00). That's all! Just only a cool eleven hundred per annum!
+Well, I guess that will show your mother whether I can take care of you
+or not. And oh how I would like to see your dear, beautiful, loving face
+when you get this news.
+
+I would like to go out on the public streets and just dance and shout
+and it is all I can do to help doing it, especially when I know we will
+be talking it all over together this time next week, and oh my darling,
+now that your folks have no excuse for putting it off any longer we
+might be in our own little home before Xmas.
+
+Would you be glad?
+
+Well, darling, this settles everything and makes our future just about
+as smooth for us as anybody could ask. I can hardly realize after all
+this waiting life's troubles are over for you and me and we have nothing
+to do but to enjoy the happiness granted us by this wonderful, beautiful
+thing we call life. I know I am not any poet and the one I tried to
+write about you the day of the picnic was fearful but the way I THINK
+about you is a poem.
+
+Write me what you think of the news. I know but write me anyhow.
+
+I'll get it before we start home and I can be reading it over all the
+time on the tram.
+
+
+Your always loving
+
+VIRGIL.
+
+
+
+The sound of her mother's diligent scrubbing in the hall came back
+slowly to Alice's hearing, as she restored the letter to the packet,
+wrapped the packet in its muslin covering, and returned it to the
+drawer. She had remained upon her knees while she read the letter; now
+she sank backward, sitting upon the floor with her hands behind her, an
+unconscious relaxing for better ease to think. Upon her face there had
+fallen a look of wonder.
+
+For the first time she was vaguely perceiving that life is everlasting
+movement. Youth really believes what is running water to be a permanent
+crystallization and sees time fixed to a point: some people have dark
+hair, some people have blond hair, some people have gray hair. Until
+this moment, Alice had no conviction that there was a universe before
+she came into it. She had always thought of it as the background of
+herself: the moon was something to make her prettier on a summer night.
+
+But this old letter, through which she saw still flickering an ancient
+starlight of young love, astounded her. Faintly before her it revealed
+the whole lives of her father and mother, who had been young, after
+all--they REALLY had--and their youth was now so utterly passed from
+them that the picture of it, in the letter, was like a burlesque of
+them. And so she, herself, must pass to such changes, too, and all that
+now seemed vital to her would be nothing.
+
+When her work was finished, that afternoon, she went into her father's
+room. His recovery had progressed well enough to permit the departure
+of Miss Perry; and Adams, wearing one of Mrs. Adams's wrappers over his
+night-gown, sat in a high-backed chair by a closed window. The weather
+was warm, but the closed window and the flannel wrapper had not sufficed
+him: round his shoulders he had an old crocheted scarf of Alice's; his
+legs were wrapped in a heavy comfort; and, with these swathings about
+him, and his eyes closed, his thin and grizzled head making but a slight
+indentation in the pillow supporting it, he looked old and little and
+queer.
+
+Alice would have gone out softly, but without opening his eyes, he spoke
+to her: “Don't go, dearie. Come sit with the old man a little while.”
+
+She brought a chair near his. “I thought you were napping.”
+
+“No. I don't hardly ever do that. I just drift a little sometimes.”
+
+“How do you mean you drift, papa?”
+
+He looked at her vaguely. “Oh, I don't know. Kind of pictures. They get
+a little mixed up--old times with times still ahead, like planning what
+to do, you know. That's as near a nap as I get--when the pictures mix up
+some. I suppose it's sort of drowsing.”
+
+She took one of his hands and stroked it. “What do you mean when you say
+you have pictures like 'planning what to do'?” she asked.
+
+“I mean planning what to do when I get out and able to go to work
+again.”
+
+“But that doesn't need any planning,” Alice said, quickly. “You're going
+back to your old place at Lamb's, of course.”
+
+Adams closed his eyes again, sighing heavily, but made no other
+response.
+
+“Why, of COURSE you are!” she cried. “What are you talking about?”
+
+His head turned slowly toward her, revealing the eyes, open in a haggard
+stare. “I heard you the other night when you came from the party,” he
+said. “I know what was the matter.”
+
+“Indeed, you don't,” she assured him. “You don't know anything about it,
+because there wasn't anything the matter at all.”
+
+“Don't you suppose I heard you crying? What'd you cry for if there
+wasn't anything the matter?”
+
+“Just nerves, papa. It wasn't anything else in the world.”
+
+“Never mind,” he said. “Your mother told me.”
+
+“She promised me not to!”
+
+At that Adams laughed mournfully. “It wouldn't be very likely I'd hear
+you so upset and not ask about it, even if she didn't come and tell me
+on her own hook. You needn't try to fool me; I tell you I know what was
+the matter.”
+
+“The only matter was I had a silly fit,” Alice protested. “It did me
+good, too.”
+
+“How's that?”
+
+“Because I've decided to do something about it, papa.”
+
+“That isn't the way your mother looks at it,” Adams said, ruefully. “She
+thinks it's our place to do something about it. Well, I don't know--I
+don't know; everything seems so changed these days. You've always been
+a good daughter, Alice, and you ought to have as much as any of these
+girls you go with; she's convinced me she's right about THAT. The
+trouble is----” He faltered, apologetically, then went on, “I mean the
+question is--how to get it for you.”
+
+“No!” she cried. “I had no business to make such a fuss just because a
+lot of idiots didn't break their necks to get dances with me and because
+I got mortified about Walter--Walter WAS pretty terrible----”
+
+“Oh, me, my!” Adams lamented. “I guess that's something we just have
+to leave work out itself. What you going to do with a boy nineteen or
+twenty years old that makes his own living? Can't whip him. Can't keep
+him locked up in the house. Just got to hope he'll learn better, I
+suppose.”
+
+“Of course he didn't want to go to the Palmers',” Alice explained,
+tolerantly--“and as mama and I made him take me, and he thought that was
+pretty selfish in me, why, he felt he had a right to amuse himself any
+way he could. Of course it was awful that this--that this Mr. Russell
+should----” In spite of her, the recollection choked her.
+
+“Yes, it was awful,” Adams agreed. “Just awful. Oh, me, my!”
+
+But Alice recovered herself at once, and showed him a cheerful face.
+“Well, just a few years from now I probably won't even remember it! I
+believe hardly anything amounts to as much as we think it does at the
+time.”
+
+“Well--sometimes it don't.”
+
+“What I've been thinking, papa: it seems to me I ought to DO something.”
+
+“What like?”
+
+She looked dreamy, but was obviously serious as she told him: “Well,
+I mean I ought to be something besides just a kind of nobody. I ought
+to----” She paused.
+
+“What, dearie?”
+
+“Well--there's one thing I'd like to do. I'm sure I COULD do it, too.”
+
+“What?”
+
+“I want to go on the stage: I know I could act.” At this, her father
+abruptly gave utterance to a feeble cackling of laughter; and when
+Alice, surprised and a little offended, pressed him for his reason, he
+tried to evade, saying, “Nothing, dearie. I just thought of something.”
+ But she persisted until he had to explain.
+
+“It made me think of your mother's sister, your Aunt Flora, that died
+when you were little,” he said. “She was always telling how she was
+going on the stage, and talking about how she was certain she'd make a
+great actress, and all so on; and one day your mother broke out and said
+she ought 'a' gone on the stage, herself, because she always knew she
+had the talent for it--and, well, they got into kind of a spat about
+which one'd make the best actress. I had to go out in the hall to
+laugh!”
+
+“Maybe you were wrong,” Alice said, gravely. “If they both felt it, why
+wouldn't that look as if there was talent in the family? I've ALWAYS
+thought----”
+
+“No, dearie,” he said, with a final chuckle. “Your mother and Flora
+weren't different from a good many others. I expect ninety per cent. of
+all the women I ever knew were just sure they'd be mighty fine actresses
+if they ever got the chance. Well, I guess it's a good thing; they enjoy
+thinking about it and it don't do anybody any harm.”
+
+Alice was piqued. For several days she had thought almost continuously
+of a career to be won by her own genius. Not that she planned details,
+or concerned herself with first steps; her picturings overleaped all
+that. Principally, she saw her name great on all the bill-boards of that
+unkind city, and herself, unchanged in age but glamorous with fame and
+Paris clothes, returning in a private car. No doubt the pleasantest
+development of her vision was a dialogue with Mildred; and this became
+so real that, as she projected it, Alice assumed the proper expressions
+for both parties to it, formed words with her lips, and even spoke some
+of them aloud. “No, I haven't forgotten you, Mrs. Russell. I remember
+you quite pleasantly, in fact. You were a Miss Palmer, I recall, in
+those funny old days. Very kind of you, I'm shaw. I appreciate your
+eagerness to do something for me in your own little home. As you say, a
+reception WOULD renew my acquaintanceship with many old friends--but I'm
+shaw you won't mind my mentioning that I don't find much inspiration in
+these provincials. I really must ask you not to press me. An artist's
+time is not her own, though of course I could hardly expect you to
+understand----”
+
+Thus Alice illuminated the dull time; but she retired from the interview
+with her father still manfully displaying an outward cheerfulness, while
+depression grew heavier within, as if she had eaten soggy cake. Her
+father knew nothing whatever of the stage, and she was aware of his
+ignorance, yet for some reason his innocently skeptical amusement
+reduced her bright project almost to nothing. Something like this always
+happened, it seemed; she was continually making these illuminations, all
+gay with gildings and colourings; and then as soon as anybody else so
+much as glanced at them--even her father, who loved her--the pretty
+designs were stricken with a desolating pallor. “Is this LIFE?” Alice
+wondered, not doubting that the question was original and all her own.
+“Is it life to spend your time imagining things that aren't so, and
+never will be? Beautiful things happen to other people; why should I be
+the only one they never CAN happen to?”
+
+The mood lasted overnight; and was still upon her the next afternoon
+when an errand for her father took her down-town. Adams had decided
+to begin smoking again, and Alice felt rather degraded, as well as
+embarrassed, when she went into the large shop her father had named, and
+asked for the cheap tobacco he used in his pipe. She fell back upon an
+air of amused indulgence, hoping thus to suggest that her purchase
+was made for some faithful old retainer, now infirm; and although the
+calmness of the clerk who served her called for no such elaboration of
+her sketch, she ornamented it with a little laugh and with the remark,
+as she dropped the package into her coat-pocket, “I'm sure it'll please
+him; they tell me it's the kind he likes.”
+
+Still playing Lady Bountiful, smiling to herself in anticipation of the
+joy she was bringing to the simple old negro or Irish follower of the
+family, she left the shop; but as she came out upon the crowded pavement
+her smile vanished quickly.
+
+Next to the door of the tobacco-shop, there was the open entrance to a
+stairway, and, above this rather bleak and dark aperture, a sign-board
+displayed in begrimed gilt letters the information that Frincke's
+Business College occupied the upper floors of the building. Furthermore,
+Frincke here publicly offered “personal instruction and training in
+practical mathematics, bookkeeping, and all branches of the business
+life, including stenography, typewriting, etc.”
+
+Alice halted for a moment, frowning at this signboard as though it were
+something surprising and distasteful which she had never seen before.
+Yet it was conspicuous in a busy quarter; she almost always passed it
+when she came down-town, and never without noticing it. Nor was this the
+first time she had paused to lift toward it that same glance of vague
+misgiving.
+
+The building was not what the changeful city defined as a modern one,
+and the dusty wooden stairway, as seen from the pavement, disappeared
+upward into a smoky darkness. So would the footsteps of a girl ascending
+there lead to a hideous obscurity, Alice thought; an obscurity as dreary
+and as permanent as death. And like dry leaves falling about her she saw
+her wintry imaginings in the May air: pretty girls turning into
+withered creatures as they worked at typing-machines; old maids “taking
+dictation” from men with double chins; Alice saw old maids of a dozen
+different kinds “taking dictation.” Her mind's eye was crowded with
+them, as it always was when she passed that stairway entrance; and
+though they were all different from one another, all of them looked a
+little like herself.
+
+She hated the place, and yet she seldom hurried by it or averted
+her eyes. It had an unpleasant fascination for her, and a mysterious
+reproach, which she did not seek to fathom. She walked on thoughtfully
+to-day; and when, at the next corner, she turned into the street that
+led toward home, she was given a surprise. Arthur Russell came rapidly
+from behind her, lifting his hat as she saw him.
+
+“Are you walking north, Miss Adams?” he asked. “Do you mind if I walk
+with you?”
+
+She was not delighted, but seemed so. “How charming!” she cried, giving
+him a little flourish of the shapely hands; and then, because she
+wondered if he had seen her coming out of the tobacco-shop, she laughed
+and added, “I've just been on the most ridiculous errand!”
+
+“What was that?”
+
+“To order some cigars for my father. He's been quite ill, poor man, and
+he's so particular--but what in the world do _I_ know about cigars?”
+
+Russell laughed. “Well, what DO you know about 'em? Did you select by
+the price?”
+
+“Mercy, no!” she exclaimed, and added, with an afterthought, “Of course
+he wrote down the name of the kind he wanted and I gave it to the
+shopman. I could never have pronounced it.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+In her pocket as she spoke her hand rested upon the little sack of
+tobacco, which responded accusingly to the touch of her restless
+fingers; and she found time to wonder why she was building up this
+fiction for Mr. Arthur Russell. His discovery of Walter's device for
+whiling away the dull evening had shamed and distressed her; but she
+would have suffered no less if almost any other had been the discoverer.
+In this gentleman, after hearing that he was Mildred's Mr. Arthur
+Russell, Alice felt not the slightest “personal interest”; and there was
+yet to develop in her life such a thing as an interest not personal. At
+twenty-two this state of affairs is not unique.
+
+So far as Alice was concerned Russell might have worn a placard,
+“Engaged.” She looked upon him as diners entering a restaurant look upon
+tables marked “Reserved”: the glance, slightly discontented, passes on
+at once. Or so the eye of a prospector wanders querulously over staked
+and established claims on the mountainside, and seeks the virgin land
+beyond; unless, indeed, the prospector be dishonest. But Alice was no
+claim-jumper--so long as the notice of ownership was plainly posted.
+
+Though she was indifferent now, habit ruled her: and, at the very time
+she wondered why she created fictitious cigars for her father, she
+was also regretting that she had not boldly carried her Malacca stick
+down-town with her. Her vivacity increased automatically.
+
+“Perhaps the clerk thought you wanted the cigars for yourself,” Russell
+suggested. “He may have taken you for a Spanish countess.”
+
+“I'm sure he did!” Alice agreed, gaily; and she hummed a bar or two of
+“LaPaloma,” snapping her fingers as castanets, and swaying her body a
+little, to suggest the accepted stencil of a “Spanish Dancer.” “Would
+you have taken me for one, Mr. Russell?” she asked, as she concluded the
+impersonation.
+
+“I? Why, yes,” he said. “I'D take you for anything you wanted me to.”
+
+“Why, what a speech!” she cried, and, laughing, gave him a quick glance
+in which there glimmered some real surprise. He was looking at
+her quizzically, but with the liveliest appreciation. Her surprise
+increased; and she was glad that he had joined her.
+
+To be seen walking with such a companion added to her pleasure. She
+would have described him as “altogether quite stunning-looking”; and she
+liked his tall, dark thinness, his gray clothes, his soft hat, and his
+clean brown shoes; she liked his easy swing of the stick he carried.
+
+“Shouldn't I have said it?” he asked. “Would you rather not be taken for
+a Spanish countess?”
+
+“That isn't it,” she explained. “You said----”
+
+“I said I'd take you for whatever you wanted me to. Isn't that all
+right?”
+
+“It would all depend, wouldn't it?”
+
+“Of course it would depend on what you wanted.”
+
+“Oh, no!” she laughed. “It might depend on a lot of things.”
+
+“Such as?”
+
+“Well----” She hesitated, having the mischievous impulse to say, “Such
+as Mildred!” But she decided to omit this reference, and became serious,
+remembering Russell's service to her at Mildred's house. “Speaking of
+what I want to be taken for,” she said;--“I've been wondering ever since
+the other night what you did take me for! You must have taken me for the
+sister of a professional gambler, I'm afraid!”
+
+Russell's look of kindness was the truth about him, she was to discover;
+and he reassured her now by the promptness of his friendly chuckle.
+“Then your young brother told you where I found him, did he? I kept my
+face straight at the time, but I laughed afterward--to myself. It
+struck me as original, to say the least: his amusing himself with those
+darkies.”
+
+“Walter IS original,” Alice said; and, having adopted this new view of
+her brother's eccentricities, she impulsively went on to make it more
+plausible. “He's a very odd boy, and I was afraid you'd misunderstand.
+He tells wonderful 'darky stories,' and he'll do anything to draw
+coloured people out and make them talk; and that's what he was doing at
+Mildred's when you found him for me--he says he wins their confidence
+by playing dice with them. In the family we think he'll probably write
+about them some day. He's rather literary.”
+
+“Are you?” Russell asked, smiling.
+
+“I? Oh----” She paused, lifting both hands in a charming gesture of
+helplessness. “Oh, I'm just--me!”
+
+His glance followed the lightly waved hands with keen approval, then
+rose to the lively and colourful face, with its hazel eyes, its small
+and pretty nose, and the lip-caught smile which seemed the climax of
+her decorative transition. Never had he seen a creature so plastic or so
+wistful.
+
+Here was a contrast to his cousin Mildred, who was not wistful, and
+controlled any impulses toward plasticity, if she had them. “By George!”
+ he said. “But you ARE different!”
+
+With that, there leaped in her such an impulse of roguish gallantry
+as she could never resist. She turned her head, and, laughing and
+bright-eyed, looked him full in the face.
+
+“From whom?” she cried.
+
+“From--everybody!” he said. “Are you a mind-reader?”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“How did you know I was thinking you were different from my cousin,
+Mildred Palmer?”
+
+“What makes you think I DID know it?”
+
+“Nonsense!” he said. “You knew what I was thinking and I knew you knew.”
+
+“Yes,” she said with cool humour. “How intimate that seems to make us
+all at once!”
+
+Russell left no doubt that he was delighted with these gaieties of hers.
+“By George!” he exclaimed again. “I thought you were this sort of girl
+the first moment I saw you!”
+
+“What sort of girl? Didn't Mildred tell you what sort of girl I am when
+she asked you to dance with me?”
+
+“She didn't ask me to dance with you--I'd been looking at you. You were
+talking to some old ladies, and I asked Mildred who you were.”
+
+“Oh, so Mildred DIDN'T----” Alice checked herself. “Who did she tell you
+I was?”
+
+“She just said you were a Miss Adams, so I----”
+
+“'A' Miss Adams?” Alice interrupted.
+
+“Yes. Then I said I'd like to meet you.”
+
+“I see. You thought you'd save me from the old ladies.”
+
+“No. I thought I'd save myself from some of the girls Mildred was
+getting me to dance with. There was a Miss Dowling----”
+
+“Poor man!” Alice said, gently, and her impulsive thought was that
+Mildred had taken few chances, and that as a matter of self-defense her
+carefulness might have been well founded. This Mr. Arthur Russell was a
+much more responsive person than one had supposed.
+
+“So, Mr. Russell, you don't know anything about me except what you
+thought when you first saw me?”
+
+“Yes, I know I was right when I thought it.”
+
+“You haven't told me what you thought.”
+
+“I thought you were like what you ARE like.”
+
+“Not very definite, is it? I'm afraid you shed more light a minute or
+so ago, when you said how different from Mildred you thought I was. That
+WAS definite, unfortunately!”
+
+“I didn't say it,” Russell explained. “I thought it, and you read my
+mind. That's the sort of girl I thought you were--one that could read a
+man's mind. Why do you say 'unfortunately' you're not like Mildred?”
+
+Alice's smooth gesture seemed to sketch Mildred. “Because she's
+perfect--why, she's PERFECTLY perfect! She never makes a mistake, and
+everybody looks up to her--oh, yes, we all fairly adore her! She's like
+some big, noble, cold statue--'way above the rest of us--and she hardly
+ever does anything mean or treacherous. Of all the girls I know I
+believe she's played the fewest really petty tricks. She's----”
+
+Russell interrupted; he looked perplexed. “You say she's perfectly
+perfect, but that she does play SOME----”
+
+Alice laughed, as if at his sweet innocence. “Men are so funny!” she
+informed him. “Of course girls ALL do mean things sometimes. My own
+career's just one long brazen smirch of 'em! What I mean is, Mildred's
+perfectly perfect compared to the rest of us.”
+
+“I see,” he said, and seemed to need a moment or two of thoughtfulness.
+Then he inquired, “What sort of treacherous things do YOU do?”
+
+“I? Oh, the very worst kind! Most people bore me particularly the men in
+this town--and I show it.”
+
+“But I shouldn't call that treacherous, exactly.”
+
+“Well, THEY do,” Alice laughed. “It's made me a terribly unpopular
+character! I do a lot of things they hate. For instance, at a dance I'd
+a lot rather find some clever old woman and talk to her than dance with
+nine-tenths of these nonentities. I usually do it, too.”
+
+“But you danced as if you liked it. You danced better than any other
+girl I----”
+
+“This flattery of yours doesn't quite turn my head, Mr. Russell,” Alice
+interrupted. “Particularly since Mildred only gave you Ella Dowling to
+compare with me!”
+
+“Oh, no,” he insisted. “There were others--and of course Mildred,
+herself.”
+
+“Oh, of course, yes. I forgot that. Well----” She paused, then added, “I
+certainly OUGHT to dance well.”
+
+“Why is it so much a duty?”
+
+“When I think of the dancing-teachers and the expense to papa! All sorts
+of fancy instructors--I suppose that's what daughters have fathers for,
+though, isn't it? To throw money away on them?”
+
+“You don't----” Russell began, and his look was one of alarm. “You
+haven't taken up----”
+
+She understood his apprehension and responded merrily, “Oh, murder, no!
+You mean you're afraid I break out sometimes in a piece of cheesecloth
+and run around a fountain thirty times, and then, for an encore, show
+how much like snakes I can make my arms look.”
+
+“I SAID you were a mind-reader!” he exclaimed. “That's exactly what I
+was pretending to be afraid you might do.”
+
+“'Pretending?' That's nicer of you. No; it's not my mania.”
+
+“What is?”
+
+“Oh, nothing in particular that I know of just now. Of course I've had
+the usual one: the one that every girl goes through.”
+
+“What's that?”
+
+“Good heavens, Mr. Russell, you can't expect me to believe you're really
+a man of the world if you don't know that every girl has a time in her
+life when she's positive she's divinely talented for the stage! It's the
+only universal rule about women that hasn't got an exception. I don't
+mean we all want to go on the stage, but we all think we'd be wonderful
+if we did. Even Mildred. Oh, she wouldn't confess it to you: you'd have
+to know her a great deal better than any man can ever know her to find
+out.”
+
+“I see,” he said. “Girls are always telling us we can't know them. I
+wonder if you----”
+
+She took up his thought before he expressed it, and again he was
+fascinated by her quickness, which indeed seemed to him almost
+telepathic. “Oh, but DON'T we know one another, though!” she cried.
+
+“Such things we have to keep secret--things that go on right before YOUR
+eyes!”
+
+“Why don't some of you tell us?” he asked.
+
+“We can't tell you.”
+
+“Too much honour?”
+
+“No. Not even too much honour among thieves, Mr. Russell. We don't tell
+you about our tricks against one another because we know it wouldn't
+make any impression on you. The tricks aren't played against you, and
+you have a soft side for cats with lovely manners!”
+
+“What about your tricks against us?”
+
+“Oh, those!” Alice laughed. “We think they're rather cute!”
+
+“Bravo!” he cried, and hammered the ferrule of his stick upon the
+pavement.
+
+“What's the applause for?”
+
+“For you. What you said was like running up the black flag to the
+masthead.”
+
+“Oh, no. It was just a modest little sign in a pretty flower-bed:
+'Gentlemen, beware!'”
+
+“I see I must,” he said, gallantly.
+
+“Thanks! But I mean, beware of the whole bloomin' garden!” Then, picking
+up a thread that had almost disappeared: “You needn't think you'll ever
+find out whether I'm right about Mildred's not being an exception by
+asking her,” she said. “She won't tell you: she's not the sort that ever
+makes a confession.”
+
+But Russell had not followed her shift to the former topic. “'Mildred's
+not being an exception?'” he said, vaguely. “I don't----”
+
+“An exception about thinking she could be a wonderful thing on the stage
+if she only cared to. If you asked her I'm pretty sure she'd say, 'What
+nonsense!' Mildred's the dearest, finest thing anywhere, but you won't
+find out many things about her by asking her.”
+
+Russell's expression became more serious, as it did whenever his cousin
+was made their topic. “You think not?” he said. “You think she's----”
+
+“No. But it's not because she isn't sincere exactly. It's only because
+she has such a lot to live up to. She has to live up to being a girl
+on the grand style to herself, I mean, of course.” And without pausing
+Alice rippled on, “You ought to have seen ME when I had the stage-fever!
+I used to play 'Juliet' all alone in my room.' She lifted her arms in
+graceful entreaty, pleading musically,
+
+ “O, swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon,
+ That monthly changes in her circled orb,
+ Lest thy love prove----”
+
+
+She broke off abruptly with a little flourish, snapping thumb and finger
+of each outstretched hand, then laughed and said, “Papa used to make
+such fun of me! Thank heaven, I was only fifteen; I was all over it by
+the next year.”
+
+“No wonder you had the fever,” Russell observed. “You do it beautifully.
+Why didn't you finish the line?”
+
+“Which one? 'Lest thy love prove likewise variable'? Juliet was saying
+it to a MAN, you know. She seems to have been ready to worry about his
+constancy pretty early in their affair!”
+
+Her companion was again thoughtful. “Yes,” he said, seeming to be rather
+irksomely impressed with Alice's suggestion. “Yes; it does appear so.”
+
+Alice glanced at his serious face, and yielded to an audacious
+temptation. “You mustn't take it so hard,” she said, flippantly.
+
+“It isn't about you: it's only about Romeo and Juliet.”
+
+“See here!” he exclaimed. “You aren't at your mind-reading again, are
+you? There are times when it won't do, you know!”
+
+She leaned toward him a little, as if companionably: they were walking
+slowly, and this geniality of hers brought her shoulder in light contact
+with his for a moment. “Do you dislike my mind-reading?” she asked, and,
+across their two just touching shoulders, gave him her sudden look of
+smiling wistfulness. “Do you hate it?”
+
+He shook his head. “No, I don't,” he said, gravely. “It's quite
+pleasant. But I think it says, 'Gentlemen, beware!'”
+
+She instantly moved away from him, with the lawless and frank laugh of
+one who is delighted to be caught in a piece of hypocrisy. “How lovely!”
+ she cried. Then she pointed ahead. “Our walk is nearly over. We're
+coming to the foolish little house where I live. It's a queer little
+place, but my father's so attached to it the family have about given up
+hope of getting him to build a real house farther out. He doesn't mind
+our being extravagant about anything else, but he won't let us alter one
+single thing about his precious little old house. Well!” She halted, and
+gave him her hand. “Adieu!”
+
+“I couldn't,” he began; hesitated, then asked: “I couldn't come in with
+you for a little while?”
+
+“Not now,” she said, quickly. “You can come----” She paused.
+
+“When?”
+
+“Almost any time.” She turned and walked slowly up the path, but he
+waited. “You can come in the evening if you like,” she called back to
+him over her shoulder.
+
+“Soon?”
+
+“As soon as you like!” She waved her hand; then ran indoors and watched
+him from a window as he went up the street. He walked rapidly, a fine,
+easy figure, swinging his stick in a way that suggested exhilaration.
+Alice, staring after him through the irregular apertures of a lace
+curtain, showed no similar buoyancy. Upon the instant she closed
+the door all sparkle left her: she had become at once the simple and
+sometimes troubled girl her family knew.
+
+“What is going on out there?” her mother asked, approaching from the
+dining-room.
+
+“Oh, nothing,” Alice said, indifferently, as she turned away. “That Mr.
+Russell met me downtown and walked up with me.”
+
+“Mr. Russell? Oh, the one that's engaged to Mildred?”
+
+“Well--I don't know for certain. He didn't seem so much like an engaged
+man to me.” And she added, in the tone of thoughtful preoccupation:
+“Anyhow--not so terribly!”
+
+Then she ran upstairs, gave her father his tobacco, filled his pipe for
+him, and petted him as he lighted it.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+After that, she went to her room and sat down before her three-leaved
+mirror. There was where she nearly always sat when she came into her
+room, if she had nothing in mind to do. She went to that chair as
+naturally as a dog goes to his corner.
+
+She leaned forward, observing her profile; gravity seemed to be her
+mood. But after a long, almost motionless scrutiny, she began to produce
+dramatic sketches upon that ever-ready stage, her countenance: she
+showed gaiety, satire, doubt, gentleness, appreciation of a companion
+and love-in-hiding--all studied in profile first, then repeated for a
+“three-quarter view.” Subsequently she ran through them, facing herself
+in full.
+
+In this manner she outlined a playful scenario for her next interview
+with Arthur Russell; but grew solemn again, thinking of the impression
+she had already sought to give him. She had no twinges for any
+underminings of her “most intimate friend”--in fact, she felt that her
+work on a new portrait of Mildred for Mr.
+
+Russell had been honest and accurate. But why had it been her instinct
+to show him an Alice Adams who didn't exist?
+
+Almost everything she had said to him was upon spontaneous impulse,
+springing to her lips on the instant; yet it all seemed to have been
+founded upon a careful design, as if some hidden self kept such designs
+in stock and handed them up to her, ready-made, to be used for its own
+purpose. What appeared to be the desired result was a false-coloured
+image in Russell's mind; but if he liked that image he wouldn't be
+liking Alice Adams; nor would anything he thought about the image be a
+thought about her.
+
+Nevertheless, she knew she would go on with her false, fancy colourings
+of this nothing as soon as she saw him again; she had just been
+practicing them. “What's the idea?” she wondered. “What makes me tell
+such lies? Why shouldn't I be just myself?” And then she thought, “But
+which one is myself?”
+
+Her eyes dwelt on the solemn eyes in the mirror; and her lips,
+disquieted by a deepening wonder, parted to whisper:
+
+“Who in the world are you?”
+
+The apparition before her had obeyed her like an alert slave, but now,
+as she subsided to a complete stillness, that aspect changed to the
+old mockery with which mirrors avenge their wrongs. The nucleus of some
+queer thing seemed to gather and shape itself behind the nothingness of
+the reflected eyes until it became almost an actual strange presence.
+If it could be identified, perhaps the presence was that of the hidden
+designer who handed up the false, ready-made pictures, and, for unknown
+purposes, made Alice exhibit them; but whatever it was, she suddenly
+found it monkey-like and terrifying. In a flutter she jumped up and went
+to another part of the room.
+
+A moment or two later she was whistling softly as she hung her light
+coat over a wooden triangle in her closet, and her musing now was
+quainter than the experience that led to it; for what she thought was
+this, “I certainly am a queer girl!” She took a little pride in so much
+originality, believing herself probably the only person in the world to
+have such thoughts as had been hers since she entered the room, and the
+first to be disturbed by a strange presence in the mirror. In fact, the
+effect of the tiny episode became apparent in that look of preoccupied
+complacency to be seen for a time upon any girl who has found reason to
+suspect that she is a being without counterpart.
+
+This slight glow, still faintly radiant, was observed across the
+dinner-table by Walter, but he misinterpreted it. “What YOU lookin' so
+self-satisfied about?” he inquired, and added in his knowing way, “I saw
+you, all right, cutie!”
+
+“Where'd you see me?”
+
+“Down-town.”
+
+“This afternoon, you mean, Walter?”
+
+“Yes, 'this afternoon, I mean, Walter,'” he returned, burlesquing
+her voice at least happily enough to please himself; for he laughed
+applausively. “Oh, you never saw me! I passed you close enough to pull
+a tooth, but you were awful busy. I never did see anybody as busy as
+you get, Alice, when you're towin' a barge. My, but you keep your hands
+goin'! Looked like the air was full of 'em! That's why I'm onto why you
+look so tickled this evening; I saw you with that big fish.”
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed benevolently; she was not displeased with this
+rallying. “Well, what of it, Walter?” she asked. “If you happen to see
+your sister on the street when some nice young man is being attentive to
+her----”
+
+Walter barked and then cackled. “Whoa, Sal!” he said. “You got the parts
+mixed. It's little Alice that was 'being attentive.' I know the big fish
+she was attentive to, all right, too.”
+
+“Yes,” his sister retorted, quietly. “I should think you might have
+recognized him, Walter.”
+
+Walter looked annoyed. “Still harpin' on THAT!” he complained. “The kind
+of women I like, if they get sore they just hit you somewhere on the
+face and then they're through. By the way, I heard this Russell was
+supposed to be your dear, old, sweet friend Mildred's steady. What you
+doin' walkin' as close to him as all that?”
+
+Mrs. Adams addressed her son in gentle reproof, “Why Walter!”
+
+“Oh, never mind, mama,” Alice said. “To the horrid all things are
+horrid.”
+
+“Get out!” Walter protested, carelessly. “I heard all about this Russell
+down at the shop. Young Joe Lamb's such a talker I wonder he don't ruin
+his grandfather's business; he keeps all us cheap help standin' round
+listening to him nine-tenths of our time. Well, Joe told me this
+Russell's some kin or other to the Palmer family, and he's got some
+little money of his own, and he's puttin' it into ole Palmer's trust
+company and Palmer's goin' to make him a vice-president of the company.
+Sort of a keep-the-money-in-the-family arrangement, Joe Lamb says.”
+
+Mrs. Adams looked thoughtful. “I don't see----” she began.
+
+“Why, this Russell's supposed to be tied up to Mildred,” her son
+explained. “When ole Palmer dies this Russell will be his son-in-law,
+and all he'll haf' to do'll be to barely lift his feet and step into
+the ole man's shoes. It's certainly a mighty fat hand-me-out for this
+Russell! You better lay off o' there, Alice. Pick somebody that's got
+less to lose and you'll make better showing.”
+
+Mrs. Adams's air of thoughtfulness had not departed. “But you say this
+Mr. Russell is well off on his own account, Walter.”
+
+“Oh, Joe Lamb says he's got some little of his own. Didn't know how
+much.”
+
+“Well, then----”
+
+Walter laughed his laugh. “Cut it out,” he bade her. “Alice wouldn't run
+in fourth place.”
+
+Alice had been looking at him in a detached way, as though estimating
+the value of a specimen in a collection not her own. “Yes,” she said,
+indifferently. “You REALLY are vulgar, Walter.”
+
+He had finished his meal; and, rising, he came round the table to her
+and patted her good-naturedly on the shoulder. “Good ole Allie!” he
+said. “HONEST, you wouldn't run in fourth place. If I was you I'd never
+even start in the class. That frozen-face gang will rule you off the
+track soon as they see your colours.”
+
+“Walter!” his mother said again.
+
+“Well, ain't I her brother?” he returned, seeming to be entirely serious
+and direct, for the moment, at least. “_I_ like the ole girl all right.
+Fact is, sometimes I'm kind of sorry for her.”
+
+“But what's it all ABOUT?” Alice cried. “Simply because you met me
+down-town with a man I never saw but once before and just barely know!
+Why all this palaver?”
+
+“'Why?'” he repeated, grinning. “Well, I've seen you start before, you
+know!” He went to the door, and paused. “I got no date to-night. Take
+you to the movies, you care to go.”
+
+She declined crisply. “No, thanks!”
+
+“Come on,” he said, as pleasantly as he knew how.
+
+“Give me a chance to show you a better time than we had up at that
+frozen-face joint. I'll get you some chop suey afterward.”
+
+“No, thanks!”
+
+“All right,” he responded and waved a flippant adieu. “As the barber
+says, 'The better the advice, the worse it's wasted!' Good-night!”
+
+Alice shrugged her shoulders; but a moment or two later, as the jar of
+the carelessly slammed front door went through the house, she shook her
+head, reconsidering. “Perhaps I ought to have gone with him. It might
+have kept him away from whatever dreadful people are his friends--at
+least for one night.”
+
+“Oh, I'm sure Walter's a GOOD boy,” Mrs. Adams said, soothingly; and
+this was what she almost always said when either her husband or Alice
+expressed such misgivings. “He's odd, and he's picked up right queer
+manners; but that's only because we haven't given him advantages like
+the other young men. But I'm sure he's a GOOD boy.”
+
+She reverted to the subject a little later, while she washed the dishes
+and Alice wiped them. “Of course Walter could take his place with the
+other nice boys of the town even yet,” she said. “I mean, if we could
+afford to help him financially. They all belong to the country clubs and
+have cars and----”
+
+“Let's don't go into that any more, mama,” the daughter begged her.
+“What's the use?”
+
+“It COULD be of use,” Mrs. Adams insisted. “It could if your father----”
+
+“But papa CAN'T.”
+
+“Yes, he can.”
+
+“But how can he? He told me a man of his age CAN'T give up a business
+he's been in practically all his life, and just go groping about for
+something that might never turn up at all. I think he's right about it,
+too, of course!”
+
+Mrs. Adams splashed among the plates with a new vigour heightened by an
+old bitterness. “Oh, yes,” she said. “He talks that way; but he knows
+better.”
+
+“How could he 'know better,' mama?”
+
+“HE knows how!”
+
+“But what does he know?”
+
+Mrs. Adams tossed her head. “You don't suppose I'm such a fool I'd
+be urging him to give up something for nothing, do you, Alice? Do you
+suppose I'd want him to just go 'groping around' like he was telling
+you? That would be crazy, of course. Little as his work at Lamb's brings
+in, I wouldn't be so silly as to ask him to give it up just on a CHANCE
+he could find something else. Good gracious, Alice, you must give me
+credit for a little intelligence once in a while!”
+
+Alice was puzzled. “But what else could there be except a chance? I
+don't see----”
+
+“Well, I do,” her mother interrupted, decisively. “That man could make
+us all well off right now if he wanted to. We could have been rich long
+ago if he'd ever really felt as he ought to about his family.”
+
+“What! Why, how could----”
+
+“You know how as well as I do,” Mrs. Adams said, crossly. “I guess you
+haven't forgotten how he treated me about it the Sunday before he got
+sick.”
+
+She went on with her work, putting into it a sudden violence inspired by
+the recollection; but Alice, enlightened, gave utterance to a laugh
+of lugubrious derision. “Oh, the GLUE factory again!” she cried. “How
+silly!” And she renewed her laughter.
+
+So often do the great projects of parents appear ignominious to their
+children. Mrs. Adams's conception of a glue factory as a fairy godmother
+of this family was an absurd old story which Alice had never taken
+seriously. She remembered that when she was about fifteen her mother
+began now and then to say something to Adams about a “glue factory,”
+ rather timidly, and as a vague suggestion, but never without irritating
+him. Then, for years, the preposterous subject had not been mentioned;
+possibly because of some explosion on the part of Adams, when his
+daughter had not been present. But during the last year Mrs. Adams had
+quietly gone back to these old hints, reviving them at intervals and
+also reviving her husband's irritation. Alice's bored impression was
+that her mother wanted him to found, or buy, or do something, or
+other, about a glue factory; and that he considered the proposal so
+impracticable as to be insulting. The parental conversations took place
+when neither Alice nor Walter was at hand, but sometimes Alice had come
+in upon the conclusion of one, to find her father in a shouting mood,
+and shocking the air behind him with profane monosyllables as he
+departed. Mrs. Adams would be left quiet and troubled; and when Alice,
+sympathizing with the goaded man, inquired of her mother why these
+tiresome bickerings had been renewed, she always got the brooding and
+cryptic answer, “He COULD do it--if he wanted to.” Alice failed to
+comprehend the desirability of a glue factory--to her mind a father
+engaged in a glue factory lacked impressiveness; had no advantage over
+a father employed by Lamb and Company; and she supposed that Adams knew
+better than her mother whether such an enterprise would be profitable
+or not. Emphatically, he thought it would not, for she had heard him
+shouting at the end of one of these painful interviews, “You can keep up
+your dang talk till YOU die and _I_ die, but I'll never make one God's
+cent that way!”
+
+There had been a culmination. Returning from church on the Sunday
+preceding the collapse with which Adams's illness had begun, Alice
+found her mother downstairs, weeping and intimidated, while her father's
+stamping footsteps were loudly audible as he strode up and down his room
+overhead. So were his endless repetitions of invective loudly audible:
+“That woman! Oh, that woman; Oh, that danged woman!”
+
+Mrs. Adams admitted to her daughter that it was “the old glue factory”
+ and that her husband's wildness had frightened her into a “solemn
+promise” never to mention the subject again so long as she had breath.
+Alice laughed. The “glue factory” idea was not only a bore, but
+ridiculous, and her mother's evident seriousness about it one of those
+inexplicable vagaries we sometimes discover in the people we know best.
+But this Sunday rampage appeared to be the end of it, and when Adams
+came down to dinner, an hour later, he was unusually cheerful. Alice
+was glad he had gone wild enough to settle the glue factory once and for
+all; and she had ceased to think of the episode long before Friday of
+that week, when Adams was brought home in the middle of the afternoon by
+his old employer, the “great J. A. Lamb,” in the latter's car.
+
+During the long illness the “glue factory” was completely forgotten, by
+Alice at least; and her laugh was rueful as well as derisive now, in the
+kitchen, when she realized that her mother's mind again dwelt upon this
+abandoned nuisance. “I thought you'd got over all that nonsense, mama,”
+ she said.
+
+Mrs. Adams smiled, pathetically. “Of course you think it's nonsense,
+dearie. Young people think everything's nonsense that they don't know
+anything about.”
+
+“Good gracious!” Alice cried. “I should think I used to hear enough
+about that horrible old glue factory to know something about it!”
+
+“No,” her mother returned patiently. “You've never heard anything about
+it at all.”
+
+“I haven't?”
+
+“No. Your father and I didn't discuss it before you children. All you
+ever heard was when he'd get in such a rage, after we'd been speaking of
+it, that he couldn't control himself when you came in. Wasn't _I_ always
+quiet? Did _I_ ever go on talking about it?”
+
+“No; perhaps not. But you're talking about it now, mama, after you
+promised never to mention it again.”
+
+“I promised not to mention it to your father,” said Mrs. Adams, gently.
+“I haven't mentioned it to him, have I?”
+
+“Ah, but if you mention it to me I'm afraid you WILL mention it to him.
+You always do speak of things that you have on your mind, and you
+might get papa all stirred up again about--” Alice paused, a light of
+divination flickering in her eyes. “Oh!” she cried. “I SEE!”
+
+“What do you see?”
+
+“You HAVE been at him about it!”
+
+“Not one single word!”
+
+“No!” Alice cried. “Not a WORD, but that's what you've meant all along!
+You haven't spoken the words to him, but all this urging him to change,
+to 'find something better to go into'--it's all been about nothing on
+earth but your foolish old glue factory that you know upsets him, and
+you gave your solemn word never to speak to him about again! You didn't
+say it, but you meant it--and he KNOWS that's what you meant! Oh, mama!”
+
+Mrs. Adams, with her hands still automatically at work in the flooded
+dishpan, turned to face her daughter. “Alice,” she said, tremulously,
+“what do I ask for myself?”
+
+“What?”
+
+“I say, What do I ask for myself? Do you suppose _I_ want anything?
+Don't you know I'd be perfectly content on your father's present income
+if I were the only person to be considered? What do I care about any
+pleasure for myself? I'd be willing never to have a maid again; _I_
+don't mind doing the work. If we didn't have any children I'd be glad to
+do your father's cooking and the housework and the washing and ironing,
+too, for the rest of my life. I wouldn't care. I'm a poor cook and a
+poor housekeeper; I don't do anything well; but it would be good enough
+for just him and me. I wouldn't ever utter one word of com----”
+
+“Oh, goodness!” Alice lamented. “What IS it all about?”
+
+“It's about this,” said Mrs. Adams, swallowing. “You and Walter are a
+new generation and you ought to have the same as the rest of the new
+generation get. Poor Walter--asking you to go to the movies and a
+Chinese restaurant: the best he had to offer! Don't you suppose _I_ see
+how the poor boy is deteriorating? Don't you suppose I know what YOU
+have to go through, Alice? And when I think of that man upstairs----”
+ The agitated voice grew louder. “When I think of him and know that
+nothing in the world but his STUBBORNNESS keeps my children from having
+all they want and what they OUGHT to have, do you suppose I'm going to
+hold myself bound to keep to the absolute letter of a silly promise he
+got from me by behaving like a crazy man? I can't! I can't do it! No
+mother could sit by and see him lock up a horn of plenty like that in
+his closet when the children were starving!”
+
+“Oh, goodness, goodness me!” Alice protested. “We aren't precisely
+'starving,' are we?”
+
+Mrs. Adams began to weep. “It's just the same. Didn't I see how flushed
+and pretty you looked, this afternoon, after you'd been walking with
+this young man that's come here? Do you suppose he'd LOOK at a girl like
+Mildred Palmer if you had what you ought to have? Do you suppose he'd be
+going into business with her father if YOUR father----”
+
+“Good heavens, mama; you're worse than Walter: I just barely know the
+man! DON'T be so absurd!”
+
+“Yes, I'm always 'absurd,'” Mrs. Adams moaned. “All I can do is cry,
+while your father sits upstairs, and his horn of plenty----”
+
+But Alice interrupted with a peal of desperate laughter. “Oh, that
+'horn of plenty!' Do come down to earth, mama. How can you call a GLUE
+factory, that doesn't exist except in your mind, a 'horn of plenty'? Do
+let's be a little rational!”
+
+“It COULD be a horn of plenty,” the tearful Mrs. Adams insisted. “It
+could! You don't understand a thing about it.”
+
+“Well, I'm willing,” Alice said, with tired skepticism. “Make me
+understand, then. Where'd you ever get the idea?”
+
+Mrs. Adams withdrew her hands from the water, dried them on a towel,
+and then wiped her eyes with a handkerchief. “Your father could make a
+fortune if he wanted to,” she said, quietly. “At least, I don't say a
+fortune, but anyhow a great deal more than he does make.”
+
+“Yes, I've heard that before, mama, and you think he could make it out
+of a glue factory. What I'm asking is: How?”
+
+“How? Why, by making glue and selling it. Don't you know how bad most
+glue is when you try to mend anything? A good glue is one of the rarest
+things there is; and it would just sell itself, once it got started.
+Well, your father knows how to make as good a glue as there is in the
+world.”
+
+Alice was not interested. “What of it? I suppose probably anybody could
+make it if they wanted to.”
+
+“I SAID you didn't know anything about it. Nobody else could make it.
+Your father knows a formula for making it.”
+
+“What of that?”
+
+“It's a secret formula. It isn't even down on paper. It's worth any
+amount of money.”
+
+“'Any amount?'” Alice said, remaining incredulous. “Why hasn't papa sold
+it then?”
+
+“Just because he's too stubborn to do anything with it at all!”
+
+“How did papa get it?”
+
+“He got it before you were born, just after we were married. I didn't
+think much about it then: it wasn't till you were growing up and I saw
+how much we needed money that I----”
+
+“Yes, but how did papa get it?” Alice began to feel a little more
+curious about this possible buried treasure. “Did he invent it?”
+
+“Partly,” Mrs. Adams said, looking somewhat preoccupied. “He and another
+man invented it.”
+
+“Then maybe the other man----”
+
+“He's dead.”
+
+“Then his family----”
+
+“I don't think he left any family,” Mrs. Adams said. “Anyhow, it belongs
+to your father. At least it belongs to him as much as it does to any one
+else. He's got an absolutely perfect right to do anything he wants to
+with it, and it would make us all comfortable if he'd do what I want him
+to--and he KNOWS it would, too!”
+
+Alice shook her head pityingly. “Poor mama!” she said. “Of course he
+knows it wouldn't do anything of the kind, or else he'd have done it
+long ago.”
+
+“He would, you say?” her mother cried. “That only shows how little you
+know him!”
+
+“Poor mama!” Alice said again, soothingly. “If papa were like what you
+say he is, he'd be--why, he'd be crazy!”
+
+Mrs. Adams agreed with a vehemence near passion. “You're right about him
+for once: that's just what he is! He sits up there in his stubbornness
+and lets us slave here in the kitchen when if he wanted to--if he'd so
+much as lift his little finger----”
+
+“Oh, come, now!” Alice laughed. “You can't build even a glue factory
+with just one little finger.”
+
+Mrs. Adams seemed about to reply that finding fault with a figure
+of speech was beside the point; but a ringing of the front door bell
+forestalled the retort. “Now, who do you suppose that is?” she wondered
+aloud, then her face brightened. “Ah--did Mr. Russell ask if he
+could----”
+
+“No, he wouldn't be coming this evening,” Alice said. “Probably it's the
+great J. A. Lamb: he usually stops for a minute on Thursdays to ask how
+papa's getting along. I'll go.”
+
+She tossed her apron off, and as she went through the house her
+expression was thoughtful. She was thinking vaguely about the glue
+factory and wondering if there might be “something in it” after all. If
+her mother was right about the rich possibilities of Adams's secret--but
+that was as far as Alice's speculations upon the matter went at this
+time: they were checked, partly by the thought that her father probably
+hadn't enough money for such an enterprise, and partly by the fact that
+she had arrived at the front door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+The fine old gentleman revealed when she opened the door was probably
+the last great merchant in America to wear the chin beard. White as
+white frost, it was trimmed short with exquisite precision, while his
+upper lip and the lower expanses of his cheeks were clean and rosy from
+fresh shaving. With this trim white chin beard, the white waistcoat,
+the white tie, the suit of fine gray cloth, the broad and brilliantly
+polished black shoes, and the wide-brimmed gray felt hat, here was a
+man who had found his style in the seventies of the last century, and
+thenceforth kept it. Files of old magazines of that period might show
+him, in woodcut, as, “Type of Boston Merchant”; Nast might have drawn
+him as an honest statesman. He was eighty, hale and sturdy, not aged;
+and his quick blue eyes, still unflecked, and as brisk as a boy's, saw
+everything.
+
+“Well, well, well!” he said, heartily. “You haven't lost any of your
+good looks since last week, I see, Miss Alice, so I guess I'm to take
+it you haven't been worrying over your daddy. The young feller's getting
+along all right, is he?”
+
+“He's much better; he's sitting up, Mr. Lamb. Won't you come in?”
+
+“Well, I don't know but I might.” He turned to call toward twin disks of
+light at the curb, “Be out in a minute, Billy”; and the silhouette of a
+chauffeur standing beside a car could be seen to salute in response, as
+the old gentleman stepped into the hall. “You don't suppose your daddy's
+receiving callers yet, is he?”
+
+“He's a good deal stronger than he was when you were here last week, but
+I'm afraid he's not very presentable, though.”
+
+“'Presentable?'” The old man echoed her jovially. “Pshaw! I've seen lots
+of sick folks. _I_ know what they look like and how they love to kind of
+nest in among a pile of old blankets and wrappers. Don't you worry about
+THAT, Miss Alice, if you think he'd like to see me.”
+
+“Of course he would--if----” Alice hesitated; then said quickly, “Of
+course he'd love to see you and he's quite able to, if you care to come
+up.”
+
+She ran up the stairs ahead of him, and had time to snatch the crocheted
+wrap from her father's shoulders. Swathed as usual, he was sitting
+beside a table, reading the evening paper; but when his employer
+appeared in the doorway he half rose as if to come forward in greeting.
+
+“Sit still!” the old gentleman shouted. “What do you mean? Don't you
+know you're weak as a cat? D'you think a man can be sick as long as you
+have and NOT be weak as a cat? What you trying to do the polite with ME
+for?”
+
+Adams gratefully protracted the handshake that accompanied these
+inquiries. “This is certainly mighty fine of you, Mr. Lamb,” he said.
+“I guess Alice has told you how much our whole family appreciate your
+coming here so regularly to see how this old bag o' bones was getting
+along. Haven't you, Alice?”
+
+“Yes, papa,” she said; and turned to go out, but Lamb checked her.
+
+“Stay right here, Miss Alice; I'm not even going to sit down. I know
+how it upsets sick folks when people outside the family come in for the
+first time.”
+
+“You don't upset me,” Adams said. “I'll feel a lot better for getting a
+glimpse of you, Mr. Lamb.”
+
+The visitor's laugh was husky, but hearty and re-assuring, like his
+voice in speaking. “That's the way all my boys blarney me, Miss Alice,”
+ he said. “They think I'll make the work lighter on 'em if they can
+get me kind of flattered up. You just tell your daddy it's no use; he
+doesn't get on MY soft side, pretending he likes to see me even when
+he's sick.”
+
+“Oh, I'm not so sick any more,” Adams said. “I expect to be back in my
+place ten days from now at the longest.”
+
+“Well, now, don't hurry it, Virgil; don't hurry it. You take your time;
+take your time.”
+
+This brought to Adams's lips a feeble smile not lacking in a kind of
+vanity, as feeble. “Why?” he asked. “I suppose you think my department
+runs itself down there, do you?”
+
+His employer's response was another husky laugh. “Well, well, well!” he
+cried, and patted Adams's shoulder with a strong pink hand. “Listen to
+this young feller, Miss Alice, will you! He thinks we can't get along
+without him a minute! Yes, sir, this daddy of yours believes the whole
+works 'll just take and run down if he isn't there to keep 'em wound up.
+I always suspected he thought a good deal of himself, and now I know he
+does!”
+
+Adams looked troubled. “Well, I don't like to feel that my salary's
+going on with me not earning it.”
+
+“Listen to him, Miss Alice! Wouldn't you think, now, he'd let me be the
+one to worry about that? Why, on my word, if your daddy had his way, _I_
+wouldn't be anywhere. He'd take all my worrying and everything else off
+my shoulders and shove me right out of Lamb and Company! He would!”
+
+“It seems to me I've been soldiering on you a pretty long while, Mr.
+Lamb,” the convalescent said, querulously. “I don't feel right about it;
+but I'll be back in ten days. You'll see.”
+
+The old man took his hand in parting. “All right; we'll see, Virgil. Of
+course we do need you, seriously speaking; but we don't need you so bad
+we'll let you come down there before you're fully fit and able.” He went
+to the door. “You hear, Miss Alice? That's what I wanted to make the old
+feller understand, and what I want you to kind of enforce on him. The
+old place is there waiting for him, and it'd wait ten years if it took
+him that long to get good and well. You see that he remembers it, Miss
+Alice!”
+
+She went down the stairs with him, and he continued to impress this upon
+her until he had gone out of the front door. And even after that, the
+husky voice called back from the darkness, as he went to his car, “Don't
+forget, Miss Alice; let him take his own time. We always want him, but
+we want him to get good and well first. Good-night, good-night, young
+lady!”
+
+When she closed the door her mother came from the farther end of the
+“living-room,” where there was no light; and Alice turned to her.
+
+“I can't help liking that old man, mama,” she said. “He always sounds
+so--well, so solid and honest and friendly! I do like him.”
+
+But Mrs. Adams failed in sympathy upon this point. “He didn't say
+anything about raising your father's salary, did he?” she asked, dryly.
+
+“No.”
+
+“No. I thought not.”
+
+She would have said more, but Alice, indisposed to listen, began to
+whistle, ran up the stairs, and went to sit with her father. She found
+him bright-eyed with the excitement a first caller brings into a slow
+convalescence: his cheeks showed actual hints of colour; and he was
+smiling tremulously as he filled and lit his pipe. She brought the
+crocheted scarf and put it about his shoulders again, then took a chair
+near him.
+
+“I believe seeing Mr. Lamb did do you good, papa,” she said. “I sort of
+thought it might, and that's why I let him come up. You really look a
+little like your old self again.”
+
+Adams exhaled a breathy “Ha!” with the smoke from his pipe as he waved
+the match to extinguish it. “That's fine,” he said. “The smoke I had
+before dinner didn't taste the way it used to, and I kind of wondered if
+I'd lost my liking for tobacco, but this one seems to be all right. You
+bet it did me good to see J. A. Lamb! He's the biggest man that's ever
+lived in this town or ever will live here; and you can take all the
+Governors and Senators or anything they've raised here, and put 'em in
+a pot with him, and they won't come out one-two-three alongside o' him!
+And to think as big a man as that, with all his interests and everything
+he's got on his mind--to think he'd never let anything prevent him from
+coming here once every week to ask how I was getting along, and then
+walk right upstairs and kind of CALL on me, as it were well, it makes
+me sort of feel as if I wasn't so much of a nobody, so to speak, as your
+mother seems to like to make out sometimes.”
+
+“How foolish, papa! Of COURSE you're not 'a nobody.'”
+
+Adams chuckled faintly upon his pipe-stem, what vanity he had seeming to
+be further stimulated by his daughter's applause. “I guess there aren't
+a whole lot of people in this town that could claim J. A. showed that
+much interest in 'em,” he said. “Of course I don't set up to believe
+it's all because of merit, or anything like that. He'd do the same for
+anybody else that'd been with the company as long as I have, but still
+it IS something to be with the company that long and have him show he
+appreciates it.”
+
+“Yes, indeed, it is, papa.”
+
+“Yes, sir,” Adams said, reflectively. “Yes, sir, I guess that's so. And
+besides, it all goes to show the kind of a man he is. Simon pure, that's
+what that man is, Alice. Simon pure! There's never been anybody work
+for him that didn't respect him more than they did any other man in the
+world, I guess. And when you work for him you know he respects you,
+too. Right from the start you get the feeling that J. A. puts absolute
+confidence in you; and that's mighty stimulating: it makes you want to
+show him he hasn't misplaced it. There's great big moral values to the
+way a man like him gets you to feeling about your relations with the
+business: it ain't all just dollars and cents--not by any means!”
+
+He was silent for a time, then returned with increasing enthusiasm to
+this theme, and Alice was glad to see so much renewal of life in him; he
+had not spoken with a like cheerful vigour since before his illness. The
+visit of his idolized great man had indeed been good for him, putting
+new spirit into him; and liveliness of the body followed that of the
+spirit. His improvement carried over the night: he slept well and
+awoke late, declaring that he was “pretty near a well man and ready for
+business right now.” Moreover, having slept again in the afternoon,
+he dressed and went down to dinner, leaning but lightly on Alice, who
+conducted him.
+
+“My! but you and your mother have been at it with your scrubbing and
+dusting!” he said, as they came through the “living-room.” “I don't know
+I ever did see the house so spick and span before!” His glance fell upon
+a few carnations in a vase, and he chuckled admiringly. “Flowers, too!
+So THAT'S what you coaxed that dollar and a half out o 'me for, this
+morning!”
+
+Other embellishments brought forth his comment when he had taken his old
+seat at the head of the small dinner-table. “Why, I declare, Alice!” he
+exclaimed. “I been so busy looking at all the spick-and-spanishness
+after the house-cleaning, and the flowers out in the parlour--'living
+room' I suppose you want me to call it, if I just GOT to be
+fashionable--I been so busy studying over all this so-and-so, I declare
+I never noticed YOU till this minute! My, but you ARE all dressed up!
+What's goin' on? What's it about: you so all dressed up, and flowers in
+the parlour and everything?”
+
+“Don't you see, papa? It's in honour of your coming downstairs again, of
+course.”
+
+“Oh, so that's it,” he said. “I never would 'a' thought of that, I
+guess.”
+
+But Walter looked sidelong at his father, and gave forth his sly and
+knowing laugh. “Neither would I!” he said.
+
+Adams lifted his eyebrows jocosely. “You're jealous, are you, sonny? You
+don't want the old man to think our young lady'd make so much fuss over
+him, do you?”
+
+“Go on thinkin' it's over you,” Walter retorted, amused. “Go on and
+think it. It'll do you good.”
+
+“Of course I'll think it,” Adams said. “It isn't anybody's birthday.
+Certainly the decorations are on account of me coming downstairs. Didn't
+you hear Alice say so?”
+
+“Sure, I heard her say so.”
+
+“Well, then----”
+
+Walter interrupted him with a little music. Looking shrewdly at Alice,
+he sang:
+
+ “I was walkin' out on Monday with my sweet thing.
+ She's my neat thing,
+ My sweet thing:
+ I'll go round on Tuesday night to see her.
+ Oh, how we'll spoon----”
+
+
+“Walter!” his mother cried. “WHERE do you learn such vulgar songs?”
+ However, she seemed not greatly displeased with him, and laughed as she
+spoke.
+
+“So that's it, Alice!” said Adams. “Playing the hypocrite with your old
+man, are you? It's some new beau, is it?”
+
+“I only wish it were,” she said, calmly. “No. It's just what I said:
+it's all for you, dear.”
+
+“Don't let her con you,” Walter advised his father. “She's got
+expectations. You hang around downstairs a while after dinner and you'll
+see.”
+
+But the prophecy failed, though Adams went to his own room without
+waiting to test it. No one came.
+
+Alice stayed in the “living-room” until half-past nine, when she went
+slowly upstairs. Her mother, almost tearful, met her at the top, and
+whispered, “You mustn't mind, dearie.”
+
+“Mustn't mind what?” Alice asked, and then, as she went on her way,
+laughed scornfully. “What utter nonsense!” she said.
+
+Next day she cut the stems of the rather scant show of carnations and
+refreshed them with new water. At dinner, her father, still in high
+spirits, observed that she had again “dressed up” in honour of his
+second descent of the stairs; and Walter repeated his fragment of
+objectionable song; but these jocularities were rendered pointless by
+the eventless evening that followed; and in the morning the carnations
+began to appear tarnished and flaccid.
+
+Alice gave them a long look, then threw them away; and neither Walter
+nor her father was inspired to any rallying by her plain costume for
+that evening. Mrs. Adams was visibly depressed.
+
+When Alice finished helping her mother with the dishes, she went
+outdoors and sat upon the steps of the little front veranda. The night,
+gentle with warm air from the south, surrounded her pleasantly, and the
+perpetual smoke was thinner. Now that the furnaces of dwelling-houses
+were no longer fired, life in that city had begun to be less like life
+in a railway tunnel; people were aware of summer in the air, and in
+the thickened foliage of the shade-trees, and in the sky. Stars were
+unveiled by the passing of the denser smoke fogs, and to-night they
+could be seen clearly; they looked warm and near. Other girls sat upon
+verandas and stoops in Alice's street, cheerful as young fishermen along
+the banks of a stream.
+
+Alice could hear them from time to time; thin sopranos persistent in
+laughter that fell dismally upon her ears. She had set no lines or nets
+herself, and what she had of “expectations,” as Walter called them, were
+vanished. For Alice was experienced; and one of the conclusions she drew
+from her experience was that when a man says, “I'd take you for anything
+you wanted me to,” he may mean it or, he may not; but, if he does, he
+will not postpone the first opportunity to say something more. Little
+affairs, once begun, must be warmed quickly; for if they cool they are
+dead.
+
+But Alice was not thinking of Arthur Russell. When she tossed away the
+carnations she likewise tossed away her thoughts of that young man. She
+had been like a boy who sees upon the street, some distance before him,
+a bit of something round and glittering, a possible dime. He hopes it is
+a dime, and, until he comes near enough to make sure, he plays that it
+is a dime. In his mind he has an adventure with it: he buys something
+delightful. If he picks it up, discovering only some tin-foil which has
+happened upon a round shape, he feels a sinking. A dulness falls upon
+him.
+
+So Alice was dull with the loss of an adventure; and when the laughter
+of other girls reached her, intermittently, she had not sprightliness
+enough left in her to be envious of their gaiety. Besides, these
+neighbours were ineligible even for her envy, being of another caste;
+they could never know a dance at the Palmers', except remotely, through
+a newspaper. Their laughter was for the encouragement of snappy young
+men of the stores and offices down-town, clerks, bookkeepers, what
+not--some of them probably graduates of Frincke's Business College.
+
+Then, as she recalled that dark portal, with its dusty stairway mounting
+between close walls to disappear in the upper shadows, her mind drew
+back as from a doorway to Purgatory. Nevertheless, it was a picture
+often in her reverie; and sometimes it came suddenly, without sequence,
+into the midst of her other thoughts, as if it leaped up among them from
+a lower darkness; and when it arrived it wanted to stay. So a traveller,
+still roaming the world afar, sometimes broods without apparent reason
+upon his family burial lot: “I wonder if I shall end there.”
+
+The foreboding passed abruptly, with a jerk of her breath, as the
+street-lamp revealed a tall and easy figure approaching from the north,
+swinging a stick in time to its stride. She had given Russell up--and he
+came.
+
+“What luck for me!” he exclaimed. “To find you alone!”
+
+Alice gave him her hand for an instant, not otherwise moving. “I'm glad
+it happened so,” she said. “Let's stay out here, shall we? Do you think
+it's too provincial to sit on a girl's front steps with her?”
+
+“'Provincial?' Why, it's the very best of our institutions,” he
+returned, taking his place beside her. “At least, I think so to-night.”
+
+“Thanks! Is that practice for other nights somewhere else?”
+
+“No,” he laughed. “The practicing all led up to this. Did I come too
+soon?”
+
+“No,” she replied, gravely. “Just in time!”
+
+“I'm glad to be so accurate; I've spent two evenings wanting to come,
+Miss Adams, instead of doing what I was doing.”
+
+“What was that?”
+
+“Dinners. Large and long dinners. Your fellow-citizens are immensely
+hospitable to a newcomer.”
+
+“Oh, no,” Alice said. “We don't do it for everybody. Didn't you find
+yourself charmed?”
+
+“One was a men's dinner,” he explained. “Mr. Palmer seemed to think I
+ought to be shown to the principal business men.”
+
+“What was the other dinner?”
+
+“My cousin Mildred gave it.”
+
+“Oh, DID she!” Alice said, sharply, but she recovered herself in the
+same instant, and laughed. “She wanted to show you to the principal
+business women, I suppose.”
+
+“I don't know. At all events, I shouldn't give myself out to be so much
+feted by your 'fellow-citizens,' after all, seeing these were both done
+by my relatives, the Palmers. However, there are others to follow, I'm
+afraid. I was wondering--I hoped maybe you'd be coming to some of them.
+Aren't you?”
+
+“I rather doubt it,” Alice said, slowly. “Mildred's dance was almost the
+only evening I've gone out since my father's illness began. He seemed
+better that day; so I went. He was better the other day when he wanted
+those cigars. He's very much up and down.” She paused. “I'd almost
+forgotten that Mildred is your cousin.”
+
+“Not a very near one,” he explained. “Mr. Palmer's father was my
+great-uncle.”
+
+“Still, of course you are related.”
+
+“Yes; that distantly.”
+
+Alice said placidly, “It's quite an advantage.”
+
+He agreed. “Yes. It is.”
+
+“No,” she said, in the same placid tone. “I mean for Mildred.”
+
+“I don't see----”
+
+She laughed. “No. You wouldn't. I mean it's an advantage over the rest
+of us who might like to compete for some of your time; and the worst of
+it is we can't accuse her of being unfair about it. We can't prove she
+showed any trickiness in having you for a cousin. Whatever else she
+might plan to do with you, she didn't plan that. So the rest of us must
+just bear it!”
+
+“The 'rest of you!'” he laughed. “It's going to mean a great deal of
+suffering!”
+
+Alice resumed her placid tone. “You're staying at the Palmers', aren't
+you?”
+
+“No, not now. I've taken an apartment. I'm going to live here; I'm
+permanent. Didn't I tell you?”
+
+“I think I'd heard somewhere that you were,” she said. “Do you think
+you'll like living here?”
+
+“How can one tell?”
+
+“If I were in your place I think I should be able to tell, Mr. Russell.”
+
+“How?”
+
+“Why, good gracious!” she cried. “Haven't you got the most perfect
+creature in town for your--your cousin? SHE expects to make you like
+living here, doesn't she? How could you keep from liking it, even if you
+tried not to, under the circumstances?”
+
+“Well, you see, there's such a lot of circumstances,” he explained; “I'm
+not sure I'll like getting back into a business again. I suppose most
+of the men of my age in the country have been going through the same
+experience: the War left us with a considerable restlessness of spirit.”
+
+“You were in the War?” she asked, quickly, and as quickly answered
+herself, “Of course you were!”
+
+“I was a left-over; they only let me out about four months ago,” he
+said. “It's quite a shake-up trying to settle down again.”
+
+“You were in France, then?”
+
+“Oh, yes; but I didn't get up to the front much--only two or three
+times, and then just for a day or so. I was in the transportation
+service.”
+
+“You were an officer, of course.”
+
+“Yes,” he said. “They let me play I was a major.”
+
+“I guessed a major,” she said. “You'd always be pretty grand, of
+course.”
+
+Russell was amused. “Well, you see,” he informed her, “as it happened,
+we had at least several other majors in our army. Why would I always be
+something 'pretty grand?'”
+
+“You're related to the Palmers. Don't you notice they always affect the
+pretty grand?”
+
+“Then you think I'm only one of their affectations, I take it.”
+
+“Yes, you seem to be the most successful one they've got!” Alice said,
+lightly. “You certainly do belong to them.” And she laughed as if at
+something hidden from him. “Don't you?”
+
+“But you've just excused me for that,” he protested. “You said nobody
+could be blamed for my being their third cousin. What a contradictory
+girl you are!”
+
+Alice shook her head. “Let's keep away from the kind of girl I am.”
+
+“No,” he said. “That's just what I came here to talk about.”
+
+She shook her head again. “Let's keep first to the kind of man you are.
+I'm glad you were in the War.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Oh, I don't know.” She was quiet a moment, for she was thinking that
+here she spoke the truth: his service put about him a little glamour
+that helped to please her with him. She had been pleased with him during
+their walk; pleased with him on his own account; and now that pleasure
+was growing keener. She looked at him, and though the light in which
+she saw him was little more than starlight, she saw that he was looking
+steadily at her with a kindly and smiling seriousness. All at once it
+seemed to her that the night air was sweeter to breathe, as if a distant
+fragrance of new blossoms had been blown to her. She smiled back to him,
+and said, “Well, what kind of man are you?”
+
+“I don't know; I've often wondered,” he replied. “What kind of girl are
+you?”
+
+“Don't you remember? I told you the other day. I'm just me!”
+
+“But who is that?”
+
+“You forget everything;” said Alice. “You told me what kind of a girl
+I am. You seemed to think you'd taken quite a fancy to me from the very
+first.”
+
+“So I did,” he agreed, heartily.
+
+“But how quickly you forgot it!”
+
+“Oh, no. I only want YOU to say what kind of a girl you are.”
+
+She mocked him. “'I don't know; I've often wondered!' What kind of a
+girl does Mildred tell you I am? What has she said about me since she
+told you I was 'a Miss Adams?'”
+
+“I don't know; I haven't asked her.”
+
+“Then DON'T ask her,” Alice said, quickly.
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Because she's such a perfect creature and I'm such an imperfect one.
+Perfect creatures have the most perfect way of ruining the imperfect
+ones.”
+
+“But then they wouldn't be perfect. Not if they----”
+
+“Oh, yes, they remain perfectly perfect,” she assured him. “That's
+because they never go into details. They're not so vulgar as to come
+right out and TELL that you've been in jail for stealing chickens.
+They just look absent-minded and say in a low voice, 'Oh, very; but I
+scarcely think you'd like her particularly'; and then begin to talk of
+something else right away.”
+
+His smile had disappeared. “Yes,” he said, somewhat ruefully. “That
+does sound like Mildred. You certainly do seem to know her! Do you know
+everybody as well as that?”
+
+“Not myself,” Alice said. “I don't know myself at all. I got to
+wondering about that--about who I was--the other day after you walked
+home with me.”
+
+He uttered an exclamation, and added, explaining it, “You do give a man
+a chance to be fatuous, though! As if it were walking home with me that
+made you wonder about yourself!”
+
+“It was,” Alice informed him, coolly. “I was wondering what I wanted to
+make you think of me, in case I should ever happen to see you again.”
+
+This audacity appeared to take his breath. “By George!” he cried.
+
+“You mustn't be astonished,” she said. “What I decided then was that I
+would probably never dare to be just myself with you--not if I cared
+to have you want to see me again--and yet here I am, just being myself
+after all!”
+
+“You ARE the cheeriest series of shocks,” Russell exclaimed, whereupon
+Alice added to the series.
+
+“Tell me: Is it a good policy for me to follow with you?” she asked, and
+he found the mockery in her voice delightful. “Would you advise me to
+offer you shocks as a sort of vacation from suavity?”
+
+“Suavity” was yet another sketch of Mildred; a recognizable one, or it
+would not have been humorous. In Alice's hands, so dexterous in this
+work, her statuesque friend was becoming as ridiculous as a fine figure
+of wax left to the mercies of a satirist.
+
+But the lively young sculptress knew better than to overdo: what she did
+must appear to spring all from mirth; so she laughed as if unwillingly,
+and said, “I MUSTN'T laugh at Mildred! In the first place, she's
+your--your cousin. And in the second place, she's not meant to be funny;
+it isn't right to laugh at really splendid people who take themselves
+seriously. In the third place, you won't come again if I do.”
+
+“Don't be sure of that,” Russell said, “whatever you do.”
+
+“'Whatever I do?'” she echoed. “That sounds as if you thought I COULD be
+terrific! Be careful; there's one thing I could do that would keep you
+away.”
+
+“What's that?”
+
+“I could tell you not to come,” she said. “I wonder if I ought to.”
+
+“Why do you wonder if you 'ought to?'”
+
+“Don't you guess?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Then let's both be mysteries to each other,” she suggested. “I mystify
+you because I wonder, and you mystify me because you don't guess why I
+wonder. We'll let it go at that, shall we?”
+
+“Very well; so long as it's certain that you DON'T tell me not to come
+again.”
+
+“I'll not tell you that--yet,” she said. “In fact----” She paused,
+reflecting, with her head to one side. “In fact, I won't tell you not
+to come, probably, until I see that's what you want me to tell you.
+I'll let you out easily--and I'll be sure to see it. Even before you do,
+perhaps.”
+
+“That arrangement suits me,” Russell returned, and his voice held no
+trace of jocularity: he had become serious. “It suits me better if
+you're enough in earnest to mean that I can come--oh, not whenever I
+want to; I don't expect so much!--but if you mean that I can see you
+pretty often.”
+
+“Of course I'm in earnest,” she said. “But before I say you can come
+'pretty often,' I'd like to know how much of my time you'd need if you
+did come 'whenever you want to'; and of course you wouldn't dare
+make any answer to that question except one. Wouldn't you let me have
+Thursdays out?”
+
+“No, no,” he protested. “I want to know. Will you let me come pretty
+often?”
+
+“Lean toward me a little,” Alice said. “I want you to understand.” And
+as he obediently bent his head near hers, she inclined toward him as if
+to whisper; then, in a half-shout, she cried,
+
+“YES!”
+
+He clapped his hands. “By George!” he said. “What a girl you are!”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Well, for the first reason, because you have such gaieties as that one.
+I should think your father would actually like being ill, just to be in
+the house with you all the time.”
+
+“You mean by that,” Alice inquired, “I keep my family cheerful with my
+amusing little ways?”
+
+“Yes. Don't you?”
+
+“There were only boys in your family, weren't there, Mr. Russell?”
+
+“I was an only child, unfortunately.”
+
+“Yes,” she said. “I see you hadn't any sisters.”
+
+For a moment he puzzled over her meaning, then saw it, and was more
+delighted with her than ever. “I can answer a question of yours, now,
+that I couldn't a while ago.”
+
+“Yes, I know,” she returned, quietly.
+
+“But how could you know?”
+
+“It's the question I asked you about whether you were going to like
+living here,” she said. “You're about to tell me that now you know you
+WILL like it.”
+
+“More telepathy!” he exclaimed. “Yes, that was it, precisely. I suppose
+the same thing's been said to you so many times that you----”
+
+“No, it hasn't,” Alice said, a little confused for the moment. “Not at
+all. I meant----” She paused, then asked in a gentle voice, “Would you
+really like to know?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Well, then, I was only afraid you didn't mean it.”
+
+“See here,” he said. “I did mean it. I told you it was being pretty
+difficult for me to settle down to things again. Well, it's more
+difficult than you know, but I think I can pull through in fair spirits
+if I can see a girl like you 'pretty often.'”
+
+“All right,” she said, in a business-like tone. “I've told you that you
+can if you want to.”
+
+“I do want to,” he assured her. “I do, indeed!”
+
+“How often is 'pretty often,' Mr. Russell?”
+
+“Would you walk with me sometimes? To-morrow?”
+
+“Sometimes. Not to-morrow. The day after.”
+
+“That's splendid!” he said. “You'll walk with me day after to-morrow,
+and the night after that I'll see you at Miss Lamb's dance, won't I?”
+
+But this fell rather chillingly upon Alice. “Miss Lamb's dance? Which
+Miss Lamb?” she asked.
+
+“I don't know--it's the one that's just coming out of mourning.”
+
+“Oh, Henrietta--yes. Is her dance so soon? I'd forgotten.”
+
+“You'll be there, won't you?” he asked. “Please say you're going.”
+
+Alice did not respond at once, and he urged her again: “Please do
+promise you'll be there.”
+
+“No, I can't promise anything,” she said, slowly. “You see, for one
+thing, papa might not be well enough.”
+
+“But if he is?” said Russell. “If he is you'll surely come, won't you?
+Or, perhaps----” He hesitated, then went on quickly, “I don't know the
+rules in this place yet, and different places have different rules; but
+do you have to have a chaperone, or don't girls just go to dances with
+the men sometimes? If they do, would you--would you let me take you?”
+
+Alice was startled. “Good gracious!”
+
+“What's the matter?”
+
+“Don't you think your relatives----Aren't you expected to go with
+Mildred--and Mrs. Palmer?”
+
+“Not necessarily. It doesn't matter what I might be expected to do,” he
+said. “Will you go with me?”
+
+“I----No; I couldn't.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“I can't. I'm not going.”
+
+“But why?”
+
+“Papa's not really any better,” Alice said, huskily. “I'm too worried
+about him to go to a dance.” Her voice sounded emotional, genuinely
+enough; there was something almost like a sob in it. “Let's talk of
+other things, please.”
+
+He acquiesced gently; but Mrs. Adams, who had been listening to the
+conversation at the open window, just overhead, did not hear him. She
+had correctly interpreted the sob in Alice's voice, and, trembling
+with sudden anger, she rose from her knees, and went fiercely to her
+husband's room.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+He had not undressed, and he sat beside the table, smoking his pipe and
+reading his newspaper. Upon his forehead the lines in that old pattern,
+the historical map of his troubles, had grown a little vaguer lately;
+relaxed by the complacency of a man who not only finds his health
+restored, but sees the days before him promising once more a familiar
+routine that he has always liked to follow.
+
+As his wife came in, closing the door behind her, he looked up
+cheerfully, “Well, mother,” he said, “what's the news downstairs?”
+
+“That's what I came to tell you,” she informed him, grimly.
+
+Adams lowered his newspaper to his knee and peered over his spectacles
+at her. She had remained by the door, standing, and the great greenish
+shadow of the small lamp-shade upon his table revealed her but
+dubiously. “Isn't everything all right?” he asked. “What's the matter?”
+
+“Don't worry: I'm going to tell you,” she said, her grimness not
+relaxed. “There's matter enough, Virgil Adams. Matter enough to make me
+sick of being alive!”
+
+With that, the markings on his brows began to emerge again in all their
+sharpness; the old pattern reappeared. “Oh, my, my!” he lamented. “I
+thought maybe we were all going to settle down to a little peace for a
+while. What's it about now?”
+
+“It's about Alice. Did you think it was about ME or anything for
+MYSELF?”
+
+Like some ready old machine, always in order, his irritability responded
+immediately and automatically to her emotion. “How in thunder could I
+think what it's about, or who it's for? SAY it, and get it over!”
+
+“Oh, I'll 'say' it,” she promised, ominously. “What I've come to ask you
+is, How much longer do you expect me to put up with that old man and his
+doings?”
+
+“Whose doings? What old man?”
+
+She came at him, fiercely accusing. “You know well enough what old man,
+Virgil Adams! That old man who was here the other night.”
+
+“Mr. Lamb?”
+
+“Yes; 'Mister Lamb!'” She mocked his voice. “What other old man would I
+be likely to mean except J. A. Lamb?”
+
+“What's he been doing now?” her husband inquired, satirically. “Where'd
+you get something new against him since the last time you----”
+
+“Just this!” she cried. “The other night when that man was here, if I'd
+known how he was going to make my child suffer, I'd never have let him
+set his foot in my house.”
+
+Adams leaned back in his chair as though her absurdity had eased his
+mind. “Oh, I see,” he said. “You've just gone plain crazy. That's the
+only explanation of such talk, and it suits the case.”
+
+“Hasn't that man made us all suffer every day of our lives?” she
+demanded. “I'd like to know why it is that my life and my children's
+lives have to be sacrificed to him?”
+
+“How are they 'sacrificed' to him?”
+
+“Because you keep on working for him! Because you keep on letting him
+hand out whatever miserable little pittance he chooses to give you;
+that's why! It's as if he were some horrible old Juggernaut and I had to
+see my children's own father throwing them under the wheels to keep him
+satisfied.”
+
+“I won't hear any more such stuff!” Lifting his paper, Adams affected to
+read.
+
+“You'd better listen to me,” she admonished him. “You might be sorry
+you didn't, in case he ever tried to set foot in my house again! I might
+tell him to his face what I think of him.”
+
+At this, Adams slapped the newspaper down upon his knee. “Oh, the devil!
+What's it matter what you think of him?”
+
+“It had better matter to you!” she cried. “Do you suppose I'm going
+to submit forever to him and his family and what they're doing to my
+child?”
+
+“What are he and his family doing to 'your child?'”
+
+Mrs. Adams came out with it. “That snippy little Henrietta Lamb has
+always snubbed Alice every time she's ever had the chance. She's
+followed the lead of the other girls; they've always all of 'em been
+jealous of Alice because she dared to try and be happy, and because
+she's showier and better-looking than they are, even though you do give
+her only about thirty-five cents a year to do it on! They've all done
+everything on earth they could to drive the young men away from her
+and belittle her to 'em; and this mean little Henrietta Lamb's been the
+worst of the whole crowd to Alice, every time she could see a chance.”
+
+“What for?” Adams asked, incredulously. “Why should she or anybody else
+pick on Alice?”
+
+“'Why?' 'What for?'” his wife repeated with a greater vehemence. “Do YOU
+ask me such a thing as that? Do you really want to know?”
+
+“Yes; I'd want to know--I would if I believed it.”
+
+“Then I'll tell you,” she said in a cold fury. “It's on account of you,
+Virgil, and nothing else in the world.”
+
+He hooted at her. “Oh, yes! These girls don't like ME, so they pick on
+Alice.”
+
+“Quit your palavering and evading,” she said. “A crowd of girls like
+that, when they get a pretty girl like Alice among them, they act just
+like wild beasts. They'll tear her to pieces, or else they'll chase
+her and run her out, because they know if she had half a chance she'd
+outshine 'em. They can't do that to a girl like Mildred Palmer because
+she's got money and family to back her. Now you listen to me, Virgil
+Adams: the way the world is now, money IS family. Alice would have just
+as much 'family' as any of 'em every single bit--if you hadn't fallen
+behind in the race.”
+
+“How did I----”
+
+“Yes, you did!” she cried. “Twenty-five years ago when we were starting
+and this town was smaller, you and I could have gone with any of 'em
+if we'd tried hard enough. Look at the people we knew then that do hold
+their heads up alongside of anybody in this town! WHY can they? Because
+the men of those families made money and gave their children everything
+that makes life worth living! Why can't we hold our heads up? Because
+those men passed you in the race. They went up the ladder, and
+you--you're still a clerk down at that old hole!”
+
+“You leave that out, please,” he said. “I thought you were going to tell
+me something Henrietta Lamb had done to our Alice.”
+
+“You BET I'm going to tell you,” she assured him, vehemently. “But first
+I'm telling WHY she does it. It's because you've never given Alice any
+backing nor any background, and they all know they can do anything they
+like to her with perfect impunity. If she had the hundredth part of what
+THEY have to fall back on she'd have made 'em sing a mighty different
+song long ago!”
+
+“How would she?”
+
+“Oh, my heavens, but you're slow!” Mrs. Adams moaned. “Look here! You
+remember how practically all the nicest boys in this town used to come
+here a few years ago. Why, they were all crazy over her; and the girls
+HAD to be nice to her then. Look at the difference now! There'll be a
+whole month go by and not a young man come to call on her, let alone
+send her candy or flowers, or ever think of TAKING her any place and
+yet she's prettier and brighter than she was when they used to come. It
+isn't the child's fault she couldn't hold 'em, is it? Poor thing, SHE
+tried hard enough! I suppose you'd say it was her fault, though.”
+
+“No; I wouldn't.”
+
+“Then whose fault is it?”
+
+“Oh, mine, mine,” he said, wearily. “I drove the young men away, of
+course.”
+
+“You might as well have driven 'em, Virgil. It amounts to just the same
+thing.”
+
+“How does it?”
+
+“Because as they got older a good many of 'em began to think more about
+money; that's one thing. Money's at the bottom of it all, for that
+matter. Look at these country clubs and all such things: the other
+girls' families belong and we don't, and Alice don't; and she can't go
+unless somebody takes her, and nobody does any more. Look at the other
+girls' houses, and then look at our house, so shabby and old-fashioned
+she'd be pretty near ashamed to ask anybody to come in and sit down
+nowadays! Look at her clothes--oh, yes; you think you shelled out a lot
+for that little coat of hers and the hat and skirt she got last March;
+but it's nothing. Some of these girls nowadays spend more than your
+whole salary on their clothes. And what jewellery has she got? A plated
+watch and two or three little pins and rings of the kind people's maids
+wouldn't wear now. Good Lord, Virgil Adams, wake up! Don't sit there and
+tell me you don't know things like this mean SUFFERING for the child!”
+
+He had begun to rub his hands wretchedly back and forth over his bony
+knees, as if in that way he somewhat alleviated the tedium caused by her
+racking voice. “Oh, my, my!” he muttered. “OH, my, my!”
+
+“Yes, I should think you WOULD say 'Oh, my, my!'” she took him up,
+loudly. “That doesn't help things much! If you ever wanted to DO
+anything about it, the poor child might see some gleam of hope in her
+life. You don't CARE for her, that's the trouble; you don't care a
+single thing about her.”
+
+“I don't?”
+
+“No; you don't. Why, even with your miserable little salary you could
+have given her more than you have. You're the closest man I ever knew:
+it's like pulling teeth to get a dollar out of you for her, now and
+then, and yet you hide some away, every month or so, in some wretched
+little investment or other. You----”
+
+“Look here, now,” he interrupted, angrily. “You look here! If I didn't
+put a little by whenever I could, in a bond or something, where would
+you be if anything happened to me? The insurance doctors never passed
+me; YOU know that. Haven't we got to have SOMETHING to fall back on?”
+
+“Yes, we have!” she cried. “We ought to have something to go on with
+right now, too, when we need it. Do you suppose these snippets would
+treat Alice the way they do if she could afford to ENTERTAIN? They leave
+her out of their dinners and dances simply because they know she can't
+give any dinners and dances to leave them out of! They know she can't
+get EVEN, and that's the whole story! That's why Henrietta Lamb's done
+this thing to her now.”
+
+Adams had gone back to his rubbing of his knees. “Oh, my, my!” he said.
+“WHAT thing?”
+
+She told him. “Your dear, grand, old Mister Lamb's Henrietta has sent
+out invitations for a large party--a LARGE one. Everybody that is
+anybody in this town is asked, you can be sure. There's a very fine
+young man, a Mr. Russell, has just come to town, and he's interested
+in Alice, and he's asked her to go to this dance with him. Well, Alice
+can't accept. She can't go with him, though she'd give anything in
+the world to do it. Do you understand? The reason she can't is because
+Henrietta Lamb hasn't invited her. Do you want to know why Henrietta
+hasn't invited her? It's because she knows Alice can't get even, and
+because she thinks Alice ought to be snubbed like this on account of
+only being the daughter of one of her grandfather's clerks. I HOPE you
+understand!”
+
+“Oh, my, my!” he said. “OH, my, my!”
+
+“That's your sweet old employer,” his wife cried, tauntingly. “That's
+your dear, kind, grand old Mister Lamb! Alice has been left out of a
+good many smaller things, like big dinners and little dances, but this
+is just the same as serving her notice that she's out of everything! And
+it's all done by your dear, grand old----”
+
+“Look here!” Adams exclaimed. “I don't want to hear any more of that!
+You can't hold him responsible for everything his grandchildren do, I
+guess! He probably doesn't know a thing about it. You don't suppose he's
+troubling HIS head over----”
+
+But she burst out at him passionately. “Suppose you trouble YOUR head
+about it! You'd better, Virgil Adams! You'd better, unless you want to
+see your child just dry up into a miserable old maid! She's still young
+and she has a chance for happiness, if she had a father that didn't
+bring a millstone to hang around her neck, instead of what he ought to
+give her! You just wait till you die and God asks you what you had in
+your breast instead of a heart!”
+
+“Oh, my, my!” he groaned. “What's my heart got to do with it?”
+
+“Nothing! You haven't got one or you'd give her what she needed. Am I
+asking anything you CAN'T do? You know better; you know I'm not!”
+
+At this he sat suddenly rigid, his troubled hands ceasing to rub his
+knees; and he looked at her fixedly. “Now, tell me,” he said, slowly.
+“Just what ARE you asking?”
+
+“You know!” she sobbed.
+
+“You mean you've broken your word never to speak of THAT to me again?”
+
+“What do _I_ care for my word?” she cried, and, sinking to the floor at
+his feet, rocked herself back and forth there. “Do you suppose I'll
+let my 'word' keep me from struggling for a little happiness for my
+children? It won't, I tell you; it won't! I'll struggle for that till I
+die! I will, till I die till I die!”
+
+He rubbed his head now instead of his knees, and, shaking all over, he
+got up and began with uncertain steps to pace the floor.
+
+“Hell, hell, hell!” he said. “I've got to go through THAT again!”
+
+“Yes, you have!” she sobbed. “Till I die.”
+
+“Yes; that's what you been after all the time I was getting well.”
+
+“Yes, I have, and I'll keep on till I die!”
+
+“A fine wife for a man,” he said. “Beggin' a man to be a dirty dog!”
+
+“No! To be a MAN--and I'll keep on till I die!”
+
+Adams again fell back upon his last solace: he walked, half staggering,
+up and down the room, swearing in a rhythmic repetition.
+
+His wife had repetitions of her own, and she kept at them in a voice
+that rose to a higher and higher pitch, like the sound of an old
+well-pump. “Till I die! Till I die! Till I DIE!”
+
+She ended in a scream; and Alice, coming up the stairs, thanked heaven
+that Russell had gone. She ran to her father's door and went in.
+
+Adams looked at her, and gesticulated shakily at the convulsive figure
+on the floor. “Can you get her out of here?”
+
+Alice helped Mrs. Adams to her feet; and the stricken woman threw her
+arms passionately about her daughter.
+
+“Get her out!” Adams said, harshly; then cried, “Wait!”
+
+Alice, moving toward the door, halted, and looked at him blankly, over
+her mother's shoulder. “What is it, papa?”
+
+He stretched out his arm and pointed at her. “She says--she says you
+have a mean life, Alice.”
+
+“No, papa.”
+
+Mrs. Adams turned in her daughter's arms. “Do you hear her lie? Couldn't
+you be as brave as she is, Virgil?”
+
+“Are you lying, Alice?” he asked. “Do you have a mean time?”
+
+“No, papa.”
+
+He came toward her. “Look at me!” he said. “Things like this dance
+now--is that so hard to bear?”
+
+Alice tried to say, “No, papa,” again, but she couldn't. Suddenly and in
+spite of herself she began to cry.
+
+“Do you hear her?” his wife sobbed. “Now do you----”
+
+He waved at them fiercely. “Get out of here!” he said. “Both of you! Get
+out of here!”
+
+As they went, he dropped in his chair and bent far forward, so that his
+haggard face was concealed from them. Then, as Alice closed the door, he
+began to rub his knees again, muttering, “Oh, my, my! OH, my, my!”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+There shone a jovial sun overhead on the appointed “day after
+to-morrow”; a day not cool yet of a temperature friendly to walkers; and
+the air, powdered with sunshine, had so much life in it that it seemed
+to sparkle. To Arthur Russell this was a day like a gay companion who
+pleased him well; but the gay companion at his side pleased him even
+better. She looked her prettiest, chattered her wittiest, smiled her
+wistfulest, and delighted him with all together.
+
+“You look so happy it's easy to see your father's taken a good turn,” he
+told her.
+
+“Yes; he has this afternoon, at least,” she said. “I might have other
+reasons for looking cheerful, though.”
+
+“For instance?”
+
+“Exactly!” she said, giving him a sweet look just enough mocked by her
+laughter. “For instance!”
+
+“Well, go on,” he begged.
+
+“Isn't it expected?” she asked.
+
+“Of you, you mean?”
+
+“No,” she returned. “For you, I mean!”
+
+In this style, which uses a word for any meaning that quick look and
+colourful gesture care to endow it with, she was an expert; and she
+carried it merrily on, leaving him at liberty (one of the great values
+of the style) to choose as he would how much or how little she meant. He
+was content to supply mere cues, for although he had little coquetry of
+his own, he had lately begun to find that the only interesting moments
+in his life were those during which Alice Adams coquetted with him.
+Happily, these obliging moments extended themselves to cover all
+the time he spent with her. However serious she might seem, whatever
+appeared to be her topic, all was thou-and-I.
+
+He planned for more of it, seeing otherwise a dull evening ahead; and
+reverted, afterwhile, to a forbidden subject. “About that dance at Miss
+Lamb's--since your father's so much better----”
+
+She flushed a little. “Now, now!” she chided him. “We agreed not to say
+any more about that.”
+
+“Yes, but since he IS better----”
+
+Alice shook her head. “He won't be better to-morrow. He always has a bad
+day after a good one especially after such a good one as this is.”
+
+“But if this time it should be different,” Russell persisted; “wouldn't
+you be willing to come if he's better by to-morrow evening? Why not wait
+and decide at the last minute?”
+
+She waved her hands airily. “What a pother!” she cried. “What does it
+matter whether poor little Alice Adams goes to a dance or not?”
+
+“Well, I thought I'd made it clear that it looks fairly bleak to me if
+you don't go.”
+
+“Oh, yes!” she jeered.
+
+“It's the simple truth,” he insisted. “I don't care a great deal about
+dances these days; and if you aren't going to be there----”
+
+“You could stay away,” she suggested. “You wouldn't!”
+
+“Unfortunately, I can't. I'm afraid I'm supposed to be the excuse. Miss
+Lamb, in her capacity as a friend of my relatives----”
+
+“Oh, she's giving it for YOU! I see! On Mildred's account you mean?”
+
+At that his face showed an increase of colour. “I suppose just on
+account of my being a cousin of Mildred's and of----”
+
+“Of course! You'll have a beautiful time, too. Henrietta'll see that you
+have somebody to dance with besides Miss Dowling, poor man!”
+
+“But what I want somebody to see is that I dance with you! And perhaps
+your father----”
+
+“Wait!” she said, frowning as if she debated whether or not to tell him
+something of import; then, seeming to decide affirmatively, she asked:
+“Would you really like to know the truth about it?”
+
+“If it isn't too unflattering.”
+
+“It hasn't anything to do with you at all,” she said. “Of course I'd
+like to go with you and to dance with you--though you don't seem to
+realize that you wouldn't be permitted much time with me.”
+
+“Oh, yes, I----”
+
+“Never mind!” she laughed. “Of course you wouldn't. But even if papa
+should be better to-morrow, I doubt if I'd go. In fact, I know I
+wouldn't. There's another reason besides papa.”
+
+“Is there?”
+
+“Yes. The truth is, I don't get on with Henrietta Lamb. As a matter of
+fact, I dislike her, and of course that means she dislikes me. I should
+never think of asking her to anything I gave, and I really wonder she
+asks me to things SHE gives.” This was a new inspiration; and Alice,
+beginning to see her way out of a perplexity, wished that she had
+thought of it earlier: she should have told him from the first that she
+and Henrietta had a feud, and consequently exchanged no invitations.
+Moreover, there was another thing to beset her with little anxieties:
+she might better not have told him from the first, as she had indeed
+told him by intimation, that she was the pampered daughter of an
+indulgent father, presumably able to indulge her; for now she must
+elaborately keep to the part. Veracity is usually simple; and its
+opposite, to be successful, should be as simple; but practitioners of
+the opposite are most often impulsive, like Alice; and, like her, they
+become enmeshed in elaborations.
+
+“It wouldn't be very nice for me to go to her house,” Alice went on,
+“when I wouldn't want her in mine. I've never admired her. I've always
+thought she was lacking in some things most people are supposed to be
+equipped with--for instance, a certain feeling about the death of a
+father who was always pretty decent to his daughter. Henrietta's father
+died just, eleven months and twenty-seven days before your cousin's
+dance, but she couldn't stick out those few last days and make it a
+year; she was there.”
+
+Alice stopped, then laughed ruefully, exclaiming, “But this is dreadful
+of me!”
+
+“Is it?”
+
+“Blackguarding her to you when she's giving a big party for you! Just
+the way Henrietta would blackguard me to you--heaven knows what she
+WOULDN'T say if she talked about me to you! It would be fair, of course,
+but--well, I'd rather she didn't!” And with that, Alice let her pretty
+hand, in its white glove, rest upon his arm for a moment; and he looked
+down at it, not unmoved to see it there. “I want to be unfair about
+just this,” she said, letting a troubled laughter tremble through
+her appealing voice as she spoke. “I won't take advantage of her with
+anybody, except just--you! I'd a little rather you didn't hear anybody
+blackguard me, and, if you don't mind--could you promise not to give
+Henrietta the chance?”
+
+It was charmingly done, with a humorous, faint pathos altogether
+genuine; and Russell found himself suddenly wanting to shout at her,
+“Oh, you DEAR!” Nothing else seemed adequate; but he controlled the
+impulse in favour of something more conservative.
+
+“Imagine any one speaking unkindly of you--not praising you!”
+
+“Who HAS praised me to you?” she asked, quickly.
+
+“I haven't talked about you with any one; but if I did, I know
+they'd----”
+
+“No, no!” she cried, and went on, again accompanying her words with
+little tremulous runs of laughter. “You don't understand this town yet.
+You'll be surprised when you do; we're different. We talk about one
+another fearfully! Haven't I just proved it, the way I've been going for
+Henrietta? Of course I didn't say anything really very terrible about
+her, but that's only because I don't follow that practice the way most
+of the others do. They don't stop with the worst of the truth they can
+find: they make UP things--yes, they really do! And, oh, I'd RATHER they
+didn't make up things about me--to you!”
+
+“What difference would it make if they did?” he inquired, cheerfully.
+“I'd know they weren't true.”
+
+“Even if you did know that, they'd make a difference,” she said. “Oh,
+yes, they would! It's too bad, but we don't like anything quite so well
+that's had specks on it, even if we've wiped the specks off;--it's just
+that much spoiled, and some things are all spoiled the instant they're
+the least bit spoiled. What a man thinks about a girl, for instance. Do
+you want to have what you think about me spoiled, Mr. Russell?”
+
+“Oh, but that's already far beyond reach,” he said, lightly.
+
+“But it can't be!” she protested.
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Because it never can be. Men don't change their minds about one another
+often: they make it quite an event when they do, and talk about it as
+if something important had happened. But a girl only has to go down-town
+with a shoe-string unfastened, and every man who sees her will change
+his mind about her. Don't you know that's true?”
+
+“Not of myself, I think.”
+
+“There!” she cried. “That's precisely what every man in the world would
+say!”
+
+“So you wouldn't trust me?”
+
+“Well--I'll be awfully worried if you give 'em a chance to tell you that
+I'm too lazy to tie my shoe-strings!”
+
+He laughed delightedly. “Is that what they do say?” he asked.
+
+“Just about! Whatever they hope will get results.” She shook her head
+wisely. “Oh, yes; we do that here!”
+
+“But I don't mind loose shoe-strings,” he said. “Not if they're yours.”
+
+“They'll find out what you do mind.”
+
+“But suppose,” he said, looking at her whimsically; “suppose I wouldn't
+mind anything--so long as it's yours?”
+
+She courtesied. “Oh, pretty enough! But a girl who's talked about has a
+weakness that's often a fatal one.”
+
+“What is it?”
+
+“It's this: when she's talked about she isn't THERE. That's how they
+kill her.”
+
+“I'm afraid I don't follow you.”
+
+“Don't you see? If Henrietta--or Mildred--or any of 'em--or some of
+their mothers--oh, we ALL do it! Well, if any of 'em told you I didn't
+tie my shoe-strings, and if I were there, so that you could see me,
+you'd know it wasn't true. Even if I were sitting so that you couldn't
+see my feet, and couldn't tell whether the strings were tied or not just
+then, still you could look at me, and see that I wasn't the sort of girl
+to neglect my shoe-strings. But that isn't the way it happens: they'll
+get at you when I'm nowhere around and can't remind you of the sort of
+girl I really am.”
+
+“But you don't do that,” he complained. “You don't remind me you don't
+even tell me--the sort of girl you really are! I'd like to know.”
+
+“Let's be serious then,” she said, and looked serious enough herself.
+“Would you honestly like to know?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Well, then, you must be careful.”
+
+“'Careful?'” The word amused him.
+
+“I mean careful not to get me mixed up,” she said. “Careful not to mix
+up the girl you might hear somebody talking about with the me I honestly
+try to make you see. If you do get those two mixed up--well, the whole
+show'll be spoiled!”
+
+“What makes you think so?”
+
+“Because it's----” She checked herself, having begun to speak too
+impulsively; and she was disturbed, realizing in what tricky stuff she
+dealt. What had been on her lips to say was, “Because it's
+happened before!” She changed to, “Because it's so easy to spoil
+anything--easiest of all to spoil anything that's pleasant.”
+
+“That might depend.”
+
+“No; it's so. And if you care at all about--about knowing a girl who'd
+like someone to know her----”
+
+“Just 'someone?' That's disappointing.”
+
+“Well--you,” she said.
+
+“Tell me how 'careful' you want me to be, then!”
+
+“Well, don't you think it would be nice if you didn't give anybody the
+chance to talk about me the way--the way I've just been talking about
+Henrietta Lamb?”
+
+With that they laughed together, and he said, “You may be cutting me off
+from a great deal of information, you know.”
+
+“Yes,” Alice admitted. “Somebody might begin to praise me to you, too;
+so it's dangerous to ask you to change the subject if I ever happen to
+be mentioned. But after all----” She paused.
+
+“'After all' isn't the end of a thought, is it?”
+
+“Sometimes it is of a girl's thought; I suppose men are neater about
+their thoughts, and always finish 'em. It isn't the end of the thought I
+had then, though.”
+
+“What is the end of it?”
+
+She looked at him impulsively. “Oh, it's foolish,” she said, and she
+laughed as laughs one who proposes something probably impossible. “But,
+WOULDN'T it be pleasant if two people could ever just keep themselves
+TO themselves, so far as they two were concerned? I mean, if they could
+just manage to be friends without people talking about it, or talking to
+THEM about it?”
+
+“I suppose that might be rather difficult,” he said, more amused than
+impressed by her idea.
+
+“I don't know: it might be done,” she returned, hopefully. “Especially
+in a town of this size; it's grown so it's quite a huge place these
+days. People can keep themselves to themselves in a big place better,
+you know. For instance, nobody knows that you and I are taking a walk
+together today.”
+
+“How absurd, when here we are on exhibition!”
+
+“No; we aren't.”
+
+“We aren't?”
+
+“Not a bit of it!” she laughed. “We were the other day, when you walked
+home with me, but anybody could tell that had just happened by chance,
+on account of your overtaking me; people can always see things like
+that. But we're not on exhibition now. Look where I've led you!”
+
+Amused and a little bewildered, he looked up and down the street,
+which was one of gaunt-faced apartment-houses, old, sooty, frame
+boarding-houses, small groceries and drug-stores, laundries and one-room
+plumbers' shops, with the sign of a clairvoyant here and there.
+
+“You see?” she said. “I've been leading you without your knowing it. Of
+course that's because you're new to the town, and you give yourself up
+to the guidance of an old citizen.”
+
+“I'm not so sure, Miss Adams. It might mean that I don't care where I
+follow so long as I follow you.”
+
+“Very well,” she said. “I'd like you to keep on following me at least
+long enough for me to show you that there's something nicer ahead of us
+than this dingy street.”
+
+“Is that figurative?” he asked.
+
+“Might be!” she returned, gaily. “There's a pretty little park at the
+end, but it's very proletarian, and nobody you and I know will be more
+likely to see us there than on this street.”
+
+“What an imagination you have!” he exclaimed. “You turn our proper
+little walk into a Parisian adventure.”
+
+She looked at him in what seemed to be a momentary grave puzzlement.
+“Perhaps you feel that a Parisian adventure mightn't please your--your
+relatives?”
+
+“Why, no,” he returned. “You seem to think of them oftener than I do.”
+
+This appeared to amuse Alice, or at least to please her, for she
+laughed. “Then I can afford to quit thinking of them, I suppose. It's
+only that I used to be quite a friend of Mildred's--but there! we
+needn't to go into that. I've never been a friend of Henrietta Lamb's,
+though, and I almost wish she weren't taking such pains to be a friend
+of yours.”
+
+“Oh, but she's not. It's all on account of----”
+
+“On Mildred's account,” Alice finished this for him, coolly. “Yes, of
+course.”
+
+“It's on account of the two families,” he was at pains to explain, a
+little awkwardly. “It's because I'm a relative of the Palmers, and the
+Palmers and the Lambs seem to be old family friends.”
+
+“Something the Adamses certainly are not,” Alice said. “Not with either
+of 'em; particularly not with the Lambs!” And here, scarce aware of what
+impelled her, she returned to her former elaborations and colourings.
+“You see, the differences between Henrietta and me aren't entirely
+personal: I couldn't go to her house even if I liked her. The Lambs and
+Adamses don't get on with each other, and we've just about come to the
+breaking-point as it happens.”
+
+“I hope it's nothing to bother you.”
+
+“Why? A lot of things bother me.”
+
+“I'm sorry they do,” he said, and seemed simply to mean it.
+
+She nodded gratefully. “That's nice of you, Mr. Russell. It helps. The
+break between the Adamses and the Lambs is a pretty bothersome thing.
+It's been coming on a long time.” She sighed deeply, and the sigh
+was half genuine; this half being for her father, but the other half
+probably belonged to her instinctive rendering of Juliet Capulet,
+daughter to a warring house. “I hate it all so!” she added.
+
+“Of course you must.”
+
+“I suppose most quarrels between families are on account of business,”
+ she said. “That's why they're so sordid. Certainly the Lambs seem a
+sordid lot to me, though of course I'm biased.” And with that she began
+to sketch a history of the commercial antagonism that had risen between
+the Adamses and the Lambs.
+
+The sketching was spontaneous and dramatic. Mathematics had no part in
+it; nor was there accurate definition of Mr. Adams's relation to the
+institution of Lamb and Company. The point was clouded, in fact; though
+that might easily be set down to the general haziness of young ladies
+confronted with the mysteries of trade or commerce. Mr. Adams either had
+been a vague sort of junior member of the firm, it appeared, or else
+he should have been made some such thing; at all events, he was an old
+mainstay of the business; and he, as much as any Lamb, had helped to
+build up the prosperity of the company. But at last, tired of providing
+so much intelligence and energy for which other people took profit
+greater than his own, he had decided to leave the company and found a
+business entirely for himself. The Lambs were going to be enraged when
+they learned what was afoot.
+
+Such was the impression, a little misted, wrought by Alice's quick
+narrative. But there was dolorous fact behind it: Adams had succumbed.
+
+His wife, grave and nervous, rather than triumphant, in success, had
+told their daughter that the great J. A. would be furious and possibly
+vindictive. Adams was afraid of him, she said.
+
+“But what for, mama?” Alice asked, since this seemed a turn of affairs
+out of reason. “What in the world has Mr. Lamb to do with papa's leaving
+the company to set up for himself? What right has he to be angry about
+it? If he's such a friend as he claims to be, I should think he'd be
+glad--that is, if the glue factory turns out well. What will he be angry
+for?”
+
+Mrs. Adams gave Alice an uneasy glance, hesitated, and then explained
+that a resignation from Lamb's had always been looked upon, especially
+by “that old man,” as treachery. You were supposed to die in the
+service, she said bitterly, and her daughter, a little mystified,
+accepted this explanation. Adams had not spoken to her of his surrender;
+he seemed not inclined to speak to her at all, or to any one.
+
+Alice was not serious too long, and she began to laugh as she came
+to the end of her decorative sketch. “After all, the whole thing is
+perfectly ridiculous,” she said. “In fact, it's FUNNY! That's on account
+of what papa's going to throw over the Lamb business FOR! To save your
+life you couldn't imagine what he's going to do!”
+
+“I won't try, then,” Russell assented.
+
+“It takes all the romance out of ME,” she laughed. “You'll never go for
+a Parisian walk with me again, after I tell you what I'll be heiress
+to.” They had come to the entrance of the little park; and, as Alice had
+said, it was a pretty place, especially on a day so radiant. Trees of
+the oldest forest stood there, hale and serene over the trim, bright
+grass; and the proletarians had not come from their factories at this
+hour; only a few mothers and their babies were to be seen, here and
+there, in the shade. “I think I'll postpone telling you about it till we
+get nearly home again,” Alice said, as they began to saunter down one of
+the gravelled paths. “There's a bench beside a spring farther on; we
+can sit there and talk about a lot of things--things not so sticky as my
+dowry's going to be.”
+
+“'Sticky?'” he echoed. “What in the world----” She laughed despairingly.
+
+“A glue factory!”
+
+Then he laughed, too, as much from friendliness as from amusement; and
+she remembered to tell him that the project of a glue factory was still
+“an Adams secret.” It would be known soon, however, she added; and the
+whole Lamb connection would probably begin saying all sorts of things,
+heaven knew what!
+
+Thus Alice built her walls of flimsy, working always gaily, or with at
+least the air of gaiety; and even as she rattled on, there was somewhere
+in her mind a constant little wonder. Everything she said seemed to be
+necessary to support something else she had said. How had it happened?
+She found herself telling him that since her father had decided on
+making so great a change in his ways, she and her mother hoped at last
+to persuade him to give up that “foolish little house” he had been so
+obstinate about; and she checked herself abruptly on this declivity just
+as she was about to slide into a remark concerning her own preference
+for a “country place.” Discretion caught her in time; and something
+else, in company with discretion, caught her, for she stopped short in
+her talk and blushed.
+
+They had taken possession of the bench beside the spring, by this time;
+and Russell, his elbow on the back of the bench and his chin on his
+hand, the better to look at her, had no guess at the cause of the blush,
+but was content to find it lovely. At his first sight of Alice she had
+seemed pretty in the particular way of being pretty that he happened
+to like best; and, with every moment he spent with her, this prettiness
+appeared to increase. He felt that he could not look at her enough: his
+gaze followed the fluttering of the graceful hands in almost continual
+gesture as she talked; then lifted happily to the vivacious face again.
+She charmed him.
+
+After her abrupt pause, she sighed, then looked at him with her eyebrows
+lifted in a comedy appeal. “You haven't said you wouldn't give Henrietta
+the chance,” she said, in the softest voice that can still have a little
+laugh running in it.
+
+He was puzzled. “Give Henrietta the chance?”
+
+“YOU know! You'll let me keep on being unfair, won't you? Not give the
+other girls a chance to get even?”
+
+He promised, heartily.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+Alice had said that no one who knew either Russell or herself would be
+likely to see them in the park or upon the dingy street; but although
+they returned by that same ungenteel thoroughfare they were seen by
+a person who knew them both. Also, with some surprise on the part of
+Russell, and something more poignant than surprise for Alice, they saw
+this person.
+
+All of the dingy street was ugly, but the greater part of it appeared to
+be honest. The two pedestrians came upon a block or two, however, where
+it offered suggestions of a less upright character, like a steady enough
+workingman with a naughty book sticking out of his pocket. Three or four
+dim shops, a single story in height, exhibited foul signboards, yet fair
+enough so far as the wording went; one proclaiming a tobacconist, one
+a junk-dealer, one a dispenser of “soft drinks and cigars.” The most
+credulous would have doubted these signboards; for the craft of the
+modern tradesman is exerted to lure indoors the passing glance, since if
+the glance is pleased the feet may follow; but this alleged tobacconist
+and his neighbours had long been fond of dust on their windows,
+evidently, and shades were pulled far down on the glass of their doors.
+Thus the public eye, small of pupil in the light of the open street, was
+intentionally not invited to the dusky interiors. Something different
+from mere lack of enterprise was apparent; and the signboards might have
+been omitted; they were pains thrown away, since it was plain to the
+world that the business parts of these shops were the brighter back
+rooms implied by the dark front rooms; and that the commerce there was
+in perilous new liquors and in dice and rough girls.
+
+Nothing could have been more innocent than the serenity with which these
+wicked little places revealed themselves for what they were; and, bound
+by this final tie of guilelessness, they stood together in a row which
+ended with a companionable barbershop, much like them. Beyond was a
+series of soot-harried frame two-story houses, once part of a cheerful
+neighbourhood when the town was middle-aged and settled, and not old and
+growing. These houses, all carrying the label. “Rooms,” had the worried
+look of vacancy that houses have when they are too full of everybody
+without being anybody's home; and there was, too, a surreptitious
+air about them, as if, like the false little shops, they advertised
+something by concealing it.
+
+One of them--the one next to the barber-shop--had across its front an
+ample, jig-sawed veranda, where aforetime, no doubt, the father of a
+family had fanned himself with a palm-leaf fan on Sunday afternoons,
+watching the surreys go by, and where his daughter listened to mandolins
+and badinage on starlit evenings; but, although youth still held the
+veranda, both the youth and the veranda were in decay. The four or five
+young men who lounged there this afternoon were of a type known to shady
+pool-parlours. Hats found no favour with them; all of them wore caps;
+and their tight clothes, apparently from a common source, showed
+a vivacious fancy for oblique pockets, false belts, and Easter-egg
+colourings. Another thing common to the group was the expression of
+eye and mouth; and Alice, in the midst of her other thoughts, had a
+distasteful thought about this.
+
+The veranda was within a dozen feet of the sidewalk, and as she and her
+escort came nearer, she took note of the young men, her face hardening
+a little, even before she suspected there might be a resemblance between
+them and any one she knew. Then she observed that each of these loungers
+wore not for the occasion, but as of habit, a look of furtively
+amused contempt; the mouth smiled to one side as if not to dislodge a
+cigarette, while the eyes kept languidly superior. All at once Alice was
+reminded of Walter; and the slight frown caused by this idea had just
+begun to darken her forehead when Walter himself stepped out of the open
+door of the house and appeared upon the veranda. Upon his head was a new
+straw hat, and in his hand was a Malacca stick with an ivory top, for
+Alice had finally decided against it for herself and had given it to
+him. His mood was lively: he twirled the stick through his fingers like
+a drum-major's baton, and whistled loudly.
+
+Moreover, he was indeed accompanied. With him was a thin girl who had
+made a violent black-and-white poster of herself: black dress, black
+flimsy boa, black stockings, white slippers, great black hat down upon
+the black eyes; and beneath the hat a curve of cheek and chin made white
+as whitewash, and in strong bilateral motion with gum.
+
+The loungers on the veranda were familiars of the pair; hailed them with
+cacklings; and one began to sing, in a voice all tin:
+
+ “Then my skirt, Sal, and me did go
+ Right straight to the moving-pitcher show.
+ OH, you bashful vamp!”
+
+
+The girl laughed airily. “God, but you guys are wise!” she said.
+
+“Come on, Wallie.”
+
+Walter stared at his sister; then grinned faintly, and nodded at Russell
+as the latter lifted his hat in salutation. Alice uttered an incoherent
+syllable of exclamation, and, as she began to walk faster, she bit her
+lip hard, not in order to look wistful, this time, but to help her keep
+tears of anger from her eyes.
+
+Russell laughed cheerfully. “Your brother certainly seems to have found
+the place for 'colour' today,” he said. “That girl's talk must be full
+of it.”
+
+But Alice had forgotten the colour she herself had used in accounting
+for Walter's peculiarities, and she did not understand. “What?” she
+said, huskily.
+
+“Don't you remember telling me about him? How he was going to write,
+probably, and would go anywhere to pick up types and get them to talk?”
+
+She kept her eyes ahead, and said sharply, “I think his literary tastes
+scarcely cover this case!”
+
+“Don't be too sure. He didn't look at all disconcerted. He didn't seem
+to mind your seeing him.”
+
+“That's all the worse, isn't it?”
+
+“Why, no,” her friend said, genially. “It means he didn't consider
+that he was engaged in anything out of the way. You can't expect to
+understand everything boys do at his age; they do all sorts of queer
+things, and outgrow them. Your brother evidently has a taste for queer
+people, and very likely he's been at least half sincere when he's made
+you believe he had a literary motive behind it. We all go through----”
+
+“Thanks, Mr. Russell,” she interrupted. “Let's don't say any more.”
+
+He looked at her flushed face and enlarged eyes; and he liked her all
+the better for her indignation: this was how good sisters ought to feel,
+he thought, failing to understand that most of what she felt was not
+about Walter. He ventured only a word more. “Try not to mind it so much;
+it really doesn't amount to anything.”
+
+She shook her head, and they went on in silence; she did not look at him
+again until they stopped before her own house. Then she gave him only
+one glimpse of her eyes before she looked down. “It's spoiled, isn't
+it?” she said, in a low voice.
+
+“What's 'spoiled?'”
+
+“Our walk--well, everything. Somehow it always--is.”
+
+“'Always is' what?” he asked.
+
+“Spoiled,” she said.
+
+He laughed at that; but without looking at him she suddenly offered him
+her hand, and, as he took it, he felt a hurried, violent pressure upon
+his fingers, as if she meant to thank him almost passionately for being
+kind. She was gone before he could speak to her again.
+
+
+In her room, with the door locked, she did not go to her mirror, but to
+her bed, flinging herself face down, not caring how far the pillows
+put her hat awry. Sheer grief had followed her anger; grief for
+the calamitous end of her bright afternoon, grief for the “end of
+everything,” as she thought then. Nevertheless, she gradually grew more
+composed, and, when her mother tapped on the door presently, let her in.
+Mrs. Adams looked at her with quick apprehension.
+
+“Oh, poor child! Wasn't he----”
+
+Alice told her. “You see how it--how it made me look, mama,” she
+quavered, having concluded her narrative. “I'd tried to cover up
+Walter's awfulness at the dance with that story about his being
+'literary,' but no story was big enough to cover this up--and oh! it
+must make him think I tell stories about other things!”
+
+“No, no, no!” Mrs. Adams protested. “Don't you see? At the worst, all HE
+could think is that Walter told stories to you about why he likes to be
+with such dreadful people, and you believed them. That's all HE'D think;
+don't you see?”
+
+Alice's wet eyes began to show a little hopefulness. “You honestly think
+it might be that way, mama?”
+
+“Why, from what you've told me he said, I KNOW it's that way. Didn't he
+say he wanted to come again?”
+
+“N-no,” Alice said, uncertainly. “But I think he will. At least I begin
+to think so now. He----” She stopped.
+
+“From all you tell me, he seems to be a very desirable young man,” Mrs.
+Adams said, primly.
+
+Her daughter was silent for several moments; then new tears gathered
+upon her downcast lashes. “He's just--dear!” she faltered.
+
+Mrs. Adams nodded. “He's told you he isn't engaged, hasn't he?”
+
+“No. But I know he isn't. Maybe when he first came here he was near it,
+but I know he's not.”
+
+“I guess Mildred Palmer would LIKE him to be, all right!” Mrs. Adams
+was frank enough to say, rather triumphantly; and Alice, with a lowered
+head, murmured:
+
+“Anybody--would.”
+
+The words were all but inaudible.
+
+“Don't you worry,” her mother said, and patted her on the shoulder.
+“Everything will come out all right; don't you fear, Alice. Can't you
+see that beside any other girl in town you're just a perfect QUEEN? Do
+you think any young man that wasn't prejudiced, or something, would need
+more than just one look to----”
+
+But Alice moved away from the caressing hand. “Never mind, mama. I
+wonder he looks at me at all. And if he does again, after seeing my
+brother with those horrible people----”
+
+“Now, now!” Mrs. Adams interrupted, expostulating mournfully. “I'm sure
+Walter's a GOOD boy----”
+
+“You are?” Alice cried, with a sudden vigour. “You ARE?”
+
+“I'm sure he's GOOD, yes--and if he isn't, it's not his fault. It's
+mine.”
+
+“What nonsense!”
+
+“No, it's true,” Mrs. Adams lamented. “I tried to bring him up to be
+good, God knows; and when he was little he was the best boy I ever saw.
+When he came from Sunday-school he'd always run to me and we'd go over
+the lesson together; and he let me come in his room at night to hear his
+prayers almost until he was sixteen. Most boys won't do that with
+their mothers--not nearly that long. I tried so hard to bring him up
+right--but if anything's gone wrong it's my fault.”
+
+“How could it be? You've just said----”
+
+“It's because I didn't make your father this--this new step earlier.
+Then Walter might have had all the advantages that other----”
+
+“Oh, mama, PLEASE!” Alice begged her. “Let's don't go over all that
+again. Isn't it more important to think what's to be done about him? Is
+he going to be allowed to go on disgracing us as he does?”
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed profoundly. “I don't know what to do,” she confessed,
+unhappily. “Your father's so upset about--about this new step he's
+taking--I don't feel as if we ought to----”
+
+“No, no!” Alice cried. “Papa mustn't be distressed with this, on top of
+everything else. But SOMETHING'S got to be done about Walter.”
+
+“What can be?” her mother asked, helplessly. “What can be?”
+
+Alice admitted that she didn't know.
+
+
+At dinner, an hour later, Walter's habitually veiled glance lifted,
+now and then, to touch her furtively;--he was waiting, as he would have
+said, for her to “spring it”; and he had prepared a brief and sincere
+defense to the effect that he made his own living, and would like
+to inquire whose business it was to offer intrusive comment upon his
+private conduct. But she said nothing, while his father and mother were
+as silent as she. Walter concluded that there was to be no attack, but
+changed his mind when his father, who ate only a little, and broodingly
+at that, rose to leave the table and spoke to him.
+
+“Walter,” he said, “when you've finished I wish you'd come up to my
+room. I got something I want to say to you.”
+
+Walter shot a hard look at his apathetic sister, then turned to his
+father. “Make it to-morrow,” he said. “This is Satad'y night and I got a
+date.”
+
+“No,” Adams said, frowning. “You come up before you go out. It's
+important.”
+
+“All right; I've had all I want to eat,” Walter returned. “I got a few
+minutes. Make it quick.”
+
+He followed his father upstairs, and when they were in the room together
+Adams shut the door, sat down, and began to rub his knees.
+
+“Rheumatism?” the boy inquired, slyly. “That what you want to talk to me
+about?”
+
+“No.” But Adams did not go on; he seemed to be in difficulties for
+words, and Walter decided to help him.
+
+“Hop ahead and spring it,” he said. “Get it off your mind: I'll tell the
+world _I_ should worry! You aren't goin' to bother ME any, so why bother
+yourself? Alice hopped home and told you she saw me playin' around with
+some pretty gay-lookin' berries and you----”
+
+“Alice?” his father said, obviously surprised. “It's nothing about
+Alice.”
+
+“Didn't she tell you----”
+
+“I haven't talked with her all day.”
+
+“Oh, I see,” Walter said. “She told mother and mother told you.”
+
+“No, neither of 'em have told me anything. What was there to tell?”
+
+Walter laughed. “Oh, it's nothin',” he said. “I was just startin' out
+to buy a girl friend o' mine a rhinestone buckle I lost to her on a bet,
+this afternoon, and Alice came along with that big Russell fish; and I
+thought she looked sore. She expects me to like the kind she likes, and
+I don't like 'em. I thought she'd prob'ly got you all stirred up about
+it.”
+
+“No, no,” his father said, peevishly. “I don't know anything about it,
+and I don't care to know anything about it. I want to talk to you about
+something important.”
+
+Then, as he was again silent, Walter said, “Well, TALK about it; I'm
+listening.”
+
+“It's this,” Adams began, heavily. “It's about me going into this glue
+business. Your mother's told you, hasn't she?”
+
+“She said you were goin' to leave the old place down-town and start a
+glue factory. That's all I know about it; I got my own affairs to 'tend
+to.”
+
+“Well, this is your affair,” his father said, frowning. “You can't stay
+with Lamb and Company.”
+
+Walter looked a little startled. “What you mean, I can't? Why not?”
+
+“You've got to help me,” Adams explained slowly; and he frowned more
+deeply, as if the interview were growing increasingly laborious for him.
+“It's going to be a big pull to get this business on its feet.”
+
+“Yes!” Walter exclaimed with a sharp skepticism. “I should say it was!”
+ He stared at his father incredulously. “Look here; aren't you just a
+little bit sudden, the way you're goin' about things? You've let mother
+shove you a little too fast, haven't you? Do you know anything about
+what it means to set up a new business these days?”
+
+“Yes, I know all about it,” Adams said. “About this business, I do.”
+
+“How do you?”
+
+“Because I made a long study of it. I'm not afraid of going about it the
+wrong way; but it's a hard job and you'll have to put in all whatever
+sense and strength you've got.”
+
+Walter began to breathe quickly, and his lips were agitated; then he set
+them obstinately. “Oh; I will,” he said.
+
+“Yes, you will,” Adams returned, not noticing that his son's inflection
+was satiric. “It's going to take every bit of energy in your body, and
+all the energy I got left in mine, and every cent of the little I've
+saved, besides something I'll have to raise on this house. I'm going
+right at it, now I've got to; and you'll have to quit Lamb's by the end
+of next week.”
+
+“Oh, I will?” Walter's voice grew louder, and there was a shrillness
+in it. “I got to quit Lamb's the end of next week, have I?” He stepped
+forward, angrily. “Listen!” he said. “I'm not walkin' out o' Lamb's,
+see? I'm not quittin' down there: I stay with 'em, see?”
+
+Adams looked up at him, astonished. “You'll leave there next Saturday,”
+ he said. “I've got to have you.”
+
+“You don't anything o' the kind,” Walter told him, sharply. “Do you
+expect to pay me anything?”
+
+“I'd pay you about what you been getting down there.”
+
+“Then pay somebody else; _I_ don't know anything about glue. You get
+somebody else.”
+
+“No. You've got to---”
+
+Walter cut him off with the utmost vehemence. “Don't tell me what I got
+to do! I know what I got to do better'n you, I guess! I stay at Lamb's,
+see?”
+
+Adams rose angrily. “You'll do what I tell you. You can't stay down
+there.”
+
+“Why can't I?”
+
+“Because I won't let you.”
+
+“Listen! Keep on not lettin' me: I'll be there just the same.”
+
+At that his father broke into a sour laughter. “THEY won't let you,
+Walter! They won't have you down there after they find out I'm going.”
+
+“Why won't they? You don't think they're goin' to be all shot to pieces
+over losin' YOU, do you?”
+
+“I tell you they won't let you stay,” his father insisted, loudly.
+
+“Why, what do they care whether you go or not?”
+
+“They'll care enough to fire YOU, my boy!”
+
+“Look here, then; show me why.”
+
+“They'll do it!”
+
+“Yes,” Walter jeered; “you keep sayin' they will, but when I ask you to
+show me why, you keep sayin' they will! That makes little headway with
+ME, I can tell you!”
+
+Adams groaned, and, rubbing his head, began to pace the floor. Walter's
+refusal was something he had not anticipated; and he felt the weakness
+of his own attempt to meet it: he seemed powerless to do anything but
+utter angry words, which, as Walter said, made little headway. “Oh, my,
+my!” he muttered, “OH, my, my!”
+
+Walter, usually sallow, had grown pale: he watched his father narrowly,
+and now took a sudden resolution. “Look here,” he said. “When you say
+Lamb's is likely to fire me because you're goin' to quit, you talk like
+the people that have to be locked up. I don't know where you get such
+things in your head; Lamb and Company won't know you're gone. Listen: I
+can stay there long as I want to. But I'll tell you what I'll do: make
+it worth my while and I'll hook up with your old glue factory, after
+all.”
+
+Adams stopped his pacing abruptly, and stared at him. “'Make it worth
+your while?' What you mean?”
+
+“I got a good use for three hundred dollars right now,” Walter said.
+“Let me have it and I'll quit Lamb's to work for you. Don't let me have
+it and I SWEAR I won't!”
+
+“Are you crazy?”
+
+“Is everybody crazy that needs three hundred dollars?”
+
+“Yes,” Adams said. “They are if they ask ME for it, when I got to
+stretch every cent I can lay my hands on to make it look like a dollar!”
+
+“You won't do it?”
+
+Adams burst out at him. “You little fool! If I had three hundred dollars
+to throw away, besides the pay I expected to give you, haven't you got
+sense enough to see I could hire a man worth three hundred dollars
+more to me than you'd be? It's a FINE time to ask me for three hundred
+dollars, isn't it! What FOR? Rhinestone buckles to throw around on your
+'girl friends?' Shame on you! Ask me to BRIBE you to help yourself and
+your own family!”
+
+“I'll give you a last chance,” Walter said. “Either you do what I want,
+or I won't do what you want. Don't ask me again after this, because----”
+
+Adams interrupted him fiercely. “'Ask you again!' Don't worry about
+that, my boy! All I ask you is to get out o' my room.”
+
+“Look here,” Walter said, quietly; and his lopsided smile distorted his
+livid cheek. “Look here: I expect YOU wouldn't give me three hundred
+dollars to save my life, would you?”
+
+“You make me sick,” Adams said, in his bitterness. “Get out of here.”
+
+Walter went out, whistling; and Adams drooped into his old chair again
+as the door closed. “OH, my, my!” he groaned. “Oh, Lordy, Lordy! The way
+of the transgressor----”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+He meant his own transgression and his own way; for Walter's stubborn
+refusal appeared to Adams just then as one of the inexplicable but
+righteous besettings he must encounter in following that way. “Oh,
+Lordy, Lord!” he groaned, and then, as resentment moved him--“That dang
+boy! Dang idiot!” Yet he knew himself for a greater idiot because he had
+not been able to tell Walter the truth. He could not bring himself to do
+it, nor even to state his case in its best terms; and that was because
+he felt that even in its best terms the case was a bad one.
+
+Of all his regrets the greatest was that in a moment of vanity and
+tenderness, twenty-five years ago, he had told his young wife a business
+secret. He had wanted to show how important her husband was becoming,
+and how much the head of the universe, J. A. Lamb, trusted to his
+integrity and ability. The great man had an idea: he thought of
+“branching out a little,” he told Adams confidentially, and there were
+possibilities of profit in glue.
+
+What he wanted was a liquid glue to be put into little bottles and sold
+cheaply. “The kind of thing that sells itself,” he said; “the kind of
+thing that pays its own small way as it goes along, until it has profits
+enough to begin advertising it right. Everybody has to use glue, and if
+I make mine convenient and cheap, everybody'll buy mine. But it's got
+to be glue that'll STICK; it's got to be the best; and if we find how
+to make it we've got to keep it a big secret, of course, or anybody can
+steal it from us. There was a man here last month; he knew a formula
+he wanted to sell me, 'sight unseen'; but he was in such a hurry I got
+suspicious, and I found he'd managed to steal it, working for the big
+packers in their glue-works. We've got to find a better glue than that,
+anyhow. I'm going to set you and Campbell at it. You're a practical,
+wide-awake young feller, and Campbell's a mighty good chemist; I guess
+you two boys ought to make something happen.”
+
+His guess was shrewd enough. Working in a shed a little way outside the
+town, where their cheery employer visited them sometimes to study their
+malodorous stews, the two young men found what Lamb had set them to
+find. But Campbell was thoughtful over the discovery. “Look here,” he
+said. “Why ain't this just about yours and mine? After all, it may be
+Lamb's money that's paid for the stuff we've used, but it hasn't cost
+much.”
+
+“But he pays US,” Adams remonstrated, horrified by his companion's idea.
+“He paid us to do it. It belongs absolutely to him.”
+
+“Oh, I know he THINKS it does,” Campbell admitted, plaintively. “I
+suppose we've got to let him take it. It's not patentable, and he'll
+have to do pretty well by us when he starts his factory, because he's
+got to depend on us to run the making of the stuff so that the workmen
+can't get onto the process. You better ask him the same salary I do, and
+mine's going to be high.”
+
+But the high salary, thus pleasantly imagined, was never paid. Campbell
+died of typhoid fever, that summer, leaving Adams and his employer the
+only possessors of the formula, an unwritten one; and Adams, pleased to
+think himself more important to the great man than ever, told his wife
+that there could be little doubt of his being put in sole charge of
+the prospective glue-works. Unfortunately, the enterprise remained
+prospective.
+
+Its projector had already become “inveigled into another side-line,”
+ as he told Adams. One of his sons had persuaded him to take up a
+“cough-lozenge,” to be called the “Jalamb Balm Trochee”; and the lozenge
+did well enough to amuse Mr. Lamb and occupy his spare time, which was
+really about all he had asked of the glue project. He had “all the MONEY
+anybody ought to want,” he said, when Adams urged him; and he could
+“start up this little glue side-line” at any time; the formula was safe
+in their two heads.
+
+At intervals Adams would seek opportunity to speak of “the little glue
+side-line” to his patron, and to suggest that the years were passing;
+but Lamb, petting other hobbies, had lost interest. “Oh, I'll start it
+up some day, maybe. If I don't, I may turn it over to my heirs: it's
+always an asset, worth something or other, of course. We'll probably
+take it up some day, though, you and I.”
+
+The sun persistently declined to rise on that day, and, as time went
+on, Adams saw that his rather timid urgings bored his employer, and he
+ceased to bring up the subject. Lamb apparently forgot all about glue,
+but Adams discovered that unfortunately there was someone else who
+remembered it.
+
+“It's really YOURS,” she argued, that painful day when for the first
+time she suggested his using his knowledge for the benefit of himself
+and his family. “Mr. Campbell might have had a right to part of it, but
+he died and didn't leave any kin, so it belongs to you.”
+
+“Suppose J. A. Lamb hired me to saw some wood,” Adams said. “Would the
+sticks belong to me?”
+
+“He hasn't got any right to take your invention and bury it,” she
+protested. “What good is it doing him if he doesn't DO anything with it?
+What good is it doing ANYBODY? None in the world! And what harm would
+it do him if you went ahead and did this for yourself and for your
+children? None in the world! And what could he do to you if he WAS old
+pig enough to get angry with you for doing it? He couldn't do a single
+thing, and you've admitted he couldn't, yourself. So what's your reason
+for depriving your children and your wife of the benefits you know you
+could give 'em?”
+
+“Nothing but decency,” he answered; and she had her reply ready for
+that. It seemed to him that, strive as he would, he could not reach her
+mind with even the plainest language; while everything that she said to
+him, with such vehemence, sounded like so much obstinate gibberish.
+Over and over he pressed her with the same illustration, on the point of
+ownership, though he thought he was varying it.
+
+“Suppose he hired me to build him a house: would that be MY house?”
+
+“He didn't hire you to build him a house. You and Campbell invented----”
+
+“Look here: suppose you give a cook a soup-bone and some vegetables, and
+pay her to make you a soup: has she got a right to take and sell it? You
+know better!”
+
+“I know ONE thing: if that old man tried to keep your own invention from
+you he's no better than a robber!”
+
+They never found any point of contact in all their passionate
+discussions of this ethical question; and the question was no more
+settled between them, now that Adams had succumbed, than it had ever
+been. But at least the wrangling about it was over: they were grave
+together, almost silent, and an uneasiness prevailed with her as much as
+with him.
+
+He had already been out of the house, to walk about the small green
+yard; and on Monday afternoon he sent for a taxicab and went down-town,
+but kept a long way from the “wholesale section,” where stood the
+formidable old oblong pile of Lamb and Company. He arranged for the
+sale of the bonds he had laid away, and for placing a mortgage upon his
+house; and on his way home, after five o'clock, he went to see an old
+friend, a man whose term of service with Lamb and Company was even a
+little longer than his own.
+
+This veteran, returned from the day's work, was sitting in front of the
+apartment house where he lived, but when the cab stopped at the curb he
+rose and came forward, offering a jocular greeting. “Well, well, Virgil
+Adams! I always thought you had a sporty streak in you. Travel in
+your own hired private automobile nowadays, do you? Pamperin' yourself
+because you're still layin' off sick, I expect.”
+
+“Oh, I'm well enough again, Charley Lohr,” Adams said, as he got out and
+shook hands. Then, telling the driver to wait, he took his friend's arm,
+walked to the bench with him, and sat down. “I been practically well for
+some time,” he said. “I'm fixin' to get into harness again.”
+
+“Bein' sick has certainly produced a change of heart in you,” his
+friend laughed. “You're the last man I ever expected to see blowin'
+yourself--or anybody else to a taxicab! For that matter, I never heard
+of you bein' in ANY kind of a cab, 'less'n it might be when you been
+pall-bearer for somebody. What's come over you?”
+
+“Well, I got to turn over a new leaf, and that's a fact,” Adams said. “I
+got a lot to do, and the only way to accomplish it, it's got to be done
+soon, or I won't have anything to live on while I'm doing it.”
+
+“What you talkin' about? What you got to do except to get strong enough
+to come back to the old place?”
+
+“Well----” Adams paused, then coughed, and said slowly, “Fact is,
+Charley Lohr, I been thinking likely I wouldn't come back.”
+
+“What! What you talkin' about?”
+
+“No,” said Adams. “I been thinking I might likely kind of branch out on
+my own account.”
+
+“Well, I'll be doggoned!” Old Charley Lohr was amazed; he ruffled up
+his gray moustache with thumb and forefinger, leaving his mouth open
+beneath, like a dark cave under a tangled wintry thicket. “Why, that's
+the doggonedest thing I ever heard!” he said. “I already am the oldest
+inhabitant down there, but if you go, there won't be anybody else of the
+old generation at all. What on earth you thinkin' of goin' into?”
+
+“Well,” said Adams, “I rather you didn't mention it till I get started
+of course anybody'll know what it is by then--but I HAVE been kind of
+planning to put a liquid glue on the market.”
+
+His friend, still ruffling the gray moustache upward, stared at him in
+frowning perplexity. “Glue?” he said. “GLUE!”
+
+“Yes. I been sort of milling over the idea of taking up something like
+that.”
+
+“Handlin' it for some firm, you mean?”
+
+“No. Making it. Sort of a glue-works likely.”
+
+Lohr continued to frown. “Let me think,” he said. “Didn't the ole man
+have some such idea once, himself?”
+
+Adams leaned forward, rubbing his knees; and he coughed again before he
+spoke. “Well, yes. Fact is, he did. That is to say, a mighty long while
+ago he did.”
+
+“I remember,” said Lohr. “He never said anything about it that I know
+of; but seems to me I recollect we had sort of a rumour around the place
+how you and that man--le's see, wasn't his name Campbell, that died of
+typhoid fever? Yes, that was it, Campbell. Didn't the ole man have you
+and Campbell workin' sort of private on some glue proposition or other?”
+
+“Yes, he did.” Adams nodded. “I found out a good deal about glue then,
+too.”
+
+“Been workin' on it since, I suppose?”
+
+“Yes. Kept it in my mind and studied out new things about it.”
+
+Lohr looked serious. “Well, but see here,” he said. “I hope it ain't
+anything the ole man'll think might infringe on whatever he had you
+doin' for HIM. You know how he is: broad-minded, liberal, free-handed
+man as walks this earth, and if he thought he owed you a cent he'd sell
+his right hand for a pork-chop to pay it, if that was the only way; but
+if he got the idea anybody was tryin' to get the better of him, he'd
+sell BOTH his hands, if he had to, to keep 'em from doin' it. Yes, at
+eighty, he would! Not that I mean I think you might be tryin' to get the
+better of him, Virg. You're a mighty close ole codger, but such a thing
+ain't in you. What I mean: I hope there ain't any chance for the ole man
+to THINK you might be----”
+
+“Oh, no,” Adams interrupted. “As a matter of fact, I don't believe he'll
+ever think about it at all, and if he did he wouldn't have any real
+right to feel offended at me: the process I'm going to use is one I
+expect to change and improve a lot different from the one Campbell and I
+worked on for him.”
+
+“Well, that's good,” said Lohr. “Of course you know what you're up to:
+you're old enough, God knows!” He laughed ruefully. “My, but it will
+seem funny to me--down there with you gone! I expect you and I both
+been gettin' to be pretty much dead-wood in the place, the way the young
+fellows look at it, and the only one that'd miss either of us would be
+the other one! Have you told the ole man yet?”
+
+“Well----” Adams spoke laboriously. “No. No, I haven't. I thought--well,
+that's what I wanted to see you about.”
+
+“What can I do?”
+
+“I thought I'd write him a letter and get you to hand it to him for me.”
+
+“My soul!” his friend exclaimed. “Why on earth don't you just go down
+there and tell him?”
+
+Adams became pitiably embarrassed. He stammered, coughed, stammered
+again, wrinkling his face so deeply he seemed about to weep; but finally
+he contrived to utter an apologetic laugh. “I ought to do that, of
+course; but in some way or other I just don't seem to be able to--to
+manage it.”
+
+“Why in the world not?” the mystified Lohr inquired.
+
+“I could hardly tell you--'less'n it is to say that when you been with
+one boss all your life it's so--so kind of embarrassing--to quit him, I
+just can't make up my mind to go and speak to him about it. No; I got it
+in my head a letter's the only satisfactory way to do it, and I thought
+I'd ask you to hand it to him.”
+
+“Well, of course I don't mind doin' that for you,” Lohr said, mildly.
+“But why in the world don't you just mail it to him?”
+
+“Well, I'll tell you,” Adams returned. “You know, like that, it'd have
+to go through a clerk and that secretary of his, and I don't know who
+all. There's a couple of kind of delicate points I want to put in it:
+for instance, I want to explain to him how much improvement and so on
+I'm going to introduce on the old process I helped to work out with
+Campbell when we were working for him, so't he'll understand it's a
+different article and no infringement at all. Then there's another
+thing: you see all during while I was sick he had my salary paid to
+me it amounts to considerable, I was on my back so long. Under the
+circumstances, because I'm quitting, I don't feel as if I ought to
+accept it, and so I'll have a check for him in the letter to cover it,
+and I want to be sure he knows it, and gets it personally. If it had to
+go through a lot of other people, the way it would if I put it in the
+mail, why, you can't tell. So what I thought: if you'd hand it to him
+for me, and maybe if he happened to read it right then, or anything,
+it might be you'd notice whatever he'd happen to say about it--and you
+could tell me afterward.”
+
+“All right,” Lohr said. “Certainly if you'd rather do it that way, I'll
+hand it to him and tell you what he says; that is, if he says anything
+and I hear him. Got it written?”
+
+“No; I'll send it around to you last of the week.” Adams moved
+toward his taxicab. “Don't say anything to anybody about it, Charley,
+especially till after that.”
+
+“All right.”
+
+“And, Charley, I'll be mighty obliged to you,” Adams said, and came back
+to shake hands in farewell. “There's one thing more you might do--if
+you'd ever happen to feel like it.” He kept his eyes rather vaguely
+fixed on a point above his friend's head as he spoke, and his voice was
+not well controlled. “I been--I been down there a good many years and
+I may not 'a' been so much use lately as I was at first, but I always
+tried to do my best for the old firm. If anything turned out so's they
+DID kind of take offense with me, down there, why, just say a good word
+for me--if you'd happen to feel like it, maybe.”
+
+Old Charley Lohr assured him that he would speak a good word if
+opportunity became available; then, after the cab had driven away,
+he went up to his small apartment on the third floor and muttered
+ruminatively until his wife inquired what he was talking to himself
+about.
+
+“Ole Virg Adams,” he told her. “He's out again after his long spell of
+sickness, and the way it looks to me he'd better stayed in bed.”
+
+“You mean he still looks too bad to be out?”
+
+“Oh, I expect he's gettin' his HEALTH back,” Lohr said, frowning.
+
+“Then what's the matter with him? You mean he's lost his mind?”
+
+“My goodness, but women do jump at conclusions!” he exclaimed.
+
+“Well,” said Mrs. Lohr, “what other conclusion did you leave me to jump
+at?”
+
+Her husband explained with a little heat: “People can have a sickness
+that AFFECTS their mind, can't they? Their mind can get some affected
+without bein' LOST, can't it?”
+
+“Then you mean the poor man's mind does seem affected?”
+
+“Why, no; I'd scarcely go as far as that,” Lohr said, inconsistently,
+and declined to be more definite.
+
+
+Adams devoted the latter part of that evening to the composition of his
+letter--a disquieting task not completed when, at eleven o'clock, he
+heard his daughter coming up the stairs. She was singing to herself in a
+low, sweet voice, and Adams paused to listen incredulously, with his
+pen lifted and his mouth open, as if he heard the strangest sound in the
+world. Then he set down the pen upon a blotter, went to his door, and
+opened it, looking out at her as she came.
+
+“Well, dearie, you seem to be feeling pretty good,” he said. “What you
+been doing?”
+
+“Just sitting out on the front steps, papa.”
+
+“All alone, I suppose.”
+
+“No. Mr. Russell called.”
+
+“Oh, he did?” Adams pretended to be surprised. “What all could you and
+he find to talk about till this hour o' the night?”
+
+She laughed gaily. “You don't know me, papa!”
+
+“How's that?”
+
+“You've never found out that I always do all the talking.”
+
+“Didn't you let him get a word in all evening?”
+
+“Oh, yes; every now and then.”
+
+Adams took her hand and petted it. “Well, what did he say?”
+
+Alice gave him a radiant look and kissed him. “Not what you think!” she
+laughed; then slapped his cheek with saucy affection, pirouetted across
+the narrow hall and into her own room, and curtsied to him as she closed
+her door.
+
+Adams went back to his writing with a lighter heart; for since Alice
+was born she had been to him the apple of his eye, his own phrase in
+thinking of her; and what he was doing now was for her.
+
+He smiled as he picked up his pen to begin a new draft of the painful
+letter; but presently he looked puzzled. After all, she could be happy
+just as things were, it seemed. Then why had he taken what his wife
+called “this new step,” which he had so long resisted?
+
+He could only sigh and wonder. “Life works out pretty peculiarly,” he
+thought; for he couldn't go back now, though the reason he couldn't was
+not clearly apparent. He had to go ahead.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+He was out in his taxicab again the next morning, and by noon he had
+secured what he wanted.
+
+It was curiously significant that he worked so quickly. All the years
+during which his wife had pressed him toward his present shift he had
+sworn to himself, as well as to her, that he would never yield; and yet
+when he did yield he had no plans to make, because he found them
+already prepared and worked out in detail in his mind; as if he had long
+contemplated the “step” he believed himself incapable of taking.
+
+Sometimes he had thought of improving his income by exchanging his
+little collection of bonds for a “small rental property,” if he could
+find “a good buy”; and he had spent many of his spare hours rambling
+over the enormously spreading city and its purlieus, looking for the
+ideal “buy.” It remained unattainable, so far as he was concerned; but
+he found other things.
+
+Not twice a crow's mile from his own house there was a dismal and
+slummish quarter, a decayed “industrial district” of earlier days. Most
+of the industries were small; some of them died, perishing of bankruptcy
+or fire; and a few had moved, leaving their shells. Of the relics, the
+best was a brick building which had been the largest and most important
+factory in the quarter: it had been injured by a long vacancy almost
+as serious as a fire, in effect, and Adams had often guessed at the sum
+needed to put it in repair.
+
+When he passed it, he would look at it with an interest which he
+supposed detached and idly speculative. “That'd be just the thing,” he
+thought. “If a fellow had money enough, and took a notion to set up some
+new business on a big scale, this would be a pretty good place--to make
+glue, for instance, if that wasn't out of the question, of course.
+It would take a lot of money, though; a great deal too much for me to
+expect to handle--even if I'd ever dream of doing such a thing.”
+
+Opposite the dismantled factory was a muddy, open lot of two acres
+or so, and near the middle of the lot, a long brick shed stood in
+a desolate abandonment, not happily decorated by old coatings of
+theatrical and medicinal advertisements. But the brick shed had two
+wooden ells, and, though both shed and ells were of a single story, here
+was empty space enough for a modest enterprise--“space enough for almost
+anything, to start with,” Adams thought, as he walked through the low
+buildings, one day, when he was prospecting in that section. “Yes, I
+suppose I COULD swing this,” he thought. “If the process belonged to
+me, say, instead of being out of the question because it isn't my
+property--or if I was the kind of man to do such a thing anyhow, here
+would be something I could probably get hold of pretty cheap. They'd
+want a lot of money for a lease on that big building over the way--but
+this, why, I should think it'd be practically nothing at all.”
+
+Then, by chance, meeting an agent he knew, he made inquiries--merely to
+satisfy a casual curiosity, he thought--and he found matters much as he
+had supposed, except that the owners of the big building did not wish
+to let, but to sell it, and this at a price so exorbitant that Adams
+laughed. But the long brick shed in the great muddy lot was for sale or
+to let, or “pretty near to be given away,” he learned, if anybody would
+take it.
+
+Adams took it now, though without seeing that he had been destined
+to take it, and that some dreary wizard in the back of his head had
+foreseen all along that he would take it, and planned to be ready. He
+drove in his taxicab to look the place over again, then down-town to
+arrange for a lease; and came home to lunch with his wife and daughter.
+Things were “moving,” he told them.
+
+He boasted a little of having acted so decisively, and said that since
+the dang thing had to be done, it was “going to be done RIGHT!” He was
+almost cheerful, in a feverish way, and when the cab came for him again,
+soon after lunch, he explained that he intended not only to get things
+done right, but also to “get 'em done quick!” Alice, following him to
+the front door, looked at him anxiously and asked if she couldn't help.
+He laughed at her grimly.
+
+“Then let me go along with you in the cab,” she begged. “You don't look
+able to start in so hard, papa, just when you're barely beginning to get
+your strength back. Do let me go with you and see if I can't help--or at
+least take care of you if you should get to feeling badly.”
+
+He declined, but upon pressure let her put a tiny bottle of spirits of
+ammonia in his pocket, and promised to make use of it if he “felt faint
+or anything.” Then he was off again; and the next morning had men at
+work in his sheds, though the wages he had to pay frightened him.
+
+He directed the workmen in every detail, hurrying them by example and
+exhortations, and receiving, in consequence, several declarations of
+independence, as well as one resignation, which took effect immediately.
+“Yous capitalusts seem to think a man's got nothin' to do but break his
+back p'doosin' wealth fer yous to squander,” the resigning person loudly
+complained. “You look out: the toiler's day is a-comin', and it ain't so
+fur off, neither!” But the capitalist was already out of hearing, gone
+to find a man to take this orator's place.
+
+By the end of the week, Adams felt that he had moved satisfactorily
+forward in his preparations for the simple equipment he needed; but
+he hated the pause of Sunday. He didn't WANT any rest, he told Alice
+impatiently, when she suggested that the idle day might be good for him.
+
+Late that afternoon he walked over to the apartment house where old
+Charley Lohr lived, and gave his friend the letter he wanted the head
+of Lamb and Company to receive “personally.” “I'll take it as a mighty
+great favour in you to hand it to him personally, Charley,” he said, in
+parting. “And you won't forget, in case he says anything about it--and
+remember if you ever do get a chance to put in a good word for me later,
+you know----”
+
+Old Charley promised to remember, and, when Mrs. Lohr came out of the
+“kitchenette,” after the door closed, he said thoughtfully, “Just skin
+and bones.”
+
+“You mean Mr. Adams is?” Mrs. Lohr inquired.
+
+“Who'd you think I meant?” he returned. “One o' these partridges in the
+wall-paper?”
+
+“Did he look so badly?”
+
+“Looked kind of distracted to me,” her husband replied. “These little
+thin fellers can stand a heap sometimes, though. He'll be over here
+again Monday.”
+
+“Did he say he would?”
+
+“No,” said Lohr. “But he will. You'll see. He'll be over to find out
+what the big boss says when I give him this letter. Expect I'd be kind
+of anxious, myself, if I was him.”
+
+“Why would you? What's Mr. Adams doing to be so anxious about?”
+
+Lohr's expression became one of reserve, the look of a man who has
+found that when he speaks his inner thoughts his wife jumps too far to
+conclusions. “Oh, nothing,” he said. “Of course any man starting up a
+new business is bound to be pretty nervous a while. He'll be over here
+to-morrow evening, all right; you'll see.”
+
+The prediction was fulfilled: Adams arrived just after Mrs. Lohr had
+removed the dinner dishes to her “kitchenette”; but Lohr had little
+information to give his caller.
+
+“He didn't say a word, Virgil; nary a word. I took it into his office
+and handed it to him, and he just sat and read it; that's all. I kind of
+stood around as long as I could, but he was sittin' at his desk with his
+side to me, and he never turned around full toward me, as it were, so I
+couldn't hardly even tell anything. All I know: he just read it.”
+
+“Well, but see here,” Adams began, nervously. “Well----”
+
+“Well what, Virg?”
+
+“Well, but what did he say when he DID speak?”
+
+“He didn't speak. Not so long I was in there, anyhow. He just sat there
+and read it. Read kind of slow. Then, when he came to the end, he turned
+back and started to read it all over again. By that time there was three
+or four other men standin' around in the office waitin' to speak to him,
+and I had to go.”
+
+Adams sighed, and stared at the floor, irresolute. “Well, I'll be
+getting along back home then, I guess, Charley. So you're sure you
+couldn't tell anything what he might have thought about it, then?”
+
+“Not a thing in the world. I've told you all I know, Virg.”
+
+“I guess so, I guess so,” Adams said, mournfully. “I feel mighty
+obliged to you, Charley Lohr; mighty obliged. Good-night to you.” And he
+departed, sighing in perplexity.
+
+On his way home, preoccupied with many thoughts, he walked so slowly
+that once or twice he stopped and stood motionless for a few moments,
+without being aware of it; and when he reached the juncture of the
+sidewalk with the short brick path that led to his own front door, he
+stopped again, and stood for more than a minute. “Ah, I wish I knew,” he
+whispered, plaintively. “I do wish I knew what he thought about it.”
+
+He was roused by a laugh that came lightly from the little veranda near
+by. “Papa!” Alice called gaily. “What are you standing there muttering
+to yourself about?”
+
+“Oh, are you there, dearie?” he said, and came up the path. A tall
+figure rose from a chair on the veranda.
+
+“Papa, this is Mr. Russell.”
+
+The two men shook hands, Adams saying, “Pleased to make your
+acquaintance,” as they looked at each other in the faint light diffused
+through the opaque glass in the upper part of the door. Adams's
+impression was of a strong and tall young man, fashionable but gentle;
+and Russell's was of a dried, little old business man with a grizzled
+moustache, worried bright eyes, shapeless dark clothes, and a homely
+manner.
+
+“Nice evening,” Adams said further, as their hands parted. “Nice time o'
+year it is, but we don't always have as good weather as this; that's
+the trouble of it. Well----” He went to the door. “Well--I bid you good
+evening,” he said, and retired within the house.
+
+Alice laughed. “He's the old-fashionedest man in town, I suppose and
+frightfully impressed with you, I could see!”
+
+“What nonsense!” said Russell. “How could anybody be impressed with me?”
+
+“Why not? Because you're quiet? Good gracious! Don't you know that
+you're the most impressive sort? We chatterers spend all our time
+playing to you quiet people.”
+
+“Yes; we're only the audience.”
+
+“'Only!'” she echoed. “Why, we live for you, and we can't live without
+you.”
+
+“I wish you couldn't,” said Russell. “That would be a new experience for
+both of us, wouldn't it?”
+
+“It might be a rather bleak one for me,” she answered, lightly. “I'm
+afraid I'll miss these summer evenings with you when they're over. I'll
+miss them enough, thanks!”
+
+“Do they have to be over some time?” he asked.
+
+“Oh, everything's over some time, isn't it?”
+
+Russell laughed at her. “Don't let's look so far ahead as that,” he
+said. “We don't need to be already thinking of the cemetery, do we?”
+
+“I didn't,” she said, shaking her head. “Our summer evenings will be
+over before then, Mr. Russell.”
+
+“Why?” he asked.
+
+“Good heavens!” she said. “THERE'S laconic eloquence: almost a proposal
+in a single word! Never mind, I shan't hold you to it. But to answer
+you: well, I'm always looking ahead, and somehow I usually see about how
+things are coming out.”
+
+“Yes,” he said. “I suppose most of us do; at least it seems as if we
+did, because we so seldom feel surprised by the way they do come out.
+But maybe that's only because life isn't like a play in a theatre, and
+most things come about so gradually we get used to them.”
+
+“No, I'm sure I can see quite a long way ahead,” she insisted, gravely.
+“And it doesn't seem to me as if our summer evenings could last very
+long. Something'll interfere--somebody will, I mean--they'll SAY
+something----”
+
+“What if they do?”
+
+She moved her shoulders in a little apprehensive shiver. “It'll change
+you,” she said. “I'm just sure something spiteful's going to happen to
+me. You'll feel differently about--things.”
+
+“Now, isn't that an idea!” he exclaimed.
+
+“It will,” she insisted. “I know something spiteful's going to happen!”
+
+“You seem possessed by a notion not a bit flattering to me,” he
+remarked.
+
+“Oh, but isn't it? That's just what it is! Why isn't it?”
+
+“Because it implies that I'm made of such soft material the slightest
+breeze will mess me all up. I'm not so like that as I evidently appear;
+and if it's true that we're afraid other people will do the things we'd
+be most likely to do ourselves, it seems to me that I ought to be the
+one to be afraid. I ought to be afraid that somebody may say something
+about me to you that will make you believe I'm a professional forger.”
+
+“No. We both know they won't,” she said. “We both know you're the sort
+of person everybody in the world says nice things about.” She lifted
+her hand to silence him as he laughed at this. “Oh, of course you are! I
+think perhaps you're a little flirtatious--most quiet men have that one
+sly way with 'em--oh, yes, they do! But you happen to be the kind of
+man everybody loves to praise. And if you weren't, _I_ shouldn't hear
+anything terrible about you. I told you I was unpopular: I don't see
+anybody at all any more. The only man except you who's been to see me in
+a month is that fearful little fat Frank Dowling, and I sent word to HIM
+I wasn't home. Nobody'd tell me of your wickedness, you see.”
+
+“Then let me break some news to you,” Russell said. “Nobody would tell
+me of yours, either. Nobody's even mentioned you to me.”
+
+She burlesqued a cry of anguish. “That IS obscurity! I suppose I'm
+too apt to forget that they say the population's about half a million
+nowadays. There ARE other people to talk about, you feel, then?”
+
+“None that I want to,” he said. “But I should think the size of the
+place might relieve your mind of what seems to insist on burdening it.
+Besides, I'd rather you thought me a better man than you do.”
+
+“What kind of a man do I think you are?”
+
+“The kind affected by what's said about people instead of by what they
+do themselves.”
+
+“Aren't you?”
+
+“No, I'm not,” he said. “If you want our summer evenings to be over
+you'll have to drive me away yourself.”
+
+“Nobody else could?”
+
+“No.”
+
+She was silent, leaning forward, with her elbows on her knees and her
+clasped hands against her lips. Then, not moving, she said softly:
+
+“Well--I won't!”
+
+She was silent again, and he said nothing, but looked at her, seeming
+to be content with looking. Her attitude was one only a graceful person
+should assume, but she was graceful; and, in the wan light, which made
+a prettily shaped mist of her, she had beauty. Perhaps it was beauty of
+the hour, and of the love scene almost made into form by what they had
+both just said, but she had it; and though beauty of the hour passes, he
+who sees it will long remember it and the hour when it came.
+
+“What are you thinking of?” he asked.
+
+She leaned back in her chair and did not answer at once. Then she said:
+
+“I don't know; I doubt if I was thinking of anything. It seems to me I
+wasn't. I think I was just being sort of sadly happy just then.”
+
+“Were you? Was it 'sadly,' too?”
+
+“Don't you know?” she said. “It seems to me that only little children
+can be just happily happy. I think when we get older our happiest
+moments are like the one I had just then: it's as if we heard strains of
+minor music running through them--oh, so sweet, but oh, so sad!”
+
+“But what makes it sad for YOU?”
+
+“I don't know,” she said, in a lighter tone. “Perhaps it's a kind of
+useless foreboding I seem to have pretty often. It may be that--or it
+may be poor papa.”
+
+“You ARE a funny, delightful girl, though!” Russell laughed. “When your
+father's so well again that he goes out walking in the evenings!”
+
+“He does too much walking,” Alice said. “Too much altogether, over at
+his new plant. But there isn't any stopping him.” She laughed and shook
+her head. “When a man gets an ambition to be a multi-millionaire his
+family don't appear to have much weight with him. He'll walk all he
+wants to, in spite of them.”
+
+“I suppose so,” Russell said, absently; then he leaned forward. “I wish
+I could understand better why you were 'sadly' happy.”
+
+Meanwhile, as Alice shed what further light she could on this point, the
+man ambitious to be a “multi-millionaire” was indeed walking too much
+for his own good. He had gone to bed, hoping to sleep well and rise
+early for a long day's work, but he could not rest, and now, in his
+nightgown and slippers, he was pacing the floor of his room.
+
+“I wish I DID know,” he thought, over and over. “I DO wish I knew how he
+feels about it.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+That was a thought almost continuously in his mind, even when he was
+hardest at work; and, as the days went on and he could not free himself,
+he became querulous about it. “I guess I'm the biggest dang fool alive,”
+ he told his wife as they sat together one evening. “I got plenty else
+to bother me, without worrying my head off about what HE thinks. I
+can't help what he thinks; it's too late for that. So why should I keep
+pestering myself about it?”
+
+“It'll wear off, Virgil,” Mrs. Adams said, reassuringly. She was gentle
+and sympathetic with him, and for the first time in many years he would
+come to sit with her and talk, when he had finished his day's work. He
+had told her, evading her eye, “Oh, I don't blame you. You didn't get
+after me to do this on your own account; you couldn't help it.”
+
+“Yes; but it don't wear off,” he complained. “This afternoon I was
+showing the men how I wanted my vats to go, and I caught my fool self
+standing there saying to my fool self, 'It's funny I don't hear how he
+feels about it from SOMEbody.' I was saying it aloud, almost--and it IS
+funny I don't hear anything!”
+
+“Well, you see what it means, don't you, Virgil? It only means he hasn't
+said anything to anybody about it. Don't you think you're getting kind
+of morbid over it?”
+
+“Maybe, maybe,” he muttered.
+
+“Why, yes,” she said, briskly. “You don't realize what a little bit of
+a thing all this is to him. It's been a long, long while since the
+last time you even mentioned glue to him, and he's probably forgotten
+everything about it.”
+
+“You're off your base; it isn't like him to forget things,” Adams
+returned, peevishly. “He may seem to forget 'em, but he don't.”
+
+“But he's not thinking about this, or you'd have heard from him before
+now.”
+
+Her husband shook his head. “Ah, that's just it!” he said. “Why HAVEN'T
+I heard from him?”
+
+“It's all your morbidness, Virgil. Look at Walter: if Mr. Lamb held this
+up against you, would he still let Walter stay there? Wouldn't he have
+discharged Walter if he felt angry with you?”
+
+“That dang boy!” Adams said. “If he WANTED to come with me now, I
+wouldn't hardly let him, What do you suppose makes him so bull-headed?”
+
+“But hasn't he a right to choose for himself?” she asked. “I suppose
+he feels he ought to stick to what he thinks is sure pay. As soon as he
+sees that you're going to succeed with the glue-works he'll want to be
+with you quick enough.”
+
+“Well, he better get a little sense in his head,” Adams returned,
+crossly. “He wanted me to pay him a three-hundred-dollar bonus in
+advance, when anybody with a grain of common sense knows I need every
+penny I can lay my hands on!”
+
+“Never mind,” she said. “He'll come around later and be glad of the
+chance.”
+
+“He'll have to beg for it then! _I_ won't ask him again.”
+
+“Oh, Walter will come out all right; you needn't worry. And don't you
+see that Mr. Lamb's not discharging him means there's no hard feeling
+against you, Virgil?”
+
+“I can't make it out at all,” he said, frowning. “The only thing I can
+THINK it means is that J. A. Lamb is so fair-minded--and of course he
+IS one of the fair-mindedest men alive I suppose that's the reason he
+hasn't fired Walter. He may know,” Adams concluded, morosely--“he may
+know that's just another thing to make me feel all the meaner: keeping
+my boy there on a salary after I've done him an injury.”
+
+“Now, now!” she said, trying to comfort him. “You couldn't do anybody an
+injury to save your life, and everybody knows it.”
+
+“Well, anybody ought to know I wouldn't WANT to do an injury, but
+this world isn't built so't we can do just what we want.” He paused,
+reflecting. “Of course there may be one explanation of why Walter's
+still there: J. A. maybe hasn't noticed that he IS there. There's so
+many I expect he hardly knows him by sight.”
+
+“Well, just do quit thinking about it,” she urged him. “It only bothers
+you without doing any good. Don't you know that?”
+
+“Don't I, though!” he laughed, feebly. “I know it better'n anybody! How
+funny that is: when you know thinking about a thing only pesters you
+without helping anything at all, and yet you keep right on pestering
+yourself with it!”
+
+“But WHY?” she said. “What's the use when you know you haven't done
+anything wrong, Virgil? You said yourself you were going to improve the
+process so much it would be different from the old one, and you'd REALLY
+have a right to it.”
+
+Adams had persuaded himself of this when he yielded; he had found it
+necessary to persuade himself of it--though there was a part of him, of
+course, that remained unpersuaded; and this discomfiting part of him was
+what made his present trouble. “Yes, I know,” he said. “That's true, but
+I can't quite seem to get away from the fact that the principle of the
+process is a good deal the same--well, it's more'n that; it's just about
+the same as the one he hired Campbell and me to work out for him. Truth
+is, nobody could tell the difference, and I don't know as there IS
+any difference except in these improvements I'm making. Of course, the
+improvements do give me pretty near a perfect right to it, as a person
+might say; and that's one of the things I thought of putting in my
+letter to him; but I was afraid he'd just think I was trying to make up
+excuses, so I left it out. I kind of worried all the time I was writing
+that letter, because if he thought I WAS just making up excuses, why, it
+might set him just so much more against me.”
+
+Ever since Mrs. Adams had found that she was to have her way, the depths
+of her eyes had been troubled by a continuous uneasiness; and, although
+she knew it was there, and sometimes veiled it by keeping the revealing
+eyes averted from her husband and children, she could not always cover
+it under that assumption of absent-mindedness. The uneasy look became
+vivid, and her voice was slightly tremulous now, as she said, “But
+what if he SHOULD be against you--although I don't believe he is, of
+course--you told me he couldn't DO anything to you, Virgil.”
+
+“No,” he said, slowly. “I can't see how he could do anything. It was
+just a secret, not a patent; the thing ain't patentable. I've tried to
+think what he could do--supposing he was to want to--but I can't figure
+out anything at all that would be any harm to me. There isn't any way in
+the world it could be made a question of law. Only thing he could do'd
+be to TELL people his side of it, and set 'em against me. I been kind of
+waiting for that to happen, all along.”
+
+She looked somewhat relieved. “So did I expect it,” she said. “I was
+dreading it most on Alice's account: it might have--well, young men are
+so easily influenced and all. But so far as the business is concerned,
+what if Mr. Lamb did talk? That wouldn't amount to much. It wouldn't
+affect the business; not to hurt. And, besides, he isn't even doing
+that.”
+
+“No; anyhow not yet, it seems.” And Adams sighed again, wistfully. “But
+I WOULD give a good deal to know what he thinks!”
+
+Before his surrender he had always supposed that if he did such an
+unthinkable thing as to seize upon the glue process for himself, what he
+would feel must be an overpowering shame. But shame is the rarest thing
+in the world: what he felt was this unremittent curiosity about his old
+employer's thoughts. It was an obsession, yet he did not want to hear
+what Lamb “thought” from Lamb himself, for Adams had a second obsession,
+and this was his dread of meeting the old man face to face. Such an
+encounter could happen only by chance and unexpectedly; since Adams
+would have avoided any deliberate meeting, so long as his legs had
+strength to carry him, even if Lamb came to the house to see him.
+
+But people do meet unexpectedly; and when Adams had to be down-town he
+kept away from the “wholesale district.” One day he did see Lamb, as the
+latter went by in his car, impassive, going home to lunch; and Adams,
+in the crowd at a corner, knew that the old man had not seen him.
+Nevertheless, in a street car, on the way back to his sheds, an hour
+later, he was still subject to little shivering seizures of horror.
+
+He worked unceasingly, seeming to keep at it even in his sleep, for he
+always woke in the midst of a planning and estimating that must have
+been going on in his mind before consciousness of himself returned.
+Moreover, the work, thus urged, went rapidly, in spite of the high wages
+he had to pay his labourers for their short hours. “It eats money,” he
+complained, and, in fact, by the time his vats and boilers were in
+place it had eaten almost all he could supply; but in addition to his
+equipment he now owned a stock of “raw material,” raw indeed; and when
+operations should be a little further along he was confident his banker
+would be willing to “carry” him.
+
+Six weeks from the day he had obtained his lease he began his
+glue-making. The terrible smells came out of the sheds and went writhing
+like snakes all through that quarter of the town. A smiling man,
+strolling and breathing the air with satisfaction, would turn a corner
+and smile no more, but hurry. However, coloured people had almost all
+the dwellings of this old section to themselves; and although even they
+were troubled, there was recompense for them. Being philosophic about
+what appeared to them as in the order of nature, they sought neither
+escape nor redress, and soon learned to bear what the wind brought them.
+They even made use of it to enrich those figures of speech with which
+the native impulses of coloured people decorate their communications:
+they flavoured metaphor, simile, and invective with it; and thus may be
+said to have enjoyed it. But the man who produced it took a hot bath
+as soon as he reached his home the evening of that first day when his
+manufacturing began. Then he put on fresh clothes; but after dinner he
+seemed to be haunted, and asked his wife if she “noticed anything.”
+
+She laughed and inquired what he meant.
+
+“Seems to me as if that glue-works smell hadn't quit hanging to me,” he
+explained. “Don't you notice it?”
+
+“No! What an idea!”
+
+He laughed, too, but uneasily; and told her he was sure “the dang glue
+smell” was somehow sticking to him. Later, he went outdoors and walked
+up and down the small yard in the dusk; but now and then he stood still,
+with his head lifted, and sniffed the air suspiciously. “Can YOU smell
+it?” he called to Alice, who sat upon the veranda, prettily dressed and
+waiting in a reverie.
+
+“Smell what, papa?”
+
+“That dang glue-works.”
+
+She did the same thing her mother had done: laughed, and said, “No! How
+foolish! Why, papa, it's over two miles from here!”
+
+“You don't get it at all?” he insisted.
+
+“The idea! The air is lovely to-night, papa.”
+
+The air did not seem lovely to him, for he was positive that he detected
+the taint. He wondered how far it carried, and if J. A. Lamb would smell
+it, too, out on his own lawn a mile to the north; and if he did, would
+he guess what it was? Then Adams laughed at himself for such nonsense;
+but could not rid his nostrils of their disgust. To him the whole town
+seemed to smell of his glue-works.
+
+Nevertheless, the glue was making, and his sheds were busy. “Guess
+we're stirrin' up this ole neighbourhood with more than the smell,” his
+foreman remarked one morning.
+
+“How's that?” Adams inquired.
+
+“That great big, enormous ole dead butterine factory across the street
+from our lot,” the man said. “Nothin' like settin' an example to bring
+real estate to life. That place is full o' carpenters startin' in to
+make a regular buildin' of it again. Guess you ought to have the
+credit of it, because you was the first man in ten years to see any
+possibilities in this neighbourhood.”
+
+Adams was pleased, and, going out to see for himself, heard a great
+hammering and sawing from within the building; while carpenters were
+just emerging gingerly upon the dangerous roof. He walked out over the
+dried mud of his deep lot, crossed the street, and spoke genially to
+a workman who was removing the broken glass of a window on the ground
+floor.
+
+“Here! What's all this howdy-do over here?”
+
+“Goin' to fix her all up, I guess,” the workman said. “Big job it is,
+too.”
+
+“Sh' think it would be.”
+
+“Yes, sir; a pretty big job--a pretty big job. Got men at it on all four
+floors and on the roof. They're doin' it RIGHT.”
+
+“Who's doing it?”
+
+“Lord! I d' know. Some o' these here big manufacturing corporations, I
+guess.”
+
+“What's it going to be?”
+
+“They tell ME,” the workman answered--“they tell ME she's goin' to be a
+butterine factory again. Anyways, I hope she won't be anything to smell
+like that glue-works you got over there not while I'm workin' around
+her, anyways!”
+
+“That smell's all right,” Adams said. “You soon get used to it.”
+
+“You do?” The man appeared incredulous. “Listen! I was over in France:
+it's a good thing them Dutchmen never thought of it; we'd of had to
+quit!”
+
+Adams laughed, and went back to his sheds. “I guess my foreman was
+right,” he told his wife, that evening, with a little satisfaction.
+“As soon as one man shows enterprise enough to found an industry in a
+broken-down neighbourhood, somebody else is sure to follow. I kind of
+like the look of it: it'll help make our place seem sort of more busy
+and prosperous when it comes to getting a loan from the bank--and I got
+to get one mighty soon, too. I did think some that if things go as well
+as there's every reason to think they OUGHT to, I might want to spread
+out and maybe get hold of that old factory myself; but I hardly expected
+to be able to handle a proposition of that size before two or three
+years from now, and anyhow there's room enough on the lot I got, if we
+need more buildings some day. Things are going about as fine as I could
+ask: I hired some girls to-day to do the bottling--coloured girls along
+about sixteen to twenty years old. Afterwhile, I expect to get a machine
+to put the stuff in the little bottles, when we begin to get good
+returns; but half a dozen of these coloured girls can do it all right
+now, by hand. We're getting to have really quite a little plant over
+there: yes, sir, quite a regular little plant!”
+
+He chuckled, and at this cheerful sound, of a kind his wife had almost
+forgotten he was capable of producing, she ventured to put her hand upon
+his arm. They had gone outdoors, after dinner, taking two chairs with
+them, and were sitting through the late twilight together, keeping well
+away from the “front porch,” which was not yet occupied, however Alice
+was in her room changing her dress.
+
+“Well, honey,” Mrs. Adams said, taking confidence not only to put her
+hand upon his arm, but to revive this disused endearment;--“it's grand
+to have you so optimistic. Maybe some time you'll admit I was right,
+after all. Everything's going so well, it seems a pity you didn't take
+this--this step--long ago. Don't you think maybe so, Virgil?”
+
+“Well--if I was ever going to, I don't know but I might as well of.
+I got to admit the proposition begins to look pretty good: I know the
+stuff'll sell, and I can't see a thing in the world to stop it. It does
+look good, and if--if----” He paused.
+
+“If what?” she said, suddenly anxious.
+
+He laughed plaintively, as if confessing a superstition. “It's
+funny--well, it's mighty funny about that smell. I've got so used to it
+at the plant I never seem to notice it at all over there. It's only when
+I get away. Honestly, can't you notice----?”
+
+“Virgil!” She lifted her hand to strike his arm chidingly. “Do quit
+harping on that nonsense!”
+
+“Oh, of course it don't amount to anything,” he said. “A person can
+stand a good deal of just smell. It don't WORRY me any.”
+
+“I should think not especially as there isn't any.”
+
+“Well,” he said, “I feel pretty fair over the whole thing--a lot
+better'n I ever expected to, anyhow. I don't know as there's any reason
+I shouldn't tell you so.”
+
+She was deeply pleased with this acknowledgment, and her voice had
+tenderness in it as she responded: “There, honey! Didn't I always say
+you'd be glad if you did it?”
+
+Embarrassed, he coughed loudly, then filled his pipe and lit it. “Well,”
+ he said, slowly, “it's a puzzle. Yes, sir, it's a puzzle.”
+
+“What is?”
+
+“Pretty much everything, I guess.”
+
+As he spoke, a song came to them from a lighted window over their heads.
+Then the window darkened abruptly, but the song continued as Alice went
+down through the house to wait on the little veranda. “Mi chiamo Mimi,”
+ she sang, and in her voice throbbed something almost startling in its
+sweetness. Her father and mother listened, not speaking until the song
+stopped with the click of the wire screen at the front door as Alice
+came out.
+
+“My!” said her father. “How sweet she does sing! I don't know as I ever
+heard her voice sound nicer than it did just then.”
+
+“There's something that makes it sound that way,” his wife told him.
+
+“I suppose so,” he said, sighing. “I suppose so. You think----”
+
+“She's just terribly in love with him!”
+
+“I expect that's the way it ought to be,” he said, then drew upon
+his pipe for reflection, and became murmurous with the symptoms of
+melancholy laughter. “It don't make things less of a puzzle, though,
+does it?”
+
+“In what way, Virgil?”
+
+“Why, here,” he said--“here we go through all this muck and moil to help
+fix things nicer for her at home, and what's it all amount to? Seems
+like she's just gone ahead the way she'd 'a' gone anyhow; and now, I
+suppose, getting ready to up and leave us! Ain't that a puzzle to you?
+It is to me.”
+
+“Oh, but things haven't gone that far yet.”
+
+“Why, you just said----”
+
+She gave a little cry of protest. “Oh, they aren't ENGAGED yet. Of
+course they WILL be; he's just as much interested in her as she is in
+him, but----”
+
+“Well, what's the trouble then?”
+
+“You ARE a simple old fellow!” his wife exclaimed, and then rose from
+her chair. “That reminds me,” she said.
+
+“What of?” he asked. “What's my being simple remind you of?”
+
+“Nothing!” she laughed. “It wasn't you that reminded me. It was just
+something that's been on my mind. I don't believe he's actually ever
+been inside our house!”
+
+“Hasn't he?”
+
+“I actually don't believe he ever has,” she said. “Of course we
+must----” She paused, debating.
+
+“We must what?”
+
+“I guess I better talk to Alice about it right now,” she said. “He don't
+usually come for about half an hour yet; I guess I've got time.” And
+with that she walked away, leaving him to his puzzles.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+Alice was softly crooning to herself as her mother turned the corner of
+the house and approached through the dusk.
+
+“Isn't it the most BEAUTIFUL evening!” the daughter said. “WHY can't
+summer last all year? Did you ever know a lovelier twilight than this,
+mama?”
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed, and answered, “Not since I was your age, I expect.”
+
+Alice was wistful at once. “Don't they stay beautiful after my age?”
+
+“Well, it's not the same thing.”
+
+“Isn't it? Not ever?”
+
+“You may have a different kind from mine,” the mother said, a little
+sadly. “I think you will, Alice. You deserve----”
+
+“No, I don't. I don't deserve anything, and I know it. But I'm getting
+a great deal these days--more than I ever dreamed COULD come to me.
+I'm--I'm pretty happy, mama!”
+
+“Dearie!” Her mother would have kissed her, but Alice drew away.
+
+“Oh, I don't mean----” She laughed nervously. “I wasn't meaning to
+tell you I'm ENGAGED, mama. We're not. I mean--oh! things seem pretty
+beautiful in spite of all I've done to spoil 'em.”
+
+“You?” Mrs. Adams cried, incredulously. “What have you done to spoil
+anything?”
+
+“Little things,” Alice said. “A thousand little silly--oh, what's
+the use? He's so honestly what he is--just simple and good and
+intelligent--I feel a tricky mess beside him! I don't see why he likes
+me; and sometimes I'm afraid he wouldn't if he knew me.”
+
+“He'd just worship you,” said the fond mother. “And the more he knew
+you, the more he'd worship you.”
+
+Alice shook her head. “He's not the worshiping kind. Not like that at
+all. He's more----”
+
+But Mrs. Adams was not interested in this analysis, and she interrupted
+briskly, “Of course it's time your father and I showed some interest in
+him. I was just saying I actually don't believe he's ever been inside
+the house.”
+
+“No,” Alice said, musingly; “that's true: I don't believe he has. Except
+when we've walked in the evening we've always sat out here, even those
+two times when it was drizzly. It's so much nicer.”
+
+“We'll have to do SOMETHING or other, of course,” her mother said.
+
+“What like?”
+
+“I was thinking----” Mrs. Adams paused. “Well, of course we could hardly
+put off asking him to dinner, or something, much longer.”
+
+Alice was not enthusiastic; so far from it, indeed, that there was a
+melancholy alarm in her voice. “Oh, mama, must we? Do you think so?”
+
+“Yes, I do. I really do.”
+
+“Couldn't we--well, couldn't we wait?”
+
+“It looks queer,” Mrs. Adams said. “It isn't the thing at all for a
+young man to come as much as he does, and never more than just barely
+meet your father and mother. No. We ought to do something.”
+
+“But a dinner!” Alice objected. “In the first place, there isn't anybody
+I want to ask. There isn't anybody I WOULD ask.”
+
+“I didn't mean trying to give a big dinner,” her mother explained. “I
+just mean having him to dinner. That mulatto woman, Malena Burns, goes
+out by the day, and she could bring a waitress. We can get some flowers
+for the table and some to put in the living-room. We might just as well
+go ahead and do it to-morrow as any other time; because your father's in
+a fine mood, and I saw Malena this afternoon and told her I might want
+her soon. She said she didn't have any engagements this week, and I can
+let her know to-night. Suppose when he comes you ask him for to-morrow,
+Alice. Everything'll be very nice, I'm sure. Don't worry about it.”
+
+“Well--but----” Alice was uncertain.
+
+“But don't you see, it looks so queer, not to do SOMETHING?” her mother
+urged. “It looks so kind of poverty-stricken. We really oughtn't to wait
+any longer.”
+
+Alice assented, though not with a good heart. “Very well, I'll ask him,
+if you think we've got to.”
+
+“That matter's settled then,” Mrs. Adams said. “I'll go telephone
+Malena, and then I'll tell your father about it.”
+
+But when she went back to her husband, she found him in an excited
+state of mind, and Walter standing before him in the darkness. Adams was
+almost shouting, so great was his vehemence.
+
+“Hush, hush!” his wife implored, as she came near them. “They'll hear
+you out on the front porch!”
+
+“I don't care who hears me,” Adams said, harshly, though he tempered his
+loudness. “Do you want to know what this boy's asking me for? I thought
+he'd maybe come to tell me he'd got a little sense in his head at last,
+and a little decency about what's due his family! I thought he was
+going to ask me to take him into my plant. No, ma'am; THAT'S not what he
+wants!”
+
+“No, it isn't,” Walter said. In the darkness his face could not be seen;
+he stood motionless, in what seemed an apathetic attitude; and he spoke
+quietly, “No,” he repeated. “That isn't what I want.”
+
+“You stay down at that place,” Adams went on, hotly, “instead of trying
+to be a little use to your family; and the only reason you're ALLOWED to
+stay there is because Mr. Lamb's never happened to notice you ARE still
+there! You just wait----”
+
+“You're off,” Walter said, in the same quiet way. “He knows I'm there.
+He spoke to me yesterday: he asked me how I was getting along with my
+work.”
+
+“He did?” Adams said, seeming not to believe him.
+
+“Yes. He did.”
+
+“What else did he say, Walter?” Mrs. Adams asked quickly.
+
+“Nothin'. Just walked on.”
+
+“I don't believe he knew who you were,” Adams declared.
+
+“Think not? He called me 'Walter Adams.'”
+
+At this Adams was silent; and Walter, after waiting a moment, said:
+
+“Well, are you going to do anything about me? About what I told you I
+got to have?”
+
+“What is it, Walter?” his mother asked, since Adams did not speak.
+
+Walter cleared his throat, and replied in a tone as quiet as that he
+had used before, though with a slight huskiness, “I got to have three
+hundred and fifty dollars. You better get him to give it to me if you
+can.”
+
+Adams found his voice. “Yes,” he said, bitterly. “That's all he asks!
+He won't do anything I ask HIM to, and in return he asks me for three
+hundred and fifty dollars! That's all!”
+
+“What in the world!” Mrs. Adams exclaimed. “What FOR, Walter?”
+
+“I got to have it,” Walter said.
+
+“But what FOR?”
+
+His quiet huskiness did not alter. “I got to have it.”
+
+“But can't you tell us----”
+
+“I got to have it.”
+
+“That's all you can get out of him,” Adams said. “He seems to think
+it'll bring him in three hundred and fifty dollars!”
+
+A faint tremulousness became evident in the husky voice. “Haven't you
+got it?”
+
+“NO, I haven't got it!” his father answered. “And I've got to go to a
+bank for more than my pay-roll next week. Do you think I'm a mint?”
+
+“I don't understand what you mean, Walter,” Mrs. Adams interposed,
+perplexed and distressed. “If your father had the money, of course
+he'd need every cent of it, especially just now, and, anyhow, you could
+scarcely expect him to give it to you, unless you told us what you want
+with it. But he hasn't got it.”
+
+“All right,” Walter said; and after standing a moment more, in silence,
+he added, impersonally, “I don't see as you ever did anything much for
+me, anyhow either of you.”
+
+Then, as if this were his valedictory, he turned his back upon them,
+walked away quickly, and was at once lost to their sight in the
+darkness.
+
+“There's a fine boy to've had the trouble of raising!” Adams grumbled.
+“Just crazy, that's all.”
+
+“What in the world do you suppose he wants all that money for?” his
+wife said, wonderingly. “I can't imagine what he could DO with it. I
+wonder----” She paused. “I wonder if he----”
+
+“If he what?” Adams prompted her irritably.
+
+“If he COULD have bad--associates.”
+
+“God knows!” said Adams. “_I_ don't! It just looks to me like he had
+something in him I don't understand. You can't keep your eye on a boy
+all the time in a city this size, not a boy Walter's age. You got a girl
+pretty much in the house, but a boy'll follow his nature. _I_ don't know
+what to do with him!”
+
+Mrs. Adams brightened a little. “He'll come out all right,” she said.
+“I'm sure he will. I'm sure he'd never be anything really bad: and he'll
+come around all right about the glue-works, too; you'll see. Of course
+every young man wants money--it doesn't prove he's doing anything wrong
+just because he asks you for it.”
+
+“No. All it proves to me is that he hasn't got good sense asking me for
+three hundred and fifty dollars, when he knows as well as you do the
+position I'm in! If I wanted to, I couldn't hardly let him have three
+hundred and fifty cents, let alone dollars!”
+
+“I'm afraid you'll have to let ME have that much--and maybe a little
+more,” she ventured, timidly; and she told him of her plans for the
+morrow. He objected vehemently.
+
+“Oh, but Alice has probably asked him by this time,” Mrs. Adams said.
+“It really must be done, Virgil: you don't want him to think she's
+ashamed of us, do you?”
+
+“Well, go ahead, but just let me stay away,” he begged. “Of course I
+expect to undergo a kind of talk with him, when he gets ready to say
+something to us about Alice, but I do hate to have to sit through a
+fashionable dinner.”
+
+“Why, it isn't going to bother you,” she said; “just one young man as a
+guest.”
+
+“Yes, I know; but you want to have all this fancy cookin'; and I see
+well enough you're going to get that old dress suit out of the cedar
+chest in the attic, and try to make me put it on me.”
+
+“I do think you better, Virgil.”
+
+“I hope the moths have got in it,” he said. “Last time I wore it was to
+the banquet, and it was pretty old then. Of course I didn't mind wearing
+it to the banquet so much, because that was what you might call quite an
+occasion.” He spoke with some reminiscent complacency; “the banquet,”
+ an affair now five years past, having provided the one time in his
+life when he had been so distinguished among his fellow-citizens as to
+receive an invitation to be present, with some seven hundred others, at
+the annual eating and speech-making of the city's Chamber of Commerce.
+“Anyhow, as you say, I think it would look foolish of me to wear a dress
+suit for just one young man,” he went on protesting, feebly. “What's the
+use of all so much howdy-do, anyway? You don't expect him to believe we
+put on all that style every night, do you? Is that what you're after?”
+
+“Well, we want him to think we live nicely,” she admitted.
+
+“So that's it!” he said, querulously. “You want him to think that's our
+regular gait, do you? Well, he'll know better about me, no matter how
+you fix me up, because he saw me in my regular suit the evening she
+introduced me to him, and he could tell anyway I'm not one of these
+moving-picture sporting-men that's always got a dress suit on. Besides,
+you and Alice certainly have some idea he'll come AGAIN, haven't you?
+If they get things settled between 'em he'll be around the house and to
+meals most any time, won't he? You don't hardly expect to put on style
+all the time, I guess. Well, he'll see then that this kind of thing was
+all show-off, and bluff, won't he? What about it?”
+
+“Oh, well, by THAT time----” She left the sentence unfinished, as if
+absently. “You could let us have a little money for to-morrow, couldn't
+you, honey?”
+
+“Oh, I reckon, I reckon,” he mumbled. “A girl like Alice is some
+comfort: she don't come around acting as if she'd commit suicide if she
+didn't get three hundred and fifty dollars in the next five minutes. I
+expect I can spare five or six dollars for your show-off if I got to.”
+
+However, she finally obtained fifteen before his bedtime; and the next
+morning “went to market” after breakfast, leaving Alice to make the
+beds. Walter had not yet come downstairs. “You had better call him,”
+ Mrs. Adams said, as she departed with a big basket on her arm. “I expect
+he's pretty sleepy; he was out so late last night I didn't hear him come
+in, though I kept awake till after midnight, listening for him. Tell him
+he'll be late to work if he doesn't hurry; and see that he drinks his
+coffee, even if he hasn't time for anything else. And when Malena comes,
+get her started in the kitchen: show her where everything is.” She
+waved her hand, as she set out for a corner where the cars stopped.
+“Everything'll be lovely. Don't forget about Walter.”
+
+Nevertheless, Alice forgot about Walter for a few minutes. She closed
+the door, went into the “living-room” absently, and stared vaguely at
+one of the old brown-plush rocking-chairs there. Upon her forehead
+were the little shadows of an apprehensive reverie, and her thoughts
+overlapped one another in a fretful jumble. “What will he think? These
+old chairs--they're hideous. I'll scrub those soot-streaks on
+the columns: it won't do any good, though. That long crack in the
+column--nothing can help it. What will he think of papa? I hope
+mama won't talk too much. When he thinks of Mildred's house, or of
+Henrietta's, or any of 'em, beside this--She said she'd buy plenty
+of roses; that ought to help some. Nothing could be done about these
+horrible chairs: can't take 'em up in the attic--a room's got to have
+chairs! Might have rented some. No; if he ever comes again he'd see they
+weren't here. 'If he ever comes again'--oh, it won't be THAT bad! But
+it won't be what he expects. I'm responsible for what he expects: he
+expects just what the airs I've put on have made him expect. What did I
+want to pose so to him for--as if papa were a wealthy man and all that?
+What WILL he think? The photograph of the Colosseum's a rather good
+thing, though. It helps some--as if we'd bought it in Rome perhaps. I
+hope he'll think so; he believes I've been abroad, of course. The
+other night he said, 'You remember the feeling you get in the
+Sainte-Chapelle'.--There's another lie of mine, not saying I didn't
+remember because I'd never been there. What makes me do it? Papa MUST
+wear his evening clothes. But Walter----”
+
+With that she recalled her mother's admonition, and went upstairs to
+Walter's door. She tapped upon it with her fingers.
+
+“Time to get up, Walter. The rest of us had breakfast over half an hour
+ago, and it's nearly eight o'clock. You'll be late. Hurry down and I'll
+have some coffee and toast ready for you.” There came no sound from
+within the room, so she rapped louder.
+
+“Wake up, Walter!”
+
+She called and rapped again, without getting any response, and then,
+finding that the door yielded to her, opened it and went in. Walter was
+not there.
+
+He had been there, however; had slept upon the bed, though not inside
+the covers; and Alice supposed he must have come home so late that he
+had been too sleepy to take off his clothes. Near the foot of the bed
+was a shallow closet where he kept his “other suit” and his evening
+clothes; and the door stood open, showing a bare wall. Nothing whatever
+was in the closet, and Alice was rather surprised at this for a moment.
+“That's queer,” she murmured; and then she decided that when he woke he
+found the clothes he had slept in “so mussy” he had put on his “other
+suit,” and had gone out before breakfast with the mussed clothes to have
+them pressed, taking his evening things with them. Satisfied with this
+explanation, and failing to observe that it did not account for the
+absence of shoes from the closet floor, she nodded absently, “Yes, that
+must be it”; and, when her mother returned, told her that Walter had
+probably breakfasted down-town. They did not delay over this; the
+coloured woman had arrived, and the basket's disclosures were important.
+
+“I stopped at Worlig's on the way back,” said Mrs. Adams, flushed with
+hurry and excitement. “I bought a can of caviar there. I thought we'd
+have little sandwiches brought into the 'living-room' before dinner, the
+way you said they did when you went to that dinner at the----”
+
+“But I think that was to go with cocktails, mama, and of course we
+haven't----”
+
+“No,” Mrs. Adams said. “Still, I think it would be nice. We can make
+them look very dainty, on a tray, and the waitress can bring them in. I
+thought we'd have the soup already on the table; and we can walk right
+out as soon as we have the sandwiches, so it won't get cold. Then, after
+the soup, Malena says she can make sweetbread pates with mushrooms: and
+for the meat course we'll have larded fillet. Malena's really a
+fancy cook, you know, and she says she can do anything like that to
+perfection. We'll have peas with the fillet, and potato balls and
+Brussels sprouts. Brussels sprouts are fashionable now, they told me
+at market. Then will come the chicken salad, and after that the
+ice-cream--she's going to make an angel-food cake to go with it--and
+then coffee and crackers and a new kind of cheese I got at Worlig's, he
+says is very fine.”
+
+Alice was alarmed. “Don't you think perhaps it's too much, mama?”
+
+“It's better to have too much than too little,” her mother said,
+cheerfully. “We don't want him to think we're the kind that skimp. Lord
+knows we have to enough, though, most of the time! Get the flowers in
+water, child. I bought 'em at market because they're so much cheaper
+there, but they'll keep fresh and nice. You fix 'em any way you want.
+Hurry! It's got to be a busy day.”
+
+She had bought three dozen little roses. Alice took them and began to
+arrange them in vases, keeping the stems separated as far as possible so
+that the clumps would look larger. She put half a dozen in each of three
+vases in the “living-room,” placing one vase on the table in the center
+of the room, and one at each end of the mantelpiece. Then she took the
+rest of the roses to the dining-room; but she postponed the arrangement
+of them until the table should be set, just before dinner. She was
+thoughtful; planning to dry the stems and lay them on the tablecloth
+like a vine of roses running in a delicate design, if she found that the
+dozen and a half she had left were enough for that. If they weren't she
+would arrange them in a vase.
+
+She looked a long time at the little roses in the basin of water, where
+she had put them; then she sighed, and went away to heavier tasks,
+while her mother worked in the kitchen with Malena. Alice dusted the
+“living-room” and the dining-room vigorously, though all the time with a
+look that grew more and more pensive; and having dusted everything, she
+wiped the furniture; rubbed it hard. After that, she washed the floors
+and the woodwork.
+
+Emerging from the kitchen at noon, Mrs. Adams found her daughter on
+hands and knees, scrubbing the bases of the columns between the hall and
+the “living-room.”
+
+“Now, dearie,” she said, “you mustn't tire yourself out, and you'd
+better come and eat something. Your father said he'd get a bite
+down-town to-day--he was going down to the bank--and Walter eats
+down-town all the time lately, so I thought we wouldn't bother to set
+the table for lunch. Come on and we'll have something in the kitchen.”
+
+“No,” Alice said, dully, as she went on with the work. “I don't want
+anything.”
+
+Her mother came closer to her. “Why, what's the matter?” she asked,
+briskly. “You seem kind of pale, to me; and you don't look--you don't
+look HAPPY.”
+
+“Well----” Alice began, uncertainly, but said no more.
+
+“See here!” Mrs. Adams exclaimed. “This is all just for you! You ought
+to be ENJOYING it. Why, it's the first time we've--we've entertained
+in I don't know how long! I guess it's almost since we had that little
+party when you were eighteen. What's the matter with you?”
+
+“Nothing. I don't know.”
+
+“But, dearie, aren't you looking FORWARD to this evening?”
+
+The girl looked up, showing a pallid and solemn face. “Oh, yes, of
+course,” she said, and tried to smile. “Of course we had to do it--I do
+think it'll be nice. Of course I'm looking forward to it.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+She was indeed “looking forward” to that evening, but in a cloud of
+apprehension; and, although she could never have guessed it, this was
+the simultaneous condition of another person--none other than the guest
+for whose pleasure so much cooking and scrubbing seemed to be necessary.
+Moreover, Mr. Arthur Russell's premonitions were no product of mere
+coincidence; neither had any magical sympathy produced them. His state
+of mind was rather the result of rougher undercurrents which had all the
+time been running beneath the surface of a romantic friendship.
+
+Never shrewder than when she analyzed the gentlemen, Alice did not
+libel him when she said he was one of those quiet men who are a bit
+flirtatious, by which she meant that he was a bit “susceptible,” the
+same thing--and he had proved himself susceptible to Alice upon his
+first sight of her. “There!” he said to himself. “Who's that?” And in
+the crowd of girls at his cousin's dance, all strangers to him, she was
+the one he wanted to know.
+
+Since then, his summer evenings with her had been as secluded as if, for
+three hours after the falling of dusk, they two had drawn apart from
+the world to some dear bower of their own. The little veranda was that
+glamorous nook, with a faint golden light falling through the glass of
+the closed door upon Alice, and darkness elsewhere, except for the one
+round globe of the street lamp at the corner. The people who passed
+along the sidewalk, now and then, were only shadows with voices, moving
+vaguely under the maple trees that loomed in obscure contours against
+the stars. So, as the two sat together, the back of the world was the
+wall and closed door behind them; and Russell, when he was away from
+Alice, always thought of her as sitting there before the closed door. A
+glamour was about her thus, and a spell upon him; but he had a formless
+anxiety never put into words: all the pictures of her in his mind
+stopped at the closed door.
+
+He had another anxiety; and, for the greater part, this was of her own
+creating. She had too often asked him (no matter how gaily) what he
+heard about her, too often begged him not to hear anything. Then, hoping
+to forestall whatever he might hear, she had been at too great pains to
+account for it, to discredit and mock it; and, though he laughed at her
+for this, telling her truthfully he did not even hear her mentioned, the
+everlasting irony that deals with all such human forefendings prevailed.
+
+Lately, he had half confessed to her what a nervousness she had
+produced. “You make me dread the day when I'll hear somebody speaking of
+you. You're getting me so upset about it that if I ever hear anybody so
+much as say the name 'Alice Adams,' I'll run!” The confession was but
+half of one because he laughed; and she took it for an assurance of
+loyalty in the form of burlesque.
+
+She misunderstood: he laughed, but his nervousness was genuine.
+
+After any stroke of events, whether a happy one or a catastrophe, we
+see that the materials for it were a long time gathering, and the only
+marvel is that the stroke was not prophesied. What bore the air of fatal
+coincidence may remain fatal indeed, to this later view; but, with the
+haphazard aspect dispelled, there is left for scrutiny the same ancient
+hint from the Infinite to the effect that since events have never yet
+failed to be law-abiding, perhaps it were well for us to deduce that
+they will continue to be so until further notice.
+
+. . . On the day that was to open the closed door in the background of
+his pictures of Alice, Russell lunched with his relatives. There were
+but the four people, Russell and Mildred and her mother and father, in
+the great, cool dining-room. Arched French windows, shaded by awnings,
+admitted a mellow light and looked out upon a green lawn ending in a
+long conservatory, which revealed through its glass panes a carnival of
+plants in luxuriant blossom. From his seat at the table, Russell
+glanced out at this pretty display, and informed his cousins that he
+was surprised. “You have such a glorious spread of flowers all over the
+house,” he said, “I didn't suppose you'd have any left out yonder. In
+fact, I didn't know there were so many splendid flowers in the world.”
+
+Mrs. Palmer, large, calm, fair, like her daughter, responded with a mild
+reproach: “That's because you haven't been cousinly enough to get used
+to them, Arthur. You've almost taught us to forget what you look like.”
+
+In defense Russell waved a hand toward her husband. “You see, he's begun
+to keep me so hard at work----”
+
+But Mr. Palmer declined the responsibility. “Up to four or five in the
+afternoon, perhaps,” he said. “After that, the young gentleman is as
+much a stranger to me as he is to my family. I've been wondering who she
+could be.”
+
+“When a man's preoccupied there must be a lady then?” Russell inquired.
+
+“That seems to be the view of your sex,” Mrs. Palmer suggested. “It was
+my husband who said it, not Mildred or I.”
+
+Mildred smiled faintly. “Papa may be singular in his ideas; they may
+come entirely from his own experience, and have nothing to do with
+Arthur.”
+
+“Thank you, Mildred,” her cousin said, bowing to her gratefully. “You
+seem to understand my character--and your father's quite as well!”
+
+However, Mildred remained grave in the face of this customary
+pleasantry, not because the old jest, worn round, like what preceded it,
+rolled in an old groove, but because of some preoccupation of her own.
+Her faint smile had disappeared, and, as her cousin's glance met hers,
+she looked down; yet not before he had seen in her eyes the flicker of
+something like a question--a question both poignant and dismayed. He may
+have understood it; for his own smile vanished at once in favour of a
+reciprocal solemnity.
+
+“You see, Arthur,” Mrs. Palmer said, “Mildred is always a good cousin.
+She and I stand by you, even if you do stay away from us for weeks and
+weeks.” Then, observing that he appeared to be so occupied with a bunch
+of iced grapes upon his plate that he had not heard her, she began to
+talk to her husband, asking him what was “going on down-town.”
+
+Arthur continued to eat his grapes, but he ventured to look again at
+Mildred after a few moments. She, also, appeared to be occupied with
+a bunch of grapes though she ate none, and only pulled them from their
+stems. She sat straight, her features as composed and pure as those of
+a new marble saint in a cathedral niche; yet her downcast eyes seemed to
+conceal many thoughts; and her cousin, against his will, was more aware
+of what these thoughts might be than of the leisurely conversation
+between her father and mother. All at once, however, he heard something
+that startled him, and he listened--and here was the effect of all
+Alice's forefendings; he listened from the first with a sinking heart.
+
+Mr. Palmer, mildly amused by what he was telling his wife, had just
+spoken the words, “this Virgil Adams.” What he had said was, “this
+Virgil Adams--that's the man's name. Queer case.”
+
+“Who told you?” Mrs. Palmer inquired, not much interested.
+
+“Alfred Lamb,” her husband answered. “He was laughing about his father,
+at the club. You see the old gentleman takes a great pride in his
+judgment of men, and always boasted to his sons that he'd never in his
+life made a mistake in trusting the wrong man. Now Alfred and James
+Albert, Junior, think they have a great joke on him; and they've twitted
+him so much about it he'll scarcely speak to them. From the first,
+Alfred says, the old chap's only repartee was, 'You wait and you'll
+see!' And they've asked him so often to show them what they're going to
+see that he won't say anything at all!”
+
+“He's a funny old fellow,” Mrs. Palmer observed. “But he's so shrewd I
+can't imagine his being deceived for such a long time. Twenty years, you
+said?”
+
+“Yes, longer than that, I understand. It appears when this man--this
+Adams--was a young clerk, the old gentleman trusted him with one of his
+business secrets, a glue process that Mr. Lamb had spent some money to
+get hold of. The old chap thought this Adams was going to have quite
+a future with the Lamb concern, and of course never dreamed he was
+dishonest. Alfred says this Adams hasn't been of any real use for years,
+and they should have let him go as dead wood, but the old gentleman
+wouldn't hear of it, and insisted on his being kept on the payroll; so
+they just decided to look on it as a sort of pension. Well, one morning
+last March the man had an attack of some sort down there, and Mr. Lamb
+got his own car out and went home with him, himself, and worried about
+him and went to see him no end, all the time he was ill.”
+
+“He would,” Mrs. Palmer said, approvingly. “He's a kind-hearted
+creature, that old man.”
+
+Her husband laughed. “Alfred says he thinks his kind-heartedness
+is about cured! It seems that as soon as the man got well again he
+deliberately walked off with the old gentleman's glue secret. Just
+calmly stole it! Alfred says he believes that if he had a stroke in the
+office now, himself, his father wouldn't lift a finger to help him!”
+
+Mrs. Palmer repeated the name to herself thoughtfully. “'Adams'--'Virgil
+Adams.' You said his name was Virgil Adams?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+She looked at her daughter. “Why, you know who that is, Mildred,” she
+said, casually. “It's that Alice Adams's father, isn't it? Wasn't his
+name Virgil Adams?”
+
+“I think it is,” Mildred said.
+
+Mrs. Palmer turned toward her husband. “You've seen this Alice Adams
+here. Mr. Lamb's pet swindler must be her father.”
+
+Mr. Palmer passed a smooth hand over his neat gray hair, which was not
+disturbed by this effort to stimulate recollection. “Oh, yes,” he said.
+“Of course--certainly. Quite a good-looking girl--one of Mildred's
+friends. How queer!”
+
+Mildred looked up, as if in a little alarm, but did not speak. Her
+mother set matters straight. “Fathers ARE amusing,” she said smilingly
+to Russell, who was looking at her, though how fixedly she did not
+notice; for she turned from him at once to enlighten her husband. “Every
+girl who meets Mildred, and tries to push the acquaintance by coming
+here until the poor child has to hide, isn't a FRIEND of hers, my dear!”
+
+Mildred's eyes were downcast again, and a faint colour rose in her
+cheeks. “Oh, I shouldn't put it quite that way about Alice Adams,” she
+said, in a low voice. “I saw something of her for a time. She's not
+unattractive in a way.”
+
+Mrs. Palmer settled the whole case of Alice carelessly. “A pushing sort
+of girl,” she said. “A very pushing little person.”
+
+“I----” Mildred began; and, after hesitating, concluded, “I rather
+dropped her.”
+
+“Fortunate you've done so,” her father remarked, cheerfully. “Especially
+since various members of the Lamb connection are here frequently. They
+mightn't think you'd show great tact in having her about the place.” He
+laughed, and turned to his cousin. “All this isn't very interesting to
+poor Arthur. How terrible people are with a newcomer in a town; they
+talk as if he knew all about everybody!”
+
+“But we don't know anything about these queer people, ourselves,” said
+Mrs. Palmer. “We know something about the girl, of course--she used to
+be a bit too conspicuous, in fact! However, as you say, we might find a
+subject more interesting for Arthur.”
+
+She smiled whimsically upon the young man. “Tell the truth,” she said.
+“Don't you fairly detest going into business with that tyrant yonder?”
+
+“What? Yes--I beg your pardon!” he stammered.
+
+“You were right,” Mrs. Palmer said to her husband. “You've bored him so,
+talking about thievish clerks, he can't even answer an honest question.”
+
+But Russell was beginning to recover his outward composure. “Try me
+again,” he said. “I'm afraid I was thinking of something else.”
+
+This was the best he found to say. There was a part of him that wanted
+to protest and deny, but he had not heat enough, in the chill that had
+come upon him. Here was the first “mention” of Alice, and with it the
+reason why it was the first: Mr. Palmer had difficulty in recalling her,
+and she happened to be spoken of, only because her father's betrayal of
+a benefactor's trust had been so peculiarly atrocious that, in the view
+of the benefactor's family, it contained enough of the element of humour
+to warrant a mild laugh at a club. There was the deadliness of the
+story: its lack of malice, even of resentment. Deadlier still were
+Mrs. Palmer's phrases: “a pushing sort of girl,” “a very pushing little
+person,” and “used to be a bit TOO conspicuous, in fact.” But she spoke
+placidly and by chance; being as obviously without unkindly motive as
+Mr. Palmer was when he related the cause of Alfred Lamb's amusement.
+Her opinion of the obscure young lady momentarily her topic had been
+expressed, moreover, to her husband, and at her own table. She sat
+there, large, kind, serene--a protest might astonish but could
+not change her; and Russell, crumpling in his strained fingers the
+lace-edged little web of a napkin on his knee, found heart enough to
+grow red, but not enough to challenge her.
+
+She noticed his colour, and attributed it to the embarrassment of a
+scrupulously gallant gentleman caught in a lapse of attention to a lady.
+“Don't be disturbed,” she said, benevolently. “People aren't expected to
+listen all the time to their relatives. A high colour's very becoming
+to you, Arthur; but it really isn't necessary between cousins. You can
+always be informal enough with us to listen only when you care to.”
+
+His complexion continued to be ruddier than usual, however, throughout
+the meal, and was still somewhat tinted when Mrs. Palmer rose. “The
+man's bringing you cigarettes here,” she said, nodding to the two
+gentlemen. “We'll give you a chance to do the sordid kind of talking we
+know you really like. Afterwhile, Mildred will show you what's in bloom
+in the hothouse, if you wish, Arthur.”
+
+Mildred followed her, and, when they were alone in another of the
+spacious rooms, went to a window and looked out, while her mother seated
+herself near the center of the room in a gilt armchair, mellowed with
+old Aubusson tapestry. Mrs. Palmer looked thoughtfully at her daughter's
+back, but did not speak to her until coffee had been brought for them.
+
+“Thanks,” Mildred said, not turning, “I don't care for any coffee, I
+believe.”
+
+“No?” Mrs. Palmer said, gently. “I'm afraid our good-looking cousin
+won't think you're very talkative, Mildred. You spoke only about twice
+at lunch. I shouldn't care for him to get the idea you're piqued because
+he's come here so little lately, should you?”
+
+“No, I shouldn't,” Mildred answered in a low voice, and with that she
+turned quickly, and came to sit near her mother. “But it's what I am
+afraid of! Mama, did you notice how red he got?”
+
+“You mean when he was caught not listening to a question of mine? Yes;
+it's very becoming to him.”
+
+“Mama, I don't think that was the reason. I don't think it was because
+he wasn't listening, I mean.”
+
+“No?”
+
+“I think his colour and his not listening came from the same reason,”
+ Mildred said, and although she had come to sit near her mother, she
+did not look at her. “I think it happened because you and papa----” She
+stopped.
+
+“Yes?” Mrs. Palmer said, good-naturedly, to prompt her. “Your father and
+I did something embarrassing?”
+
+“Mama, it was because of those things that came out about Alice Adams.”
+
+“How could that bother Arthur? Does he know her?”
+
+“Don't you remember?” the daughter asked. “The day after my dance I
+mentioned how odd I thought it was in him--I was a little disappointed
+in him. I'd been seeing that he met everybody, of course, but she was
+the only girl HE asked to meet; and he did it as soon as he noticed her.
+I hadn't meant to have him meet her--in fact, I was rather sorry I'd
+felt I had to ask her, because she oh, well, she's the sort that 'tries
+for the new man,' if she has half a chance; and sometimes they seem
+quite fascinated--for a time, that is. I thought Arthur was above
+all that; or at the very least I gave him credit for being too
+sophisticated.”
+
+“I see,” Mrs. Palmer said, thoughtfully. “I remember now that you spoke
+of it. You said it seemed a little peculiar, but of course it really
+wasn't: a 'new man' has nothing to go by, except his own first
+impressions. You can't blame poor Arthur--she's quite a piquant looking
+little person. You think he's seen something of her since then?”
+
+Mildred nodded slowly. “I never dreamed such a thing till yesterday,
+and even then I rather doubted it--till he got so red, just now! I was
+surprised when he asked to meet her, but he just danced with her once
+and didn't mention her afterward; I forgot all about it--in fact, I
+virtually forgot all about HER. I'd seen quite a little of her----”
+
+“Yes,” said Mrs. Palmer. “She did keep coming here!”
+
+“But I'd just about decided that it really wouldn't do,” Mildred went
+on. “She isn't--well, I didn't admire her.”
+
+“No,” her mother assented, and evidently followed a direct connection
+of thought in a speech apparently irrelevant. “I understand the young
+Malone wants to marry Henrietta. I hope she won't; he seems rather a
+gross type of person.”
+
+“Oh, he's just one,” Mildred said. “I don't know that he and Alice Adams
+were ever engaged--she never told me so. She may not have been engaged
+to any of them; she was just enough among the other girls to get talked
+about--and one of the reasons I felt a little inclined to be nice to
+her was that they seemed to be rather edging her out of the circle. It
+wasn't long before I saw they were right, though. I happened to mention
+I was going to give a dance and she pretended to take it as a matter
+of course that I meant to invite her brother--at least, I thought she
+pretended; she may have really believed it. At any rate, I had to send
+him a card; but I didn't intend to be let in for that sort of thing
+again, of course. She's what you said, 'pushing'; though I'm awfully
+sorry you said it.”
+
+“Why shouldn't I have said it, my dear?”
+
+“Of course I didn't say 'shouldn't.'” Mildred explained, gravely. “I
+meant only that I'm sorry it happened.”
+
+“Yes; but why?”
+
+“Mama”--Mildred turned to her, leaning forward and speaking in a lowered
+voice--“Mama, at first the change was so little it seemed as if Arthur
+hardly knew it himself. He'd been lovely to me always, and he was still
+lovely to me but--oh, well, you've understood--after my dance it was
+more as if it was just his nature and his training to be lovely to me,
+as he would be to everyone a kind of politeness. He'd never said he
+CARED for me, but after that I could see he didn't. It was clear--after
+that. I didn't know what had happened; I couldn't think of anything I'd
+done. Mama--it was Alice Adams.”
+
+Mrs. Palmer set her little coffee-cup upon the table beside her, calmly
+following her own motion with her eyes, and not seeming to realize with
+what serious entreaty her daughter's gaze was fixed upon her. Mildred
+repeated the last sentence of her revelation, and introduced a stress of
+insistence.
+
+“Mama, it WAS Alice Adams!”
+
+But Mrs. Palmer declined to be greatly impressed, so far as her
+appearance went, at least; and to emphasize her refusal, she smiled
+indulgently. “What makes you think so?”
+
+“Henrietta told me yesterday.”
+
+At this Mrs. Palmer permitted herself to laugh softly aloud. “Good
+heavens! Is Henrietta a soothsayer? Or is she Arthur's particular
+confidante?”
+
+“No. Ella Dowling told her.”
+
+Mrs. Palmer's laughter continued. “Now we have it!” she exclaimed. “It's
+a game of gossip: Arthur tells Ella, Ella tells Henrietta, and Henrietta
+tells----”
+
+“Don't laugh, please, mama,” Mildred begged. “Of course Arthur didn't
+tell anybody. It's roundabout enough, but it's true. I know it! I
+hadn't quite believed it, but I knew it was true when he got so red. He
+looked--oh, for a second or so he looked--stricken! He thought I didn't
+notice it. Mama, he's been to see her almost every evening lately. They
+take long walks together. That's why he hasn't been here.”
+
+Of Mrs. Palmer's laughter there was left only her indulgent smile, which
+she had not allowed to vanish. “Well, what of it?” she said.
+
+“Mama!”
+
+“Yes,” said Mrs. Palmer. “What of it?”
+
+“But don't you see?” Mildred's well-tutored voice, though modulated and
+repressed even in her present emotion, nevertheless had a tendency to
+quaver. “It's true. Frank Dowling was going to see her one evening and
+he saw Arthur sitting on the stoop with her, and didn't go in. And Ella
+used to go to school with a girl who lives across the street from here.
+She told Ella----”
+
+“Oh, I understand,” Mrs. Palmer interrupted. “Suppose he does go there.
+My dear, I said, 'What of it?'”
+
+“I don't see what you mean, mama. I'm so afraid he might think we knew
+about it, and that you and papa said those things about her and her
+father on that account--as if we abused them because he goes there
+instead of coming here.”
+
+“Nonsense!” Mrs. Palmer rose, went to a window, and, turning there,
+stood with her back to it, facing her daughter and looking at her
+cheerfully. “Nonsense, my dear! It was perfectly clear that she was
+mentioned by accident, and so was her father. What an extraordinary man!
+If Arthur makes friends with people like that, he certainly knows better
+than to expect to hear favourable opinions of them. Besides, it's only a
+little passing thing with him.”
+
+“Mama! When he goes there almost every----”
+
+“Yes,” Mrs. Palmer said, dryly. “It seems to me I've heard somewhere
+that other young men have gone there 'almost every!' She doesn't
+last, apparently. Arthur's gallant, and he's impressionable--but
+he's fastidious, and fastidiousness is always the check on
+impressionableness. A girl belongs to her family, too--and this one does
+especially, it strikes me! Arthur's very sensible; he sees more than
+you'd think.”
+
+Mildred looked at her hopefully. “Then you don't believe he's likely to
+imagine we said those things of her in any meaning way?”
+
+At this, Mrs. Palmer laughed again. “There's one thing you seem not to
+have noticed, Mildred.”
+
+“What's that?”
+
+“It seems to have escaped your attention that he never said a word.”
+
+“Mightn't that mean----?” Mildred began, but she stopped.
+
+“No, it mightn't,” her mother replied, comprehending easily. “On the
+contrary, it might mean that instead of his feeling it too deeply to
+speak, he was getting a little illumination.”
+
+Mildred rose and came to her. “WHY do you suppose he never told us he
+went there? Do you think he's--do you think he's pleased with her, and
+yet ashamed of it? WHY do you suppose he's never spoken of it?”
+
+“Ah, that,” Mrs. Palmer said,--“that might possibly be her own doing.
+If it is, she's well paid by what your father and I said, because we
+wouldn't have said it if we'd known that Arthur----” She checked herself
+quickly. Looking over her daughter's shoulder, she saw the two gentlemen
+coming from the corridor toward the wide doorway of the room; and she
+greeted them cheerfully. “If you've finished with each other for a
+while,” she added, “Arthur may find it a relief to put his thoughts on
+something prettier than a trust company--and more fragrant.”
+
+Arthur came to Mildred.
+
+“Your mother said at lunch that perhaps you'd----”
+
+“I didn't say 'perhaps,' Arthur,” Mrs. Palmer interrupted, to correct
+him. “I said she would. If you care to see and smell those lovely things
+out yonder, she'll show them to you. Run along, children!”
+
+
+Half an hour later, glancing from a window, she saw them come from
+the hothouses and slowly cross the lawn. Arthur had a fine rose in his
+buttonhole and looked profoundly thoughtful.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+That morning and noon had been warm, though the stirrings of a feeble
+breeze made weather not flagrantly intemperate; but at about three
+o'clock in the afternoon there came out of the southwest a heat like an
+affliction sent upon an accursed people, and the air was soon dead of
+it. Dripping negro ditch-diggers whooped with satires praising hell and
+hot weather, as the tossing shovels flickered up to the street level,
+where sluggish male pedestrians carried coats upon hot arms, and
+fanned themselves with straw hats, or, remaining covered, wore soaked
+handkerchiefs between scalp and straw. Clerks drooped in silent, big
+department stores, stenographers in offices kept as close to electric
+fans as the intervening bulk of their employers would let them; guests
+in hotels left the lobbies and went to lie unclad upon their beds; while
+in hospitals the patients murmured querulously against the heat, and
+perhaps against some noisy motorist who strove to feel the air by
+splitting it, not troubled by any foreboding that he, too, that hour
+next week, might need quiet near a hospital. The “hot spell” was a
+true spell, one upon men's spirits; for it was so hot that, in suburban
+outskirts, golfers crept slowly back over the low undulations of their
+club lands, abandoning their matches and returning to shelter.
+
+Even on such a day, sizzling work had to be done, as in winter. There
+were glowing furnaces to be stoked, liquid metals to be poured; but such
+tasks found seasoned men standing to them; and in all the city probably
+no brave soul challenged the heat more gamely than Mrs. Adams did, when,
+in a corner of her small and fiery kitchen, where all day long her
+hired African immune cooked fiercely, she pressed her husband's evening
+clothes with a hot iron. No doubt she risked her life, but she risked
+it cheerfully in so good and necessary a service for him. She would have
+given her life for him at any time, and both his and her own for her
+children.
+
+Unconscious of her own heroism, she was surprised to find herself rather
+faint when she finished her ironing. However, she took heart to believe
+that the clothes looked better, in spite of one or two scorched places;
+and she carried them upstairs to her husband's room before increasing
+blindness forced her to grope for the nearest chair. Then, trying to
+rise and walk, without having sufficiently recovered, she had to sit
+down again; but after a little while she was able to get upon her feet;
+and, keeping her hand against the wall, moved successfully to the door
+of her own room. Here she wavered; might have gone down, had she not
+been stimulated by the thought of how much depended upon her;--she made
+a final great effort, and floundered across the room to her bureau,
+where she kept some simple restoratives. They served her need, or her
+faith in them did; and she returned to her work.
+
+She went down the stairs, keeping a still tremulous hand upon the rail;
+but she smiled brightly when Alice looked up from below, where the
+woodwork was again being tormented with superfluous attentions.
+
+“Alice, DON'T!” her mother said, commiseratingly. “You did all that this
+morning and it looks lovely. What's the use of wearing yourself out on
+it? You ought to be lying down, so's to look fresh for to-night.”
+
+“Hadn't you better lie down yourself?” the daughter returned. “Are you
+ill, mama?”
+
+“Certainly not. What in the world makes you think so?”
+
+“You look pretty pale,” Alice said, and sighed heavily. “It makes me
+ashamed, having you work so hard--for me.”
+
+“How foolish! I think it's fun, getting ready to entertain a little
+again, like this. I only wish it hadn't turned so hot: I'm afraid your
+poor father'll suffer--his things are pretty heavy, I noticed. Well,
+it'll do him good to bear something for style's sake this once, anyhow!”
+ She laughed, and coming to Alice, bent down and kissed her. “Dearie,”
+ she said, tenderly, “wouldn't you please slip upstairs now and take just
+a little teeny nap to please your mother?”
+
+But Alice responded only by moving her head slowly, in token of refusal.
+
+“Do!” Mrs. Adams urged. “You don't want to look worn out, do you?”
+
+“I'll LOOK all right,” Alice said, huskily. “Do you like the way I've
+arranged the furniture now? I've tried all the different ways it'll go.”
+
+“It's lovely,” her mother said, admiringly. “I thought the last way you
+had it was pretty, too. But you know best; I never knew anybody with so
+much taste. If you'd only just quit now, and take a little rest----”
+
+“There'd hardly be time, even if I wanted to; it's after five but I
+couldn't; really, I couldn't. How do you think we can manage about
+Walter--to see that he wears his evening things, I mean?”
+
+Mrs. Adams pondered. “I'm afraid he'll make a lot of objections, on
+account of the weather and everything. I wish we'd had a chance to
+tell him last night or this morning. I'd have telephoned to him this
+afternoon except--well, I scarcely like to call him up at that place,
+since your father----”
+
+“No, of course not, mama.”
+
+“If Walter gets home late,” Mrs. Adams went on, “I'll just slip out and
+speak to him, in case Mr. Russell's here before he comes. I'll just tell
+him he's got to hurry and get his things on.”
+
+“Maybe he won't come home to dinner,” Alice suggested, rather hopefully.
+“Sometimes he doesn't.”
+
+“No; I think he'll be here. When he doesn't come he usually telephones
+by this time to say not to wait for him; he's very thoughtful about
+that. Well, it really is getting late: I must go and tell her she ought
+to be preparing her fillet. Dearie, DO rest a little.”
+
+“You'd much better do that yourself,” Alice called after her, but Mrs.
+Adams shook her head cheerily, not pausing on her way to the fiery
+kitchen.
+
+Alice continued her useless labours for a time; then carried her bucket
+to the head of the cellar stairway, where she left it upon the top step;
+and, closing the door, returned to the “living-room;” Again she changed
+the positions of the old plush rocking-chairs, moving them into the
+corners where she thought they might be least noticeable; and while
+thus engaged she was startled by a loud ringing of the door-bell. For
+a moment her face was panic-stricken, and she stood staring, then
+she realized that Russell would not arrive for another hour, at the
+earliest, and recovering her equipoise, went to the door.
+
+Waiting there, in a languid attitude, was a young coloured woman, with
+a small bundle under her arm and something malleable in her mouth.
+“Listen,” she said. “You folks expectin' a coloured lady?”
+
+“No,” said Alice. “Especially not at the front door.”
+
+“Listen,” the coloured woman said again. “Listen. Say, listen. Ain't
+they another coloured lady awready here by the day? Listen. Ain't Miz
+Malena Burns here by the day this evenin'? Say, listen. This the number
+house she give ME.”
+
+“Are you the waitress?” Alice asked, dismally.
+
+“Yes'm, if Malena here.”
+
+“Malena is here,” Alice said, and hesitated; but she decided not to
+send the waitress to the back door; it might be a risk. She let her in.
+“What's your name?”
+
+“Me? I'm name' Gertrude. Miss Gertrude Collamus.”
+
+“Did you bring a cap and apron?”
+
+Gertrude took the little bundle from under her arm. “Yes'm. I'm all
+fix'.”
+
+“I've already set the table,” Alice said. “I'll show you what we want
+done.”
+
+She led the way to the dining-room, and, after offering some instruction
+there, received by Gertrude with languor and a slowly moving jaw, she
+took her into the kitchen, where the cap and apron were put on. The
+effect was not fortunate; Gertrude's eyes were noticeably bloodshot,
+an affliction made more apparent by the white cap; and Alice drew her
+mother apart, whispering anxiously,
+
+“Do you suppose it's too late to get someone else?”
+
+“I'm afraid it is,” Mrs. Adams said. “Malena says it was hard enough to
+get HER! You have to pay them so much that they only work when they feel
+like it.”
+
+“Mama, could you ask her to wear her cap straighter? Every time she
+moves her head she gets it on one side, and her skirt's too long behind
+and too short in front--and oh, I've NEVER seen such FEET!” Alice
+laughed desolately. “And she MUST quit that terrible chewing!”
+
+“Never mind; I'll get to work with her. I'll straighten her out all I
+can, dearie; don't worry.” Mrs. Adams patted her daughter's shoulder
+encouragingly. “Now YOU can't do another thing, and if you don't run and
+begin dressing you won't be ready. It'll only take me a minute to dress,
+myself, and I'll be down long before you will. Run, darling! I'll look
+after everything.”
+
+Alice nodded vaguely, went up to her room, and, after only a moment with
+her mirror, brought from her closet the dress of white organdie she
+had worn the night when she met Russell for the first time. She laid it
+carefully upon her bed, and began to make ready to put it on. Her mother
+came in, half an hour later, to “fasten” her.
+
+“I'M all dressed,” Mrs. Adams said, briskly. “Of course it doesn't
+matter. He won't know what the rest of us even look like: How could he?
+I know I'm an old SIGHT, but all I want is to look respectable. Do I?”
+
+“You look like the best woman in the world; that's all!” Alice said,
+with a little gulp.
+
+Her mother laughed and gave her a final scrutiny. “You might use just
+a tiny bit more colour, dearie--I'm afraid the excitement's made you a
+little pale. And you MUST brighten up! There's sort of a look in your
+eyes as if you'd got in a trance and couldn't get out. You've had it all
+day. I must run: your father wants me to help him with his studs. Walter
+hasn't come yet, but I'll look after him; don't worry, And you better
+HURRY, dearie, if you're going to take any time fixing the flowers on
+the table.”
+
+She departed, while Alice sat at the mirror again, to follow her advice
+concerning a “tiny bit more colour.” Before she had finished, her father
+knocked at the door, and, when she responded, came in. He was dressed
+in the clothes his wife had pressed; but he had lost substantially in
+weight since they were made for him; no one would have thought that they
+had been pressed. They hung from him voluminously, seeming to be the
+clothes of a larger man.
+
+“Your mother's gone downstairs,” he said, in a voice of distress.
+
+“One of the buttonholes in my shirt is too large and I can't keep the
+dang thing fastened. _I_ don't know what to do about it! I only got one
+other white shirt, and it's kind of ruined: I tried it before I did this
+one. Do you s'pose you could do anything?”
+
+“I'll see,” she said.
+
+“My collar's got a frayed edge,” he complained, as she examined his
+troublesome shirt. “It's a good deal like wearing a saw; but I expect
+it'll wilt down flat pretty soon, and not bother me long. I'm liable to
+wilt down flat, myself, I expect; I don't know as I remember any such
+hot night in the last ten or twelve years.” He lifted his head and
+sniffed the flaccid air, which was laden with a heavy odour. “My, but
+that smell is pretty strong!” he said.
+
+“Stand still, please, papa,” Alice begged him. “I can't see what's the
+matter if you move around. How absurd you are about your old glue smell,
+papa! There isn't a vestige of it, of course.”
+
+“I didn't mean glue,” he informed her. “I mean cabbage. Is that
+fashionable now, to have cabbage when there's company for dinner?”
+
+“That isn't cabbage, papa. It's Brussels sprouts.”
+
+“Oh, is it? I don't mind it much, because it keeps that glue smell off
+me, but it's fairly strong. I expect you don't notice it so much because
+you been in the house with it all along, and got used to it while it was
+growing.”
+
+“It is pretty dreadful,” Alice said. “Are all the windows open
+downstairs?”
+
+“I'll go down and see, if you'll just fix that hole up for me.”
+
+“I'm afraid I can't,” she said. “Not unless you take your shirt off and
+bring it to me. I'll have to sew the hole smaller.”
+
+“Oh, well, I'll go ask your mother to----”
+
+“No,” said Alice. “She's got everything on her hands. Run and take it
+off. Hurry, papa; I've got to arrange the flowers on the table before he
+comes.”
+
+He went away, and came back presently, half undressed, bringing the
+shirt. “There's ONE comfort,” he remarked, pensively, as she worked.
+“I've got that collar off--for a while, anyway. I wish I could go to
+table like this; I could stand it a good deal better. Do you seem to be
+making any headway with the dang thing?”
+
+“I think probably I can----”
+
+Downstairs the door-bell rang, and Alice's arms jerked with the shock.
+
+“Golly!” her father said. “Did you stick your finger with that fool
+needle?”
+
+She gave him a blank stare. “He's come!”
+
+She was not mistaken, for, upon the little veranda, Russell stood facing
+the closed door at last. However, it remained closed for a considerable
+time after he rang. Inside the house the warning summons of the bell was
+immediately followed by another sound, audible to Alice and her father
+as a crash preceding a series of muffled falls. Then came a distant
+voice, bitter in complaint.
+
+“Oh, Lord!” said Adams. “What's that?”
+
+Alice went to the top of the front stairs, and her mother appeared in
+the hall below.
+
+“Mama!”
+
+Mrs. Adams looked up. “It's all right,” she said, in a loud whisper.
+“Gertrude fell down the cellar stairs. Somebody left a bucket there,
+and----” She was interrupted by a gasp from Alice, and hastened to
+reassure her. “Don't worry, dearie. She may limp a little, but----”
+
+Adams leaned over the banisters. “Did she break anything?” he asked.
+
+“Hush!” his wife whispered. “No. She seems upset and angry about it,
+more than anything else; but she's rubbing herself, and she'll be all
+right in time to bring in the little sandwiches. Alice! Those flowers!”
+
+“I know, mama. But----”
+
+“Hurry!” Mrs. Adams warned her. “Both of you hurry! I MUST let him in!”
+
+She turned to the door, smiling cordially, even before she opened it.
+“Do come right in, Mr. Russell,” she said, loudly, lifting her voice
+for additional warning to those above. “I'm SO glad to receive you
+informally, this way, in our own little home. There's a hat-rack here
+under the stairway,” she continued, as Russell, murmuring some response,
+came into the hall. “I'm afraid you'll think it's almost TOO informal,
+my coming to the door, but unfortunately our housemaid's just had a
+little accident--oh, nothing to mention! I just thought we better
+not keep you waiting any longer. Will you step into our living-room,
+please?”
+
+She led the way between the two small columns, and seated herself in one
+of the plush rocking-chairs, selecting it because Alice had once pointed
+out that the chairs, themselves, were less noticeable when they had
+people sitting in them. “Do sit down, Mr. Russell; it's so very warm
+it's really quite a trial just to stand up!”
+
+“Thank you,” he said, as he took a seat. “Yes. It is quite warm.” And
+this seemed to be the extent of his responsiveness for the moment.
+He was grave, rather pale; and Mrs. Adams's impression of him, as
+she formed it then, was of “a distinguished-looking young man, really
+elegant in the best sense of the word, but timid and formal when he
+first meets you.” She beamed upon him, and used with everything she said
+a continuous accompaniment of laughter, meaningless except that it was
+meant to convey cordiality. “Of course we DO have a great deal of warm
+weather,” she informed him. “I'm glad it's so much cooler in the house
+than it is outdoors.”
+
+“Yes,” he said. “It is pleasanter indoors.” And, stopping with this
+single untruth, he permitted himself the briefest glance about the room;
+then his eyes returned to his smiling hostess.
+
+“Most people make a great fuss about hot weather,” she said. “The only
+person I know who doesn't mind the heat the way other people do is
+Alice. She always seems as cool as if we had a breeze blowing, no matter
+how hot it is. But then she's so amiable she never minds anything. It's
+just her character. She's always been that way since she was a little
+child; always the same to everybody, high and low. I think character's
+the most important thing in the world, after all, don't you, Mr.
+Russell?”
+
+“Yes,” he said, solemnly; and touched his bedewed white forehead with a
+handkerchief.
+
+“Indeed it is,” she agreed with herself, never failing to continue her
+murmur of laughter. “That's what I've always told Alice; but she never
+sees anything good in herself, and she just laughs at me when I praise
+her. She sees good in everybody ELSE in the world, no matter how
+unworthy they are, or how they behave toward HER; but she always
+underestimates herself. From the time she was a little child she was
+always that way. When some other little girl would behave selfishly or
+meanly toward her, do you think she'd come and tell me? Never a word
+to anybody! The little thing was too proud! She was the same way about
+school. The teachers had to tell me when she took a prize; she'd bring
+it home and keep it in her room without a word about it to her father
+and mother. Now, Walter was just the other way. Walter would----” But
+here Mrs. Adams checked herself, though she increased the volume of
+her laughter. “How silly of me!” she exclaimed. “I expect you know how
+mothers ARE, though, Mr. Russell. Give us a chance and we'll talk about
+our children forever! Alice would feel terribly if she knew how I've
+been going on about her to you.”
+
+In this Mrs. Adams was right, though she did not herself suspect it,
+and upon an almost inaudible word or two from him she went on with her
+topic. “Of course my excuse is that few mothers have a daughter like
+Alice. I suppose we all think the same way about our children, but SOME
+of us must be right when we feel we've got the best. Don't you think
+so?”
+
+“Yes. Yes, indeed.”
+
+“I'm sure _I_ am!” she laughed. “I'll let the others speak for
+themselves.” She paused reflectively. “No; I think a mother knows
+when she's got a treasure in her family. If she HASN'T got one, she'll
+pretend she has, maybe; but if she has, she knows it. I certainly
+know _I_ have. She's always been what people call 'the joy of the
+household'--always cheerful, no matter what went wrong, and always ready
+to smooth things over with some bright, witty saying. You must be sure
+not to TELL we've had this little chat about her--she'd just be furious
+with me--but she IS such a dear child! You won't tell her, will you?”
+
+“No,” he said, and again applied the handkerchief to his forehead for an
+instant. “No, I'll----” He paused, and finished lamely: “I'll--not tell
+her.”
+
+Thus reassured, Mrs. Adams set before him some details of her daughter's
+popularity at sixteen, dwelling upon Alice's impartiality among her
+young suitors: “She never could BEAR to hurt their feelings, and always
+treated all of them just alike. About half a dozen of them were just
+BOUND to marry her! Naturally, her father and I considered any such idea
+ridiculous; she was too young, of course.”
+
+Thus the mother went on with her biographical sketches, while the pale
+young man sat facing her under the hard overhead light of a white globe,
+set to the ceiling; and listened without interrupting. She was glad to
+have the chance to tell him a few things about Alice he might not
+have guessed for himself, and, indeed, she had planned to find such an
+opportunity, if she could; but this was getting to be altogether too
+much of one, she felt. As time passed, she was like an actor who must
+improvise to keep the audience from perceiving that his fellow-players
+have missed their cues; but her anxiety was not betrayed to the still
+listener; she had a valiant soul.
+
+Alice, meanwhile, had arranged her little roses on the table in as many
+ways, probably, as there were blossoms; and she was still at it when
+her father arrived in the dining-room by way of the back stairs and the
+kitchen.
+
+“It's pulled out again,” he said. “But I guess there's no help for it
+now; it's too late, and anyway it lets some air into me when it bulges.
+I can sit so's it won't be noticed much, I expect. Isn't it time you
+quit bothering about the looks of the table? Your mother's been talking
+to him about half an hour now, and I had the idea he came on your
+account, not hers. Hadn't you better go and----”
+
+“Just a minute.” Alice said, piteously. “Do YOU think it looks all
+right?”
+
+“The flowers? Fine! Hadn't you better leave 'em the way they are,
+though?”
+
+“Just a minute,” she begged again. “Just ONE minute, papa!” And she
+exchanged a rose in front of Russell's plate for one that seemed to her
+a little larger.
+
+“You better come on,” Adams said, moving to the door.
+
+“Just ONE more second, papa.” She shook her head, lamenting. “Oh, I wish
+we'd rented some silver!”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Because so much of the plating has rubbed off a lot of it. JUST a
+second, papa.” And as she spoke she hastily went round the table,
+gathering the knives and forks and spoons that she thought had their
+plating best preserved, and exchanging them for more damaged pieces at
+Russell's place. “There!” she sighed, finally.
+
+“Now I'll come.” But at the door she paused to look back dubiously, over
+her shoulder.
+
+“What's the matter now?”
+
+“The roses. I believe after all I shouldn't have tried that vine effect;
+I ought to have kept them in water, in the vase. It's so hot, they
+already begin to look a little wilted, out on the dry tablecloth like
+that. I believe I'll----”
+
+“Why, look here, Alice!” he remonstrated, as she seemed disposed to turn
+back. “Everything'll burn up on the stove if you keep on----”
+
+“Oh, well,” she said, “the vase was terribly ugly; I can't do any
+better. We'll go in.” But with her hand on the door-knob she paused.
+“No, papa. We mustn't go in by this door. It might look as if----”
+
+“As if what?”
+
+“Never mind,” she said. “Let's go the other way.”
+
+“I don't see what difference it makes,” he grumbled, but nevertheless
+followed her through the kitchen, and up the back stairs then through
+the upper hallway. At the top of the front stairs she paused for a
+moment, drawing a deep breath; and then, before her father's puzzled
+eyes, a transformation came upon her.
+
+Her shoulders, like her eyelids, had been drooping, but now she threw
+her head back: the shoulders straightened, and the lashes lifted over
+sparkling eyes; vivacity came to her whole body in a flash; and she
+tripped down the steps, with her pretty hands rising in time to the
+lilting little tune she had begun to hum.
+
+At the foot of the stairs, one of those pretty hands extended itself at
+full arm's length toward Russell, and continued to be extended until it
+reached his own hand as he came to meet her. “How terrible of me!” she
+exclaimed. “To be so late coming down! And papa, too--I think you know
+each other.”
+
+Her father was advancing toward the young man, expecting to shake hands
+with him, but Alice stood between them, and Russell, a little flushed,
+bowed to him gravely over her shoulder, without looking at him;
+whereupon Adams, slightly disconcerted, put his hands in his pockets and
+turned to his wife.
+
+“I guess dinner's more'n ready,” he said. “We better go sit down.”
+
+But she shook her head at him fiercely, “Wait!” she whispered.
+
+“What for? For Walter?”
+
+“No; he can't be coming,” she returned, hurriedly, and again warned him
+by a shake of her head. “Be quiet!”
+
+“Oh, well----” he muttered.
+
+“Sit down!”
+
+He was thoroughly mystified, but obeyed her gesture and went to the
+rocking-chair in the opposite corner, where he sat down, and, with an
+expression of meek inquiry, awaited events.
+
+Meanwhile, Alice prattled on: “It's really not a fault of mine,
+being tardy. The shameful truth is I was trying to hurry papa. He's
+incorrigible: he stays so late at his terrible old factory--terrible new
+factory, I should say. I hope you don't HATE us for making you dine with
+us in such fearful weather! I'm nearly dying of the heat, myself, so you
+have a fellow-sufferer, if that pleases you. Why is it we always bear
+things better if we think other people have to stand them, too?” And she
+added, with an excited laugh: “SILLY of us, don't you think?”
+
+Gertrude had just made her entrance from the dining-room, bearing a
+tray. She came slowly, with an air of resentment; and her skirt still
+needed adjusting, while her lower jaw moved at intervals, though not
+now upon any substance, but reminiscently, of habit. She halted before
+Adams, facing him.
+
+He looked plaintive. “What you want o' me?” he asked.
+
+For response, she extended the tray toward him with a gesture of
+indifference; but he still appeared to be puzzled. “What in the
+world----?” he began, then caught his wife's eye, and had presence of
+mind enough to take a damp and plastic sandwich from the tray. “Well,
+I'll TRY one,” he said, but a moment later, as he fulfilled this
+promise, an expression of intense dislike came upon his features, and
+he would have returned the sandwich to Gertrude. However, as she
+had crossed the room to Mrs. Adams he checked the gesture, and sat
+helplessly, with the sandwich in his hand. He made another effort to
+get rid of it as the waitress passed him, on her way back to the
+dining-room, but she appeared not to observe him, and he continued to be
+troubled by it.
+
+Alice was a loyal daughter. “These are delicious, mama,” she said; and
+turning to Russell, “You missed it; you should have taken one. Too
+bad we couldn't have offered you what ought to go with it, of course,
+but----”
+
+She was interrupted by the second entrance of Gertrude, who announced,
+“Dinner serve',” and retired from view.
+
+“Well, well!” Adams said, rising from his chair, with relief. “That's
+good! Let's go see if we can eat it.” And as the little group moved
+toward the open door of the dining-room he disposed of his sandwich by
+dropping it in the empty fireplace.
+
+Alice, glancing back over her shoulder, was the only one who saw him,
+and she shuddered in spite of herself. Then, seeing that he looked at
+her entreatingly, as if he wanted to explain that he was doing the best
+he could, she smiled upon him sunnily, and began to chatter to Russell
+again.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+Alice kept her sprightly chatter going when they sat down, though the
+temperature of the room and the sight of hot soup might have discouraged
+a less determined gayety. Moreover, there were details as unpropitious
+as the heat: the expiring roses expressed not beauty but pathos, and
+what faint odour they exhaled was no rival to the lusty emanations of
+the Brussels sprouts; at the head of the table, Adams, sitting low in
+his chair, appeared to be unable to flatten the uprising wave of
+his starched bosom; and Gertrude's manner and expression were of a
+recognizable hostility during the long period of vain waiting for the
+cups of soup to be emptied. Only Mrs. Adams made any progress in this
+direction; the others merely feinting, now and then lifting their spoons
+as if they intended to do something with them.
+
+Alice's talk was little more than cheerful sound, but, to fill a
+desolate interval, served its purpose; and her mother supported her
+with ever-faithful cooings of applausive laughter. “What a funny thing
+weather is!” the girl ran on. “Yesterday it was cool--angels had charge
+of it--and to-day they had an engagement somewhere else, so the devil
+saw his chance and started to move the equator to the North Pole; but by
+the time he got half-way, he thought of something else he wanted to do,
+and went off; and left the equator here, right on top of US! I wish he'd
+come back and get it!”
+
+“Why, Alice dear!” her mother cried, fondly. “What an imagination! Not
+a very pious one, I'm afraid Mr. Russell might think, though!” Here she
+gave Gertrude a hidden signal to remove the soup; but, as there was
+no response, she had to make the signal more conspicuous. Gertrude was
+leaning against the wall, her chin moving like a slow pendulum, her
+streaked eyes fixed mutinously upon Russell. Mrs. Adams nodded several
+times, increasing the emphasis of her gesture, while Alice talked
+briskly; but the brooding waitress continued to brood. A faint snap of
+the fingers failed to disturb her; nor was a covert hissing whisper of
+avail, and Mrs. Adams was beginning to show signs of strain when her
+daughter relieved her.
+
+“Imagine our trying to eat anything so hot as soup on a night like
+this!” Alice laughed. “What COULD have been in the cook's mind not to
+give us something iced and jellied instead? Of course it's because she's
+equatorial, herself, originally, and only feels at home when Mr. Satan
+moves it north.” She looked round at Gertrude, who stood behind her. “Do
+take this dreadful soup away!”
+
+Thus directly addressed, Gertrude yielded her attention, though
+unwillingly, and as if she decided only by a hair's weight not to
+revolt, instead. However, she finally set herself in slow motion; but
+overlooked the supposed head of the table, seeming to be unaware of
+the sweltering little man who sat there. As she disappeared toward
+the kitchen with but three of the cups upon her tray he turned to look
+plaintively after her, and ventured an attempt to recall her.
+
+“Here!” he said, in a low voice. “Here, you!”
+
+“What is it, Virgil?” his wife asked.
+
+“What's her name?”
+
+Mrs. Adams gave him a glance of sudden panic, and, seeing that the
+guest of the evening was not looking at her, but down at the white cloth
+before him, she frowned hard, and shook her head.
+
+Unfortunately Alice was not observing her mother, and asked, innocently:
+“What's whose name, papa?”
+
+“Why, this young darky woman,” he explained. “She left mine.”
+
+“Never mind,” Alice laughed. “There's hope for you, papa. She hasn't
+gone forever!”
+
+“I don't know about that,” he said, not content with this impulsive
+assurance. “She LOOKED like she is.” And his remark, considered as a
+prediction, had begun to seem warranted before Gertrude's return with
+china preliminary to the next stage of the banquet.
+
+Alice proved herself equal to the long gap, and rattled on through it
+with a spirit richly justifying her mother's praise of her as “always
+ready to smooth things over”; for here was more than long delay to be
+smoothed over. She smoothed over her father and mother for Russell; and
+she smoothed over him for them, though he did not know it, and remained
+unaware of what he owed her. With all this, throughout her prattlings,
+the girl's bright eyes kept seeking his with an eager gayety, which but
+little veiled both interrogation and entreaty--as if she asked: “Is it
+too much for you? Can't you bear it? Won't you PLEASE bear it? I would
+for you. Won't you give me a sign that it's all right?”
+
+He looked at her but fleetingly, and seemed to suffer from the heat, in
+spite of every manly effort not to wipe his brow too often. His colour,
+after rising when he greeted Alice and her father, had departed, leaving
+him again moistly pallid; a condition arising from discomfort, no doubt,
+but, considered as a decoration, almost poetically becoming to him.
+Not less becoming was the faint, kindly smile, which showed his wish to
+express amusement and approval; and yet it was a smile rather strained
+and plaintive, as if he, like Adams, could only do the best he could.
+
+He pleased Adams, who thought him a fine young man, and decidedly
+the quietest that Alice had ever shown to her family. In her father's
+opinion this was no small merit; and it was to Russell's credit, too,
+that he showed embarrassment upon this first intimate presentation; here
+was an applicant with both reserve and modesty. “So far, he seems to be
+first rate a mighty fine young man,” Adams thought; and, prompted by no
+wish to part from Alice but by reminiscences of apparent candidates less
+pleasing, he added, “At last!”
+
+Alice's liveliness never flagged. Her smoothing over of things was an
+almost continuous performance, and had to be. Yet, while she chattered
+through the hot and heavy courses, the questions she asked herself
+were as continuous as the performance, and as poignant as what her eyes
+seemed to be asking Russell. Why had she not prevailed over her mother's
+fear of being “skimpy?” Had she been, indeed, as her mother said she
+looked, “in a trance?” But above all: What was the matter with HIM? What
+had happened? For she told herself with painful humour that something
+even worse than this dinner must be “the matter with him.”
+
+The small room, suffocated with the odour of boiled sprouts, grew hotter
+and hotter as more and more food appeared, slowly borne in, between
+deathly long waits, by the resentful, loud-breathing Gertrude. And while
+Alice still sought Russell's glance, and read the look upon his face
+a dozen different ways, fearing all of them; and while the straggling
+little flowers died upon the stained cloth, she felt her heart grow as
+heavy as the food, and wondered that it did not die like the roses.
+
+With the arrival of coffee, the host bestirred himself to make known a
+hospitable regret, “By George!” he said. “I meant to buy some cigars.”
+ He addressed himself apologetically to the guest. “I don't know what I
+was thinking about, to forget to bring some home with me. I don't use
+'em myself--unless somebody hands me one, you might say. I've always
+been a pipe-smoker, pure and simple, but I ought to remembered for kind
+of an occasion like this.”
+
+“Not at all,” Russell said. “I'm not smoking at all lately; but when I
+do, I'm like you, and smoke a pipe.”
+
+Alice started, remembering what she had told him when he overtook her on
+her way from the tobacconist's; but, after a moment, looking at him,
+she decided that he must have forgotten it. If he had remembered, she
+thought, he could not have helped glancing at her. On the contrary, he
+seemed more at ease, just then, than he had since they sat down, for he
+was favouring her father with a thoughtful attention as Adams responded
+to the introduction of a man's topic into the conversation at last.
+“Well, Mr. Russell, I guess you're right, at that. I don't say but what
+cigars may be all right for a man that can afford 'em, if he likes 'em
+better than a pipe, but you take a good old pipe now----”
+
+He continued, and was getting well into the eulogium customarily
+provoked by this theme, when there came an interruption: the door-bell
+rang, and he paused inquiringly, rather surprised.
+
+Mrs. Adams spoke to Gertrude in an undertone:
+
+“Just say, 'Not at home.'”
+
+“What?”
+
+“If it's callers, just say we're not at home.”
+
+Gertrude spoke out freely: “You mean you astin' me to 'tend you' front
+do' fer you?”
+
+She seemed both incredulous and affronted, but Mrs. Adams persisted,
+though somewhat apprehensively. “Yes. Hurry--uh--please. Just say we're
+not at home if you please.”
+
+Again Gertrude obviously hesitated between compliance and revolt, and
+again the meeker course fortunately prevailed with her. She gave Mrs.
+Adams a stare, grimly derisive, then departed. When she came back she
+said:
+
+“He say he wait.”
+
+“But I told you to tell anybody we were not at home,” Mrs Adams
+returned. “Who is it?”
+
+“Say he name Mr. Law.”
+
+“We don't know any Mr. Law.”
+
+“Yes'm; he know you. Say he anxious to speak Mr. Adams. Say he wait.”
+
+“Tell him Mr. Adams is engaged.”
+
+“Hold on a minute,” Adams intervened. “Law? No. I don't know any Mr.
+Law. You sure you got the name right?”
+
+“Say he name Law,” Gertrude replied, looking at the ceiling to express
+her fatigue. “Law. 'S all he tell me; 's all I know.”
+
+Adams frowned. “Law,” he said. “Wasn't it maybe 'Lohr?'”
+
+“Law,” Gertrude repeated. “'S all he tell me; 's all I know.”
+
+“What's he look like?”
+
+“He ain't much,” she said. “'Bout you' age; got brustly white moustache,
+nice eye-glasses.”
+
+“It's Charley Lohr!” Adams exclaimed. “I'll go see what he wants.”
+
+“But, Virgil,” his wife remonstrated, “do finish your coffee; he might
+stay all evening. Maybe he's come to call.”
+
+Adams laughed. “He isn't much of a caller, I expect. Don't worry: I'll
+take him up to my room.” And turning toward Russell, “Ah--if you'll just
+excuse me,” he said; and went out to his visitor.
+
+When he had gone, Mrs. Adams finished her coffee, and, having glanced
+intelligently from her guest to her daughter, she rose. “I think perhaps
+I ought to go and shake hands with Mr. Lohr, myself,” she said, adding
+in explanation to Russell, as she reached the door, “He's an old friend
+of my husband's and it's a very long time since he's been here.”
+
+Alice nodded and smiled to her brightly, but upon the closing of the
+door, the smile vanished; all her liveliness disappeared; and with this
+change of expression her complexion itself appeared to change, so that
+her rouge became obvious, for she was pale beneath it. However, Russell
+did not see the alteration, for he did not look at her; and it was but
+a momentary lapse the vacation of a tired girl, who for ten seconds lets
+herself look as she feels. Then she shot her vivacity back into place as
+by some powerful spring.
+
+“Penny for your thoughts!” she cried, and tossed one of the wilted
+roses at him, across the table. “I'll bid more than a penny; I'll bid
+tuppence--no, a poor little dead rose a rose for your thoughts, Mr.
+Arthur Russell! What are they?”
+
+He shook his head. “I'm afraid I haven't any.”
+
+“No, of course not,” she said. “Who could have thoughts in weather like
+this? Will you EVER forgive us?”
+
+“What for?”
+
+“Making you eat such a heavy dinner--I mean LOOK at such a heavy dinner,
+because you certainly didn't do more than look at it--on such a night!
+But the crime draws to a close, and you can begin to cheer up!” She
+laughed gaily, and, rising, moved to the door. “Let's go in the other
+room; your fearful duty is almost done, and you can run home as soon as
+you want to. That's what you're dying to do.”
+
+“Not at all,” he said in a voice so feeble that she laughed aloud.
+
+“Good gracious!” she cried. “I hadn't realized it was THAT bad!”
+
+For this, though he contrived to laugh, he seemed to have no verbal
+retort whatever; but followed her into the “living-room,” where she
+stopped and turned, facing him.
+
+“Has it really been so frightful?” she asked.
+
+“Why, of course not. Not at all.”
+
+“Of course yes, though, you mean!”
+
+“Not at all. It's been most kind of your mother and father and you.”
+
+“Do you know,” she said, “you've never once looked at me for more than a
+second at a time the whole evening? And it seemed to me I looked rather
+nice to-night, too!”
+
+“You always do,” he murmured.
+
+“I don't see how you know,” she returned; and then stepping closer
+to him, spoke with gentle solicitude: “Tell me: you're really feeling
+wretchedly, aren't you? I know you've got a fearful headache, or
+something. Tell me!”
+
+“Not at all.”
+
+“You are ill--I'm sure of it.”
+
+“Not at all.”
+
+“On your word?”
+
+“I'm really quite all right.”
+
+“But if you are----” she began; and then, looking at him with a
+desperate sweetness, as if this were her last resource to rouse him,
+“What's the matter, little boy?” she said with lisping tenderness. “Tell
+auntie!”
+
+It was a mistake, for he seemed to flinch, and to lean backward,
+however, slightly. She turned away instantly, with a flippant lift and
+drop of both hands. “Oh, my dear!” she laughed. “I won't eat you!”
+
+And as the discomfited young man watched her, seeming able to lift
+his eyes, now that her back was turned, she went to the front door and
+pushed open the screen. “Let's go out on the porch,” she said. “Where we
+belong!”
+
+Then, when he had followed her out, and they were seated, “Isn't this
+better?” she asked. “Don't you feel more like yourself out here?”
+
+He began a murmur: “Not at----”
+
+But she cut him off sharply: “Please don't say 'Not at all' again!”
+
+“I'm sorry.”
+
+“You do seem sorry about something,” she said. “What is it? Isn't it
+time you were telling me what's the matter?”
+
+“Nothing. Indeed nothing's the matter. Of course one IS rather affected
+by such weather as this. It may make one a little quieter than usual, of
+course.”
+
+She sighed, and let the tired muscles of her face rest. Under the hard
+lights, indoors, they had served her until they ached, and it was a
+luxury to feel that in the darkness no grimacings need call upon them.
+
+“Of course, if you won't tell me----” she said.
+
+“I can only assure you there's nothing to tell.”
+
+“I know what an ugly little house it is,” she said. “Maybe it was the
+furniture--or mama's vases that upset you. Or was it mama herself--or
+papa?”
+
+“Nothing 'upset' me.”
+
+At that she uttered a monosyllable of doubting laughter. “I wonder why
+you say that.”
+
+“Because it's so.”
+
+“No. It's because you're too kind, or too conscientious, or too
+embarrassed--anyhow too something--to tell me.” She leaned forward,
+elbows on knees and chin in hands, in the reflective attitude she knew
+how to make graceful. “I have a feeling that you're not going to tell
+me,” she said, slowly. “Yes--even that you're never going to tell me. I
+wonder--I wonder----”
+
+“Yes? What do you wonder?”
+
+“I was just thinking--I wonder if they haven't done it, after all.”
+
+“I don't understand.”
+
+“I wonder,” she went on, still slowly, and in a voice of reflection, “I
+wonder who HAS been talking about me to you, after all? Isn't that it?”
+
+“Not at----” he began, but checked himself and substituted another form
+of denial. “Nothing is 'it.'”
+
+“Are you sure?”
+
+“Why, yes.”
+
+“How curious!” she said.
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Because all evening you've been so utterly different.”
+
+“But in this weather----”
+
+“No. That wouldn't make you afraid to look at me all evening!”
+
+“But I did look at you. Often.”
+
+“No. Not really a LOOK.”
+
+“But I'm looking at you now.”
+
+“Yes--in the dark!” she said. “No--the weather might make you even
+quieter than usual, but it wouldn't strike you so nearly dumb. No--and
+it wouldn't make you seem to be under such a strain--as if you thought
+only of escape!”
+
+“But I haven't----”
+
+“You shouldn't,” she interrupted, gently. “There's nothing you have to
+escape from, you know. You aren't committed to--to this friendship.”
+
+“I'm sorry you think----” he began, but did not complete the fragment.
+
+She took it up. “You're sorry I think you're so different, you mean to
+say, don't you? Never mind: that's what you did mean to say, but you
+couldn't finish it because you're not good at deceiving.”
+
+“Oh, no,” he protested, feebly. “I'm not deceiving. I'm----”
+
+“Never mind,” she said again. “You're sorry I think you're so
+different--and all in one day--since last night. Yes, your voice SOUNDS
+sorry, too. It sounds sorrier than it would just because of my thinking
+something you could change my mind about in a minute so it means you're
+sorry you ARE different.”
+
+“No--I----”
+
+But disregarding the faint denial, “Never mind,” she said. “Do you
+remember one night when you told me that nothing anybody else could do
+would ever keep you from coming here? That if you--if you left me it
+would be because I drove you away myself?”
+
+“Yes,” he said, huskily. “It was true.”
+
+“Are you sure?”
+
+“Indeed I am,” he answered in a low voice, but with conviction.
+
+“Then----” She paused. “Well--but I haven't driven you away.”
+
+“No.”
+
+“And yet you've gone,” she said, quietly.
+
+“Do I seem so stupid as all that?”
+
+“You know what I mean.” She leaned back in her chair again, and her
+hands, inactive for once, lay motionless in her lap. When she spoke it
+was in a rueful whisper:
+
+“I wonder if I HAVE driven you away?”
+
+“You've done nothing--nothing at all,” he said.
+
+“I wonder----” she said once more, but she stopped. In her mind she was
+going back over their time together since the first meeting--fragments
+of talk, moments of silence, little things of no importance, little
+things that might be important; moonshine, sunshine, starlight; and her
+thoughts zigzagged among the jumbling memories; but, as if she made for
+herself a picture of all these fragments, throwing them upon the canvas
+haphazard, she saw them all just touched with the one tainting quality
+that gave them coherence, the faint, false haze she had put over this
+friendship by her own pretendings. And, if this terrible dinner, or
+anything, or everything, had shown that saffron tint in its true colour
+to the man at her side, last night almost a lover, then she had indeed
+of herself driven him away, and might well feel that she was lost.
+
+“Do you know?” she said, suddenly, in a clear, loud voice. “I have the
+strangest feeling. I feel as if I were going to be with you only about
+five minutes more in all the rest of my life!”
+
+“Why, no,” he said. “Of course I'm coming to see you--often. I----”
+
+“No,” she interrupted. “I've never had a feeling like this before.
+It's--it's just SO; that's all! You're GOING--why, you're never coming
+here again!” She stood up, abruptly, beginning to tremble all over.
+“Why, it's FINISHED, isn't it?” she said, and her trembling was manifest
+now in her voice. “Why, it's all OVER, isn't it? Why, yes!”
+
+He had risen as she did. “I'm afraid you're awfully tired and nervous,”
+ he said. “I really ought to be going.”
+
+“Yes, of COURSE you ought,” she cried, despairingly. “There's nothing
+else for you to do. When anything's spoiled, people CAN'T do anything
+but run away from it. So good-bye!”
+
+“At least,” he returned, huskily, “we'll only--only say good-night.”
+
+Then, as moving to go, he stumbled upon the veranda steps, “Your HAT!”
+ she cried. “I'd like to keep it for a souvenir, but I'm afraid you need
+it!”
+
+She ran into the hall and brought his straw hat from the chair where he
+had left it. “You poor thing!” she said, with quavering laughter. “Don't
+you know you can't go without your hat?”
+
+Then, as they faced each other for the short moment which both of them
+knew would be the last of all their veranda moments, Alice's broken
+laughter grew louder. “What a thing to say!” she cried. “What a romantic
+parting--talking about HATS!”
+
+Her laughter continued as he turned away, but other sounds came from
+within the house, clearly audible with the opening of a door upstairs--a
+long and wailing cry of lamentation in the voice of Mrs. Adams. Russell
+paused at the steps, uncertain, but Alice waved to him to go on.
+
+“Oh, don't bother,” she said. “We have lots of that in this funny little
+old house! Good-bye!”
+
+And as he went down the steps, she ran back into the house and closed
+the door heavily behind her.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+Her mother's wailing could still be heard from overhead, though more
+faintly; and old Charley Lohr was coming down the stairs alone.
+
+He looked at Alice compassionately. “I was just comin' to suggest maybe
+you'd excuse yourself from your company,” he said. “Your mother was
+bound not to disturb you, and tried her best to keep you from hearin'
+how she's takin' on, but I thought probably you better see to her.”
+
+“Yes, I'll come. What's the matter?”
+
+“Well,” he said, “_I_ only stepped over to offer my sympathy and
+services, as it were. _I_ thought of course you folks knew all about it.
+Fact is, it was in the evening paper--just a little bit of an item on
+the back page, of course.”
+
+“What is it?”
+
+He coughed. “Well, it ain't anything so terrible,” he said. “Fact is,
+your brother Walter's got in a little trouble--well, I suppose you might
+call it quite a good deal of trouble. Fact is, he's quite considerable
+short in his accounts down at Lamb and Company.”
+
+Alice ran up the stairs and into her father's room, where Mrs. Adams
+threw herself into her daughter's arms. “Is he gone?” she sobbed. “He
+didn't hear me, did he? I tried so hard----”
+
+Alice patted the heaving shoulders her arms enclosed. “No, no,” she
+said. “He didn't hear you--it wouldn't have mattered--he doesn't matter
+anyway.”
+
+“Oh, POOR Walter!” The mother cried. “Oh, the POOR boy! Poor, poor
+Walter! Poor, poor, poor, POOR----”
+
+“Hush, dear, hush!” Alice tried to soothe her, but the lament could
+not be abated, and from the other side of the room a repetition in
+a different spirit was as continuous. Adams paced furiously there,
+pounding his fist into his left palm as he strode. “The dang boy!” he
+said. “Dang little fool! Dang idiot! Dang fool! Whyn't he TELL me, the
+dang little fool?”
+
+“He DID!” Mrs. Adams sobbed. “He DID tell you, and you wouldn't GIVE it
+to him.”
+
+“He DID, did he?” Adams shouted at her. “What he begged me for was money
+to run away with! He never dreamed of putting back what he took. What
+the dangnation you talking about--accusing me!”
+
+“He NEEDED it,” she said. “He needed it to run away with! How could he
+expect to LIVE, after he got away, if he didn't have a little money? Oh,
+poor, poor, POOR Walter! Poor, poor, poor----”
+
+She went back to this repetition; and Adams went back to his own, then
+paused, seeing his old friend standing in the hallway outside the open
+door.
+
+“Ah--I'll just be goin', I guess, Virgil,” Lohr said. “I don't see as
+there's any use my tryin' to say any more. I'll do anything you want me
+to, you understand.”
+
+“Wait a minute,” Adams said, and, groaning, came and went down the
+stairs with him. “You say you didn't see the old man at all?”
+
+“No, I don't know a thing about what he's going to do,” Lohr said, as
+they reached the lower floor. “Not a thing. But look here, Virgil,
+I don't see as this calls for you and your wife to take on so hard
+about--anyhow not as hard as the way you've started.”
+
+“No,” Adams gulped. “It always seems that way to the other party that's
+only looking on!”
+
+“Oh, well, I know that, of course,” old Charley returned, soothingly.
+“But look here, Virgil: they may not catch the boy; they didn't even
+seem to be sure what train he made, and if they do get him, why, the ole
+man might decide not to prosecute if----”
+
+“HIM?” Adams cried, interrupting. “Him not prosecute? Why, that's what
+he's been waiting for, all along! He thinks my boy and me both cheated
+him! Why, he was just letting Walter walk into a trap! Didn't you say
+they'd been suspecting him for some time back? Didn't you say they'd
+been watching him and were just about fixing to arrest him?”
+
+“Yes, I know,” said Lohr; “but you can't tell, especially if you raise
+the money and pay it back.”
+
+“Every cent!” Adams vociferated. “Every last penny! I can raise it--I
+GOT to raise it! I'm going to put a loan on my factory to-morrow. Oh,
+I'll get it for him, you tell him! Every last penny!”
+
+“Well, ole feller, you just try and get quieted down some now.” Charley
+held out his hand in parting. “You and your wife just quiet down some.
+You AIN'T the healthiest man in the world, you know, and you already
+been under quite some strain before this happened. You want to take
+care of yourself for the sake of your wife and that sweet little girl
+upstairs, you know. Now, good-night,” he finished, stepping out upon the
+veranda. “You send for me if there's anything I can do.”
+
+“Do?” Adams echoed. “There ain't anything ANYBODY can do!” And then, as
+his old friend went down the path to the sidewalk, he called after him,
+“You tell him I'll pay him every last cent! Every last, dang, dirty
+PENNY!”
+
+He slammed the door and went rapidly up the stairs, talking loudly to
+himself. “Every dang, last, dirty penny! Thinks EVERYBODY in this family
+wants to steal from him, does he? Thinks we're ALL yellow, does he?
+I'll show him!” And he came into his own room vociferating, “Every last,
+dang, dirty penny!”
+
+Mrs. Adams had collapsed, and Alice had put her upon his bed, where she
+lay tossing convulsively and sobbing, “Oh, POOR Walter!” over and
+over, but after a time she varied the sorry tune. “Oh, poor Alice!” she
+moaned, clinging to her daughter's hand. “Oh, poor, POOR Alice to have
+THIS come on the night of your dinner--just when everything seemed to be
+going so well--at last--oh, poor, poor, POOR----”
+
+“Hush!” Alice said, sharply. “Don't say 'poor Alice!' I'm all right.”
+
+“You MUST be!” her mother cried, clutching her. “You've just GOT to be!
+ONE of us has got to be all right--surely God wouldn't mind just ONE of
+us being all right--that wouldn't hurt Him----”
+
+“Hush, hush, mother! Hush!”
+
+But Mrs. Adams only clutched her the more tightly. “He seemed SUCH a
+nice young man, dearie! He may not see this in the paper--Mr. Lohr said
+it was just a little bit of an item--he MAY not see it, dearie----”
+
+Then her anguish went back to Walter again; and to his needs as a
+fugitive--she had meant to repair his underwear, but had postponed doing
+so, and her neglect now appeared to be a detail as lamentable as the
+calamity itself. She could neither be stilled upon it, nor herself
+exhaust its urgings to self-reproach, though she finally took up another
+theme temporarily. Upon an unusually violent outbreak of her husband's,
+in denunciation of the runaway, she cried out faintly that he was cruel;
+and further wearied her broken voice with details of Walter's beauty as
+a baby, and of his bedtime pieties throughout his infancy.
+
+So the hot night wore on. Three had struck before Mrs. Adams was got to
+bed; and Alice, returning to her own room, could hear her father's bare
+feet thudding back and forth after that. “Poor papa!” she whispered in
+helpless imitation of her mother. “Poor papa! Poor mama! Poor Walter!
+Poor all of us!”
+
+She fell asleep, after a time, while from across the hall the bare
+feet still thudded over their changeless route; and she woke at seven,
+hearing Adams pass her door, shod. In her wrapper she ran out into the
+hallway and found him descending the stairs.
+
+“Papa!”
+
+“Hush,” he said, and looked up at her with reddened eyes. “Don't wake
+your mother.”
+
+“I won't,” she whispered. “How about you? You haven't slept any at all!”
+
+“Yes, I did. I got some sleep. I'm going over to the works now. I got
+to throw some figures together to show the bank. Don't worry: I'll get
+things fixed up. You go back to bed. Good-bye.”
+
+“Wait!” she bade him sharply.
+
+“What for?”
+
+“You've got to have some breakfast.”
+
+“Don't want 'ny.”
+
+“You wait!” she said, imperiously, and disappeared to return almost at
+once. “I can cook in my bedroom slippers,” she explained, “but I don't
+believe I could in my bare feet!”
+
+Descending softly, she made him wait in the dining-room until she
+brought him toast and eggs and coffee. “Eat!” she said. “And I'm going
+to telephone for a taxicab to take you, if you think you've really got
+to go.”
+
+“No, I'm going to walk--I WANT to walk.”
+
+She shook her head anxiously. “You don't look able. You've walked all
+night.”
+
+“No, I didn't,” he returned. “I tell you I got some sleep. I got all I
+wanted anyhow.”
+
+“But, papa----”
+
+“Here!” he interrupted, looking up at her suddenly and setting down his
+cup of coffee. “Look here! What about this Mr. Russell? I forgot all
+about him. What about him?”
+
+Her lip trembled a little, but she controlled it before she spoke.
+“Well, what about him, papa?” she asked, calmly enough.
+
+“Well, we could hardly----” Adams paused, frowning heavily. “We could
+hardly expect he wouldn't hear something about all this.”
+
+“Yes; of course he'll hear it, papa.”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“Well, what?” she asked, gently.
+
+“You don't think he'd be the--the cheap kind it'd make a difference
+with, of course.”
+
+“Oh, no; he isn't cheap. It won't make any difference with him.”
+
+Adams suffered a profound sigh to escape him. “Well--I'm glad of that,
+anyway.”
+
+“The difference,” she explained--“the difference was made without his
+hearing anything about Walter. He doesn't know about THAT yet.”
+
+“Well, what does he know about?”
+
+“Only,” she said, “about me.”
+
+“What you mean by that, Alice?” he asked, helplessly.
+
+“Never mind,” she said. “It's nothing beside the real trouble we're
+in--I'll tell you some time. You eat your eggs and toast; you can't keep
+going on just coffee.”
+
+“I can't eat any eggs and toast,” he objected, rising. “I can't.”
+
+“Then wait till I can bring you something else.”
+
+“No,” he said, irritably. “I won't do it! I don't want any dang food!
+And look here”--he spoke sharply to stop her, as she went toward the
+telephone--“I don't want any dang taxi, either! You look after your
+mother when she wakes up. I got to be at WORK!”
+
+And though she followed him to the front door, entreating, he could not
+be stayed or hindered. He went through the quiet morning streets at
+a rickety, rapid gait, swinging his old straw hat in his hands, and
+whispering angrily to himself as he went. His grizzled hair, not trimmed
+for a month, blew back from his damp forehead in the warm breeze; his
+reddened eyes stared hard at nothing from under blinking lids; and one
+side of his face twitched startlingly from time to time;--children might
+have run from him, or mocked him.
+
+When he had come into that fallen quarter his industry had partly
+revived and wholly made odorous, a negro woman, leaning upon her
+whitewashed gate, gazed after him and chuckled for the benefit of a
+gossiping friend in the next tiny yard. “Oh, good Satan! Wha'ssa matter
+that ole glue man?”
+
+“Who? Him?” the neighbour inquired. “What he do now?”
+
+“Talkin' to his ole se'f!” the first explained, joyously. “Look like
+gone distracted--ole glue man!”
+
+Adams's legs had grown more uncertain with his hard walk, and he
+stumbled heavily as he crossed the baked mud of his broad lot, but cared
+little for that, was almost unaware of it, in fact. Thus his eyes saw
+as little as his body felt, and so he failed to observe something that
+would have given him additional light upon an old phrase that already
+meant quite enough for him.
+
+There are in the wide world people who have never learned its meaning;
+but most are either young or beautifully unobservant who remain
+wholly unaware of the inner poignancies the words convey: “a rain of
+misfortunes.” It is a boiling rain, seemingly whimsical in its choice of
+spots whereon to fall; and, so far as mortal eye can tell, neither the
+just nor the unjust may hope to avoid it, or need worry themselves by
+expecting it. It had selected the Adams family for its scaldings; no
+question.
+
+The glue-works foreman, standing in the doorway of the brick shed,
+observed his employer's eccentric approach, and doubtfully stroked a
+whiskered chin.
+
+“Well, they ain't no putticular use gettin' so upset over it,” he said,
+as Adams came up. “When a thing happens, why, it happens, and that's all
+there is to it. When a thing's so, why, it's so. All you can do about it
+is think if there's anything you CAN do; and that's what you better be
+doin' with this case.”
+
+Adams halted, and seemed to gape at him. “What--case?” he said, with
+difficulty. “Was it in the morning papers, too?”
+
+“No, it ain't in no morning papers. My land! It don't need to be in no
+papers; look at the SIZE of it!”
+
+“The size of what?”
+
+“Why, great God!” the foreman exclaimed. “He ain't even seen it. Look!
+Look yonder!”
+
+Adams stared vaguely at the man's outstretched hand and pointing
+forefinger, then turned and saw a great sign upon the facade of the big
+factory building across the street. The letters were large enough to be
+read two blocks away.
+
+ “AFTER THE FIFTEENTH OF NEXT MONTH
+ THIS BUILDING WILL BE OCCUPIED BY
+ THE J. A. LAMB LIQUID GLUE CO. INC.”
+
+
+A gray touring-car had just come to rest before the principal entrance
+of the building, and J. A. Lamb himself descended from it. He glanced
+over toward the humble rival of his projected great industry, saw his
+old clerk, and immediately walked across the street and the lot to speak
+to him.
+
+“Well, Adams,” he said, in his husky, cheerful voice, “how's your
+glue-works?”
+
+Adams uttered an inarticulate sound, and lifted the hand that held his
+hat as if to make a protective gesture, but failed to carry it out; and
+his arm sank limp at his side. The foreman, however, seemed to feel that
+something ought to be said.
+
+“Our glue-works, hell!” he remarked. “I guess we won't HAVE no
+glue-works over here not very long, if we got to compete with the sized
+thing you got over there!”
+
+Lamb chuckled. “I kind of had some such notion,” he said. “You see,
+Virgil, I couldn't exactly let you walk off with it like swallering a
+pat o' butter, now, could I? It didn't look exactly reasonable to expect
+me to let go like that, now, did it?”
+
+Adams found a half-choked voice somewhere in his throat. “Do you--would
+you step into my office a minute, Mr. Lamb?”
+
+“Why, certainly I'm willing to have a little talk with you,” the old
+gentleman said, as he followed his former employee indoors, and he
+added, “I feel a lot more like it than I did before I got THAT up, over
+yonder, Virgil!”
+
+Adams threw open the door of the rough room he called his office, having
+as justification for this title little more than the fact that he had a
+telephone there and a deal table that served as a desk. “Just step into
+the office, please,” he said.
+
+Lamb glanced at the desk, at the kitchen chair before it, at the
+telephone, and at the partition walls built of old boards, some covered
+with ancient paint and some merely weatherbeaten, the salvage of a
+house-wrecker; and he smiled broadly. “So these are your offices, are
+they?” he asked. “You expect to do quite a business here, I guess, don't
+you, Virgil?”
+
+Adams turned upon him a stricken and tortured face. “Have you seen
+Charley Lohr since last night, Mr. Lamb?”
+
+“No; I haven't seen Charley.”
+
+“Well, I told him to tell you,” Adams began;--“I told him I'd pay
+you----”
+
+“Pay me what you expect to make out o' glue, you mean, Virgil?”
+
+“No,” Adams said, swallowing. “I mean what my boy owes you. That's what
+I told Charley to tell you. I told him to tell you I'd pay you every
+last----”
+
+“Well, well!” the old gentleman interrupted, testily. “I don't know
+anything about that.”
+
+“I'm expecting to pay you,” Adams went on, swallowing again, painfully.
+“I was expecting to do it out of a loan I thought I could get on my
+glue-works.”
+
+The old gentleman lifted his frosted eyebrows. “Oh, out o' the
+GLUE-works? You expected to raise money on the glue-works, did you?”
+
+At that, Adams's agitation increased prodigiously. “How'd you THINK I
+expected to pay you?” he said. “Did you think I expected to get money on
+my own old bones?” He slapped himself harshly upon the chest and legs.
+“Do you think a bank'll lend money on a man's ribs and his broken-down
+old knee-bones? They won't do it! You got to have some BUSINESS
+prospects to show 'em, if you haven't got any property nor securities;
+and what business prospects have I got now, with that sign of yours up
+over yonder? Why, you don't need to make an OUNCE o' glue; your sign's
+fixed ME without your doing another lick! THAT'S all you had to do; just
+put your sign up! You needn't to----”
+
+“Just let me tell you something, Virgil Adams,” the old man interrupted,
+harshly. “I got just one right important thing to tell you before we
+talk any further business; and that's this: there's some few men in this
+town made their money in off-colour ways, but there aren't many; and
+those there are have had to be a darn sight slicker than you know how to
+be, or ever WILL know how to be! Yes, sir, and they none of them had the
+little gumption to try to make it out of a man that had the spirit not
+to let 'em, and the STRENGTH not to let 'em! I know what you thought.
+'Here,' you said to yourself, 'here's this ole fool J. A. Lamb; he's
+kind of worn out and in his second childhood like; I can put it over on
+him, without his ever----'”
+
+“I did not!” Adams shouted. “A great deal YOU know about my feelings
+and all what I said to myself! There's one thing I want to tell YOU,
+and that's what I'm saying to myself NOW, and what my feelings are this
+MINUTE!”
+
+He struck the table a great blow with his thin fist, and shook the
+damaged knuckles in the air. “I just want to tell you, whatever I did
+feel, I don't feel MEAN any more; not to-day, I don't. There's a meaner
+man in this world than _I_ am, Mr. Lamb!”
+
+“Oh, so you feel better about yourself to-day, do you, Virgil?”
+
+“You bet I do! You worked till you got me where you want me; and
+I wouldn't do that to another man, no matter what he did to me! I
+wouldn't----”
+
+“What you talkin' about! How've I 'got you where I want you?'”
+
+“Ain't it plain enough?” Adams cried. “You even got me where I can't
+raise the money to pay back what my boy owes you! Do you suppose
+anybody's fool enough to let me have a cent on this business after one
+look at what you got over there across the road?”
+
+“No, I don't.”
+
+“No, you don't,” Adams echoed, hoarsely. “What's more, you knew my house
+was mortgaged, and my----”
+
+“I did not,” Lamb interrupted, angrily. “What do _I_ care about your
+house?”
+
+“What's the use your talking like that?” Adams cried. “You got me where
+I can't even raise the money to pay what my boy owes the company, so't
+I can't show any reason to stop the prosecution and keep him out the
+penitentiary. That's where you worked till you got ME!”
+
+“What!” Lamb shouted. “You accuse me of----”
+
+“'Accuse you?' What am I telling you? Do you think I got no EYES?” And
+Adams hammered the table again. “Why, you knew the boy was weak----”
+
+“I did not!”
+
+“Listen: you kept him there after you got mad at my leaving the way
+I did. You kept him there after you suspected him; and you had him
+watched; you let him go on; just waited to catch him and ruin him!”
+
+“You're crazy!” the old man bellowed. “I didn't know there was anything
+against the boy till last night. You're CRAZY, I say!”
+
+Adams looked it. With his hair disordered over his haggard forehead and
+bloodshot eyes; with his bruised hands pounding the table and flying in
+a hundred wild and absurd gestures, while his feet shuffled constantly
+to preserve his balance upon staggering legs, he was the picture of a
+man with a mind gone to rags.
+
+“Maybe I AM crazy!” he cried, his voice breaking and quavering. “Maybe
+I am, but I wouldn't stand there and taunt a man with it if I'd done to
+him what you've done to me! Just look at me: I worked all my life for
+you, and what I did when I quit never harmed you--it didn't make two
+cents' worth o' difference in your life and it looked like it'd mean all
+the difference in the world to my family--and now look what you've DONE
+to me for it! I tell you, Mr. Lamb, there never was a man looked up to
+another man the way I looked up to you the whole o' my life, but I don't
+look up to you any more! You think you got a fine day of it now, riding
+up in your automobile to look at that sign--and then over here at my
+poor little works that you've ruined. But listen to me just this
+one last time!” The cracking voice broke into falsetto, and the
+gesticulating hands fluttered uncontrollably. “Just you listen!” he
+panted. “You think I did you a bad turn, and now you got me ruined for
+it, and you got my works ruined, and my family ruined; and if anybody'd
+'a' told me this time last year I'd ever say such a thing to you I'd
+called him a dang liar, but I DO say it: I say you've acted toward me
+like--like a--a doggone mean--man!”
+
+His voice, exhausted, like his body, was just able to do him this final
+service; then he sank, crumpled, into the chair by the table, his chin
+down hard upon his chest.
+
+“I tell you, you're crazy!” Lamb said again. “I never in the world----”
+ But he checked himself, staring in sudden perplexity at his accuser.
+“Look here!” he said. “What's the matter of you? Have you got another of
+those----?” He put his hand upon Adams's shoulder, which jerked feebly
+under the touch.
+
+The old man went to the door and called to the foreman.
+
+“Here!” he said. “Run and tell my chauffeur to bring my car over here.
+Tell him to drive right up over the sidewalk and across the lot. Tell
+him to hurry!”
+
+So, it happened, the great J. A. Lamb a second time brought his former
+clerk home, stricken and almost inanimate.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+About five o'clock that afternoon, the old gentleman came back to
+Adams's house; and when Alice opened the door, he nodded, walked
+into the “living-room” without speaking; then stood frowning as if he
+hesitated to decide some perplexing question.
+
+“Well, how is he now?” he asked, finally.
+
+“The doctor was here again a little while ago; he thinks papa's coming
+through it. He's pretty sure he will.”
+
+“Something like the way it was last spring?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Not a bit of sense to it!” Lamb said, gruffly. “When he was getting
+well the other time the doctor told me it wasn't a regular stroke, so to
+speak--this 'cerebral effusion' thing. Said there wasn't any particular
+reason for your father to expect he'd ever have another attack, if he'd
+take a little care of himself. Said he could consider himself well as
+anybody else long as he did that.”
+
+“Yes. But he didn't do it!”
+
+Lamb nodded, sighed aloud, and crossed the room to a chair. “I
+guess not,” he said, as he sat down. “Bustin' his health up over his
+glue-works, I expect.”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I guess so; I guess so.” Then he looked up at her with a glimmer of
+anxiety in his eyes. “Has he came to yet?”
+
+“Yes. He's talked a little. His mind's clear; he spoke to mama and me
+and to Miss Perry.” Alice laughed sadly. “We were lucky enough to get
+her back, but papa didn't seem to think it was lucky. When he recognized
+her he said, 'Oh, my goodness, 'tisn't YOU, is it!'”
+
+“Well, that's a good sign, if he's getting a little cross. Did he--did
+he happen to say anything--for instance, about me?”
+
+This question, awkwardly delivered, had the effect of removing the
+girl's pallor; rosy tints came quickly upon her cheeks. “He--yes, he
+did,” she said. “Naturally, he's troubled about--about----” She stopped.
+
+“About your brother, maybe?”
+
+“Yes, about making up the----”
+
+“Here, now,” Lamb said, uncomfortably, as she stopped again. “Listen,
+young lady; let's don't talk about that just yet. I want to ask you: you
+understand all about this glue business, I expect, don't you?”
+
+“I'm not sure. I only know----”
+
+“Let me tell you,” he interrupted, impatiently. “I'll tell you all about
+it in two words. The process belonged to me, and your father up and
+walked off with it; there's no getting around THAT much, anyhow.”
+
+“Isn't there?” Alice stared at him. “I think you're mistaken, Mr. Lamb.
+Didn't papa improve it so that it virtually belonged to him?”
+
+There was a spark in the old blue eyes at this. “What?” he cried. “Is
+that the way he got around it? Why, in all my life I never heard of such
+a----” But he left the sentence unfinished; the testiness went out of
+his husky voice and the anger out of his eyes. “Well, I expect maybe
+that was the way of it,” he said. “Anyhow, it's right for you to stand
+up for your father; and if you think he had a right to it----”
+
+“But he did!” she cried.
+
+“I expect so,” the old man returned, pacifically. “I expect so,
+probably. Anyhow, it's a question that's neither here nor there, right
+now. What I was thinking of saying--well, did your father happen to let
+out that he and I had words this morning?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Well, we did.” He sighed and shook his head. “Your father--well, he
+used some pretty hard expressions toward me, young lady. They weren't
+SO, I'm glad to say, but he used 'em to me, and the worst of it was he
+believed 'em. Well, I been thinking it over, and I thought I'd just have
+a kind of little talk with you to set matters straight, so to speak.”
+
+“Yes, Mr. Lamb.”
+
+“For instance,” he said, “it's like this. Now, I hope you won't think I
+mean any indelicacy, but you take your brother's case, since we got to
+mention it, why, your father had the whole thing worked out in his mind
+about as wrong as anybody ever got anything. If I'd acted the way your
+father thought I did about that, why, somebody just ought to take me out
+and shoot me! Do YOU know what that man thought?”
+
+“I'm not sure.”
+
+He frowned at her, and asked, “Well, what do you think about it?”
+
+“I don't know,” she said. “I don't believe I think anything at all about
+anything to-day.”
+
+“Well, well,” he returned; “I expect not; I expect not. You kind of look
+to me as if you ought to be in bed yourself, young lady.”
+
+“Oh, no.”
+
+“I guess you mean 'Oh, yes'; and I won't keep you long, but there's
+something we got to get fixed up, and I'd rather talk to you than I
+would to your mother, because you're a smart girl and always friendly;
+and I want to be sure I'm understood. Now, listen.”
+
+“I will,” Alice promised, smiling faintly.
+
+“I never even hardly noticed your brother was still working for me,” he
+explained, earnestly. “I never thought anything about it. My sons sort
+of tried to tease me about the way your father--about his taking up this
+glue business, so to speak--and one day Albert, Junior, asked me if I
+felt all right about your brother's staying there after that, and I told
+him--well, I just asked him to shut up. If the boy wanted to stay there,
+I didn't consider it my business to send him away on account of
+any feeling I had toward his father; not as long as he did his work
+right--and the report showed he did. Well, as it happens, it looks now
+as if he stayed because he HAD to; he couldn't quit because he'd 'a'
+been found out if he did. Well, he'd been covering up his shortage for a
+considerable time--and do you know what your father practically charged
+me with about that?”
+
+“No, Mr. Lamb.”
+
+In his resentment, the old gentleman's ruddy face became ruddier and his
+husky voice huskier. “Thinks I kept the boy there because I suspected
+him! Thinks I did it to get even with HIM! Do I look to YOU like a man
+that'd do such a thing?”
+
+“No,” she said, gently. “I don't think you would.”
+
+“No!” he exclaimed. “Nor HE wouldn't think so if he was himself; he's
+known me too long. But he must been sort of brooding over this whole
+business--I mean before Walter's trouble he must been taking it to heart
+pretty hard for some time back. He thought I didn't think much of
+him any more--and I expect he maybe wondered some what I was going
+to DO--and there's nothing worse'n that state of mind to make a man
+suspicious of all kinds of meanness. Well, he practically stood up there
+and accused me to my face of fixing things so't he couldn't ever raise
+the money to settle for Walter and ask us not to prosecute. That's the
+state of mind your father's brooding got him into, young lady--charging
+me with a trick like that!”
+
+“I'm sorry,” she said. “I know you'd never----”
+
+The old man slapped his sturdy knee, angrily. “Why, that dang fool of a
+Virgil Adams!” he exclaimed. “He wouldn't even give me a chance to talk;
+and he got me so mad I couldn't hardly talk, anyway! He might 'a' known
+from the first I wasn't going to let him walk in and beat me out of my
+own--that is, he might 'a' known I wouldn't let him get ahead of me in
+a business matter--not with my boys twitting me about it every few
+minutes! But to talk to me the way he did this morning--well, he was out
+of his head; that's all! Now, wait just a minute,” he interposed, as she
+seemed about to speak. “In the first place, we aren't going to push this
+case against your brother. I believe in the law, all right, and
+business men got to protect themselves; but in a case like this, where
+restitution's made by the family, why, I expect it's just as well
+sometimes to use a little influence and let matters drop. Of course your
+brother'll have to keep out o' this state; that's all.”
+
+“But--you said----” she faltered.
+
+“Yes. What'd I say?”
+
+“You said, 'where restitution's made by the family.' That's what seemed
+to trouble papa so terribly, because--because restitution couldn't----”
+
+“Why, yes, it could. That's what I'm here to talk to you about.”
+
+“I don't see----”
+
+“I'm going to TELL you, ain't I?” he said, gruffly. “Just hold your
+horses a minute, please.” He coughed, rose from his chair, walked up and
+down the room, then halted before her. “It's like this,” he said. “After
+I brought your father home, this morning, there was one of the things he
+told me, when he was going for me, over yonder--it kind of stuck in
+my craw. It was something about all this glue controversy not meaning
+anything to me in particular, and meaning a whole heap to him and his
+family. Well, he was wrong about that two ways. The first one was,
+it did mean a good deal to me to have him go back on me after so many
+years. I don't need to say any more about it, except just to tell you it
+meant quite a little more to me than you'd think, maybe. The other way
+he was wrong is, that how much a thing means to one man and how little
+it means to another ain't the right way to look at a business matter.”
+
+“I suppose it isn't, Mr. Lamb.”
+
+“No,” he said. “It isn't. It's not the right way to look at anything.
+Yes, and your father knows it as well as I do, when he's in his right
+mind; and I expect that's one of the reasons he got so mad at me--but
+anyhow, I couldn't help thinking about how much all this thing HAD maybe
+meant to him;--as I say, it kind of stuck in my craw. I want you to tell
+him something from me, and I want you to go and tell him right off, if
+he's able and willing to listen. You tell him I got kind of a notion
+he was pushed into this thing by circumstances, and tell him I've lived
+long enough to know that circumstances can beat the best of us--you tell
+him I said 'the BEST of us.' Tell him I haven't got a bit of feeling
+against him--not any more--and tell him I came here to ask him not to
+have any against me.”
+
+“Yes, Mr. Lamb.”
+
+“Tell him I said----” The old man paused abruptly and Alice was
+surprised, in a dull and tired way, when she saw that his lips had begun
+to twitch and his eyelids to blink; but he recovered himself almost
+at once, and continued: “I want him to remember, 'Forgive us our
+transgressions, as we forgive those that transgress against us'; and if
+he and I been transgressing against each other, why, tell him I think
+it's time we QUIT such foolishness!”
+
+He coughed again, smiled heartily upon her, and walked toward the door;
+then turned back to her with an exclamation: “Well, if I ain't an old
+fool!”
+
+“What is it?” she asked.
+
+“Why, I forgot what we were just talking about! Your father wants to
+settle for Walter's deficit. Tell him we'll be glad to accept it; but
+of course we don't expect him to clean the matter up until he's able to
+talk business again.”
+
+Alice stared at him blankly enough for him to perceive that further
+explanations were necessary. “It's like this,” he said. “You see, if
+your father decided to keep his works going over yonder, I don't say but
+he might give us some little competition for a time, 'specially as he's
+got the start on us and about ready for the market. Then I was figuring
+we could use his plant--it's small, but it'd be to our benefit to have
+the use of it--and he's got a lease on that big lot; it may come in
+handy for us if we want to expand some. Well, I'd prefer to make a deal
+with him as quietly as possible---no good in every Tom, Dick and Harry
+hearing about things like this--but I figured he could sell out to me
+for a little something more'n enough to cover the mortgage he put on
+this house, and Walter's deficit, too--THAT don't amount to much
+in dollars and cents. The way I figure it, I could offer him about
+ninety-three hundred dollars as a total--or say ninety-three hundred and
+fifty--and if he feels like accepting, why, I'll send a confidential man
+up here with the papers soon's your father's able to look 'em over. You
+tell him, will you, and ask him if he sees his way to accepting that
+figure?”
+
+“Yes,” Alice said; and now her own lips twitched, while her eyes filled
+so that she saw but a blurred image of the old man, who held out his
+hand in parting. “I'll tell him. Thank you.”
+
+He shook her hand hastily. “Well, let's just keep it kind of quiet,”
+ he said, at the door. “No good in every Tom, Dick and Harry knowing all
+what goes on in town! You telephone me when your papa's ready to go over
+the papers--and call me up at my house to-night, will you? Let me hear
+how he's feeling?”
+
+“I will,” she said, and through her grateful tears gave him a smile
+almost radiant. “He'll be better, Mr. Lamb. We all will.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+One morning, that autumn, Mrs. Adams came into Alice's room, and found
+her completing a sober toilet for the street; moreover, the expression
+revealed in her mirror was harmonious with the business-like severity
+of her attire. “What makes you look so cross, dearie?” the mother asked.
+“Couldn't you find anything nicer to wear than that plain old dark
+dress?”
+
+“I don't believe I'm cross,” the girl said, absently. “I believe I'm
+just thinking. Isn't it about time?”
+
+“Time for what?”
+
+“Time for thinking--for me, I mean?”
+
+Disregarding this, Mrs. Adams looked her over thoughtfully. “I can't see
+why you don't wear more colour,” she said. “At your age it's becoming
+and proper, too. Anyhow, when you're going on the street, I think you
+ought to look just as gay and lively as you can manage. You want to show
+'em you've got some spunk!”
+
+“How do you mean, mama?”
+
+“I mean about Walter's running away and the mess your father made of his
+business. It would help to show 'em you're holding up your head just the
+same.”
+
+“Show whom!”
+
+“All these other girls that----”
+
+“Not I!” Alice laughed shortly, shaking her head. “I've quit dressing at
+them, and if they saw me they wouldn't think what you want 'em to. It's
+funny; but we don't often make people think what we want 'em to, mama.
+You do thus and so; and you tell yourself, 'Now, seeing me do thus and
+so, people will naturally think this and that'; but they don't. They
+think something else--usually just what you DON'T want 'em to. I suppose
+about the only good in pretending is the fun we get out of fooling
+ourselves that we fool somebody.”
+
+“Well, but it wouldn't be pretending. You ought to let people see you're
+still holding your head up because you ARE. You wouldn't want that
+Mildred Palmer to think you're cast down about--well, you know you
+wouldn't want HER not to think you're holding your head up, would you?”
+
+“She wouldn't know whether I am or not, mama.” Alice bit her lip, then
+smiled faintly as she said:
+
+“Anyhow, I'm not thinking about my head in that way--not this morning,
+I'm not.”
+
+Mrs. Adams dropped the subject casually. “Are you going down-town?” she
+inquired.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“What for?”
+
+“Just something I want to see about. I'll tell you when I come back.
+Anything you want me to do?”
+
+“No; I guess not to-day. I thought you might look for a rug, but I'd
+rather go with you to select it. We'll have to get a new rug for your
+father's room, I expect.”
+
+“I'm glad you think so, mama. I don't suppose he's ever even noticed it,
+but that old rug of his--well, really!”
+
+“I didn't mean for him,” her mother explained, thoughtfully. “No; he
+don't mind it, and he'd likely make a fuss if we changed it on his
+account. No; what I meant--we'll have to put your father in Walter's
+room. He won't mind, I don't expect--not much.”
+
+“No, I suppose not,” Alice agreed, rather sadly. “I heard the bell
+awhile ago. Was it somebody about that?”
+
+“Yes; just before I came upstairs. Mrs. Lohr gave him a note to me, and
+he was really a very pleasant-looking young man. A VERY pleasant-looking
+young man,” Mrs. Adams repeated with increased animation and a
+thoughtful glance at her daughter. “He's a Mr. Will Dickson; he has a
+first-rate position with the gas works, Mrs. Lohr says, and he's fully
+able to afford a nice room. So if you and I double up in here, then
+with that young married couple in my room, and this Mr. Dickson in your
+father's, we'll just about have things settled. I thought maybe I could
+make one more place at table, too, so that with the other people from
+outside we'd be serving eleven altogether. You see if I have to pay this
+cook twelve dollars a week--it can't be helped, I guess--well, one more
+would certainly help toward a profit. Of course it's a terribly worrying
+thing to see how we WILL come out. Don't you suppose we could squeeze in
+one more?”
+
+“I suppose it COULD be managed; yes.”
+
+Mrs. Adams brightened. “I'm sure it'll be pleasant having that young
+married couple in the house and especially this Mr. Will Dickson. He
+seemed very much of a gentleman, and anxious to get settled in good
+surroundings. I was very favourably impressed with him in every way; and
+he explained to me about his name; it seems it isn't William, it's just
+'Will'; his parents had him christened that way. It's curious.” She
+paused, and then, with an effort to seem casual, which veiled nothing
+from her daughter: “It's QUITE curious,” she said again. “But it's
+rather attractive and different, don't you think?”
+
+“Poor mama!” Alice laughed compassionately. “Poor mama!”
+
+“He is, though,” Mrs. Adams maintained. “He's very much of a gentleman,
+unless I'm no judge of appearances; and it'll really be nice to have him
+in the house.”
+
+“No doubt,” Alice said, as she opened her door to depart. “I don't
+suppose we'll mind having any of 'em as much as we thought we would.
+Good-bye.”
+
+But her mother detained her, catching her by the arm. “Alice, you do
+hate it, don't you!”
+
+“No,” the girl said, quickly. “There wasn't anything else to do.”
+
+Mrs. Adams became emotional at once: her face cried tragedy, and her
+voice misfortune. “There MIGHT have been something else to do! Oh,
+Alice, you gave your father bad advice when you upheld him in taking a
+miserable little ninety-three hundred and fifty from that old wretch! If
+your father'd just had the gumption to hold out, they'd have had to pay
+him anything he asked. If he'd just had the gumption and a little manly
+COURAGE----”
+
+“Hush!” Alice whispered, for her mother's voice grew louder. “Hush!
+He'll hear you, mama.”
+
+“Could he hear me too often?” the embittered lady asked. “If he'd
+listened to me at the right time, would we have to be taking in boarders
+and sinking DOWN in the scale at the end of our lives, instead of going
+UP? You were both wrong; we didn't need to be so panicky--that was just
+what that old man wanted: to scare us and buy us out for nothing! If
+your father'd just listened to me then, or if for once in his life he'd
+just been half a MAN----”
+
+Alice put her hand over her mother's mouth. “You mustn't! He WILL hear
+you!”
+
+But from the other side of Adams's closed door his voice came
+querulously. “Oh, I HEAR her, all right!”
+
+“You see, mama?” Alice said, and, as Mrs. Adams turned away, weeping,
+the daughter sighed; then went in to speak to her father.
+
+He was in his old chair by the table, with a pillow behind his head,
+but the crocheted scarf and Mrs. Adams's wrapper swathed him no more;
+he wore a dressing-gown his wife had bought for him, and was smoking his
+pipe. “The old story, is it?” he said, as Alice came in. “The same, same
+old story! Well, well! Has she gone?”
+
+“Yes, papa.”
+
+“Got your hat on,” he said. “Where you going?”
+
+“I'm going down-town on an errand of my own. Is there anything you want,
+papa?”
+
+“Yes, there is.” He smiled at her. “I wish you'd sit down a while and
+talk to me unless your errand----”
+
+“No,” she said, taking a chair near him. “I was just going down to see
+about some arrangements I was making for myself. There's no hurry.”
+
+“What arrangements for yourself, dearie?”
+
+“I'll tell you afterwards--after I find out something about 'em myself.”
+
+“All right,” he said, indulgently. “Keep your secrets; keep your
+secrets.” He paused, drew musingly upon his pipe, and shook his head.
+“Funny--the way your mother looks at things! For the matter o' that,
+everything's pretty funny, I expect, if you stop to think about it. For
+instance, let her say all she likes, but we were pushed right spang to
+the wall, if J. A. Lamb hadn't taken it into his head to make that
+offer for the works; and there's one of the things I been thinking about
+lately, Alice: thinking about how funny they work out.”
+
+“What did you think about it, papa!”
+
+“Well, I've seen it happen in other people's lives, time and time again;
+and now it's happened in ours. You think you're going to be pushed right
+up against the wall; you can't see any way out, or any hope at all; you
+think you're GONE--and then something you never counted on turns up;
+and, while maybe you never do get back to where you used to be, yet
+somehow you kind of squirm out of being right SPANG against the wall.
+You keep on going--maybe you can't go much, but you do go a little. See
+what I mean?”
+
+“Yes. I understand, dear.”
+
+“Yes, I'm afraid you do,” he said. “Too bad! You oughtn't to understand
+it at your age. It seems to me a good deal as if the Lord really meant
+for the young people to have the good times, and for the old to have
+the troubles; and when anybody as young as you has trouble there's a big
+mistake somewhere.”
+
+“Oh, no!” she protested.
+
+But he persisted whimsically in this view of divine error: “Yes, it
+does look a good deal that way. But of course we can't tell; we're never
+certain about anything--not about anything at all. Sometimes I look at
+it another way, though. Sometimes it looks to me as if a body's troubles
+came on him mainly because he hadn't had sense enough to know how not to
+have any--as if his troubles were kind of like a boy's getting kept in
+after school by the teacher, to give him discipline, or something or
+other. But, my, my! We don't learn easy!” He chuckled mournfully. “Not
+to learn how to live till we're about ready to die, it certainly seems
+to me dang tough!”
+
+“Then I wouldn't brood on such a notion, papa,” she said.
+
+“'Brood?' No!” he returned. “I just kind o' mull it over.” He chuckled
+again, sighed, and then, not looking at her, he said, “That Mr.
+Russell--your mother tells me he hasn't been here again--not since----”
+
+“No,” she said, quietly, as Adams paused. “He never came again.”
+
+“Well, but maybe----”
+
+“No,” she said. “There isn't any 'maybe.' I told him good-bye that
+night, papa. It was before he knew about Walter--I told you.”
+
+“Well, well,” Adams said. “Young people are entitled to their own
+privacy; I don't want to pry.” He emptied his pipe into a chipped saucer
+on the table beside him, laid the pipe aside, and reverted to a former
+topic. “Speaking of dying----”
+
+“Well, but we weren't!” Alice protested.
+
+“Yes, about not knowing how to live till you're through living--and THEN
+maybe not!” he said, chuckling at his own determined pessimism. “I see
+I'm pretty old because I talk this way--I remember my grandmother saying
+things a good deal like all what I'm saying now; I used to hear her
+at it when I was a young fellow--she was a right gloomy old lady, I
+remember. Well, anyhow, it reminds me: I want to get on my feet again as
+soon as I can; I got to look around and find something to go into.”
+
+Alice shook her head gently. “But, papa, he told you----”
+
+“Never mind throwing that dang doctor up at me!” Adams interrupted,
+peevishly. “He said I'd be good for SOME kind of light job--if I could
+find just the right thing. 'Where there wouldn't be either any physical
+or mental strain,' he said. Well, I got to find something like that.
+Anyway, I'll feel better if I can just get out LOOKING for it.”
+
+“But, papa, I'm afraid you won't find it, and you'll be disappointed.”
+
+“Well, I want to hunt around and SEE, anyhow.”
+
+Alice patted his hand. “You must just be contented, papa. Everything's
+going to be all right, and you mustn't get to worrying about doing
+anything. We own this house; it's all clear--and you've taken care of
+mama and me all our lives; now it's our turn.”
+
+“No, sir!” he said, querulously. “I don't like the idea of being the
+landlady's husband around a boarding-house; it goes against my gizzard.
+_I_ know: makes out the bills for his wife Sunday mornings--works with
+a screw-driver on somebody's bureau drawer sometimes--'tends the furnace
+maybe--one the boarders gives him a cigar now and then. That's a FINE
+life to look forward to! No, sir; I don't want to finish as a landlady's
+husband!”
+
+Alice looked grave; for she knew the sketch was but too accurately
+prophetic in every probability. “But, papa,” she said, to console him,
+“don't you think maybe there isn't such a thing as a 'finish,' after
+all! You say perhaps we don't learn to live till we die but maybe that's
+how it is AFTER we die, too--just learning some more, the way we do
+here, and maybe through trouble again, even after that.”
+
+“Oh, it might be,” he sighed. “I expect so.”
+
+“Well, then,” she said, “what's the use of talking about a 'finish?' We
+do keep looking ahead to things as if they'd finish something, but when
+we get TO them, they don't finish anything. They're just part of going
+on. I'll tell you--I looked ahead all summer to something I was afraid
+of, and I said to myself, 'Well, if that happens, I'm finished!' But it
+wasn't so, papa. It did happen, and nothing's finished; I'm going on,
+just the same only----” She stopped and blushed.
+
+“Only what?” he asked.
+
+“Well----” She blushed more deeply, then jumped up, and, standing before
+him, caught both his hands in hers. “Well, don't you think, since we do
+have to go on, we ought at least to have learned some sense about how to
+do it?”
+
+He looked up at her adoringly.
+
+“What _I_ think,” he said, and his voice trembled;--“I think you're
+the smartest girl in the world! I wouldn't trade you for the whole
+kit-and-boodle of 'em!”
+
+But as this folly of his threatened to make her tearful, she kissed him
+hastily, and went forth upon her errand.
+
+Since the night of the tragic-comic dinner she had not seen Russell, nor
+caught even the remotest chance glimpse of him; and it was curious that
+she should encounter him as she went upon such an errand as now engaged
+her. At a corner, not far from that tobacconist's shop she had just left
+when he overtook her and walked with her for the first time, she met him
+to-day. He turned the corner, coming toward her, and they were face to
+face; whereupon that engaging face of Russell's was instantly reddened,
+but Alice's remained serene.
+
+She stopped short, though; and so did he; then she smiled brightly as
+she put out her hand.
+
+“Why, Mr. Russell!”
+
+“I'm so--I'm so glad to have this--this chance,” he stammered. “I've
+wanted to tell you--it's just that going into a new undertaking--this
+business life--one doesn't get to do a great many things he'd like to. I
+hope you'll let me call again some time, if I can.”
+
+“Yes, do!” she said, cordially, and then, with a quick nod, went briskly
+on.
+
+She breathed more rapidly, but knew that he could not have detected it,
+and she took some pride in herself for the way she had met this little
+crisis. But to have met it with such easy courage meant to her something
+more reassuring than a momentary pride in the serenity she had shown.
+For she found that what she had resolved in her inmost heart was now
+really true: she was “through with all that!”
+
+She walked on, but more slowly, for the tobacconist's shop was not far
+from her now--and, beyond it, that portal of doom, Frincke's Business
+College. Already Alice could read the begrimed gilt letters of the
+sign; and although they had spelled destiny never with a more painful
+imminence than just then, an old habit of dramatizing herself still
+prevailed with her.
+
+There came into her mind a whimsical comparison of her fate with that
+of the heroine in a French romance she had read long ago and remembered
+well, for she had cried over it. The story ended with the heroine's
+taking the veil after a death blow to love; and the final scene again
+became vivid to Alice, for a moment. Again, as when she had read
+and wept, she seemed herself to stand among the great shadows in the
+cathedral nave; smelled the smoky incense on the enclosed air, and heard
+the solemn pulses of the organ. She remembered how the novice's father
+knelt, trembling, beside a pillar of gray stone; how the faithless lover
+watched and shivered behind the statue of a saint; how stifled sobs and
+outcries were heard when the novice came to the altar; and how a shaft
+of light struck through the rose-window, enveloping her in an amber
+glow.
+
+It was the vision of a moment only, and for no longer than a moment did
+Alice tell herself that the romance provided a prettier way of taking
+the veil than she had chosen, and that a faithless lover, shaking with
+remorse behind a saint's statue, was a greater solace than one left on a
+street corner protesting that he'd like to call some time--if he could!
+Her pity for herself vanished more reluctantly; but she shook it off and
+tried to smile at it, and at her romantic recollections--at all of them.
+She had something important to think of.
+
+She passed the tobacconist's, and before her was that dark entrance to
+the wooden stairway leading up to Frincke's Business College--the very
+doorway she had always looked upon as the end of youth and the end of
+hope.
+
+How often she had gone by here, hating the dreary obscurity of that
+stairway; how often she had thought of this obscurity as something lying
+in wait to obliterate the footsteps of any girl who should ascend into
+the smoky darkness above! Never had she passed without those ominous
+imaginings of hers: pretty girls turning into old maids “taking
+dictation”--old maids of a dozen different types, yet all looking a
+little like herself.
+
+Well, she was here at last! She looked up and down the street quickly,
+and then, with a little heave of the shoulders, she went bravely in,
+under the sign, and began to climb the wooden steps. Half-way up the
+shadows were heaviest, but after that the place began to seem brighter.
+There was an open window overhead somewhere, she found; and the steps at
+the top were gay with sunshine.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALICE ADAMS ***
+
+***** This file should be named 980-0.txt or 980-0.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/9/8/980/
+
+Produced by Charles Keller
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase “Project
+Gutenberg”), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. “Project Gutenberg” is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (“the Foundation”
+ or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase “Project Gutenberg” appears, or with which the phrase “Project
+Gutenberg” is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase “Project Gutenberg” associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+“Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, “Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.”
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+“Defects,” such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the “Right
+of Replacement or Refund” described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/980-0.zip b/980-0.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8a3ffc3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/980-0.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/980-h.zip b/980-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..45a50d3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/980-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/980-h/980-h.htm b/980-h/980-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..55bfdf1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/980-h/980-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,13152 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Alice Adams
+
+Author: Booth Tarkington
+
+Release Date: July 21, 2008 [EBook #980]
+Last Updated: March 3, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALICE ADAMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ ALICE ADAMS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Booth Tarkington
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The patient, an old-fashioned man, thought the nurse made a mistake in
+ keeping both of the windows open, and her sprightly disregard of his
+ protests added something to his hatred of her. Every evening he told her
+ that anybody with ordinary gumption ought to realize that night air was
+ bad for the human frame. &ldquo;The human frame won't stand everything, Miss
+ Perry,&rdquo; he warned her, resentfully. &ldquo;Even a child, if it had just ordinary
+ gumption, ought to know enough not to let the night air blow on sick
+ people yes, nor well people, either! 'Keep out of the night air, no matter
+ how well you feel.' That's what my mother used to tell me when I was a
+ boy. 'Keep out of the night air, Virgil,' she'd say. 'Keep out of the
+ night air.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I expect probably her mother told her the same thing,&rdquo; the nurse
+ suggested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course she did. My grandmother&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I guess your GRANDmother thought so, Mr. Adams! That was when all
+ this flat central country was swampish and hadn't been drained off yet. I
+ guess the truth must been the swamp mosquitoes bit people and gave 'em
+ malaria, especially before they began to put screens in their windows.
+ Well, we got screens in these windows, and no mosquitoes are goin' to bite
+ us; so just you be a good boy and rest your mind and go to sleep like you
+ need to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sleep?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Likely!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thought the night air worst of all in April; he hadn't a doubt it would
+ kill him, he declared. &ldquo;It's miraculous what the human frame WILL
+ survive,&rdquo; he admitted on the last evening of that month. &ldquo;But you and the
+ doctor ought to both be taught it won't stand too dang much! You poison a
+ man and poison and poison him with this April night air&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can't poison you with much more of it,&rdquo; Miss Perry interrupted him,
+ indulgently. &ldquo;To-morrow it'll be May night air, and I expect that'll be a
+ lot better for you, don't you? Now let's just sober down and be a good boy
+ and get some nice sound sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She gave him his medicine, and, having set the glass upon the center
+ table, returned to her cot, where, after a still interval, she snored
+ faintly. Upon this, his expression became that of a man goaded out of
+ overpowering weariness into irony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sleep? Oh, CERTAINLY, thank you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, he did sleep intermittently, drowsed between times, and even
+ dreamed; but, forgetting his dreams before he opened his eyes, and having
+ some part of him all the while aware of his discomfort, he believed, as
+ usual, that he lay awake the whole night long. He was conscious of the
+ city as of some single great creature resting fitfully in the dark outside
+ his windows. It lay all round about, in the damp cover of its night cloud
+ of smoke, and tried to keep quiet for a few hours after midnight, but was
+ too powerful a growing thing ever to lie altogether still. Even while it
+ strove to sleep it muttered with digestions of the day before, and these
+ already merged with rumblings of the morrow. &ldquo;Owl&rdquo; cars, bringing in last
+ passengers over distant trolley-lines, now and then howled on a curve;
+ faraway metallic stirrings could be heard from factories in the sooty
+ suburbs on the plain outside the city; east, west, and south,
+ switch-engines chugged and snorted on sidings; and everywhere in the air
+ there seemed to be a faint, voluminous hum as of innumerable wires
+ trembling overhead to vibration of machinery underground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his youth Adams might have been less resentful of sounds such as these
+ when they interfered with his night's sleep: even during an illness he
+ might have taken some pride in them as proof of his citizenship in a &ldquo;live
+ town&rdquo;; but at fifty-five he merely hated them because they kept him awake.
+ They &ldquo;pressed on his nerves,&rdquo; as he put it; and so did almost everything
+ else, for that matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He heard the milk-wagon drive into the cross-street beneath his windows
+ and stop at each house. The milkman carried his jars round to the &ldquo;back
+ porch,&rdquo; while the horse moved slowly ahead to the gate of the next
+ customer and waited there. &ldquo;He's gone into Pollocks',&rdquo; Adams thought,
+ following this progress. &ldquo;I hope it'll sour on 'em before breakfast.
+ Delivered the Andersons'. Now he's getting out ours. Listen to the darn
+ brute! What's HE care who wants to sleep!&rdquo; His complaint was of the horse,
+ who casually shifted weight with a clink of steel shoes on the worn brick
+ pavement of the street, and then heartily shook himself in his harness,
+ perhaps to dislodge a fly far ahead of its season. Light had just filmed
+ the windows; and with that the first sparrow woke, chirped instantly, and
+ roused neighbours in the trees of the small yard, including a loud-voiced
+ robin. Vociferations began irregularly, but were soon unanimous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sleep? Dang likely now, ain't it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Night sounds were becoming day sounds; the far-away hooting of
+ freight-engines seemed brisker than an hour ago in the dark. A cheerful
+ whistler passed the house, even more careless of sleepers than the
+ milkman's horse had been; then a group of coloured workmen came by, and
+ although it was impossible to be sure whether they were homeward bound
+ from night-work or on their way to day-work, at least it was certain that
+ they were jocose. Loose, aboriginal laughter preceded them afar, and beat
+ on the air long after they had gone by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick-room night-light, shielded from his eyes by a newspaper propped
+ against a water-pitcher, still showed a thin glimmering that had grown
+ offensive to Adams. In his wandering and enfeebled thoughts, which were
+ much more often imaginings than reasonings, the attempt of the night-light
+ to resist the dawn reminded him of something unpleasant, though he could
+ not discover just what the unpleasant thing was. Here was a puzzle that
+ irritated him the more because he could not solve it, yet always seemed
+ just on the point of a solution. However, he may have lost nothing
+ cheerful by remaining in the dark upon the matter; for if he had been a
+ little sharper in this introspection he might have concluded that the
+ squalor of the night-light, in its seeming effort to show against the
+ forerunning of the sun itself, had stimulated some half-buried perception
+ within him to sketch the painful little synopsis of an autobiography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of noises without, he drowsed again, not knowing that he did; and
+ when he opened his eyes the nurse was just rising from her cot. He took no
+ pleasure in the sight, it may be said. She exhibited to him a face
+ mismodelled by sleep, and set like a clay face left on its cheek in a hot
+ and dry studio. She was still only in part awake, however, and by the time
+ she had extinguished the night-light and given her patient his tonic, she
+ had recovered enough plasticity. &ldquo;Well, isn't that grand! We've had
+ another good night,&rdquo; she said as she departed to dress in the bathroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you had another!&rdquo; he retorted, though not until after she had closed
+ the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he heard his daughter moving about in her room across the narrow
+ hall, and so knew that she had risen. He hoped she would come in to see
+ him soon, for she was the one thing that didn't press on his nerves, he
+ felt; though the thought of her hurt him, as, indeed, every thought hurt
+ him. But it was his wife who came first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She wore a lank cotton wrapper, and a crescent of gray hair escaped to one
+ temple from beneath the handkerchief she had worn upon her head for the
+ night and still retained; but she did everything possible to make her
+ expression cheering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you're better again! I can see that, as soon as I look at you,&rdquo; she
+ said. &ldquo;Miss Perry tells me you've had another splendid night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made a sound of irony, which seemed to dispose unfavourably of Miss
+ Perry, and then, in order to be more certainly intelligible, he added,
+ &ldquo;She slept well, as usual!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his wife's smile persisted. &ldquo;It's a good sign to be cross; it means
+ you're practically convalescent right now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I am, am I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No doubt in the world!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;Why, you're practically a well
+ man, Virgil&mdash;all except getting your strength back, of course, and
+ that isn't going to take long. You'll be right on your feet in a couple of
+ weeks from now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I will?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course you will!&rdquo; She laughed briskly, and, going to the table in the
+ center of the room, moved his glass of medicine an inch or two, turned a
+ book over so that it lay upon its other side, and for a few moments
+ occupied herself with similar futilities, having taken on the air of a
+ person who makes things neat, though she produced no such actual effect
+ upon them. &ldquo;Of course you will,&rdquo; she repeated, absently. &ldquo;You'll be as
+ strong as you ever were; maybe stronger.&rdquo; She paused for a moment, not
+ looking at him, then added, cheerfully, &ldquo;So that you can fly around and
+ find something really good to get into.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something important between them came near the surface here, for though
+ she spoke with what seemed but a casual cheerfulness, there was a little
+ betraying break in her voice, a trembling just perceptible in the
+ utterance of the final word. And she still kept up the affectation of
+ being helpfully preoccupied with the table, and did not look at her
+ husband&mdash;perhaps because they had been married so many years that
+ without looking she knew just what his expression would be, and preferred
+ to avoid the actual sight of it as long as possible. Meanwhile, he stared
+ hard at her, his lips beginning to move with little distortions not
+ lacking in the pathos of a sick man's agitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So that's it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That's what you're hinting at.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Hinting?'&rdquo; Mrs. Adams looked surprised and indulgent. &ldquo;Why, I'm not
+ doing any hinting, Virgil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did you say about my finding 'something good to get into?'&rdquo; he
+ asked, sharply. &ldquo;Don't you call that hinting?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams turned toward him now; she came to the bedside and would have
+ taken his hand, but he quickly moved it away from her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mustn't let yourself get nervous,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But of course when you
+ get well there's only one thing to do. You mustn't go back to that old
+ hole again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Old hole?' That's what you call it, is it?&rdquo; In spite of his weakness,
+ anger made his voice strident, and upon this stimulation she spoke more
+ urgently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You just mustn't go back to it, Virgil. It's not fair to any of us, and
+ you know it isn't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't tell me what I know, please!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She clasped her hands, suddenly carrying her urgency to plaintive
+ entreaty. &ldquo;Virgil, you WON'T go back to that hole?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's a nice word to use to me!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Call a man's business a
+ hole!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Virgil, if you don't owe it to me to look for something different, don't
+ you owe it to your children? Don't tell me you won't do what we all want
+ you to, and what you know in your heart you ought to! And if you HAVE got
+ into one of your stubborn fits and are bound to go back there for no other
+ reason except to have your own way, don't tell me so, for I can't bear
+ it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked up at her fiercely. &ldquo;You've got a fine way to cure a sick man!&rdquo;
+ he said; but she had concluded her appeal&mdash;for that time&mdash;and
+ instead of making any more words in the matter, let him see that there
+ were tears in her eyes, shook her head, and left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alone, he lay breathing rapidly, his emaciated chest proving itself equal
+ to the demands his emotion put upon it. &ldquo;Fine!&rdquo; he repeated, with husky
+ indignation. &ldquo;Fine way to cure a sick man! Fine!&rdquo; Then, after a silence,
+ he gave forth whispering sounds as of laughter, his expression the while
+ remaining sore and far from humour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And give us our daily bread!&rdquo; he added, meaning that his wife's little
+ performance was no novelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In fact, the agitation of Mrs. Adams was genuine, but so well under her
+ control that its traces vanished during the three short steps she took to
+ cross the narrow hall between her husband's door and the one opposite. Her
+ expression was matter-of-course, rather than pathetic, as she entered the
+ pretty room where her daughter, half dressed, sat before a dressing-table
+ and played with the reflections of a three-leafed mirror framed in blue
+ enamel. That is, just before the moment of her mother's entrance, Alice
+ had been playing with the mirror's reflections&mdash;posturing her arms
+ and her expressions, clasping her hands behind her neck, and tilting back
+ her head to foreshorten the face in a tableau conceived to represent
+ sauciness, then one of smiling weariness, then one of scornful toleration,
+ and all very piquant; but as the door opened she hurriedly resumed the
+ practical, and occupied her hands in the arrangement of her plentiful
+ brownish hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were pretty hands, of a shapeliness delicate and fine. &ldquo;The best
+ things she's got!&rdquo; a cold-blooded girl friend said of them, and meant to
+ include Alice's mind and character in the implied list of possessions
+ surpassed by the notable hands. However that may have been, the rest of
+ her was well enough. She was often called &ldquo;a right pretty girl&rdquo;&mdash;temperate
+ praise meaning a girl rather pretty than otherwise, and this she deserved,
+ to say the least. Even in repose she deserved it, though repose was
+ anything but her habit, being seldom seen upon her except at home. On
+ exhibition she led a life of gestures, the unkind said to make her lovely
+ hands more memorable; but all of her usually accompanied the gestures of
+ the hands, the shoulders ever giving them their impulses first, and even
+ her feet being called upon, at the same time, for eloquence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much liveliness took proper place as only accessory to that of the
+ face, where her vivacity reached its climax; and it was unfortunate that
+ an ungifted young man, new in the town, should have attempted to define
+ the effect upon him of all this generosity of emphasis. He said that &ldquo;the
+ way she used her cute hazel eyes and the wonderful glow of her facial
+ expression gave her a mighty spiritual quality.&rdquo; His actual rendition of
+ the word was &ldquo;spirichul&rdquo;; but it was not his pronunciation that embalmed
+ this outburst in the perennial laughter of Alice's girl friends; they made
+ the misfortune far less his than hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her mother comforted her too heartily, insisting that Alice had &ldquo;plenty
+ enough spiritual qualities,&rdquo; certainly more than possessed by the other
+ girls who flung the phrase at her, wooden things, jealous of everything
+ they were incapable of themselves; and then Alice, getting more
+ championship than she sought, grew uneasy lest Mrs. Adams should repeat
+ such defenses &ldquo;outside the family&rdquo;; and Mrs. Adams ended by weeping
+ because the daughter so distrusted her intelligence. Alice frequently
+ thought it necessary to instruct her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her morning greeting was an instruction to-day; or, rather, it was an
+ admonition in the style of an entreaty, the more petulant as Alice thought
+ that Mrs. Adams might have had a glimpse of the posturings to the mirror.
+ This was a needless worry; the mother had caught a thousand such glimpses,
+ with Alice unaware, and she thought nothing of the one just flitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For heaven's sake, mama, come clear inside the room and shut the door!
+ PLEASE don't leave it open for everybody to look at me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There isn't anybody to see you,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams explained, obeying. &ldquo;Miss
+ Perry's gone downstairs, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama, I heard you in papa's room,&rdquo; Alice said, not dropping the note of
+ complaint. &ldquo;I could hear both of you, and I don't think you ought to get
+ poor old papa so upset&mdash;not in his present condition, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams seated herself on the edge of the bed. &ldquo;He's better all the
+ time,&rdquo; she said, not disturbed. &ldquo;He's almost well. The doctor says so and
+ Miss Perry says so; and if we don't get him into the right frame of mind
+ now we never will. The first day he's outdoors he'll go back to that old
+ hole&mdash;you'll see! And if he once does that, he'll settle down there
+ and it'll be too late and we'll never get him out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, anyhow, I think you could use a little more tact with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do try to,&rdquo; the mother sighed. &ldquo;It never was much use with him. I don't
+ think you understand him as well as I do, Alice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's one thing I don't understand about either of you,&rdquo; Alice
+ returned, crisply. &ldquo;Before people get married they can do anything they
+ want to with each other. Why can't they do the same thing after they're
+ married? When you and papa were young people and engaged, he'd have done
+ anything you wanted him to. That must have been because you knew how to
+ manage him then. Why can't you go at him the same way now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams sighed again, and laughed a little, making no other response;
+ but Alice persisted. &ldquo;Well, WHY can't you? Why can't you ask him to do
+ things the way you used to ask him when you were just in love with each
+ other? Why don't you anyhow try it, mama, instead of ding-donging at him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Ding-donging at him,' Alice?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, with a pathos somewhat
+ emphasized. &ldquo;Is that how my trying to do what I can for you strikes you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind that; it's nothing to hurt your feelings.&rdquo; Alice disposed of
+ the pathos briskly. &ldquo;Why don't you answer my question? What's the matter
+ with using a little more tact on papa? Why can't you treat him the way you
+ probably did when you were young people, before you were married? I never
+ have understood why people can't do that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps you WILL understand some day,&rdquo; her mother said, gently. &ldquo;Maybe
+ you will when you've been married twenty-five years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You keep evading. Why don't you answer my question right straight out?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are questions you can't answer to young people, Alice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean because we're too young to understand the answer? I don't see
+ that at all. At twenty-two a girl's supposed to have some intelligence,
+ isn't she? And intelligence is the ability to understand, isn't it? Why do
+ I have to wait till I've lived with a man twenty-five years to understand
+ why you can't be tactful with papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may understand some things before that,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said,
+ tremulously. &ldquo;You may understand how you hurt me sometimes. Youth can't
+ know everything by being intelligent, and by the time you could understand
+ the answer you're asking for you'd know it, and wouldn't need to ask. You
+ don't understand your father, Alice; you don't know what it takes to
+ change him when he's made up his mind to be stubborn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice rose and began to get herself into a skirt. &ldquo;Well, I don't think
+ making scenes ever changes anybody,&rdquo; she grumbled. &ldquo;I think a little jolly
+ persuasion goes twice as far, myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'A little jolly persuasion!'&rdquo; Her mother turned the echo of this phrase
+ into an ironic lament. &ldquo;Yes, there was a time when I thought that, too! It
+ didn't work; that's all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps you left the 'jolly' part of it out, mama.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the second time that morning&mdash;it was now a little after seven
+ o'clock&mdash;tears seemed about to offer their solace to Mrs. Adams. &ldquo;I
+ might have expected you to say that, Alice; you never do miss a chance,&rdquo;
+ she said, gently. &ldquo;It seems queer you don't some time miss just ONE
+ chance!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alice, progressing with her toilet, appeared to be little concerned.
+ &ldquo;Oh, well, I think there are better ways of managing a man than just
+ hammering at him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams uttered a little cry of pain. &ldquo;'Hammering,' Alice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you'd left it entirely to me,&rdquo; her daughter went on, briskly, &ldquo;I
+ believe papa'd already be willing to do anything we want him to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's it; tell me I spoil everything. Well, I won't interfere from now
+ on, you can be sure of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Please don't talk like that,&rdquo; Alice said, quickly. &ldquo;I'm old enough to
+ realize that papa may need pressure of all sorts; I only think it makes
+ him more obstinate to get him cross. You probably do understand him
+ better, but that's one thing I've found out and you haven't. There!&rdquo; She
+ gave her mother a friendly tap on the shoulder and went to the door. &ldquo;I'll
+ hop in and say hello to him now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she went, she continued the fastening of her blouse, and appeared in
+ her father's room with one hand still thus engaged, but she patted his
+ forehead with the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor old papa-daddy!&rdquo; she said, gaily. &ldquo;Every time he's better somebody
+ talks him into getting so mad he has a relapse. It's a shame!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her father's eyes, beneath their melancholy brows, looked up at her
+ wistfully. &ldquo;I suppose you heard your mother going for me,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I heard you going for her, too!&rdquo; Alice laughed. &ldquo;What was it all about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, the same danged old story!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean she wants you to try something new when you get well?&rdquo; Alice
+ asked, with cheerful innocence. &ldquo;So we could all have a lot more money?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this his sorrowful forehead was more sorrowful than ever. The deep
+ horizontal lines moved upward to a pattern of suffering so familiar to his
+ daughter that it meant nothing to her; but he spoke quietly. &ldquo;Yes; so we
+ wouldn't have any money at all, most likely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; she laughed, and, finishing with her blouse, patted his cheeks
+ with both hands. &ldquo;Just think how many grand openings there must be for a
+ man that knows as much as you do! I always did believe you could get rich
+ if you only cared to, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But upon his forehead the painful pattern still deepened. &ldquo;Don't you think
+ we've always had enough, the way things are, Alice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not the way things ARE!&rdquo; She patted his cheeks again; laughed again. &ldquo;It
+ used to be enough, maybe anyway we did skimp along on it&mdash;but the way
+ things are now I expect mama's really pretty practical in her ideas,
+ though, I think it's a shame for her to bother you about it while you're
+ so weak. Don't you worry about it, though; just think about other things
+ till you get strong.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;you know it isn't exactly the easiest thing in the
+ world for a man of my age to find these grand openings you speak of. And
+ when you've passed half-way from fifty to sixty you're apt to see some
+ risk in giving up what you know how to do and trying something new.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My, what a frown!&rdquo; she cried, blithely. &ldquo;Didn't I tell you to stop
+ thinking about it till you get ALL well?&rdquo; She bent over him, giving him a
+ gay little kiss on the bridge of his nose. &ldquo;There! I must run to
+ breakfast. Cheer up now! Au 'voir!&rdquo; And with her pretty hand she waved
+ further encouragement from the closing door as she departed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lightsomely descending the narrow stairway, she whistled as she went, her
+ fingers drumming time on the rail; and, still whistling, she came into the
+ dining-room, where her mother and her brother were already at the table.
+ The brother, a thin and sallow boy of twenty, greeted her without much
+ approval as she took her place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing seems to trouble you!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; nothing much,&rdquo; she made airy response. &ldquo;What's troubling yourself,
+ Walter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't let that worry you!&rdquo; he returned, seeming to consider this to be
+ repartee of an effective sort; for he furnished a short laugh to go with
+ it, and turned to his coffee with the manner of one who has satisfactorily
+ closed an episode.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter always seems to have so many secrets!&rdquo; Alice said, studying him
+ shrewdly, but with a friendly enough amusement in her scrutiny.
+ &ldquo;Everything he does or says seems to be acted for the benefit of some
+ mysterious audience inside himself, and he always gets its applause. Take
+ what he said just now: he seems to think it means something, but if it
+ does, why, that's just another secret between him and the secret audience
+ inside of him! We don't really know anything about Walter at all, do we,
+ mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter laughed again, in a manner that sustained her theory well enough;
+ then after finishing his coffee, he took from his pocket a flattened
+ packet in glazed blue paper; extracted with stained fingers a bent and
+ wrinkled little cigarette, lighted it, hitched up his belted trousers with
+ the air of a person who turns from trifles to things better worth his
+ attention, and left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice laughed as the door closed. &ldquo;He's ALL secrets,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Don't you
+ think you really ought to know more about him, mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sure he's a good boy,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams returned, thoughtfully. &ldquo;He's been
+ very brave about not being able to have the advantages that are enjoyed by
+ the boys he's grown up with. I've never heard a word of complaint from
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About his not being sent to college?&rdquo; Alice cried. &ldquo;I should think you
+ wouldn't! He didn't even have enough ambition to finish high school!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams sighed. &ldquo;It seemed to me Walter lost his ambition when nearly
+ all the boys he'd grown up with went to Eastern schools to prepare for
+ college, and we couldn't afford to send him. If only your father would
+ have listened&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice interrupted: &ldquo;What nonsense! Walter hated books and studying, and
+ athletics, too, for that matter. He doesn't care for anything nice that I
+ ever heard of. What do you suppose he does like, mama? He must like
+ something or other somewhere, but what do you suppose it is? What does he
+ do with his time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the poor boy's at Lamb and Company's all day. He doesn't get through
+ until five in the afternoon; he doesn't HAVE much time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we never have dinner until about seven, and he's always late for
+ dinner, and goes out, heaven knows where, right afterward!&rdquo; Alice shook
+ her head. &ldquo;He used to go with our friends' boys, but I don't think he does
+ now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how could he?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams protested. &ldquo;That isn't his fault, poor
+ child! The boys he knew when he was younger are nearly all away at
+ college.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but he doesn't see anything of 'em when they're here at holiday-time
+ or vacation. None of 'em come to the house any more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose he's made other friends. It's natural for him to want
+ companions, at his age.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Alice said, with disapproving emphasis. &ldquo;But who are they? I've got
+ an idea he plays pool at some rough place down-town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no; I'm sure he's a steady boy,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams protested, but her tone
+ was not that of thoroughgoing conviction, and she added, &ldquo;Life might be a
+ very different thing for him if only your father can be brought to see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, mama! It isn't me that has to be convinced, you know; and we
+ can do a lot more with papa if we just let him alone about it for a day or
+ two. Promise me you won't say any more to him until&mdash;well, until he's
+ able to come downstairs to table. Will you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams bit her lip, which had begun to tremble. &ldquo;I think you can trust
+ me to know a FEW things, Alice,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I'm a little older than you,
+ you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's a good girl!&rdquo; Alice jumped up, laughing. &ldquo;Don't forget it's the
+ same as a promise, and do just cheer him up a little. I'll say good-bye to
+ him before I go out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where are you going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I've got lots to do. I thought I'd run out to Mildred's to see what
+ she's going to wear to-night, and then I want to go down and buy a yard of
+ chiffon and some narrow ribbon to make new bows for my slippers&mdash;you'll
+ have to give me some money&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he'll give it to me!&rdquo; her mother lamented, as they went toward the
+ front stairs together; but an hour later she came into Alice's room with a
+ bill in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has some money in his bureau drawer,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He finally told me
+ where it was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were traces of emotion in her voice, and Alice, looking shrewdly at
+ her, saw moisture in her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You didn't do what you promised me you wouldn't, did
+ you&mdash;NOT before Miss Perry!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Perry's getting him some broth,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams returned, calmly.
+ &ldquo;Besides, you're mistaken in saying I promised you anything; I said I
+ thought you could trust me to know what is right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you did bring it up again!&rdquo; And Alice swung away from her, strode to
+ her father's door, flung it open, went to him, and put a light hand
+ soothingly over his unrelaxed forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor old papa!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It's a shame how everybody wants to trouble
+ him. He shan't be bothered any more at all! He doesn't need to have
+ everybody telling him how to get away from that old hole he's worked in so
+ long and begin to make us all nice and rich. HE knows how!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon she kissed him a consoling good-bye, and made another gay
+ departure, the charming hand again fluttering like a white butterfly in
+ the shadow of the closing door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams had remained in Alice's room, but her mood seemed to have
+ changed, during her daughter's little more than momentary absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did he SAY?&rdquo; she asked, quickly, and her tone was hopeful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Say?'&rdquo; Alice repeated, impatiently. &ldquo;Why, nothing. I didn't let him.
+ Really, mama, I think the best thing for you to do would be to just keep
+ out of his room, because I don't believe you can go in there and not talk
+ to him about it, and if you do talk we'll never get him to do the right
+ thing. Never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother's response was a grieving silence; she turned from her daughter
+ and walked to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, for goodness' sake!&rdquo; Alice cried. &ldquo;Don't go making tragedy out of my
+ offering you a little practical advice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams gulped, halting. &ldquo;I'm just&mdash;just going to dust
+ the downstairs, Alice.&rdquo; And with her face still averted, she went out into
+ the little hallway, closing the door behind her. A moment later she could
+ be heard descending the stairs, the sound of her footsteps carrying
+ somehow an effect of resignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice listened, sighed, and, breathing the words, &ldquo;Oh, murder!&rdquo; turned to
+ cheerier matters. She put on a little apple-green turban with a dim gold
+ band round it, and then, having shrouded the turban in a white veil, which
+ she kept pushed up above her forehead, she got herself into a tan coat of
+ soft cloth fashioned with rakish severity. After that, having studied
+ herself gravely in a long glass, she took from one of the drawers of her
+ dressing-table a black leather card-case cornered in silver filigree, but
+ found it empty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She opened another drawer wherein were two white pasteboard boxes of
+ cards, the one set showing simply &ldquo;Miss Adams,&rdquo; the other engraved in
+ Gothic characters, &ldquo;Miss Alys Tuttle Adams.&rdquo; The latter belonged to
+ Alice's &ldquo;Alys&rdquo; period&mdash;most girls go through it; and Alice must have
+ felt that she had graduated, for, after frowning thoughtfully at the
+ exhibit this morning, she took the box with its contents, and let the
+ white shower fall from her fingers into the waste-basket beside her small
+ desk. She replenished the card-case from the &ldquo;Miss Adams&rdquo; box; then,
+ having found a pair of fresh white gloves, she tucked an ivory-topped
+ Malacca walking-stick under her arm and set forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went down the stairs, buttoning her gloves and still wearing the frown
+ with which she had put &ldquo;Alys&rdquo; finally out of her life. She descended
+ slowly, and paused on the lowest step, looking about her with an
+ expression that needed but a slight deepening to betoken bitterness. Its
+ connection with her dropping &ldquo;Alys&rdquo; forever was slight, however.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The small frame house, about fifteen years old, was already inclining to
+ become a new Colonial relic. The Adamses had built it, moving into it from
+ the &ldquo;Queen Anne&rdquo; house they had rented until they took this step in
+ fashion. But fifteen years is a long time to stand still in the midland
+ country, even for a house, and this one was lightly made, though the
+ Adamses had not realized how flimsily until they had lived in it for some
+ time. &ldquo;Solid, compact, and convenient&rdquo; were the instructions to the
+ architect, and he had made it compact successfully. Alice, pausing at the
+ foot of the stairway, was at the same time fairly in the &ldquo;living-room,&rdquo;
+ for the only separation between the &ldquo;living room&rdquo; and the hall was a
+ demarcation suggested to willing imaginations by a pair of wooden columns
+ painted white. These columns, pine under the paint, were bruised and
+ chipped at the base; one of them showed a crack that threatened to become
+ a split; the &ldquo;hard-wood&rdquo; floor had become uneven; and in a corner the
+ walls apparently failed of solidity, where the wall-paper had declined to
+ accompany some staggerings of the plaster beneath it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The furniture was in great part an accumulation begun with the wedding
+ gifts; though some of it was older, two large patent rocking-chairs and a
+ footstool having belonged to Mrs. Adams's mother in the days of hard brown
+ plush and veneer. For decoration there were pictures and vases. Mrs. Adams
+ had always been fond of vases, she said, and every year her husband's
+ Christmas present to her was a vase of one sort or another&mdash;whatever
+ the clerk showed him, marked at about twelve or fourteen dollars. The
+ pictures were some of them etchings framed in gilt: Rheims, Canterbury,
+ schooners grouped against a wharf; and Alice could remember how, in her
+ childhood, her father sometimes pointed out the watery reflections in this
+ last as very fine. But it was a long time since he had shown interest in
+ such things&mdash;&ldquo;or in anything much,&rdquo; as she thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other pictures were two water-colours in baroque frames; one being the
+ Amalfi monk on a pergola wall, while the second was a yard-wide display of
+ iris blossoms, painted by Alice herself at fourteen, as a birthday gift to
+ her mother. Alice's glance paused upon it now with no great pride, but
+ showed more approval of an enormous photograph of the Colosseum. This she
+ thought of as &ldquo;the only good thing in the room&rdquo;; it possessed and bestowed
+ distinction, she felt; and she did not regret having won her struggle to
+ get it hung in its conspicuous place of honour over the mantelpiece.
+ Formerly that place had been held for years by a steel-engraving, an
+ accurate representation of the Suspension Bridge at Niagara Falls. It was
+ almost as large as its successor, the &ldquo;Colosseum,&rdquo; and it had been
+ presented to Mr. Adams by colleagues in his department at Lamb and
+ Company's. Adams had shown some feeling when Alice began to urge its
+ removal to obscurity in the &ldquo;upstairs hall&rdquo;; he even resisted for several
+ days after she had the &ldquo;Colosseum&rdquo; charged to him, framed in oak, and sent
+ to the house. She cheered him up, of course, when he gave way; and her
+ heart never misgave her that there might be a doubt which of the two
+ pictures was the more dismaying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over the pictures, the vases, the old brown plush rocking-chairs and the
+ stool, over the three gilt chairs, over the new chintz-covered easy chair
+ and the gray velure sofa&mdash;over everything everywhere, was the
+ familiar coating of smoke grime. It had worked into every fibre of the
+ lace curtains, dingying them to an unpleasant gray; it lay on the
+ window-sills and it dimmed the glass panes; it covered the walls, covered
+ the ceiling, and was smeared darker and thicker in all corners. Yet here
+ was no fault of housewifery; the curse could not be lifted, as the
+ ingrained smudges permanent on the once white woodwork proved. The grime
+ was perpetually renewed; scrubbing only ground it in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This particular ugliness was small part of Alice's discontent, for though
+ the coating grew a little deeper each year she was used to it. Moreover,
+ she knew that she was not likely to find anything better in a thousand
+ miles, so long as she kept to cities, and that none of her friends,
+ however opulent, had any advantage of her here. Indeed, throughout all the
+ great soft-coal country, people who consider themselves comparatively poor
+ may find this consolation: cleanliness has been added to the virtues and
+ beatitudes that money can not buy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice brightened a little as she went forward to the front door, and she
+ brightened more when the spring breeze met her there. Then all depression
+ left her as she walked down the short brick path to the sidewalk, looked
+ up and down the street, and saw how bravely the maple shade-trees, in
+ spite of the black powder they breathed, were flinging out their thousands
+ of young green particles overhead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned north, treading the new little shadows on the pavement briskly,
+ and, having finished buttoning her gloves, swung down her Malacca stick
+ from under her arm to let it tap a more leisurely accompaniment to her
+ quick, short step. She had to step quickly if she was to get anywhere; for
+ the closeness of her skirt, in spite of its little length, permitted no
+ natural stride; but she was pleased to be impeded, these brevities forming
+ part of her show of fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other pedestrians found them not without charm, though approval may have
+ been lacking here and there, and at the first crossing Alice suffered what
+ she might have accounted an actual injury, had she allowed herself to be
+ so sensitive. An elderly woman in fussy black silk stood there, waiting
+ for a streetcar; she was all of a globular modelling, with a face
+ patterned like a frost-bitten peach; and that the approaching gracefulness
+ was uncongenial she naively made too evident. Her round, wan eyes seemed
+ roused to bitter life as they rose from the curved high heels of the
+ buckled slippers to the tight little skirt, and thence with startled
+ ferocity to the Malacca cane, which plainly appeared to her as a
+ decoration not more astounding than it was insulting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perceiving that the girl was bowing to her, the globular lady hurriedly
+ made shift to alter her injurious expression. &ldquo;Good morning, Mrs.
+ Dowling,&rdquo; Alice said, gravely. Mrs. Dowling returned the salutation with a
+ smile as convincingly benevolent as the ghastly smile upon a Santa Claus
+ face; and then, while Alice passed on, exploded toward her a single
+ compacted breath through tightened lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sound was eloquently audible, though Mrs. Dowling remained unaware
+ that in this or any manner whatever she had shed a light upon her
+ thoughts; for it was her lifelong innocent conviction that other people
+ saw her only as she wished to be seen, and heard from her only what she
+ intended to be heard. At home it was always her husband who pulled down
+ the shades of their bedroom window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice looked serious for a few moments after the little encounter, then
+ found some consolation in the behaviour of a gentleman of forty or so who
+ was coming toward her. Like Mrs. Dowling, he had begun to show
+ consciousness of Alice's approach while she was yet afar off; but his
+ tokens were of a kind pleasanter to her. He was like Mrs. Dowling again,
+ however, in his conception that Alice would not realize the significance
+ of what he did. He passed his hand over his neck-scarf to see that it lay
+ neatly to his collar, smoothed a lapel of his coat, and adjusted his hat,
+ seeming to be preoccupied the while with problems that kept his eyes to
+ the pavement; then, as he came within a few feet of her, he looked up, as
+ in a surprised recognition almost dramatic, smiled winningly, lifted his
+ hat decisively, and carried it to the full arm's length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice's response was all he could have asked. The cane in her right hand
+ stopped short in its swing, while her left hand moved in a pretty gesture
+ as if an impulse carried it toward the heart; and she smiled, with her
+ under lip caught suddenly between her teeth. Months ago she had seen an
+ actress use this smile in a play, and it came perfectly to Alice now,
+ without conscious direction, it had been so well acquired; but the pretty
+ hand's little impulse toward the heart was an original bit all her own, on
+ the spur of the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentleman went on, passing from her forward vision as he replaced his
+ hat. Of himself he was nothing to Alice, except for the gracious
+ circumstance that he had shown strong consciousness of a pretty girl. He
+ was middle-aged, substantial, a family man, securely married; and Alice
+ had with him one of those long acquaintances that never become emphasized
+ by so much as five minutes of talk; yet for this inconsequent meeting she
+ had enacted a little part like a fragment in a pantomime of Spanish
+ wooing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not for him&mdash;not even to impress him, except as a messenger.
+ Alice was herself almost unaware of her thought, which was one of the
+ running thousands of her thoughts that took no deliberate form in words.
+ Nevertheless, she had it, and it was the impulse of all her pretty bits of
+ pantomime when she met other acquaintances who made their appreciation
+ visible, as this substantial gentleman did. In Alice's unworded thought,
+ he was to be thus encouraged as in some measure a champion to speak well
+ of her to the world; but more than this: he was to tell some magnificent
+ unknown bachelor how wonderful, how mysterious, she was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She hastened on gravely, a little stirred reciprocally with the supposed
+ stirrings in the breast of that shadowy ducal mate, who must be somewhere
+ &ldquo;waiting,&rdquo; or perhaps already seeking her; for she more often thought of
+ herself as &ldquo;waiting&rdquo; while he sought her; and sometimes this view of
+ things became so definite that it shaped into a murmur on her lips.
+ &ldquo;Waiting. Just waiting.&rdquo; And she might add, &ldquo;For him!&rdquo; Then, being
+ twenty-two, she was apt to conclude the mystic interview by laughing at
+ herself, though not without a continued wistfulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She came to a group of small coloured children playing waywardly in a
+ puddle at the mouth of a muddy alley; and at sight of her they gave over
+ their pastime in order to stare. She smiled brilliantly upon them, but
+ they were too struck with wonder to comprehend that the manifestation was
+ friendly; and as Alice picked her way in a little detour to keep from the
+ mud, she heard one of them say, &ldquo;Lady got cane! Jeez'!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She knew that many coloured children use impieties familiarly, and she was
+ not startled. She was disturbed, however, by an unfavourable hint in the
+ speaker's tone. He was six, probably, but the sting of a criticism is not
+ necessarily allayed by knowledge of its ignoble source, and Alice had
+ already begun to feel a slight uneasiness about her cane. Mrs. Dowling's
+ stare had been strikingly projected at it; other women more than merely
+ glanced, their brows and lips contracting impulsively; and Alice was aware
+ that one or two of them frankly halted as soon as she had passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had seen in several magazines pictures of ladies with canes, and on
+ that account she had bought this one, never questioning that fashion is
+ recognized, even in the provinces, as soon as beheld. On the contrary,
+ these staring women obviously failed to realize that what they were being
+ shown was not an eccentric outburst, but the bright harbinger of an
+ illustrious mode. Alice had applied a bit of artificial pigment to her
+ lips and cheeks before she set forth this morning; she did not need it,
+ having a ready colour of her own, which now mounted high with annoyance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a splendidly shining closed black automobile, with windows of
+ polished glass, came silently down the street toward her. Within it, as in
+ a luxurious little apartment, three comely ladies in mourning sat and
+ gossiped; but when they saw Alice they clutched one another. They
+ instantly recovered, bowing to her solemnly as they were borne by, yet
+ were not gone from her sight so swiftly but the edge of her side glance
+ caught a flash of teeth in mouths suddenly opened, and the dark glisten of
+ black gloves again clutching to share mirth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colour that outdid the rouge on Alice's cheek extended its area and
+ grew warmer as she realized how all too cordial had been her nod and smile
+ to these humorous ladies. But in their identity lay a significance causing
+ her a sharper smart, for they were of the family of that Lamb, chief of
+ Lamb and Company, who had employed her father since before she was born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And know his salary! They'd be SURE to find out about that!&rdquo; was her
+ thought, coupled with another bitter one to the effect that they had
+ probably made instantaneous financial estimates of what she wore though
+ certainly her walking-stick had most fed their hilarity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She tucked it under her arm, not swinging it again; and her breath became
+ quick and irregular as emotion beset her. She had been enjoying her walk,
+ but within the space of the few blocks she had gone since she met the
+ substantial gentleman, she found that more than the walk was spoiled:
+ suddenly her life seemed to be spoiled, too; though she did not view the
+ ruin with complaisance. These Lamb women thought her and her cane
+ ridiculous, did they? she said to herself. That was their parvenu blood:
+ to think because a girl's father worked for their grandfather she had no
+ right to be rather striking in style, especially when the striking WAS her
+ style. Probably all the other girls and women would agree with them and
+ would laugh at her when they got together, and, what might be fatal, would
+ try to make all the men think her a silly pretender. Men were just like
+ sheep, and nothing was easier than for women to set up as shepherds and
+ pen them in a fold. &ldquo;To keep out outsiders,&rdquo; Alice thought. &ldquo;And make 'em
+ believe I AM an outsider. What's the use of living?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All seemed lost when a trim young man appeared, striding out of a
+ cross-street not far before her, and, turning at the corner, came toward
+ her. Visibly, he slackened his gait to lengthen the time of his approach,
+ and, as he was a stranger to her, no motive could be ascribed to him other
+ than a wish to have a longer time to look at her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She lifted a pretty hand to a pin at her throat, bit her lip&mdash;not
+ with the smile, but mysteriously&mdash;and at the last instant before her
+ shadow touched the stranger, let her eyes gravely meet his. A moment
+ later, having arrived before the house which was her destination, she
+ halted at the entrance to a driveway leading through fine lawns to the
+ intentionally important mansion. It was a pleasant and impressive place to
+ be seen entering, but Alice did not enter at once. She paused, examining a
+ tiny bit of mortar which the masons had forgotten to scrape from a brick
+ in one of the massive gate-posts. She frowned at this tiny defacement, and
+ with an air of annoyance scraped it away, using the ferrule of her cane an
+ act of fastidious proprietorship. If any one had looked back over his
+ shoulder he would not have doubted that she lived there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice did not turn to see whether anything of the sort happened or not,
+ but she may have surmised that it did. At all events, it was with an
+ invigorated step that she left the gateway behind her and went cheerfully
+ up the drive to the house of her friend Mildred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Adams had a restless morning, and toward noon he asked Miss Perry to call
+ his daughter; he wished to say something to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought I heard her leaving the house a couple of hours ago&mdash;maybe
+ longer,&rdquo; the nurse told him. &ldquo;I'll go see.&rdquo; And she returned from the
+ brief errand, her impression confirmed by information from Mrs. Adams.
+ &ldquo;Yes. She went up to Miss Mildred Palmer's to see what she's going to wear
+ to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams looked at Miss Perry wearily, but remained passive, making no
+ inquiries; for he was long accustomed to what seemed to him a kind of
+ jargon among ladies, which became the more incomprehensible when they
+ tried to explain it. A man's best course, he had found, was just to let it
+ go as so much sound. His sorrowful eyes followed the nurse as she went
+ back to her rocking-chair by the window, and her placidity showed him that
+ there was no mystery for her in the fact that Alice walked two miles to
+ ask so simple a question when there was a telephone in the house.
+ Obviously Miss Perry also comprehended why Alice thought it important to
+ know what Mildred meant to wear. Adams understood why Alice should be
+ concerned with what she herself wore &ldquo;to look neat and tidy and at her
+ best, why, of course she'd want to,&rdquo; he thought&mdash;but he realized that
+ it was forever beyond him to understand why the clothing of other people
+ had long since become an absorbing part of her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her excursion this morning was no novelty; she was continually going to
+ see what Mildred meant to wear, or what some other girl meant to wear; and
+ when Alice came home from wherever other girls or women had been gathered,
+ she always hurried to her mother with earnest descriptions of the clothing
+ she had seen. At such times, if Adams was present, he might recognize
+ &ldquo;organdie,&rdquo; or &ldquo;taffeta,&rdquo; or &ldquo;chiffon,&rdquo; as words defining certain
+ textiles, but the rest was too technical for him, and he was like a dismal
+ boy at a sermon, just waiting for it to get itself finished. Not the least
+ of the mystery was his wife's interest: she was almost indifferent about
+ her own clothes, and when she consulted Alice about them spoke hurriedly
+ and with an air of apology; but when Alice described other people's
+ clothes, Mrs. Adams listened as eagerly as the daughter talked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There they go!&rdquo; he muttered to-day, a moment after he heard the front
+ door closing, a sound recognizable throughout most of the thinly built
+ house. Alice had just returned, and Mrs. Adams called to her from the
+ upper hallway, not far from Adams's door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did she SAY?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was sort of snippy about it,&rdquo; Alice returned, ascending the stairs.
+ &ldquo;She gets that way sometimes, and pretended she hadn't made up her mind,
+ but I'm pretty sure it'll be the maize Georgette with Malines flounces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't you say she wore that at the Pattersons'?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams inquired, as
+ Alice arrived at the top of the stairs. &ldquo;And didn't you tell me she wore
+ it again at the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; Alice interrupted, rather petulantly. &ldquo;She's never worn
+ it but once, and of course she wouldn't want to wear anything to-night
+ that people have seen her in a lot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Perry opened the door of Adams's room and stepped out. &ldquo;Your father
+ wants to know if you'll come and see him a minute, Miss Adams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor old thing! Of course!&rdquo; Alice exclaimed, and went quickly into the
+ room, Miss Perry remaining outside. &ldquo;What's the matter, papa? Getting
+ awful sick of lying on his tired old back, I expect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've had kind of a poor morning,&rdquo; Adams said, as she patted his hand
+ comfortingly. &ldquo;I been thinking&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't I tell you not to?&rdquo; she cried, gaily. &ldquo;Of course you'll have poor
+ times when you go and do just exactly what I say you mustn't. You stop
+ thinking this very minute!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled ruefully, closing his eyes; was silent for a moment, then asked
+ her to sit beside the bed. &ldquo;I been thinking of something I wanted to say,&rdquo;
+ he added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What like, papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it's nothing&mdash;much,&rdquo; he said, with something deprecatory in
+ his tone, as if he felt vague impulses toward both humour and apology. &ldquo;I
+ just thought maybe I ought to've said more to you some time or other about&mdash;well,
+ about the way things ARE, down at Lamb and Company's, for instance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, papa!&rdquo; She leaned forward in the chair she had taken, and pretended
+ to slap his hand crossly. &ldquo;Isn't that exactly what I said you couldn't
+ think one single think about till you get ALL well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he said, and went on slowly, not looking at her, but
+ at the ceiling. &ldquo;I just thought maybe it wouldn't been any harm if some
+ time or other I told you something about the way they sort of depend on me
+ down there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why don't they show it, then?&rdquo; she asked, quickly. &ldquo;That's just what mama
+ and I have been feeling so much; they don't appreciate you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, yes, they do,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Yes, they do. They began h'isting my salary
+ the second year I went in there, and they've h'isted it a little every two
+ years all the time I've worked for 'em. I've been head of the sundries
+ department for seven years now, and I could hardly have more authority in
+ that department unless I was a member of the firm itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, why don't they make you a member of the firm? That's what they
+ ought to've done! Yes, and long ago!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams laughed, but sighed with more heartiness than he had laughed. &ldquo;They
+ call me their 'oldest stand-by' down there.&rdquo; He laughed again,
+ apologetically, as if to excuse himself for taking a little pride in this
+ title. &ldquo;Yes, sir; they say I'm their 'oldest stand-by'; and I guess they
+ know they can count on my department's turning in as good a report as they
+ look for, at the end of every month; but they don't have to take a man
+ into the firm to get him to do my work, dearie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you said they depended on you, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So they do; but of course not so's they couldn't get along without me.&rdquo;
+ He paused, reflecting. &ldquo;I don't just seem to know how to put it&mdash;I
+ mean how to put what I started out to say. I kind of wanted to tell you&mdash;well,
+ it seems funny to me, these last few years, the way your mother's taken to
+ feeling about it. I'd like to see a better established wholesale drug
+ business than Lamb and Company this side the Alleghanies&mdash;I don't say
+ bigger, I say better established&mdash;and it's kind of funny for a man
+ that's been with a business like that as long as I have to hear it called
+ a 'hole.' It's kind of funny when you think, yourself, you've done pretty
+ fairly well in a business like that, and the men at the head of it seem to
+ think so, too, and put your salary just about as high as anybody could
+ consider customary&mdash;well, what I mean, Alice, it's kind of funny to
+ have your mother think it's mostly just&mdash;mostly just a failure, so to
+ speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His voice had become tremulous in spite of him; and this sign of weakness
+ and emotion had sufficient effect upon Alice. She bent over him suddenly,
+ with her arm about him and her cheek against his. &ldquo;Poor papa!&rdquo; she
+ murmured. &ldquo;Poor papa!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I didn't mean anything to trouble you. I just thought&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ He hesitated. &ldquo;I just wondered&mdash;I thought maybe it wouldn't be any
+ harm if I said something about how things ARE down there. I got to
+ thinking maybe you didn't understand it's a pretty good place. They're
+ fine people to work for; and they've always seemed to think something of
+ me;&mdash;the way they took Walter on, for instance, soon as I asked 'em,
+ last year. Don't you think that looked a good deal as if they thought
+ something of me, Alice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, papa,&rdquo; she said, not moving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the work's right pleasant,&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;Mighty nice boys in our
+ department, Alice. Well, they are in all the departments, for that matter.
+ We have a good deal of fun down there some days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She lifted her head. &ldquo;More than you do at home 'some days,' I expect,
+ papa!&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He protested feebly. &ldquo;Now, I didn't mean that&mdash;I didn't want to
+ trouble you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him through winking eyelashes. &ldquo;I'm sorry I called it a
+ 'hole,' papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he protested, gently. &ldquo;It was your mother said that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I did, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if you did, it was only because you'd heard her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shook her head, then kissed him. &ldquo;I'm going to talk to her,&rdquo; she said,
+ and rose decisively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at this, her father's troubled voice became quickly louder: &ldquo;You
+ better let her alone. I just wanted to have a little talk with you. I
+ didn't mean to start any&mdash;your mother won't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, papa!&rdquo; Alice spoke cheerfully again, and smiled upon him. &ldquo;I want
+ you to quit worrying! Everything's going to be all right and nobody's
+ going to bother you any more about anything. You'll see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She carried her smile out into the hall, but after she had closed the door
+ her face was all pity; and her mother, waiting for her in the opposite
+ room, spoke sympathetically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter, Alice? What did he say that's upset you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait a minute, mama.&rdquo; Alice found a handkerchief, used it for eyes and
+ suffused nose, gulped, then suddenly and desolately sat upon the bed.
+ &ldquo;Poor, poor, POOR papa!&rdquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams inquired, mildly. &ldquo;What's the matter with him? Sometimes
+ you act as if he weren't getting well. What's he been talking about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama&mdash;well, I think I'm pretty selfish. Oh, I do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did he say you were?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Papa? No, indeed! What I mean is, maybe we're both a little selfish to
+ try to make him go out and hunt around for something new.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams looked thoughtful. &ldquo;Oh, that's what he was up to!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama, I think we ought to give it up. I didn't dream it had really hurt
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, doesn't he hurt us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never that I know of, mama.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't mean by SAYING things,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams explained, impatiently. &ldquo;There
+ are more ways than that of hurting people. When a man sticks to a salary
+ that doesn't provide for his family, isn't that hurting them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it 'provides' for us well enough, mama. We have what we need&mdash;if
+ I weren't so extravagant. Oh, <i>I</i> know I am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at this admission her mother cried out sharply. &ldquo;'Extravagant!' You
+ haven't one tenth of what the other girls you go with have. And you CAN'T
+ have what you ought to as long as he doesn't get out of that horrible
+ place. It provides bare food and shelter for us, but what's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think we ought to try any more to change him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams came and stood before her. &ldquo;Listen, Alice: your
+ father's asleep; that's his trouble, and he's got to be waked up. He
+ doesn't know that things have changed. When you and Walter were little
+ children we did have enough&mdash;at least it seemed to be about as much
+ as most of the people we knew. But the town isn't what it was in those
+ days, and times aren't what they were then, and these fearful PRICES
+ aren't the old prices. Everything else but your father has changed, and
+ all the time he's stood still. He doesn't know it; he thinks because
+ they've given him a hundred dollars more every two years he's quite a
+ prosperous man! And he thinks that because his children cost him more than
+ he and I cost our parents he gives them&mdash;enough!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Walter&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Alice faltered. &ldquo;Walter doesn't cost him
+ anything at all any more.&rdquo; And she concluded, in a stricken voice, &ldquo;It's
+ all&mdash;me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why shouldn't it be?&rdquo; her mother cried. &ldquo;You're young&mdash;you're just
+ at the time when your life should be fullest of good things and happiness.
+ Yet what do you get?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice's lip quivered; she was not unsusceptible to such an appeal, but she
+ contrived the semblance of a protest. &ldquo;I don't have such a bad time not a
+ good DEAL of the time, anyhow. I've got a good MANY of the things other
+ girls have&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams was piteously satirical. &ldquo;I suppose you've got a
+ limousine to go to that dance to-night? I suppose you've only got to call
+ a florist and tell him to send you some orchids? I suppose you've&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alice interrupted this list. Apparently in a single instant all
+ emotion left her, and she became businesslike, as one in the midst of
+ trifles reminded of really serious matters. She got up from the bed and
+ went to the door of the closet where she kept her dresses. &ldquo;Oh, see here,&rdquo;
+ she said, briskly. &ldquo;I've decided to wear my white organdie if you could
+ put in a new lining for me. I'm afraid it'll take you nearly all
+ afternoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She brought forth the dress, displayed it upon the bed, and Mrs. Adams
+ examined it attentively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think you could get it done, mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see why not,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams answered, passing a thoughtful hand over
+ the fabric. &ldquo;It oughtn't to take more than four or five hours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a shame to have you sit at the machine that long,&rdquo; Alice said,
+ absently, adding, &ldquo;And I'm sure we ought to let papa alone. Let's just
+ give it up, mama.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams continued her thoughtful examination of the dress. &ldquo;Did you buy
+ the chiffon and ribbon, Alice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. I'm sure we oughtn't to talk to him about it any more, mama.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we'll see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let's both agree that we'll NEVER say another single word to him about
+ it,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;It'll be a great deal better if we just let him make up
+ his mind for himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ With this, having more immediately practical questions before them, they
+ dropped the subject, to bend their entire attention upon the dress; and
+ when the lunch-gong sounded downstairs Alice was still sketching repairs
+ and alterations. She continued to sketch them, not heeding the summons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose we'd better go down to lunch,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, absently.
+ &ldquo;She's at the gong again.&rdquo; &ldquo;In a minute, mama. Now about the sleeves&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ And she went on with her planning. Unfortunately the gong was inexpressive
+ of the mood of the person who beat upon it. It consisted of three little
+ metal bowls upon a string; they were unequal in size, and, upon being
+ tapped with a padded stick, gave forth vibrations almost musically
+ pleasant. It was Alice who had substituted this contrivance for the brass
+ &ldquo;dinner-bell&rdquo; in use throughout her childhood; and neither she nor the
+ others of her family realized that the substitution of sweeter sounds had
+ made the life of that household more difficult. In spite of dismaying
+ increases in wages, the Adamses still strove to keep a cook; and, as they
+ were unable to pay the higher rates demanded by a good one, what they
+ usually had was a whimsical coloured woman of nomadic impulses. In the
+ hands of such a person the old-fashioned &ldquo;dinner-bell&rdquo; was satisfying;
+ life could instantly be made intolerable for any one dawdling on his way
+ to a meal; the bell was capable of every desirable profanity and left
+ nothing bottled up in the breast of the ringer. But the chamois-covered
+ stick might whack upon Alice's little Chinese bowls for a considerable
+ length of time and produce no great effect of urgency upon a hearer, nor
+ any other effect, except fury in the cook. The ironical impossibility of
+ expressing indignation otherwise than by sounds of gentle harmony proved
+ exasperating; the cook was apt to become surcharged, so that explosive
+ resignations, never rare, were somewhat more frequent after the
+ introduction of the gong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams took this increased frequency to be only another manifestation
+ of the inexplicable new difficulties that beset all housekeeping. You paid
+ a cook double what you had paid one a few years before; and the cook knew
+ half as much of cookery, and had no gratitude. The more you gave these
+ people, it seemed, the worse they behaved&mdash;a condition not to be
+ remedied by simply giving them less, because you couldn't even get the
+ worst unless you paid her what she demanded. Nevertheless, Mrs. Adams
+ remained fitfully an optimist in the matter. Brought up by her mother to
+ speak of a female cook as &ldquo;the girl,&rdquo; she had been instructed by Alice to
+ drop that definition in favour of one not an improvement in accuracy: &ldquo;the
+ maid.&rdquo; Almost always, during the first day or so after every cook came,
+ Mrs. Adams would say, at intervals, with an air of triumph: &ldquo;I believe&mdash;of
+ course it's a little soon to be sure&mdash;but I do really believe this
+ new maid is the treasure we've been looking for so long!&rdquo; Much in the same
+ way that Alice dreamed of a mysterious perfect mate for whom she &ldquo;waited,&rdquo;
+ her mother had a fairy theory that hidden somewhere in the universe there
+ was the treasure, the perfect &ldquo;maid,&rdquo; who would come and cook in the
+ Adamses' kitchen, not four days or four weeks, but forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The present incumbent was not she. Alice, profoundly interested herself,
+ kept her mother likewise so preoccupied with the dress that they were but
+ vaguely conscious of the gong's soft warnings, though these were repeated
+ and protracted unusually. Finally the sound of a hearty voice, independent
+ and enraged, reached the pair. It came from the hall below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I says goo'-BYE!&rdquo; it called. &ldquo;Da'ss all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the front door slammed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Mrs. Adams began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went down hurriedly to find out. Miss Perry informed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I couldn't make her listen to reason,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;She rang the gong four
+ or five times and got to talking to herself; and then she went up to her
+ room and packed her bag. I told her she had no business to go out the
+ front door, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams took the news philosophically. &ldquo;I thought she had something
+ like that in her eye when I paid her this morning, and I'm not surprised.
+ Well, we won't let Mr. Adams know anything's the matter till I get a new
+ one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They lunched upon what the late incumbent had left chilling on the table,
+ and then Mrs. Adams prepared to wash the dishes; she would &ldquo;have them done
+ in a jiffy,&rdquo; she said, cheerfully. But it was Alice who washed the dishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I DON'T like to have you do that, Alice,&rdquo; her mother protested, following
+ her into the kitchen. &ldquo;It roughens the hands, and when a girl has hands
+ like yours&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know, mama.&rdquo; Alice looked troubled, but shook her head. &ldquo;It can't be
+ helped this time; you'll need every minute to get that dress done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams went away lamenting, while Alice, no expert, began to splash
+ the plates and cups and saucers in the warm water. After a while, as she
+ worked, her eyes grew dreamy: she was making little gay-coloured pictures
+ of herself, unfounded prophecies of how she would look and what would
+ happen to her that evening. She saw herself, charming and demure, wearing
+ a fluffy idealization of the dress her mother now determinedly struggled
+ with upstairs; she saw herself framed in a garlanded archway, the entrance
+ to a ballroom, and saw the people on the shining floor turning
+ dramatically to look at her; then from all points a rush of young men
+ shouting for dances with her; and she constructed a superb stranger, tall,
+ dark, masterfully smiling, who swung her out of the clamouring group as
+ the music began. She saw herself dancing with him, saw the half-troubled
+ smile she would give him; and she accurately smiled that smile as she
+ rinsed the knives and forks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These hopeful fragments of drama were not to be realized, she knew; but
+ she played that they were true, and went on creating them. In all of them
+ she wore or carried flowers&mdash;her mother's sorrow for her in this
+ detail but made it the more important&mdash;and she saw herself glamorous
+ with orchids; discarded these for an armful of long-stemmed, heavy roses;
+ tossed them away for a great bouquet of white camellias; and so wandered
+ down a lengthening hothouse gallery of floral beauty, all costly and
+ beyond her reach except in such a wistful day-dream. And upon her present
+ whole horizon, though she searched it earnestly, she could discover no
+ figure of a sender of flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of her fancies the desire for flowers to wear that night emerged
+ definitely and became poignant; she began to feel that it might be
+ particularly important to have them. &ldquo;This might be the night!&rdquo; She was
+ still at the age to dream that the night of any dance may be the vital
+ point in destiny. No matter how commonplace or disappointing other dance
+ nights have been this one may bring the great meeting. The unknown
+ magnifico may be there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was almost unaware of her own reveries in which this being appeared&mdash;reveries
+ often so transitory that they developed and passed in a few seconds. And
+ in some of them the being was not wholly a stranger; there were moments
+ when he seemed to be composed of recognizable fragments of young men she
+ knew&mdash;a smile she had liked, from one; the figure of another, the
+ hair of another&mdash;and sometimes she thought he might be concealed, so
+ to say, within the person of an actual acquaintance, someone she had never
+ suspected of being the right seeker for her, someone who had never
+ suspected that it was she who &ldquo;waited&rdquo; for him. Anything might reveal them
+ to each other: a look, a turn of the head, a singular word&mdash;perhaps
+ some flowers upon her breast or in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She wiped the dishes slowly, concluding the operation by dropping a saucer
+ upon the floor and dreamily sweeping the fragments under the stove. She
+ sighed and replaced the broom near a window, letting her glance wander
+ over the small yard outside. The grass, repulsively besooted to the colour
+ of coal-smoke all winter, had lately come to life again and now sparkled
+ with green, in the midst of which a tiny shot of blue suddenly fixed her
+ absent eyes. They remained upon it for several moments, becoming less
+ absent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a violet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice ran upstairs, put on her hat, went outdoors and began to search out
+ the violets. She found twenty-two, a bright omen&mdash;since the number
+ was that of her years&mdash;but not enough violets. There were no more;
+ she had ransacked every foot of the yard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked dubiously at the little bunch in her hand, glanced at the lawn
+ next door, which offered no favourable prospect; then went thoughtfully
+ into the house, left her twenty-two violets in a bowl of water, and came
+ quickly out again, her brow marked with a frown of decision. She went to a
+ trolley-line and took a car to the outskirts of the city where a new park
+ had been opened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she resumed her search, but it was not an easily rewarded one, and
+ for an hour after her arrival she found no violets. She walked
+ conscientiously over the whole stretch of meadow, her eyes roving
+ discontentedly; there was never a blue dot in the groomed expanse; but at
+ last, as she came near the borders of an old grove of trees, left
+ untouched by the municipal landscapers, the little flowers appeared, and
+ she began to gather them. She picked them carefully, loosening the earth
+ round each tiny plant, so as to bring the roots up with it, that it might
+ live the longer; and she had brought a napkin, which she drenched at a
+ hydrant, and kept loosely wrapped about the stems of her collection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The turf was too damp for her to kneel; she worked patiently, stooping
+ from the waist; and when she got home in a drizzle of rain at five o'clock
+ her knees were tremulous with strain, her back ached, and she was tired
+ all over, but she had three hundred violets. Her mother moaned when Alice
+ showed them to her, fragrant in a basin of water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you POOR child! To think of your having to work so hard to get
+ things that other girls only need lift their little fingers for!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; said Alice, huskily. &ldquo;I've got 'em and I AM going to have a
+ good time to-night!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've just got to!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams agreed, intensely sympathetic. &ldquo;The Lord
+ knows you deserve to, after picking all these violets, poor thing, and He
+ wouldn't be mean enough to keep you from it. I may have to get dinner
+ before I finish the dress, but I can get it done in a few minutes
+ afterward, and it's going to look right pretty. Don't you worry about
+ THAT! And with all these lovely violets&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Alice began, paused, then went on, fragmentarily:
+ &ldquo;I suppose&mdash;well, I wonder&mdash;do you suppose it would have been
+ better policy to have told Walter before&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said her mother. &ldquo;It would only have given him longer to grumble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he might&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't worry,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams reassured her. &ldquo;He'll be a little cross, but he
+ won't be stubborn; just let me talk to him and don't you say anything at
+ all, no matter what HE says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These references to Walter concerned some necessary manoeuvres which took
+ place at dinner, and were conducted by the mother, Alice having accepted
+ her advice to sit in silence. Mrs. Adams began by laughing cheerfully. &ldquo;I
+ wonder how much longer it took me to cook this dinner than it does Walter
+ to eat it?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Don't gobble, child! There's no hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In contact with his own family Walter was no squanderer of words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is for me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Got date.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know you have, but there's plenty of time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled in benevolent pity. &ldquo;YOU know, do you? If you made any coffee&mdash;don't
+ bother if you didn't. Get some down-town.&rdquo; He seemed about to rise and
+ depart; whereupon Alice, biting her lip, sent a panic-stricken glance at
+ her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mrs. Adams seemed not at all disturbed; and laughed again. &ldquo;Why, what
+ nonsense, Walter! I'll bring your coffee in a few minutes, but we're going
+ to have dessert first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some lovely peaches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doe' want 'ny canned peaches,&rdquo; said the frank Walter, moving back his
+ chair. &ldquo;G'-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter! It doesn't begin till about nine o'clock at the earliest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paused, mystified. &ldquo;What doesn't?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What dance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Mildred Palmer's dance, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter laughed briefly. &ldquo;What's that to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, you haven't forgotten it's TO-NIGHT, have you?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams cried.
+ &ldquo;What a boy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told you a week ago I wasn't going to that ole dance,&rdquo; he returned,
+ frowning. &ldquo;You heard me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;Of COURSE you're going. I got your clothes all
+ out this afternoon, and brushed them for you. They'll look very nice, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They won't look nice on ME,&rdquo; he interrupted. &ldquo;Got date down-town, I tell
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But of course you'll&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See here!&rdquo; Walter said, decisively. &ldquo;Don't get any wrong ideas in your
+ head. I'm just as liable to go up to that ole dance at the Palmers' as I
+ am to eat a couple of barrels of broken glass.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Walter&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter was beginning to be seriously annoyed. &ldquo;Don't 'Walter' me! I'm no
+ s'ciety snake. I wouldn't jazz with that Palmer crowd if they coaxed me
+ with diamonds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't I tell you it's no use to 'Walter' me?&rdquo; he demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear child&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Glory!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this Mrs. Adams abandoned her air of amusement, looked hurt, and
+ glanced at the demure Miss Perry across the table. &ldquo;I'm afraid Miss Perry
+ won't think you have very good manners, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're right she won't,&rdquo; he agreed, grimly. &ldquo;Not if I haf to hear any
+ more about me goin' to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his mother interrupted him with some asperity: &ldquo;It seems very strange
+ that you always object to going anywhere among OUR friends, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YOUR friends!&rdquo; he said, and, rising from his chair, gave utterance to an
+ ironical laugh strictly monosyllabic. &ldquo;Your friends!&rdquo; he repeated, going
+ to the door. &ldquo;Oh, yes! Certainly! Good-NIGHT!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And looking back over his shoulder to offer a final brief view of his
+ derisive face, he took himself out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice gasped: &ldquo;Mama&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll stop him!&rdquo; her mother responded, sharply; and hurried after the
+ truant, catching him at the front door with his hat and raincoat on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Told you had a date down-town,&rdquo; he said, gruffly, and would have opened
+ the door, but she caught his arm and detained him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter, please come back and finish your dinner. When I take all the
+ trouble to cook it for you, I think you might at least&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, now!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That isn't what you're up to. You don't want to make
+ me eat; you want to make me listen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you MUST listen!&rdquo; She retained her grasp upon his arm, and made it
+ tighter. &ldquo;Walter, please!&rdquo; she entreated, her voice becoming tremulous.
+ &ldquo;PLEASE don't make me so much trouble!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew back from her as far as her hold upon him permitted, and looked at
+ her sharply. &ldquo;Look here!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I get you, all right! What's the
+ matter of Alice GOIN' to that party by herself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She just CAN'T!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It makes things too MEAN for her, Walter. All the other girls have
+ somebody to depend on after they get there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, why doesn't she have somebody?&rdquo; he asked, testily. &ldquo;Somebody
+ besides ME, I mean! Why hasn't somebody asked her to go? She ought to be
+ THAT popular, anyhow, I sh'd think&mdash;she TRIES enough!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand how you can be so hard,&rdquo; his mother wailed, huskily.
+ &ldquo;You know why they don't run after her the way they do the other girls she
+ goes with, Walter. It's because we're poor, and she hasn't got any
+ background.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Background?'&rdquo; Walter repeated. &ldquo;'Background?' What kind of talk is
+ that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You WILL go with her to-night, Walter?&rdquo; his mother pleaded, not stopping
+ to enlighten him. &ldquo;You don't understand how hard things are for her and
+ how brave she is about them, or you COULDN'T be so selfish! It'd be more
+ than I can bear to see her disappointed to-night! She went clear out to
+ Belleview Park this afternoon, Walter, and spent hours and hours picking
+ violets to wear. You WILL&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter's heart was not iron, and the episode of the violets may have
+ reached it. &ldquo;Oh, BLUB!&rdquo; he said, and flung his soft hat violently at the
+ wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His mother beamed with delight. &ldquo;THAT'S a good boy, darling! You'll never
+ be sorry you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cut it out,&rdquo; he requested. &ldquo;If I take her, will you pay for a taxi?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Walter!&rdquo; And again Mrs. Adams showed distress. &ldquo;Couldn't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I couldn't; I'm not goin' to throw away my good money like that, and
+ you can't tell what time o' night it'll be before she's willin' to come
+ home. What's the matter you payin' for one?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't any money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, father&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shook her head dolefully. &ldquo;I got some from him this morning, and I
+ can't bother him for any more; it upsets him. He's ALWAYS been so terribly
+ close with money&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess he couldn't help that,&rdquo; Walter observed. &ldquo;We're liable to go to
+ the poorhouse the way it is. Well, what's the matter our walkin' to this
+ rotten party?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the rain, Walter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it's only a drizzle and we can take a streetcar to within a block
+ of the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again his mother shook her head. &ldquo;It wouldn't do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, darn the luck, all right!&rdquo; he consented, explosively. &ldquo;I'll get her
+ something to ride in. It means seventy-five cents.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Walter!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams cried, much pleased. &ldquo;Do you know how to get a
+ cab for that little? How splendid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tain't a cab,&rdquo; Walter informed her crossly. &ldquo;It's a tin Lizzie, but you
+ don't haf' to tell her what it is till I get her into it, do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams agreed that she didn't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Alice was busy with herself for two hours after dinner; but a little
+ before nine o'clock she stood in front of her long mirror, completed,
+ bright-eyed and solemn. Her hair, exquisitely arranged, gave all she asked
+ of it; what artificialities in colour she had used upon her face were only
+ bits of emphasis that made her prettiness the more distinct; and the
+ dress, not rumpled by her mother's careful hours of work, was a white
+ cloud of loveliness. Finally there were two triumphant bouquets of
+ violets, each with the stems wrapped in tin-foil shrouded by a bow of
+ purple chiffon; and one bouquet she wore at her waist and the other she
+ carried in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Perry, called in by a rapturous mother for the free treat of a look
+ at this radiance, insisted that Alice was a vision. &ldquo;Purely and simply a
+ vision!&rdquo; she said, meaning that no other definition whatever would satisfy
+ her. &ldquo;I never saw anybody look a vision if she don't look one to-night,&rdquo;
+ the admiring nurse declared. &ldquo;Her papa'll think the same I do about it.
+ You see if he doesn't say she's purely and simply a vision.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams did not fulfil the prediction quite literally when Alice paid a
+ brief visit to his room to &ldquo;show&rdquo; him and bid him good-night; but he
+ chuckled feebly. &ldquo;Well, well, well!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You look mighty fine&mdash;MIGHTY fine!&rdquo; And he waggled a bony finger at
+ her two bouquets. &ldquo;Why, Alice, who's your beau?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never you mind!&rdquo; she laughed, archly brushing his nose with the violets
+ in her hand. &ldquo;He treats me pretty well, doesn't he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Must like to throw his money around! These violets smell mighty sweet,
+ and they ought to, if they're going to a party with YOU. Have a good time,
+ dearie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mean to!&rdquo; she cried; and she repeated this gaily, but with an emphasis
+ expressing sharp determination as she left him. &ldquo;I MEAN to!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was he talking about?&rdquo; her mother inquired, smoothing the rather
+ worn and old evening wrap she had placed on Alice's bed. &ldquo;What were you
+ telling him you 'mean to?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice went back to her triple mirror for the last time, then stood before
+ the long one. &ldquo;That I mean to have a good time to-night,&rdquo; she said; and as
+ she turned from her reflection to the wrap Mrs. Adams held up for her, &ldquo;It
+ looks as though I COULD, don't you think so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll just be a queen to-night,&rdquo; her mother whispered in fond emotion.
+ &ldquo;You mustn't doubt yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, there's one thing,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;I think I do look nice enough to
+ get along without having to dance with that Frank Dowling! All I ask is
+ for it to happen just once; and if he comes near me to-night I'm going to
+ treat him the way the other girls do. Do you suppose Walter's got the taxi
+ out in front?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&mdash;he's waiting down in the hall,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams answered, nervously;
+ and she held up another garment to go over the wrap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice frowned at it. &ldquo;What's that, mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's&mdash;it's your father's raincoat. I thought you'd put it on over&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I won't need it in a taxicab.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will to get in and out, and you needn't take it into the Palmers'.
+ You can leave it in the&mdash;in the&mdash;It's drizzling, and you'll need
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; Alice consented; and a few minutes later, as with Walter's
+ assistance she climbed into the vehicle he had provided, she better
+ understood her mother's solicitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What on earth IS this, Walter?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind; it'll keep you dry enough with the top up,&rdquo; he returned,
+ taking his seat beside her. Then for a time, as they went rather jerkily
+ up the street, she was silent; but finally she repeated her question:
+ &ldquo;What IS it, Walter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This&mdash;this CAR?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a ottomobile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mean&mdash;what kind is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Haven't you got eyes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's too dark.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a second-hand tin Lizzie,&rdquo; said Walter. &ldquo;D'you know what that means?
+ It means a flivver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Got 'ny 'bjections?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, no, dear,&rdquo; she said, placatively. &ldquo;Is it yours, Walter? Have you
+ bought it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Me?&rdquo; he laughed. &ldquo;<i>I</i> couldn't buy a used wheelbarrow. I rent this
+ sometimes when I'm goin' out among 'em. Costs me seventy-five cents and
+ the price o' the gas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That seems very moderate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess it is! The feller owes me some money, and this is the only way
+ I'd ever get it off him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is he a garage-keeper?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not exactly!&rdquo; Walter uttered husky sounds of amusement. &ldquo;You'll be just
+ as happy, I guess, if you don't know who he is,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His tone misgave her; and she said truthfully that she was content not to
+ know who owned the car. &ldquo;I joke sometimes about how you keep things to
+ yourself,&rdquo; she added, &ldquo;but I really never do pry in your affairs, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, you don't!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, I don't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you're mighty nice and cooing when you got me where you want me,&rdquo; he
+ jeered. &ldquo;Well, <i>I</i> just as soon tell you where I get this car.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'd just as soon you wouldn't, Walter,&rdquo; she said, hurriedly. &ldquo;Please
+ don't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Walter meant to tell her. &ldquo;Why, there's nothin' exactly CRIMINAL about
+ it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It belongs to old J. A. Lamb himself. He keeps it for their
+ coon chauffeur. I rent it from him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From Mr. LAMB?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; from the coon chauffeur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter!&rdquo; she gasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure I do! I can get it any night when the coon isn't goin' to use it
+ himself. He's drivin' their limousine to-night&mdash;that little Henrietta
+ Lamb's goin' to the party, no matter if her father HAS only been dead
+ less'n a year!&rdquo; He paused, then inquired: &ldquo;Well, how d'you like it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not speak, and he began to be remorseful for having imparted so
+ much information, though his way of expressing regret was his own. &ldquo;Well,
+ you WILL make the folks make me take you to parties!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I got to
+ do it the best way I CAN, don't I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then as she made no response, &ldquo;Oh, the car's CLEAN enough,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;This
+ coon, he's as particular as any white man; you needn't worry about that.&rdquo;
+ And as she still said nothing, he added gruffly, &ldquo;I'd of had a better car
+ if I could afforded it. You needn't get so upset about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand&mdash;&rdquo; she said in a low voice&mdash;&ldquo;I don't
+ understand how you know such people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such people as who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As&mdash;coloured chauffeurs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, look here, now!&rdquo; he protested, loudly. &ldquo;Don't you know this is a
+ democratic country?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not quite that democratic, is it, Walter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The trouble with you,&rdquo; he retorted, &ldquo;you don't know there's anybody in
+ town except just this silk-shirt crowd.&rdquo; He paused, seeming to await a
+ refutation; but as none came, he expressed himself definitely: &ldquo;They make
+ me sick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were coming near their destination, and the glow of the big, brightly
+ lighted house was seen before them in the wet night. Other cars, not like
+ theirs, were approaching this center of brilliance; long triangles of
+ light near the ground swept through the fine drizzle; small red
+ tail-lights gleamed again from the moist pavement of the street; and,
+ through the myriads of little glistening leaves along the curving
+ driveway, glimpses were caught of lively colours moving in a white glare
+ as the limousines released their occupants under the shelter of the
+ porte-cochere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice clutched Walter's arm in a panic; they were just at the driveway
+ entrance. &ldquo;Walter, we mustn't go in there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave this awful car outside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; she insisted, vehemently. &ldquo;You've got to! Go back!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Glory!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little car was between the entrance posts; but Walter backed it out,
+ avoiding a collision with an impressive machine which swerved away from
+ them and passed on toward the porte-cochere, showing a man's face grinning
+ at the window as it went by. &ldquo;Flivver runabout got the wrong number!&rdquo; he
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did he SEE us?&rdquo; Alice cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did who see us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Harvey Malone&mdash;in that foreign coupe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; he couldn't tell who we were under this top,&rdquo; Walter assured her as
+ he brought the little car to a standstill beside the curbstone, out in the
+ street. &ldquo;What's it matter if he did, the big fish?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice responded with a loud sigh, and sat still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, want to go on back?&rdquo; Walter inquired. &ldquo;You bet I'm willing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, what's the matter our drivin' on up to the porte-cochere?
+ There's room for me to park just the other side of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, NO!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you expect to do? Sit HERE all night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, leave the car here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> don't care where we leave it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Sit still till I lock
+ her, so none o' these millionaires around here'll run off with her.&rdquo; He
+ got out with a padlock and chain; and, having put these in place, offered
+ Alice his hand. &ldquo;Come on, if you're ready.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait,&rdquo; she said, and, divesting herself of the raincoat, handed it to
+ Walter. &ldquo;Please leave this with your things in the men's dressing-room, as
+ if it were an extra one of your own, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He nodded; she jumped out; and they scurried through the drizzle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they reached the porte-cochere she began to laugh airily, and spoke to
+ the impassive man in livery who stood there. &ldquo;Joke on us!&rdquo; she said,
+ hurrying by him toward the door of the house. &ldquo;Our car broke down outside
+ the gate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man remained impassive, though he responded with a faint gleam as
+ Walter, looking back at him, produced for his benefit a cynical distortion
+ of countenance which offered little confirmation of Alice's account of
+ things. Then the door was swiftly opened to the brother and sister; and
+ they came into a marble-floored hall, where a dozen sleeked young men
+ lounged, smoked cigarettes and fastened their gloves, as they waited for
+ their ladies. Alice nodded to one or another of these, and went quickly
+ on, her face uplifted and smiling; but Walter detained her at the door to
+ which she hastened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen here,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I suppose you want me to dance the first dance
+ with you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you please, Walter,&rdquo; she said, meekly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long you goin' to hang around fixin' up in that dressin'-room?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll be out before you're ready yourself,&rdquo; she promised him; and kept her
+ word, she was so eager for her good time to begin. When he came for her,
+ they went down the hall to a corridor opening upon three great rooms which
+ had been thrown open together, with the furniture removed and the broad
+ floors waxed. At one end of the corridor musicians sat in a green grove,
+ and Walter, with some interest, turned toward these; but his sister,
+ pressing his arm, impelled him in the opposite direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter now?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;That's Jazz Louie and his half-breed
+ bunch&mdash;three white and four mulatto. Let's&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;We must speak to Mildred and Mr. and Mrs.
+ Palmer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Speak' to 'em? I haven't got a thing to say to THOSE berries!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter, won't you PLEASE behave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He seemed to consent, for the moment, at least, and suffered her to take
+ him down the corridor toward a floral bower where the hostess stood with
+ her father and mother. Other couples and groups were moving in the same
+ direction, carrying with them a hubbub of laughter and fragmentary
+ chatterings; and Alice, smiling all the time, greeted people on every side
+ of her eagerly&mdash;a little more eagerly than most of them responded&mdash;while
+ Walter nodded in a noncommittal manner to one or two, said nothing, and
+ yawned audibly, the last resource of a person who finds himself nervous in
+ a false situation. He repeated his yawn and was beginning another when a
+ convulsive pressure upon his arm made him understand that he must abandon
+ this method of reassuring himself. They were close upon the floral bower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred was giving her hand to one and another of her guests as rapidly as
+ she could, passing them on to her father and mother, and at the same time
+ resisting the efforts of three or four detached bachelors who besought her
+ to give over her duty in favour of the dance-music just beginning to
+ blare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was a large, fair girl, with a kindness of eye somewhat withheld by an
+ expression of fastidiousness; at first sight of her it was clear that she
+ would never in her life do anything &ldquo;incorrect,&rdquo; or wear anything
+ &ldquo;incorrect.&rdquo; But her correctness was of the finer sort, and had no air of
+ being studied or achieved; conduct would never offer her a problem to be
+ settled from a book of rules, for the rules were so deep within her that
+ she was unconscious of them. And behind this perfection there was an even
+ ampler perfection of what Mrs. Adams called &ldquo;background.&rdquo; The big, rich,
+ simple house was part of it, and Mildred's father and mother were part of
+ it. They stood beside her, large, serene people, murmuring graciously and
+ gently inclining their handsome heads as they gave their hands to the
+ guests; and even the youngest and most ebullient of these took on a hushed
+ mannerliness with a closer approach to the bower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the opportunity came for Alice and Walter to pass within this
+ precinct, Alice, going first, leaned forward and whispered in Mildred's
+ ear. &ldquo;You DIDN'T wear the maize georgette! That's what I thought you were
+ going to. But you look simply DARLING! And those pearls&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others were crowding decorously forward, anxious to be done with ceremony
+ and get to the dancing; and Mildred did not prolong the intimacy of
+ Alice's enthusiastic whispering. With a faint accession of colour and a
+ smile tending somewhat in the direction of rigidity, she carried Alice's
+ hand immediately onward to Mrs. Palmer's. Alice's own colour showed a
+ little heightening as she accepted the suggestion thus implied; nor was
+ that emotional tint in any wise decreased, a moment later, by an
+ impression that Walter, in concluding the brief exchange of courtesies
+ between himself and the stately Mr. Palmer, had again reassured himself
+ with a yawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she did not speak of it to Walter; she preferred not to confirm the
+ impression and to leave in her mind a possible doubt that he had done it.
+ He followed her out upon the waxed floor, said resignedly: &ldquo;Well, come
+ on,&rdquo; put his arm about her, and they began to dance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice danced gracefully and well, but not so well as Walter. Of all the
+ steps and runs, of all the whimsical turns and twirlings, of all the
+ rhythmic swayings and dips commanded that season by such blarings as were
+ the barbaric product, loud and wild, of the Jazz Louies and their
+ half-breed bunches, the thin and sallow youth was a master. Upon his face
+ could be seen contempt of the easy marvels he performed as he moved in
+ swift precision from one smooth agility to another; and if some too-dainty
+ or jealous cavalier complained that to be so much a stylist in dancing was
+ &ldquo;not quite like a gentleman,&rdquo; at least Walter's style was what the music
+ called for. No other dancer in the room could be thought comparable to
+ him. Alice told him so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's wonderful!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;And the mystery is, where you ever learned to
+ DO it! You never went to dancing-school, but there isn't a man in the room
+ who can dance half so well. I don't see why, when you dance like this, you
+ always make such a fuss about coming to parties.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sounded his brief laugh, a jeering bark out of one side of the mouth,
+ and swung her miraculously through a closing space between two other
+ couples. &ldquo;You know a lot about what goes on, don't you? You prob'ly think
+ there's no other place to dance in this town except these frozen-face
+ joints.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Frozen face?'&rdquo; she echoed, laughing. &ldquo;Why, everybody's having a splendid
+ time. Look at them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, they holler loud enough,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;They do it to make each other
+ think they're havin' a good time. You don't call that Palmer family
+ frozen-face berries, I s'pose. No?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not. They're just dignified and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yeuh!&rdquo; said Walter. &ldquo;They're dignified, 'specially when you tried to
+ whisper to Mildred to show how IN with her you were, and she moved you on
+ that way. SHE'S a hot friend, isn't she!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She didn't mean anything by it. She&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ole Palmer's a hearty, slap you-on-the-back ole berry,&rdquo; Walter
+ interrupted; adding in a casual tone, &ldquo;All I'd like, I'd like to hit him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter! By the way, you mustn't forget to ask Mildred for a dance before
+ the evening is over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Me?&rdquo; He produced the lop-sided appearance of his laugh, but without
+ making it vocal. &ldquo;You watch me do it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She probably won't have one left, but you must ask her, anyway.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why must I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because, in the first place, you're supposed to, and, in the second
+ place, she's my most intimate friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yeuh? Is she? I've heard you pull that 'most-intimate-friend' stuff often
+ enough about her. What's SHE ever do to show she is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind. You really must ask her, Walter. I want you to; and I want
+ you to ask several other girls afterwhile; I'll tell you who.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Keep on wanting; it'll do you good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but you really&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'm just as liable to dance with any of these fairies
+ as I am to buy a bucket o' rusty tacks and eat 'em. Forget it! Soon as I
+ get rid of you I'm goin' back to that room where I left my hat and
+ overcoat and smoke myself to death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said, a little ruefully, as the frenzy of Jazz Louie and his
+ half-breeds was suddenly abated to silence, &ldquo;you mustn't&mdash;you mustn't
+ get rid of me TOO soon, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stood near one of the wide doorways, remaining where they had
+ stopped. Other couples, everywhere, joined one another, forming vivacious
+ clusters, but none of these groups adopted the brother and sister, nor did
+ any one appear to be hurrying in Alice's direction to ask her for the next
+ dance. She looked about her, still maintaining that jubilance of look and
+ manner she felt so necessary&mdash;for it is to the girls who are &ldquo;having
+ a good time&rdquo; that partners are attracted&mdash;and, in order to lend
+ greater colour to her impersonation of a lively belle, she began to
+ chatter loudly, bringing into play an accompaniment of frolicsome gesture.
+ She brushed Walter's nose saucily with the bunch of violets in her hand,
+ tapped him on the shoulder, shook her pretty forefinger in his face,
+ flourished her arms, kept her shoulders moving, and laughed continuously
+ as she spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You NAUGHTY old Walter!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;AREN'T you ashamed to be such a
+ wonderful dancer and then only dance with your own little sister! You
+ could dance on the stage if you wanted to. Why, you could made your
+ FORTUNE that way! Why don't you? Wouldn't it be just lovely to have all
+ the rows and rows of people clapping their hands and shouting, 'Hurrah!
+ Hurrah, for Walter Adams! Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stood looking at her in stolid pity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cut it out,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You better be givin' some of these berries the eye
+ so they'll ask you to dance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was not to be so easily checked, and laughed loudly, flourishing her
+ violets in his face again. &ldquo;You WOULD like it; you know you would; you
+ needn't pretend! Just think! A whole big audience shouting, 'Hurrah!
+ HURRAH! HUR&mdash;&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The place'll be pulled if you get any noisier,&rdquo; he interrupted, not
+ ungently. &ldquo;Besides, I'm no muley cow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A 'COW?'&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;What on earth&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't eat dead violets,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;So don't keep tryin' to make me
+ do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had the effect he desired, and subdued her; she abandoned her
+ unsisterly coquetries, and looked beamingly about her, but her smile was
+ more mechanical than it had been at first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At home she had seemed beautiful; but here, where the other girls
+ competed, things were not as they had been there, with only her mother and
+ Miss Perry to give contrast. These crowds of other girls had all done
+ their best, also, to look beautiful, though not one of them had worked so
+ hard for such a consummation as Alice had. They did not need to; they did
+ not need to get their mothers to make old dresses over; they did not need
+ to hunt violets in the rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At home her dress had seemed beautiful; but that was different, too, where
+ there were dozens of brilliant fabrics, fashioned in new ways&mdash;some
+ of these new ways startling, which only made the wearers centers of
+ interest and shocked no one. And Alice remembered that she had heard a
+ girl say, not long before, &ldquo;Oh, ORGANDIE! Nobody wears organdie for
+ evening gowns except in midsummer.&rdquo; Alice had thought little of this; but
+ as she looked about her and saw no organdie except her own, she found
+ greater difficulty in keeping her smile as arch and spontaneous as she
+ wished it. In fact, it was beginning to make her face ache a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred came in from the corridor, heavily attended. She carried a great
+ bouquet of violets laced with lilies of-the-valley; and the violets were
+ lusty, big purple things, their stems wrapped in cloth of gold, with
+ silken cords dependent, ending in long tassels. She and her convoy passed
+ near the two young Adamses; and it appeared that one of the convoy
+ besought his hostess to permit &ldquo;cutting in&rdquo;; they were &ldquo;doing it other
+ places&rdquo; of late, he urged; but he was denied and told to console himself
+ by holding the bouquet, at intervals, until his third of the sixteenth
+ dance should come. Alice looked dubiously at her own bouquet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she felt that the violets betrayed her; that any one who looked
+ at them could see how rustic, how innocent of any florist's craft they
+ were &ldquo;I can't eat dead violets,&rdquo; Walter said. The little wild flowers,
+ dying indeed in the warm air, were drooping in a forlorn mass; and it
+ seemed to her that whoever noticed them would guess that she had picked
+ them herself. She decided to get rid of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter was becoming restive. &ldquo;Look here!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Can't you flag one o'
+ these long-tailed birds to take you on for the next dance? You came to
+ have a good time; why don't you get busy and have it? I want to get out
+ and smoke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You MUSTN'T leave me, Walter,&rdquo; she whispered, hastily. &ldquo;Somebody'll come
+ for me before long, but until they do&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, couldn't you sit somewhere?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no! There isn't any one I could sit with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, why not? Look at those ole dames in the corners. What's the matter
+ your tyin' up with some o' them for a while?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;PLEASE, Walter; no!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, that indomitable smile of hers was the more difficult to maintain
+ because of these very elders to whom Walter referred. They were mothers of
+ girls among the dancers, and they were there to fend and contrive for
+ their offspring; to keep them in countenance through any trial; to lend
+ them diplomacy in the carrying out of all enterprises; to be &ldquo;background&rdquo;
+ for them; and in these essentially biological functionings to imitate
+ their own matings and renew the excitement of their nuptial periods. Older
+ men, husbands of these ladies and fathers of eligible girls, were also to
+ be seen, most of them with Mr. Palmer in a billiard-room across the
+ corridor. Mr. and Mrs. Adams had not been invited. &ldquo;Of course papa and
+ mama just barely know Mildred Palmer,&rdquo; Alice thought, &ldquo;and most of the
+ other girls' fathers and mothers are old friends of Mr. and Mrs. Palmer,
+ but I do think she might have ASKED papa and mama, anyway&mdash;she
+ needn't have been afraid just to ask them; she knew they couldn't come.&rdquo;
+ And her smiling lip twitched a little threateningly, as she concluded the
+ silent monologue. &ldquo;I suppose she thinks I ought to be glad enough she
+ asked Walter!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter was, in fact, rather noticeable. He was not Mildred's only guest to
+ wear a short coat and to appear without gloves; but he was singular (at
+ least in his present surroundings) on account of a kind of coiffuring he
+ favoured, his hair having been shaped after what seemed a Mongol
+ inspiration. Only upon the top of the head was actual hair perceived, the
+ rest appearing to be nudity. And even more than by any difference in mode
+ he was set apart by his look and manner, in which there seemed to be a
+ brooding, secretive and jeering superiority and this was most vividly
+ expressed when he felt called upon for his loud, short, lop-sided laugh.
+ Whenever he uttered it Alice laughed, too, as loudly as she could, to
+ cover it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;How long we goin' to stand here? My feet are sproutin'
+ roots.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice took his arm, and they began to walk aimlessly through the rooms,
+ though she tried to look as if they had a definite destination, keeping
+ her eyes eager and her lips parted;&mdash;people had called jovially to
+ them from the distance, she meant to imply, and they were going to join
+ these merry friends. She was still upon this ghostly errand when a furious
+ outbreak of drums and saxophones sounded a prelude for the second dance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter danced with her again, but he gave her a warning. &ldquo;I don't want to
+ leave you high and dry,&rdquo; he told her, &ldquo;but I can't stand it. I got to get
+ somewhere I don't haf' to hurt my eyes with these berries; I'll go blind
+ if I got to look at any more of 'em. I'm goin' out to smoke as soon as the
+ music begins the next time, and you better get fixed for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice tried to get fixed for it. As they danced she nodded sunnily to
+ every man whose eye she caught, smiled her smile with the under lip caught
+ between her teeth; but it was not until the end of the intermission after
+ the dance that she saw help coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Across the room sat the globular lady she had encountered that morning,
+ and beside the globular lady sat a round-headed, round-bodied girl; her
+ daughter, at first glance. The family contour was also as evident a
+ characteristic of the short young man who stood in front of Mrs. Dowling,
+ engaged with her in a discussion which was not without evidences of an
+ earnestness almost impassioned. Like Walter, he was declining to dance a
+ third time with sister; he wished to go elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice from a sidelong eye watched the controversy: she saw the globular
+ young man glance toward her, over his shoulder; whereupon Mrs. Dowling,
+ following this glance, gave Alice a look of open fury, became much more
+ vehement in the argument, and even struck her knee with a round, fat fist
+ for emphasis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm on my way,&rdquo; said Walter. &ldquo;There's the music startin' up again, and I
+ told you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She nodded gratefully. &ldquo;It's all right&mdash;but come back before long,
+ Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The globular young man, red with annoyance, had torn himself from his
+ family and was hastening across the room to her. &ldquo;C'n I have this dance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, you nice Frank Dowling!&rdquo; Alice cried. &ldquo;How lovely!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ They danced. Mr. Dowling should have found other forms of exercise and
+ pastime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature has not designed everyone for dancing, though sometimes those she
+ has denied are the last to discover her niggardliness. But the round young
+ man was at least vigorous enough&mdash;too much so, when his knees
+ collided with Alice's&mdash;and he was too sturdy to be thrown off his
+ feet, himself, or to allow his partner to fall when he tripped her. He
+ held her up valiantly, and continued to beat a path through the crowd of
+ other dancers by main force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paid no attention to anything suggested by the efforts of the
+ musicians, and appeared to be unaware that there should have been some
+ connection between what they were doing and what he was doing; but he may
+ have listened to other music of his own, for his expression was of high
+ content; he seemed to feel no doubt whatever that he was dancing. Alice
+ kept as far away from him as under the circumstances she could; and when
+ they stopped she glanced down, and found the execution of unseen
+ manoeuvres, within the protection of her skirt, helpful to one of her
+ insteps and to the toes of both of her slippers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her cheery partner was paddling his rosy brows with a fine handkerchief.
+ &ldquo;That was great!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Let's go out and sit in the corridor; they've
+ got some comfortable chairs out there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;let's not,&rdquo; she returned. &ldquo;I believe I'd rather stay in here
+ and look at the crowd.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; that isn't it,&rdquo; he said, chiding her with a waggish forefinger. &ldquo;You
+ think if you go out there you'll miss a chance of someone else asking you
+ for the next dance, and so you'll have to give it to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How absurd!&rdquo; Then, after a look about her that revealed nothing
+ encouraging, she added graciously, &ldquo;You can have the next if you want it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Great!&rdquo; he exclaimed, mechanically. &ldquo;Now let's get out of here&mdash;out
+ of THIS room, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why? What's the matter with&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My mother,&rdquo; Mr. Dowling explained. &ldquo;But don't look at her. She keeps
+ motioning me to come and see after Ella, and I'm simply NOT going to do
+ it, you see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice laughed. &ldquo;I don't believe it's so much that,&rdquo; she said, and
+ consented to walk with him to a point in the next room from which Mrs.
+ Dowling's continuous signalling could not be seen. &ldquo;Your mother hates me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no; I wouldn't say that. No, she don't,&rdquo; he protested, innocently.
+ &ldquo;She don't know you more than just to speak to, you see. So how could
+ she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, she does. I can tell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A frown appeared upon his rounded brow. &ldquo;No; I'll tell you the way she
+ feels. It's like this: Ella isn't TOO popular, you know&mdash;it's hard to
+ see why, because she's a right nice girl, in her way&mdash;and mother
+ thinks I ought to look after her, you see. She thinks I ought to dance a
+ whole lot with her myself, and stir up other fellows to dance with her&mdash;it's
+ simply impossible to make mother understand you CAN'T do that, you see.
+ And then about me, you see, if she had her way I wouldn't get to dance
+ with anybody at all except girls like Mildred Palmer and Henrietta Lamb.
+ Mother wants to run my whole programme for me, you understand, but the
+ trouble of it is&mdash;about girls like that, you see well, I couldn't do
+ what she wants, even if I wanted to myself, because you take those girls,
+ and by the time I get Ella off my hands for a minute, why, their dances
+ are always every last one taken, and where do I come in?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice nodded, her amiability undamaged. &ldquo;I see. So that's why you dance
+ with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I like to,&rdquo; he protested. &ldquo;I rather dance with you than I do with
+ those girls.&rdquo; And he added with a retrospective determination which showed
+ that he had been through quite an experience with Mrs. Dowling in this
+ matter. &ldquo;I TOLD mother I would, too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did it take all your courage, Frank?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her shrewdly. &ldquo;Now you're trying to tease me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I
+ don't care; I WOULD rather dance with you! In the first place, you're a
+ perfectly beautiful dancer, you see, and in the second, a man feels a lot
+ more comfortable with you than he does with them. Of course I know almost
+ all the other fellows get along with those girls all right; but I don't
+ waste any time on 'em I don't have to. <i>I</i> like people that are
+ always cordial to everybody, you see&mdash;the way you are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; she said, thoughtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I MEAN it,&rdquo; he insisted. &ldquo;There goes the band again. Shall we?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose we sit it out?&rdquo; she suggested. &ldquo;I believe I'd like to go out in
+ the corridor, after all&mdash;it's pretty warm in here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assenting cheerfully, Dowling conducted her to a pair of easy-chairs
+ within a secluding grove of box-trees, and when they came to this retreat
+ they found Mildred Palmer just departing, under escort of a well-favoured
+ gentleman about thirty. As these two walked slowly away, in the direction
+ of the dancing-floor, they left it not to be doubted that they were on
+ excellent terms with each other; Mildred was evidently willing to make
+ their progress even slower, for she halted momentarily, once or twice; and
+ her upward glances to her tall companion's face were of a gentle, almost
+ blushing deference. Never before had Alice seen anything like this in her
+ friend's manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How queer!&rdquo; she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's queer?&rdquo; Dowling inquired as they sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who was that man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Haven't you met him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never saw him before. Who is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it's this Arthur Russell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What Arthur Russell? I never heard of him.&rdquo; Mr. Dowling was puzzled.
+ &ldquo;Why, THAT'S funny! Only the last time I saw you, you were telling me how
+ awfully well you knew Mildred Palmer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, certainly I do,&rdquo; Alice informed him. &ldquo;She's my most intimate
+ friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's what makes it seem so funny you haven't heard anything about this
+ Russell, because everybody says even if she isn't engaged to him right
+ now, she most likely will be before very long. I must say it looks a good
+ deal that way to me, myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What nonsense!&rdquo; Alice exclaimed. &ldquo;She's never even mentioned him to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man glanced at her dubiously and passed a finger over the tiny
+ prong that dashingly composed the whole substance of his moustache.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you see, Mildred IS pretty reserved,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;This Russell is
+ some kind of cousin of the Palmer family, I understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes&mdash;second or third or something, the girls say. You see, my sister
+ Ella hasn't got much to do at home, and don't read anything, or sew, or
+ play solitaire, you see; and she hears about pretty much everything that
+ goes on, you see. Well, Ella says a lot of the girls have been talking
+ about Mildred and this Arthur Russell for quite a while back, you see.
+ They were all wondering what he was going to look like, you see; because
+ he only got here yesterday; and that proves she must have been talking to
+ some of 'em, or else how&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice laughed airily, but the pretty sound ended abruptly with an audible
+ intake of breath. &ldquo;Of course, while Mildred IS my most intimate friend,&rdquo;
+ she said, &ldquo;I don't mean she tells me everything&mdash;and naturally she
+ has other friends besides. What else did your sister say she told them
+ about this Mr. Russell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it seems he's VERY well off; at least Henrietta Lamb told Ella he
+ was. Ella says&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice interrupted again, with an increased irritability. &ldquo;Oh, never mind
+ what Ella says! Let's find something better to talk about than Mr.
+ Russell!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I'M willing,&rdquo; Mr. Dowling assented, ruefully. &ldquo;What you want to
+ talk about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this liberal offer found her unresponsive; she sat leaning back,
+ silent, her arms along the arms of her chair, and her eyes, moist and
+ bright, fixed upon a wide doorway where the dancers fluctuated. She was
+ disquieted by more than Mildred's reserve, though reserve so marked had
+ certainly the significance of a warning that Alice's definition, &ldquo;my most
+ intimate friend,&rdquo; lacked sanction. Indirect notice to this effect could
+ not well have been more emphatic, but the sting of it was left for a later
+ moment. Something else preoccupied Alice: she had just been surprised by
+ an odd experience. At first sight of this Mr. Arthur Russell, she had said
+ to herself instantly, in words as definite as if she spoke them aloud,
+ though they seemed more like words spoken to her by some unknown person
+ within her: &ldquo;There! That's exactly the kind of looking man I'd like to
+ marry!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the eyes of the restless and the longing, Providence often appears to
+ be worse than inscrutable: an unreliable Omnipotence given to haphazard
+ whimsies in dealing with its own creatures, choosing at random some among
+ them to be rent with tragic deprivations and others to be petted with
+ blessing upon blessing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Alice's eyes, Mildred had been blessed enough; something ought to be
+ left over, by this time, for another girl. The final touch to the heaping
+ perfection of Christmas-in-everything for Mildred was that this Mr. Arthur
+ Russell, good-looking, kind-looking, graceful, the perfect fiance, should
+ be also &ldquo;VERY well off.&rdquo; Of course! These rich always married one another.
+ And while the Mildreds danced with their Arthur Russells the best an
+ outsider could do for herself was to sit with Frank Dowling&mdash;the one
+ last course left her that was better than dancing with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what DO you want to talk about?&rdquo; he inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Suppose we just sit, Frank.&rdquo; But a moment later she
+ remembered something, and, with a sudden animation, began to prattle. She
+ pointed to the musicians down the corridor. &ldquo;Oh, look at them! Look at the
+ leader! Aren't they FUNNY? Someone told me they're called 'Jazz Louie and
+ his half-breed bunch.' Isn't that just crazy? Don't you love it? Do watch
+ them, Frank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She continued to chatter, and, while thus keeping his glance away from
+ herself, she detached the forlorn bouquet of dead violets from her dress
+ and laid it gently beside the one she had carried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter already reposed in the obscurity selected for it at the base of
+ one of the box-trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she was abruptly silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You certainly are a funny girl,&rdquo; Dowling remarked. &ldquo;You say you don't
+ want to talk about anything at all, and all of a sudden you break out and
+ talk a blue streak; and just about the time I begin to get interested in
+ what you're saying you shut off! What's the matter with girls, anyhow,
+ when they do things like that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know; we're just queer, I guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say so! Well, what'll we do NOW? Talk, or just sit?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose we just sit some more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anything to oblige,&rdquo; he assented. &ldquo;I'm willing to sit as long as you
+ like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even as he made his amiability clear in this matter, the peace was
+ threatened&mdash;his mother came down the corridor like a rolling, ominous
+ cloud. She was looking about her on all sides, in a fidget of annoyance,
+ searching for him, and to his dismay she saw him. She immediately made a
+ horrible face at his companion, beckoned to him imperiously with a dumpy
+ arm, and shook her head reprovingly. The unfortunate young man tried to
+ repulse her with an icy stare, but this effort having obtained little to
+ encourage his feeble hope of driving her away, he shifted his chair so
+ that his back was toward her discomfiting pantomime. He should have known
+ better, the instant result was Mrs. Dowling in motion at an impetuous
+ waddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She entered the box-tree seclusion with the lower rotundities of her face
+ hastily modelled into the resemblance of an over-benevolent smile a
+ contortion which neglected to spread its intended geniality upward to the
+ exasperated eyes and anxious forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think your mother wants to speak to you, Frank,&rdquo; Alice said, upon this
+ advent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dowling nodded to her. &ldquo;Good evening, Miss Adams,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I just
+ thought as you and Frank weren't dancing you wouldn't mind my disturbing
+ you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; Alice murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Dowling seemed of a different mind. &ldquo;Well, what DO you want?&rdquo; he
+ inquired, whereupon his mother struck him roguishly with her fan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad fellow!&rdquo; She turned to Alice. &ldquo;I'm sure you won't mind excusing him
+ to let him do something for his old mother, Miss Adams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What DO you want?&rdquo; the son repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two very nice things,&rdquo; Mrs. Dowling informed him. &ldquo;Everybody is so
+ anxious for Henrietta Lamb to have a pleasant evening, because it's the
+ very first time she's been anywhere since her father's death, and of
+ course her dear grandfather's an old friend of ours, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; her son interrupted. &ldquo;Miss Adams isn't interested in all
+ this, mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Henrietta came to speak to Ella and me, and I told her you were so
+ anxious to dance with her&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Look here! I'd rather do my own&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; that's just it,&rdquo; Mrs. Dowling explained. &ldquo;I just thought it was such
+ a good opportunity; and Henrietta said she had most of her dances taken,
+ but she'd give you one if you asked her before they were all gone. So I
+ thought you'd better see her as soon as possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dowling's face had become rosy. &ldquo;I refuse to do anything of the kind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad fellow!&rdquo; said his mother, gaily. &ldquo;I thought this would be the best
+ time for you to see Henrietta, because it won't be long till all her
+ dances are gone, and you've promised on your WORD to dance the next with
+ Ella, and you mightn't have a chance to do it then. I'm sure Miss Adams
+ won't mind if you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; Alice said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, <i>I</i> mind!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I wish you COULD understand that when I
+ want to dance with any girl I don't need my mother to ask her for me. I
+ really AM more than six years old!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke with too much vehemence, and Mrs. Dowling at once saw how to have
+ her way. As with husbands and wives, so with many fathers and daughters,
+ and so with some sons and mothers: the man will himself be cross in public
+ and think nothing of it, nor will he greatly mind a little crossness on
+ the part of the woman; but let her show agitation before any spectator, he
+ is instantly reduced to a coward's slavery. Women understand that ancient
+ weakness, of course; for it is one of their most important means of
+ defense, but can be used ignobly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dowling permitted a tremulousness to become audible in her voice. &ldquo;It
+ isn't very&mdash;very pleasant&mdash;to be talked to like that by your own
+ son&mdash;before strangers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my! Look here!&rdquo; the stricken Dowling protested. &ldquo;<i>I</i> didn't say
+ anything, mother. I was just joking about how you never get over thinking
+ I'm a little boy. I only&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dowling continued: &ldquo;I just thought I was doing you a little favour. I
+ didn't think it would make you so angry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother, for goodness' sake! Miss Adams'll think&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; Mrs. Dowling interrupted, piteously, &ldquo;I suppose it doesn't
+ matter what <i>I</i> think!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, gracious!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice interfered; she perceived that the ruthless Mrs. Dowling meant to
+ have her way. &ldquo;I think you'd better go, Frank. Really.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There!&rdquo; his mother cried. &ldquo;Miss Adams says so, herself! What more do you
+ want?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, gracious!&rdquo; he lamented again, and, with a sick look over his shoulder
+ at Alice, permitted his mother to take his arm and propel him away. Mrs.
+ Dowling's spirits had strikingly recovered even before the pair passed
+ from the corridor: she moved almost bouncingly beside her embittered son,
+ and her eyes and all the convolutions of her abundant face were blithe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice went in search of Walter, but without much hope of finding him. What
+ he did with himself at frozen-face dances was one of his most successful
+ mysteries, and her present excursion gave her no clue leading to its
+ solution. When the musicians again lowered their instruments for an
+ interval she had returned, alone, to her former seat within the partial
+ shelter of the box-trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had now to practice an art that affords but a limited variety of
+ methods, even to the expert: the art of seeming to have an escort or
+ partner when there is none. The practitioner must imply, merely by
+ expression and attitude, that the supposed companion has left her for only
+ a few moments, that she herself has sent him upon an errand; and, if
+ possible, the minds of observers must be directed toward a conclusion that
+ this errand of her devising is an amusing one; at all events, she is alone
+ temporarily and of choice, not deserted. She awaits a devoted man who may
+ return at any instant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other people desired to sit in Alice's nook, but discovered her in
+ occupancy. She had moved the vacant chair closer to her own, and she sat
+ with her arm extended so that her hand, holding her lace kerchief, rested
+ upon the back of this second chair, claiming it. Such a preemption, like
+ that of a traveller's bag in the rack, was unquestionable; and, for
+ additional evidence, sitting with her knees crossed, she kept one foot
+ continuously moving a little, in cadence with the other, which tapped the
+ floor. Moreover, she added a fine detail: her half-smile, with the under
+ lip caught, seemed to struggle against repression, as if she found the
+ service engaging her absent companion even more amusing than she would let
+ him see when he returned: there was jovial intrigue of some sort afoot,
+ evidently. Her eyes, beaming with secret fun, were averted from intruders,
+ but sometimes, when couples approached, seeking possession of the nook,
+ her thoughts about the absentee appeared to threaten her with outright
+ laughter; and though one or two girls looked at her skeptically, as they
+ turned away, their escorts felt no such doubts, and merely wondered what
+ importantly funny affair Alice Adams was engaged in. She had learned to do
+ it perfectly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had learned it during the last two years; she was twenty when for the
+ first time she had the shock of finding herself without an applicant for
+ one of her dances. When she was sixteen &ldquo;all the nice boys in town,&rdquo; as
+ her mother said, crowded the Adamses' small veranda and steps, or sat near
+ by, cross-legged on the lawn, on summer evenings; and at eighteen she had
+ replaced the boys with &ldquo;the older men.&rdquo; By this time most of &ldquo;the other
+ girls,&rdquo; her contemporaries, were away at school or college, and when they
+ came home to stay, they &ldquo;came out&rdquo;&mdash;that feeble revival of an ancient
+ custom offering the maiden to the ceremonial inspection of the tribe.
+ Alice neither went away nor &ldquo;came out,&rdquo; and, in contrast with those who
+ did, she may have seemed to lack freshness of lustre&mdash;jewels are
+ richest when revealed all new in a white velvet box. And Alice may have
+ been too eager to secure new retainers, too kind in her efforts to keep
+ the old ones. She had been a belle too soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The device of the absentee partner has the defect that it cannot be
+ employed for longer than ten or fifteen minutes at a time, and it may not
+ be repeated more than twice in one evening: a single repetition, indeed,
+ is weak, and may prove a betrayal. Alice knew that her present performance
+ could be effective during only this interval between dances; and though
+ her eyes were guarded, she anxiously counted over the partnerless young
+ men who lounged together in the doorways within her view. Every one of
+ them ought to have asked her for dances, she thought, and although she
+ might have been put to it to give a reason why any of them &ldquo;ought,&rdquo; her
+ heart was hot with resentment against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a girl who has been a belle, it is harder to live through these bad
+ times than it is for one who has never known anything better. Like a
+ figure of painted and brightly varnished wood, Ella Dowling sat against
+ the wall through dance after dance with glassy imperturbability; it was
+ easier to be wooden, Alice thought, if you had your mother with you, as
+ Ella had. You were left with at least the shred of a pretense that you
+ came to sit with your mother as a spectator, and not to offer yourself to
+ be danced with by men who looked you over and rejected you&mdash;not for
+ the first time. &ldquo;Not for the first time&rdquo;: there lay a sting! Why had you
+ thought this time might be different from the other times? Why had you
+ broken your back picking those hundreds of violets?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hating the fatuous young men in the doorways more bitterly for every
+ instant that she had to maintain her tableau, the smiling Alice knew
+ fierce impulses to spring to her feet and shout at them, &ldquo;You IDIOTS!&rdquo;
+ Hands in pockets, they lounged against the pilasters, or faced one
+ another, laughing vaguely, each one of them seeming to Alice no more than
+ so much mean beef in clothes. She wanted to tell them they were no better
+ than that; and it seemed a cruel thing of heaven to let them go on
+ believing themselves young lords. They were doing nothing, killing time.
+ Wasn't she at her lowest value at least a means of killing time? Evidently
+ the mean beeves thought not. And when one of them finally lounged across
+ the corridor and spoke to her, he was the very one to whom she preferred
+ her loneliness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Waiting for somebody, Lady Alicia?&rdquo; he asked, negligently; and his easy
+ burlesque of her name was like the familiarity of the rest of him. He was
+ one of those full-bodied, grossly handsome men who are powerful and
+ active, but never submit themselves to the rigour of becoming athletes,
+ though they shoot and fish from expensive camps. Gloss is the most shining
+ outward mark of the type. Nowadays these men no longer use brilliantine on
+ their moustaches, but they have gloss bought from manicure-girls, from
+ masseurs, and from automobile-makers; and their eyes, usually large, are
+ glossy. None of this is allowed to interfere with business; these are
+ &ldquo;good business men,&rdquo; and often make large fortunes. They are men of
+ imagination about two things&mdash;women and money, and, combining their
+ imaginings about both, usually make a wise first marriage. Later, however,
+ they are apt to imagine too much about some little woman without whom life
+ seems duller than need be. They run away, leaving the first wife well
+ enough dowered. They are never intentionally unkind to women, and in the
+ end they usually make the mistake of thinking they have had their money's
+ worth of life. Here was Mr. Harvey Malone, a young specimen in an earlier
+ stage of development, trying to marry Henrietta Lamb, and now sauntering
+ over to speak to Alice, as a time-killer before his next dance with
+ Henrietta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice made no response to his question, and he dropped lazily into the
+ vacant chair, from which she sharply withdrew her hand. &ldquo;I might as well
+ use his chair till he comes, don't you think? You don't MIND, do you, old
+ girl?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;It doesn't matter one way or the other. Please
+ don't call me that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So that's how you feel?&rdquo; Mr. Malone laughed indulgently, without much
+ interest. &ldquo;I've been meaning to come to see you for a long time honestly I
+ have&mdash;because I wanted to have a good talk with you about old times.
+ I know you think it was funny, after the way I used to come to your house
+ two or three times a week, and sometimes oftener&mdash;well, I don't blame
+ you for being hurt, the way I stopped without explaining or anything. The
+ truth is there wasn't any reason: I just happened to have a lot of
+ important things to do and couldn't find the time. But I AM going to call
+ on you some evening&mdash;honestly I am. I don't wonder you think&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're mistaken,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;I've never thought anything about it at
+ all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; he said, and looked at her languidly. &ldquo;What's the use of
+ being cross with this old man? He always means well.&rdquo; And, extending his
+ arm, he would have given her a friendly pat upon the shoulder but she
+ evaded it. &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Seems to me you're getting awful
+ tetchy! Don't you like your old friends any more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not all of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who's the new one?&rdquo; he asked, teasingly. &ldquo;Come on and tell us, Alice. Who
+ is it you were holding this chair for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, all I've got to do is to sit here till he comes back; then I'll see
+ who it is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He may not come back before you have to go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guess you got me THAT time,&rdquo; Malone admitted, laughing as he rose.
+ &ldquo;They're tuning up, and I've got this dance. I AM coming around to see you
+ some evening.&rdquo; He moved away, calling back over his shoulder, &ldquo;Honestly, I
+ am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice did not look at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had held her tableau as long as she could; it was time for her to
+ abandon the box-trees; and she stepped forth frowning, as if a little
+ annoyed with the absentee for being such a time upon her errand; whereupon
+ the two chairs were instantly seized by a coquetting pair who intended to
+ &ldquo;sit out&rdquo; the dance. She walked quickly down the broad corridor, turned
+ into the broader hall, and hurriedly entered the dressing-room where she
+ had left her wraps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stayed here as long as she could, pretending to arrange her hair at a
+ mirror, then fidgeting with one of her slipper-buckles; but the
+ intelligent elderly woman in charge of the room made an indefinite sojourn
+ impracticable. &ldquo;Perhaps I could help you with that buckle, Miss,&rdquo; she
+ suggested, approaching. &ldquo;Has it come loose?&rdquo; Alice wrenched desperately;
+ then it was loose. The competent woman, producing needle and thread,
+ deftly made the buckle fast; and there was nothing for Alice to do but to
+ express her gratitude and go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went to the door of the cloak-room opposite, where a coloured man
+ stood watchfully in the doorway. &ldquo;I wonder if you know which of the
+ gentlemen is my brother, Mr. Walter Adams,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes'm; I know him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Could you tell me where he is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No'm; I couldn't say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if you see him, would you please tell him that his sister, Miss
+ Adams, is looking for him and very anxious to speak to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes'm. Sho'ly, sho'ly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she went away he stared after her and seemed to swell with some
+ bursting emotion. In fact, it was too much for him, and he suddenly
+ retired within the room, releasing strangulated laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter remonstrated. Behind an excellent screen of coats and hats, in a
+ remote part of the room, he was kneeling on the floor, engaged in a game
+ of chance with a second coloured attendant; and the laughter became so
+ vehement that it not only interfered with the pastime in hand, but
+ threatened to attract frozen-face attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cain' he'p it, man,&rdquo; the laughter explained. &ldquo;I cain' he'p it! You
+ sut'n'y the beatin'es' white boy 'n 'is city!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dancers were swinging into an &ldquo;encore&rdquo; as Alice halted for an
+ irresolute moment in a doorway. Across the room, a cluster of matrons sat
+ chatting absently, their eyes on their dancing daughters; and Alice,
+ finding a refugee's courage, dodged through the scurrying couples, seated
+ herself in a chair on the outskirts of this colony of elders, and began to
+ talk eagerly to the matron nearest her. The matron seemed unaccustomed to
+ so much vivacity, and responded but dryly, whereupon Alice was more
+ vivacious than ever; for she meant now to present the picture of a jolly
+ girl too much interested in these wise older women to bother about every
+ foolish young man who asked her for a dance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her matron was constrained to go so far as to supply a tolerant nod, now
+ and then, in complement to the girl's animation, and Alice was grateful
+ for the nods. In this fashion she supplemented the exhausted resources of
+ the dressing-room and the box-tree nook; and lived through two more
+ dances, when again Mr. Frank Dowling presented himself as a partner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She needed no pretense to seek the dressing-room for repairs after that
+ number; this time they were necessary and genuine. Dowling waited for her,
+ and when she came out he explained for the fourth or fifth time how the
+ accident had happened. &ldquo;It was entirely those other people's fault,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;They got me in a kind of a corner, because neither of those fellows
+ knows the least thing about guiding; they just jam ahead and expect
+ everybody to get out of their way. It was Charlotte Thom's diamond
+ crescent pin that got caught on your dress in the back and made such a&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; Alice said in a tired voice. &ldquo;The maid fixed it so that she
+ says it isn't very noticeable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it isn't,&rdquo; he returned. &ldquo;You could hardly tell there'd been
+ anything the matter. Where do you want to go? Mother's been interfering in
+ my affairs some more and I've got the next taken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was sitting with Mrs. George Dresser. You might take me back there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He left her with the matron, and Alice returned to her picture-making, so
+ that once more, while two numbers passed, whoever cared to look was
+ offered the sketch of a jolly, clever girl preoccupied with her elders.
+ Then she found her friend Mildred standing before her, presenting Mr.
+ Arthur Russell, who asked her to dance with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice looked uncertain, as though not sure what her engagements were; but
+ her perplexity cleared; she nodded, and swung rhythmically away with the
+ tall applicant. She was not grateful to her hostess for this alms. What a
+ young hostess does with a fiance, Alice thought, is to make him dance with
+ the unpopular girls. She supposed that Mr. Arthur Russell had already
+ danced with Ella Dowling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loan of a lover, under these circumstances, may be painful to the
+ lessee, and Alice, smiling never more brightly, found nothing to say to
+ Mr. Russell, though she thought he might have found something to say to
+ her. &ldquo;I wonder what Mildred told him,&rdquo; she thought. &ldquo;Probably she said,
+ 'Dearest, there's one more girl you've got to help me out with. You
+ wouldn't like her much, but she dances well enough and she's having a
+ rotten time. Nobody ever goes near her any more.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the music stopped, Russell added his applause to the hand-clapping
+ that encouraged the uproarious instruments to continue, and as they
+ renewed the tumult, he said heartily, &ldquo;That's splendid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice gave him a glance, necessarily at short range, and found his eyes
+ kindly and pleased. Here was a friendly soul, it appeared, who probably
+ &ldquo;liked everybody.&rdquo; No doubt he had applauded for an &ldquo;encore&rdquo; when he
+ danced with Ella Dowling, gave Ella the same genial look, and said,
+ &ldquo;That's splendid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the &ldquo;encore&rdquo; was over, Alice spoke to him for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mildred will be looking for you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I think you'd better take me
+ back to where you found me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked surprised. &ldquo;Oh, if you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sure Mildred will be needing you,&rdquo; Alice said, and as she took his
+ arm and they walked toward Mrs. Dresser, she thought it might be just
+ possible to make a further use of the loan. &ldquo;Oh, I wonder if you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ she began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; he said, quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't know my brother, Walter Adams,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But he's somewhere I
+ think possibly he's in a smoking-room or some place where girls aren't
+ expected, and if you wouldn't think it too much trouble to inquire&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll find him,&rdquo; Russell said, promptly. &ldquo;Thank you so much for that
+ dance. I'll bring your brother in a moment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was to be a long moment, Alice decided, presently. Mrs. Dresser had
+ grown restive; and her nods and vague responses to her young dependent's
+ gaieties were as meager as they could well be. Evidently the matron had no
+ intention of appearing to her world in the light of a chaperone for Alice
+ Adams; and she finally made this clear. With a word or two of excuse,
+ breaking into something Alice was saying, she rose and went to sit next to
+ Mildred's mother, who had become the nucleus of the cluster. So Alice was
+ left very much against the wall, with short stretches of vacant chairs on
+ each side of her. She had come to the end of her picture-making, and could
+ only pretend that there was something amusing the matter with the arm of
+ her chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She supposed that Mildred's Mr. Russell had forgotten Walter by this time.
+ &ldquo;I'm not even an intimate enough friend of Mildred's for him to have
+ thought he ought to bother to tell me he couldn't find him,&rdquo; she thought.
+ And then she saw Russell coming across the room toward her, with Walter
+ beside him. She jumped up gaily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, thank you!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I know this naughty boy must have been
+ terribly hard to find. Mildred'll NEVER forgive me! I've put you to so
+ much&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; he said, amiably, and went away, leaving the brother and
+ sister together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter, let's dance just once more,&rdquo; Alice said, touching his arm
+ placatively. &ldquo;I thought&mdash;well, perhaps we might go home then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Walter's expression was that of a person upon whom an outrage has just
+ been perpetrated. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We've stayed THIS long, I'm goin' to
+ wait and see what they got to eat. And you look here!&rdquo; He turned upon her
+ angrily. &ldquo;Don't you ever do that again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Send somebody after me that pokes his nose into every corner of the house
+ till he finds me! 'Are you Mr. Walter Adams?' he says. I guess he must
+ asked everybody in the place if they were Mr. Walter Adams! Well, I'll bet
+ a few iron men you wouldn't send anybody to hunt for me again if you knew
+ where he found me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where was it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter decided that her fit punishment was to know. &ldquo;I was shootin' dice
+ with those coons in the cloak-room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And he saw you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unless he was blind!&rdquo; said Walter. &ldquo;Come on, I'll dance this one more
+ dance with you. Supper comes after that, and THEN we'll go home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams heard Alice's key turning in the front door and hurried down
+ the stairs to meet her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you get wet coming in, darling?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;Did you have a good
+ time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just lovely!&rdquo; Alice said, cheerily, and after she had arranged the latch
+ for Walter, who had gone to return the little car, she followed her mother
+ upstairs and hummed a dance-tune on the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I'm so glad you had a nice time,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, as they reached
+ the door of her daughter's room together. &ldquo;You DESERVED to, and it's
+ lovely to think&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at this, without warning, Alice threw herself into her mother's arms,
+ sobbing so loudly that in his room, close by, her father, half drowsing
+ through the night, started to full wakefulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On a morning, a week after this collapse of festal hopes, Mrs. Adams and
+ her daughter were concluding a three-days' disturbance, the &ldquo;Spring
+ house-cleaning&rdquo;&mdash;postponed until now by Adams's long illness&mdash;and
+ Alice, on her knees before a chest of drawers, in her mother's room,
+ paused thoughtfully after dusting a packet of letters wrapped in worn
+ muslin. She called to her mother, who was scrubbing the floor of the
+ hallway just beyond the open door,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These old letters you had in the bottom drawer, weren't they some papa
+ wrote you before you were married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams laughed and said, &ldquo;Yes. Just put 'em back where they were&mdash;or
+ else up in the attic&mdash;anywhere you want to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mind if I read one, mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams laughed again. &ldquo;Oh, I guess you can if you want to. I expect
+ they're pretty funny!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice laughed in response, and chose the topmost letter of the packet. &ldquo;My
+ dear, beautiful girl,&rdquo; it began; and she stared at these singular words.
+ They gave her a shock like that caused by overhearing some bewildering
+ impropriety; and, having read them over to herself several times, she went
+ on to experience other shocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR, BEAUTIFUL GIRL:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time yesterday I had a mighty bad case of blues because I had not had
+ a word from you in two whole long days and when I do not hear from you
+ every day things look mighty down in the mouth to me. Now it is all so
+ different because your letter has arrived and besides I have got a piece
+ of news I believe you will think as fine as I do. Darling, you will be
+ surprised, so get ready to hear about a big effect on our future. It is
+ this way. I had sort of a suspicion the head of the firm kind of took a
+ fancy to me from the first when I went in there, and liked the way I
+ attended to my work and so when he took me on this business trip with him
+ I felt pretty sure of it and now it turns out I was about right. In return
+ I guess I have got about the best boss in this world and I believe you
+ will think so too. Yes, sweetheart, after the talk I have just had with
+ him if J. A. Lamb asked me to cut my hand off for him I guess I would come
+ pretty near doing it because what he says means the end of our waiting to
+ be together. From New Years on he is going to put me in entire charge of
+ the sundries dept. and what do you think is going to be my salary? Eleven
+ hundred cool dollars a year ($1,100.00). That's all! Just only a cool
+ eleven hundred per annum! Well, I guess that will show your mother whether
+ I can take care of you or not. And oh how I would like to see your dear,
+ beautiful, loving face when you get this news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would like to go out on the public streets and just dance and shout and
+ it is all I can do to help doing it, especially when I know we will be
+ talking it all over together this time next week, and oh my darling, now
+ that your folks have no excuse for putting it off any longer we might be
+ in our own little home before Xmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would you be glad?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, darling, this settles everything and makes our future just about as
+ smooth for us as anybody could ask. I can hardly realize after all this
+ waiting life's troubles are over for you and me and we have nothing to do
+ but to enjoy the happiness granted us by this wonderful, beautiful thing
+ we call life. I know I am not any poet and the one I tried to write about
+ you the day of the picnic was fearful but the way I THINK about you is a
+ poem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Write me what you think of the news. I know but write me anyhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'll get it before we start home and I can be reading it over all the time
+ on the tram.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your always loving
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIRGIL.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sound of her mother's diligent scrubbing in the hall came back slowly
+ to Alice's hearing, as she restored the letter to the packet, wrapped the
+ packet in its muslin covering, and returned it to the drawer. She had
+ remained upon her knees while she read the letter; now she sank backward,
+ sitting upon the floor with her hands behind her, an unconscious relaxing
+ for better ease to think. Upon her face there had fallen a look of wonder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first time she was vaguely perceiving that life is everlasting
+ movement. Youth really believes what is running water to be a permanent
+ crystallization and sees time fixed to a point: some people have dark
+ hair, some people have blond hair, some people have gray hair. Until this
+ moment, Alice had no conviction that there was a universe before she came
+ into it. She had always thought of it as the background of herself: the
+ moon was something to make her prettier on a summer night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this old letter, through which she saw still flickering an ancient
+ starlight of young love, astounded her. Faintly before her it revealed the
+ whole lives of her father and mother, who had been young, after all&mdash;they
+ REALLY had&mdash;and their youth was now so utterly passed from them that
+ the picture of it, in the letter, was like a burlesque of them. And so
+ she, herself, must pass to such changes, too, and all that now seemed
+ vital to her would be nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When her work was finished, that afternoon, she went into her father's
+ room. His recovery had progressed well enough to permit the departure of
+ Miss Perry; and Adams, wearing one of Mrs. Adams's wrappers over his
+ night-gown, sat in a high-backed chair by a closed window. The weather was
+ warm, but the closed window and the flannel wrapper had not sufficed him:
+ round his shoulders he had an old crocheted scarf of Alice's; his legs
+ were wrapped in a heavy comfort; and, with these swathings about him, and
+ his eyes closed, his thin and grizzled head making but a slight
+ indentation in the pillow supporting it, he looked old and little and
+ queer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice would have gone out softly, but without opening his eyes, he spoke
+ to her: &ldquo;Don't go, dearie. Come sit with the old man a little while.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She brought a chair near his. &ldquo;I thought you were napping.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I don't hardly ever do that. I just drift a little sometimes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you mean you drift, papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her vaguely. &ldquo;Oh, I don't know. Kind of pictures. They get a
+ little mixed up&mdash;old times with times still ahead, like planning what
+ to do, you know. That's as near a nap as I get&mdash;when the pictures mix
+ up some. I suppose it's sort of drowsing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took one of his hands and stroked it. &ldquo;What do you mean when you say
+ you have pictures like 'planning what to do'?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mean planning what to do when I get out and able to go to work again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that doesn't need any planning,&rdquo; Alice said, quickly. &ldquo;You're going
+ back to your old place at Lamb's, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams closed his eyes again, sighing heavily, but made no other response.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, of COURSE you are!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;What are you talking about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His head turned slowly toward her, revealing the eyes, open in a haggard
+ stare. &ldquo;I heard you the other night when you came from the party,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;I know what was the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, you don't,&rdquo; she assured him. &ldquo;You don't know anything about it,
+ because there wasn't anything the matter at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you suppose I heard you crying? What'd you cry for if there wasn't
+ anything the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just nerves, papa. It wasn't anything else in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Your mother told me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She promised me not to!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that Adams laughed mournfully. &ldquo;It wouldn't be very likely I'd hear you
+ so upset and not ask about it, even if she didn't come and tell me on her
+ own hook. You needn't try to fool me; I tell you I know what was the
+ matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The only matter was I had a silly fit,&rdquo; Alice protested. &ldquo;It did me good,
+ too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I've decided to do something about it, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn't the way your mother looks at it,&rdquo; Adams said, ruefully. &ldquo;She
+ thinks it's our place to do something about it. Well, I don't know&mdash;I
+ don't know; everything seems so changed these days. You've always been a
+ good daughter, Alice, and you ought to have as much as any of these girls
+ you go with; she's convinced me she's right about THAT. The trouble is&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ He faltered, apologetically, then went on, &ldquo;I mean the question is&mdash;how
+ to get it for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I had no business to make such a fuss just because a lot
+ of idiots didn't break their necks to get dances with me and because I got
+ mortified about Walter&mdash;Walter WAS pretty terrible&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, me, my!&rdquo; Adams lamented. &ldquo;I guess that's something we just have to
+ leave work out itself. What you going to do with a boy nineteen or twenty
+ years old that makes his own living? Can't whip him. Can't keep him locked
+ up in the house. Just got to hope he'll learn better, I suppose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course he didn't want to go to the Palmers',&rdquo; Alice explained,
+ tolerantly&mdash;&ldquo;and as mama and I made him take me, and he thought that
+ was pretty selfish in me, why, he felt he had a right to amuse himself any
+ way he could. Of course it was awful that this&mdash;that this Mr. Russell
+ should&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; In spite of her, the recollection choked her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it was awful,&rdquo; Adams agreed. &ldquo;Just awful. Oh, me, my!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alice recovered herself at once, and showed him a cheerful face.
+ &ldquo;Well, just a few years from now I probably won't even remember it! I
+ believe hardly anything amounts to as much as we think it does at the
+ time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;sometimes it don't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What I've been thinking, papa: it seems to me I ought to DO something.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked dreamy, but was obviously serious as she told him: &ldquo;Well, I
+ mean I ought to be something besides just a kind of nobody. I ought to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ She paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, dearie?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;there's one thing I'd like to do. I'm sure I COULD do it,
+ too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to go on the stage: I know I could act.&rdquo; At this, her father
+ abruptly gave utterance to a feeble cackling of laughter; and when Alice,
+ surprised and a little offended, pressed him for his reason, he tried to
+ evade, saying, &ldquo;Nothing, dearie. I just thought of something.&rdquo; But she
+ persisted until he had to explain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It made me think of your mother's sister, your Aunt Flora, that died when
+ you were little,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;She was always telling how she was going on
+ the stage, and talking about how she was certain she'd make a great
+ actress, and all so on; and one day your mother broke out and said she
+ ought 'a' gone on the stage, herself, because she always knew she had the
+ talent for it&mdash;and, well, they got into kind of a spat about which
+ one'd make the best actress. I had to go out in the hall to laugh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe you were wrong,&rdquo; Alice said, gravely. &ldquo;If they both felt it, why
+ wouldn't that look as if there was talent in the family? I've ALWAYS
+ thought&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, dearie,&rdquo; he said, with a final chuckle. &ldquo;Your mother and Flora
+ weren't different from a good many others. I expect ninety per cent. of
+ all the women I ever knew were just sure they'd be mighty fine actresses
+ if they ever got the chance. Well, I guess it's a good thing; they enjoy
+ thinking about it and it don't do anybody any harm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was piqued. For several days she had thought almost continuously of
+ a career to be won by her own genius. Not that she planned details, or
+ concerned herself with first steps; her picturings overleaped all that.
+ Principally, she saw her name great on all the bill-boards of that unkind
+ city, and herself, unchanged in age but glamorous with fame and Paris
+ clothes, returning in a private car. No doubt the pleasantest development
+ of her vision was a dialogue with Mildred; and this became so real that,
+ as she projected it, Alice assumed the proper expressions for both parties
+ to it, formed words with her lips, and even spoke some of them aloud. &ldquo;No,
+ I haven't forgotten you, Mrs. Russell. I remember you quite pleasantly, in
+ fact. You were a Miss Palmer, I recall, in those funny old days. Very kind
+ of you, I'm shaw. I appreciate your eagerness to do something for me in
+ your own little home. As you say, a reception WOULD renew my
+ acquaintanceship with many old friends&mdash;but I'm shaw you won't mind
+ my mentioning that I don't find much inspiration in these provincials. I
+ really must ask you not to press me. An artist's time is not her own,
+ though of course I could hardly expect you to understand&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Alice illuminated the dull time; but she retired from the interview
+ with her father still manfully displaying an outward cheerfulness, while
+ depression grew heavier within, as if she had eaten soggy cake. Her father
+ knew nothing whatever of the stage, and she was aware of his ignorance,
+ yet for some reason his innocently skeptical amusement reduced her bright
+ project almost to nothing. Something like this always happened, it seemed;
+ she was continually making these illuminations, all gay with gildings and
+ colourings; and then as soon as anybody else so much as glanced at them&mdash;even
+ her father, who loved her&mdash;the pretty designs were stricken with a
+ desolating pallor. &ldquo;Is this LIFE?&rdquo; Alice wondered, not doubting that the
+ question was original and all her own. &ldquo;Is it life to spend your time
+ imagining things that aren't so, and never will be? Beautiful things
+ happen to other people; why should I be the only one they never CAN happen
+ to?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mood lasted overnight; and was still upon her the next afternoon when
+ an errand for her father took her down-town. Adams had decided to begin
+ smoking again, and Alice felt rather degraded, as well as embarrassed,
+ when she went into the large shop her father had named, and asked for the
+ cheap tobacco he used in his pipe. She fell back upon an air of amused
+ indulgence, hoping thus to suggest that her purchase was made for some
+ faithful old retainer, now infirm; and although the calmness of the clerk
+ who served her called for no such elaboration of her sketch, she
+ ornamented it with a little laugh and with the remark, as she dropped the
+ package into her coat-pocket, &ldquo;I'm sure it'll please him; they tell me
+ it's the kind he likes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still playing Lady Bountiful, smiling to herself in anticipation of the
+ joy she was bringing to the simple old negro or Irish follower of the
+ family, she left the shop; but as she came out upon the crowded pavement
+ her smile vanished quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to the door of the tobacco-shop, there was the open entrance to a
+ stairway, and, above this rather bleak and dark aperture, a sign-board
+ displayed in begrimed gilt letters the information that Frincke's Business
+ College occupied the upper floors of the building. Furthermore, Frincke
+ here publicly offered &ldquo;personal instruction and training in practical
+ mathematics, bookkeeping, and all branches of the business life, including
+ stenography, typewriting, etc.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice halted for a moment, frowning at this signboard as though it were
+ something surprising and distasteful which she had never seen before. Yet
+ it was conspicuous in a busy quarter; she almost always passed it when she
+ came down-town, and never without noticing it. Nor was this the first time
+ she had paused to lift toward it that same glance of vague misgiving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The building was not what the changeful city defined as a modern one, and
+ the dusty wooden stairway, as seen from the pavement, disappeared upward
+ into a smoky darkness. So would the footsteps of a girl ascending there
+ lead to a hideous obscurity, Alice thought; an obscurity as dreary and as
+ permanent as death. And like dry leaves falling about her she saw her
+ wintry imaginings in the May air: pretty girls turning into withered
+ creatures as they worked at typing-machines; old maids &ldquo;taking dictation&rdquo;
+ from men with double chins; Alice saw old maids of a dozen different kinds
+ &ldquo;taking dictation.&rdquo; Her mind's eye was crowded with them, as it always was
+ when she passed that stairway entrance; and though they were all different
+ from one another, all of them looked a little like herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She hated the place, and yet she seldom hurried by it or averted her eyes.
+ It had an unpleasant fascination for her, and a mysterious reproach, which
+ she did not seek to fathom. She walked on thoughtfully to-day; and when,
+ at the next corner, she turned into the street that led toward home, she
+ was given a surprise. Arthur Russell came rapidly from behind her, lifting
+ his hat as she saw him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you walking north, Miss Adams?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Do you mind if I walk with
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was not delighted, but seemed so. &ldquo;How charming!&rdquo; she cried, giving
+ him a little flourish of the shapely hands; and then, because she wondered
+ if he had seen her coming out of the tobacco-shop, she laughed and added,
+ &ldquo;I've just been on the most ridiculous errand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To order some cigars for my father. He's been quite ill, poor man, and
+ he's so particular&mdash;but what in the world do <i>I</i> know about
+ cigars?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell laughed. &ldquo;Well, what DO you know about 'em? Did you select by the
+ price?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mercy, no!&rdquo; she exclaimed, and added, with an afterthought, &ldquo;Of course he
+ wrote down the name of the kind he wanted and I gave it to the shopman. I
+ could never have pronounced it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In her pocket as she spoke her hand rested upon the little sack of
+ tobacco, which responded accusingly to the touch of her restless fingers;
+ and she found time to wonder why she was building up this fiction for Mr.
+ Arthur Russell. His discovery of Walter's device for whiling away the dull
+ evening had shamed and distressed her; but she would have suffered no less
+ if almost any other had been the discoverer. In this gentleman, after
+ hearing that he was Mildred's Mr. Arthur Russell, Alice felt not the
+ slightest &ldquo;personal interest&rdquo;; and there was yet to develop in her life
+ such a thing as an interest not personal. At twenty-two this state of
+ affairs is not unique.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far as Alice was concerned Russell might have worn a placard,
+ &ldquo;Engaged.&rdquo; She looked upon him as diners entering a restaurant look upon
+ tables marked &ldquo;Reserved&rdquo;: the glance, slightly discontented, passes on at
+ once. Or so the eye of a prospector wanders querulously over staked and
+ established claims on the mountainside, and seeks the virgin land beyond;
+ unless, indeed, the prospector be dishonest. But Alice was no claim-jumper&mdash;so
+ long as the notice of ownership was plainly posted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though she was indifferent now, habit ruled her: and, at the very time she
+ wondered why she created fictitious cigars for her father, she was also
+ regretting that she had not boldly carried her Malacca stick down-town
+ with her. Her vivacity increased automatically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps the clerk thought you wanted the cigars for yourself,&rdquo; Russell
+ suggested. &ldquo;He may have taken you for a Spanish countess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sure he did!&rdquo; Alice agreed, gaily; and she hummed a bar or two of
+ &ldquo;LaPaloma,&rdquo; snapping her fingers as castanets, and swaying her body a
+ little, to suggest the accepted stencil of a &ldquo;Spanish Dancer.&rdquo; &ldquo;Would you
+ have taken me for one, Mr. Russell?&rdquo; she asked, as she concluded the
+ impersonation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I? Why, yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'D take you for anything you wanted me to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what a speech!&rdquo; she cried, and, laughing, gave him a quick glance in
+ which there glimmered some real surprise. He was looking at her
+ quizzically, but with the liveliest appreciation. Her surprise increased;
+ and she was glad that he had joined her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be seen walking with such a companion added to her pleasure. She would
+ have described him as &ldquo;altogether quite stunning-looking&rdquo;; and she liked
+ his tall, dark thinness, his gray clothes, his soft hat, and his clean
+ brown shoes; she liked his easy swing of the stick he carried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shouldn't I have said it?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Would you rather not be taken for a
+ Spanish countess?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn't it,&rdquo; she explained. &ldquo;You said&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I said I'd take you for whatever you wanted me to. Isn't that all right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would all depend, wouldn't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course it would depend on what you wanted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;It might depend on a lot of things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such as?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She hesitated, having the mischievous impulse to say,
+ &ldquo;Such as Mildred!&rdquo; But she decided to omit this reference, and became
+ serious, remembering Russell's service to her at Mildred's house.
+ &ldquo;Speaking of what I want to be taken for,&rdquo; she said;&mdash;&ldquo;I've been
+ wondering ever since the other night what you did take me for! You must
+ have taken me for the sister of a professional gambler, I'm afraid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell's look of kindness was the truth about him, she was to discover;
+ and he reassured her now by the promptness of his friendly chuckle. &ldquo;Then
+ your young brother told you where I found him, did he? I kept my face
+ straight at the time, but I laughed afterward&mdash;to myself. It struck
+ me as original, to say the least: his amusing himself with those darkies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter IS original,&rdquo; Alice said; and, having adopted this new view of her
+ brother's eccentricities, she impulsively went on to make it more
+ plausible. &ldquo;He's a very odd boy, and I was afraid you'd misunderstand. He
+ tells wonderful 'darky stories,' and he'll do anything to draw coloured
+ people out and make them talk; and that's what he was doing at Mildred's
+ when you found him for me&mdash;he says he wins their confidence by
+ playing dice with them. In the family we think he'll probably write about
+ them some day. He's rather literary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you?&rdquo; Russell asked, smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I? Oh&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She paused, lifting both hands in a charming gesture
+ of helplessness. &ldquo;Oh, I'm just&mdash;me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His glance followed the lightly waved hands with keen approval, then rose
+ to the lively and colourful face, with its hazel eyes, its small and
+ pretty nose, and the lip-caught smile which seemed the climax of her
+ decorative transition. Never had he seen a creature so plastic or so
+ wistful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was a contrast to his cousin Mildred, who was not wistful, and
+ controlled any impulses toward plasticity, if she had them. &ldquo;By George!&rdquo;
+ he said. &ldquo;But you ARE different!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that, there leaped in her such an impulse of roguish gallantry as she
+ could never resist. She turned her head, and, laughing and bright-eyed,
+ looked him full in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From whom?&rdquo; she cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From&mdash;everybody!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Are you a mind-reader?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you know I was thinking you were different from my cousin,
+ Mildred Palmer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What makes you think I DID know it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You knew what I was thinking and I knew you knew.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said with cool humour. &ldquo;How intimate that seems to make us all
+ at once!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell left no doubt that he was delighted with these gaieties of hers.
+ &ldquo;By George!&rdquo; he exclaimed again. &ldquo;I thought you were this sort of girl the
+ first moment I saw you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of girl? Didn't Mildred tell you what sort of girl I am when
+ she asked you to dance with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She didn't ask me to dance with you&mdash;I'd been looking at you. You
+ were talking to some old ladies, and I asked Mildred who you were.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, so Mildred DIDN'T&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Alice checked herself. &ldquo;Who did she
+ tell you I was?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She just said you were a Miss Adams, so I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'A' Miss Adams?&rdquo; Alice interrupted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. Then I said I'd like to meet you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see. You thought you'd save me from the old ladies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I thought I'd save myself from some of the girls Mildred was getting
+ me to dance with. There was a Miss Dowling&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor man!&rdquo; Alice said, gently, and her impulsive thought was that Mildred
+ had taken few chances, and that as a matter of self-defense her
+ carefulness might have been well founded. This Mr. Arthur Russell was a
+ much more responsive person than one had supposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, Mr. Russell, you don't know anything about me except what you thought
+ when you first saw me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know I was right when I thought it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You haven't told me what you thought.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought you were like what you ARE like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not very definite, is it? I'm afraid you shed more light a minute or so
+ ago, when you said how different from Mildred you thought I was. That WAS
+ definite, unfortunately!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't say it,&rdquo; Russell explained. &ldquo;I thought it, and you read my mind.
+ That's the sort of girl I thought you were&mdash;one that could read a
+ man's mind. Why do you say 'unfortunately' you're not like Mildred?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice's smooth gesture seemed to sketch Mildred. &ldquo;Because she's perfect&mdash;why,
+ she's PERFECTLY perfect! She never makes a mistake, and everybody looks up
+ to her&mdash;oh, yes, we all fairly adore her! She's like some big, noble,
+ cold statue&mdash;'way above the rest of us&mdash;and she hardly ever does
+ anything mean or treacherous. Of all the girls I know I believe she's
+ played the fewest really petty tricks. She's&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell interrupted; he looked perplexed. &ldquo;You say she's perfectly
+ perfect, but that she does play SOME&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice laughed, as if at his sweet innocence. &ldquo;Men are so funny!&rdquo; she
+ informed him. &ldquo;Of course girls ALL do mean things sometimes. My own
+ career's just one long brazen smirch of 'em! What I mean is, Mildred's
+ perfectly perfect compared to the rest of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; he said, and seemed to need a moment or two of thoughtfulness.
+ Then he inquired, &ldquo;What sort of treacherous things do YOU do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I? Oh, the very worst kind! Most people bore me particularly the men in
+ this town&mdash;and I show it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I shouldn't call that treacherous, exactly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, THEY do,&rdquo; Alice laughed. &ldquo;It's made me a terribly unpopular
+ character! I do a lot of things they hate. For instance, at a dance I'd a
+ lot rather find some clever old woman and talk to her than dance with
+ nine-tenths of these nonentities. I usually do it, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you danced as if you liked it. You danced better than any other girl
+ I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This flattery of yours doesn't quite turn my head, Mr. Russell,&rdquo; Alice
+ interrupted. &ldquo;Particularly since Mildred only gave you Ella Dowling to
+ compare with me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; he insisted. &ldquo;There were others&mdash;and of course Mildred,
+ herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, of course, yes. I forgot that. Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She paused, then
+ added, &ldquo;I certainly OUGHT to dance well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why is it so much a duty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I think of the dancing-teachers and the expense to papa! All sorts
+ of fancy instructors&mdash;I suppose that's what daughters have fathers
+ for, though, isn't it? To throw money away on them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Russell began, and his look was one of alarm.
+ &ldquo;You haven't taken up&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She understood his apprehension and responded merrily, &ldquo;Oh, murder, no!
+ You mean you're afraid I break out sometimes in a piece of cheesecloth and
+ run around a fountain thirty times, and then, for an encore, show how much
+ like snakes I can make my arms look.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I SAID you were a mind-reader!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;That's exactly what I was
+ pretending to be afraid you might do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Pretending?' That's nicer of you. No; it's not my mania.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, nothing in particular that I know of just now. Of course I've had the
+ usual one: the one that every girl goes through.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good heavens, Mr. Russell, you can't expect me to believe you're really a
+ man of the world if you don't know that every girl has a time in her life
+ when she's positive she's divinely talented for the stage! It's the only
+ universal rule about women that hasn't got an exception. I don't mean we
+ all want to go on the stage, but we all think we'd be wonderful if we did.
+ Even Mildred. Oh, she wouldn't confess it to you: you'd have to know her a
+ great deal better than any man can ever know her to find out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Girls are always telling us we can't know them. I
+ wonder if you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took up his thought before he expressed it, and again he was
+ fascinated by her quickness, which indeed seemed to him almost telepathic.
+ &ldquo;Oh, but DON'T we know one another, though!&rdquo; she cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such things we have to keep secret&mdash;things that go on right before
+ YOUR eyes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why don't some of you tell us?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We can't tell you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Too much honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. Not even too much honour among thieves, Mr. Russell. We don't tell
+ you about our tricks against one another because we know it wouldn't make
+ any impression on you. The tricks aren't played against you, and you have
+ a soft side for cats with lovely manners!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What about your tricks against us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, those!&rdquo; Alice laughed. &ldquo;We think they're rather cute!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bravo!&rdquo; he cried, and hammered the ferrule of his stick upon the
+ pavement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the applause for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For you. What you said was like running up the black flag to the
+ masthead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no. It was just a modest little sign in a pretty flower-bed:
+ 'Gentlemen, beware!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see I must,&rdquo; he said, gallantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks! But I mean, beware of the whole bloomin' garden!&rdquo; Then, picking
+ up a thread that had almost disappeared: &ldquo;You needn't think you'll ever
+ find out whether I'm right about Mildred's not being an exception by
+ asking her,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;She won't tell you: she's not the sort that ever
+ makes a confession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Russell had not followed her shift to the former topic. &ldquo;'Mildred's
+ not being an exception?'&rdquo; he said, vaguely. &ldquo;I don't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An exception about thinking she could be a wonderful thing on the stage
+ if she only cared to. If you asked her I'm pretty sure she'd say, 'What
+ nonsense!' Mildred's the dearest, finest thing anywhere, but you won't
+ find out many things about her by asking her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell's expression became more serious, as it did whenever his cousin
+ was made their topic. &ldquo;You think not?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You think she's&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. But it's not because she isn't sincere exactly. It's only because she
+ has such a lot to live up to. She has to live up to being a girl on the
+ grand style to herself, I mean, of course.&rdquo; And without pausing Alice
+ rippled on, &ldquo;You ought to have seen ME when I had the stage-fever! I used
+ to play 'Juliet' all alone in my room.' She lifted her arms in graceful
+ entreaty, pleading musically,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O, swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon,
+ That monthly changes in her circled orb,
+ Lest thy love prove&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ She broke off abruptly with a little flourish, snapping thumb and finger
+ of each outstretched hand, then laughed and said, &ldquo;Papa used to make such
+ fun of me! Thank heaven, I was only fifteen; I was all over it by the next
+ year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No wonder you had the fever,&rdquo; Russell observed. &ldquo;You do it beautifully.
+ Why didn't you finish the line?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which one? 'Lest thy love prove likewise variable'? Juliet was saying it
+ to a MAN, you know. She seems to have been ready to worry about his
+ constancy pretty early in their affair!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her companion was again thoughtful. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, seeming to be rather
+ irksomely impressed with Alice's suggestion. &ldquo;Yes; it does appear so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice glanced at his serious face, and yielded to an audacious temptation.
+ &ldquo;You mustn't take it so hard,&rdquo; she said, flippantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn't about you: it's only about Romeo and Juliet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See here!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;You aren't at your mind-reading again, are you?
+ There are times when it won't do, you know!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She leaned toward him a little, as if companionably: they were walking
+ slowly, and this geniality of hers brought her shoulder in light contact
+ with his for a moment. &ldquo;Do you dislike my mind-reading?&rdquo; she asked, and,
+ across their two just touching shoulders, gave him her sudden look of
+ smiling wistfulness. &ldquo;Do you hate it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook his head. &ldquo;No, I don't,&rdquo; he said, gravely. &ldquo;It's quite pleasant.
+ But I think it says, 'Gentlemen, beware!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She instantly moved away from him, with the lawless and frank laugh of one
+ who is delighted to be caught in a piece of hypocrisy. &ldquo;How lovely!&rdquo; she
+ cried. Then she pointed ahead. &ldquo;Our walk is nearly over. We're coming to
+ the foolish little house where I live. It's a queer little place, but my
+ father's so attached to it the family have about given up hope of getting
+ him to build a real house farther out. He doesn't mind our being
+ extravagant about anything else, but he won't let us alter one single
+ thing about his precious little old house. Well!&rdquo; She halted, and gave him
+ her hand. &ldquo;Adieu!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I couldn't,&rdquo; he began; hesitated, then asked: &ldquo;I couldn't come in with
+ you for a little while?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not now,&rdquo; she said, quickly. &ldquo;You can come&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Almost any time.&rdquo; She turned and walked slowly up the path, but he
+ waited. &ldquo;You can come in the evening if you like,&rdquo; she called back to him
+ over her shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Soon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As soon as you like!&rdquo; She waved her hand; then ran indoors and watched
+ him from a window as he went up the street. He walked rapidly, a fine,
+ easy figure, swinging his stick in a way that suggested exhilaration.
+ Alice, staring after him through the irregular apertures of a lace
+ curtain, showed no similar buoyancy. Upon the instant she closed the door
+ all sparkle left her: she had become at once the simple and sometimes
+ troubled girl her family knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is going on out there?&rdquo; her mother asked, approaching from the
+ dining-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, nothing,&rdquo; Alice said, indifferently, as she turned away. &ldquo;That Mr.
+ Russell met me downtown and walked up with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Russell? Oh, the one that's engaged to Mildred?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;I don't know for certain. He didn't seem so much like an
+ engaged man to me.&rdquo; And she added, in the tone of thoughtful
+ preoccupation: &ldquo;Anyhow&mdash;not so terribly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she ran upstairs, gave her father his tobacco, filled his pipe for
+ him, and petted him as he lighted it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After that, she went to her room and sat down before her three-leaved
+ mirror. There was where she nearly always sat when she came into her room,
+ if she had nothing in mind to do. She went to that chair as naturally as a
+ dog goes to his corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She leaned forward, observing her profile; gravity seemed to be her mood.
+ But after a long, almost motionless scrutiny, she began to produce
+ dramatic sketches upon that ever-ready stage, her countenance: she showed
+ gaiety, satire, doubt, gentleness, appreciation of a companion and
+ love-in-hiding&mdash;all studied in profile first, then repeated for a
+ &ldquo;three-quarter view.&rdquo; Subsequently she ran through them, facing herself in
+ full.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this manner she outlined a playful scenario for her next interview with
+ Arthur Russell; but grew solemn again, thinking of the impression she had
+ already sought to give him. She had no twinges for any underminings of her
+ &ldquo;most intimate friend&rdquo;&mdash;in fact, she felt that her work on a new
+ portrait of Mildred for Mr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell had been honest and accurate. But why had it been her instinct to
+ show him an Alice Adams who didn't exist?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost everything she had said to him was upon spontaneous impulse,
+ springing to her lips on the instant; yet it all seemed to have been
+ founded upon a careful design, as if some hidden self kept such designs in
+ stock and handed them up to her, ready-made, to be used for its own
+ purpose. What appeared to be the desired result was a false-coloured image
+ in Russell's mind; but if he liked that image he wouldn't be liking Alice
+ Adams; nor would anything he thought about the image be a thought about
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, she knew she would go on with her false, fancy colourings of
+ this nothing as soon as she saw him again; she had just been practicing
+ them. &ldquo;What's the idea?&rdquo; she wondered. &ldquo;What makes me tell such lies? Why
+ shouldn't I be just myself?&rdquo; And then she thought, &ldquo;But which one is
+ myself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her eyes dwelt on the solemn eyes in the mirror; and her lips, disquieted
+ by a deepening wonder, parted to whisper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who in the world are you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The apparition before her had obeyed her like an alert slave, but now, as
+ she subsided to a complete stillness, that aspect changed to the old
+ mockery with which mirrors avenge their wrongs. The nucleus of some queer
+ thing seemed to gather and shape itself behind the nothingness of the
+ reflected eyes until it became almost an actual strange presence. If it
+ could be identified, perhaps the presence was that of the hidden designer
+ who handed up the false, ready-made pictures, and, for unknown purposes,
+ made Alice exhibit them; but whatever it was, she suddenly found it
+ monkey-like and terrifying. In a flutter she jumped up and went to another
+ part of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment or two later she was whistling softly as she hung her light coat
+ over a wooden triangle in her closet, and her musing now was quainter than
+ the experience that led to it; for what she thought was this, &ldquo;I certainly
+ am a queer girl!&rdquo; She took a little pride in so much originality,
+ believing herself probably the only person in the world to have such
+ thoughts as had been hers since she entered the room, and the first to be
+ disturbed by a strange presence in the mirror. In fact, the effect of the
+ tiny episode became apparent in that look of preoccupied complacency to be
+ seen for a time upon any girl who has found reason to suspect that she is
+ a being without counterpart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This slight glow, still faintly radiant, was observed across the
+ dinner-table by Walter, but he misinterpreted it. &ldquo;What YOU lookin' so
+ self-satisfied about?&rdquo; he inquired, and added in his knowing way, &ldquo;I saw
+ you, all right, cutie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where'd you see me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Down-town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This afternoon, you mean, Walter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, 'this afternoon, I mean, Walter,'&rdquo; he returned, burlesquing her
+ voice at least happily enough to please himself; for he laughed
+ applausively. &ldquo;Oh, you never saw me! I passed you close enough to pull a
+ tooth, but you were awful busy. I never did see anybody as busy as you
+ get, Alice, when you're towin' a barge. My, but you keep your hands goin'!
+ Looked like the air was full of 'em! That's why I'm onto why you look so
+ tickled this evening; I saw you with that big fish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams laughed benevolently; she was not displeased with this
+ rallying. &ldquo;Well, what of it, Walter?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;If you happen to see
+ your sister on the street when some nice young man is being attentive to
+ her&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter barked and then cackled. &ldquo;Whoa, Sal!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You got the parts
+ mixed. It's little Alice that was 'being attentive.' I know the big fish
+ she was attentive to, all right, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; his sister retorted, quietly. &ldquo;I should think you might have
+ recognized him, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter looked annoyed. &ldquo;Still harpin' on THAT!&rdquo; he complained. &ldquo;The kind
+ of women I like, if they get sore they just hit you somewhere on the face
+ and then they're through. By the way, I heard this Russell was supposed to
+ be your dear, old, sweet friend Mildred's steady. What you doin' walkin'
+ as close to him as all that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams addressed her son in gentle reproof, &ldquo;Why Walter!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, never mind, mama,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;To the horrid all things are horrid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get out!&rdquo; Walter protested, carelessly. &ldquo;I heard all about this Russell
+ down at the shop. Young Joe Lamb's such a talker I wonder he don't ruin
+ his grandfather's business; he keeps all us cheap help standin' round
+ listening to him nine-tenths of our time. Well, Joe told me this Russell's
+ some kin or other to the Palmer family, and he's got some little money of
+ his own, and he's puttin' it into ole Palmer's trust company and Palmer's
+ goin' to make him a vice-president of the company. Sort of a
+ keep-the-money-in-the-family arrangement, Joe Lamb says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams looked thoughtful. &ldquo;I don't see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; she began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, this Russell's supposed to be tied up to Mildred,&rdquo; her son
+ explained. &ldquo;When ole Palmer dies this Russell will be his son-in-law, and
+ all he'll haf' to do'll be to barely lift his feet and step into the ole
+ man's shoes. It's certainly a mighty fat hand-me-out for this Russell! You
+ better lay off o' there, Alice. Pick somebody that's got less to lose and
+ you'll make better showing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams's air of thoughtfulness had not departed. &ldquo;But you say this Mr.
+ Russell is well off on his own account, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Joe Lamb says he's got some little of his own. Didn't know how much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter laughed his laugh. &ldquo;Cut it out,&rdquo; he bade her. &ldquo;Alice wouldn't run
+ in fourth place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice had been looking at him in a detached way, as though estimating the
+ value of a specimen in a collection not her own. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said,
+ indifferently. &ldquo;You REALLY are vulgar, Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had finished his meal; and, rising, he came round the table to her and
+ patted her good-naturedly on the shoulder. &ldquo;Good ole Allie!&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;HONEST, you wouldn't run in fourth place. If I was you I'd never even
+ start in the class. That frozen-face gang will rule you off the track soon
+ as they see your colours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter!&rdquo; his mother said again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, ain't I her brother?&rdquo; he returned, seeming to be entirely serious
+ and direct, for the moment, at least. &ldquo;<i>I</i> like the ole girl all
+ right. Fact is, sometimes I'm kind of sorry for her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what's it all ABOUT?&rdquo; Alice cried. &ldquo;Simply because you met me
+ down-town with a man I never saw but once before and just barely know! Why
+ all this palaver?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Why?'&rdquo; he repeated, grinning. &ldquo;Well, I've seen you start before, you
+ know!&rdquo; He went to the door, and paused. &ldquo;I got no date to-night. Take you
+ to the movies, you care to go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She declined crisply. &ldquo;No, thanks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come on,&rdquo; he said, as pleasantly as he knew how.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me a chance to show you a better time than we had up at that
+ frozen-face joint. I'll get you some chop suey afterward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, thanks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; he responded and waved a flippant adieu. &ldquo;As the barber says,
+ 'The better the advice, the worse it's wasted!' Good-night!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice shrugged her shoulders; but a moment or two later, as the jar of the
+ carelessly slammed front door went through the house, she shook her head,
+ reconsidering. &ldquo;Perhaps I ought to have gone with him. It might have kept
+ him away from whatever dreadful people are his friends&mdash;at least for
+ one night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I'm sure Walter's a GOOD boy,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, soothingly; and this
+ was what she almost always said when either her husband or Alice expressed
+ such misgivings. &ldquo;He's odd, and he's picked up right queer manners; but
+ that's only because we haven't given him advantages like the other young
+ men. But I'm sure he's a GOOD boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She reverted to the subject a little later, while she washed the dishes
+ and Alice wiped them. &ldquo;Of course Walter could take his place with the
+ other nice boys of the town even yet,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I mean, if we could
+ afford to help him financially. They all belong to the country clubs and
+ have cars and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let's don't go into that any more, mama,&rdquo; the daughter begged her.
+ &ldquo;What's the use?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It COULD be of use,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams insisted. &ldquo;It could if your father&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But papa CAN'T.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how can he? He told me a man of his age CAN'T give up a business he's
+ been in practically all his life, and just go groping about for something
+ that might never turn up at all. I think he's right about it, too, of
+ course!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams splashed among the plates with a new vigour heightened by an
+ old bitterness. &ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He talks that way; but he knows
+ better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How could he 'know better,' mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;HE knows how!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what does he know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams tossed her head. &ldquo;You don't suppose I'm such a fool I'd be
+ urging him to give up something for nothing, do you, Alice? Do you suppose
+ I'd want him to just go 'groping around' like he was telling you? That
+ would be crazy, of course. Little as his work at Lamb's brings in, I
+ wouldn't be so silly as to ask him to give it up just on a CHANCE he could
+ find something else. Good gracious, Alice, you must give me credit for a
+ little intelligence once in a while!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was puzzled. &ldquo;But what else could there be except a chance? I don't
+ see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I do,&rdquo; her mother interrupted, decisively. &ldquo;That man could make us
+ all well off right now if he wanted to. We could have been rich long ago
+ if he'd ever really felt as he ought to about his family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! Why, how could&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know how as well as I do,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, crossly. &ldquo;I guess you
+ haven't forgotten how he treated me about it the Sunday before he got
+ sick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went on with her work, putting into it a sudden violence inspired by
+ the recollection; but Alice, enlightened, gave utterance to a laugh of
+ lugubrious derision. &ldquo;Oh, the GLUE factory again!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;How silly!&rdquo;
+ And she renewed her laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So often do the great projects of parents appear ignominious to their
+ children. Mrs. Adams's conception of a glue factory as a fairy godmother
+ of this family was an absurd old story which Alice had never taken
+ seriously. She remembered that when she was about fifteen her mother began
+ now and then to say something to Adams about a &ldquo;glue factory,&rdquo; rather
+ timidly, and as a vague suggestion, but never without irritating him.
+ Then, for years, the preposterous subject had not been mentioned; possibly
+ because of some explosion on the part of Adams, when his daughter had not
+ been present. But during the last year Mrs. Adams had quietly gone back to
+ these old hints, reviving them at intervals and also reviving her
+ husband's irritation. Alice's bored impression was that her mother wanted
+ him to found, or buy, or do something, or other, about a glue factory; and
+ that he considered the proposal so impracticable as to be insulting. The
+ parental conversations took place when neither Alice nor Walter was at
+ hand, but sometimes Alice had come in upon the conclusion of one, to find
+ her father in a shouting mood, and shocking the air behind him with
+ profane monosyllables as he departed. Mrs. Adams would be left quiet and
+ troubled; and when Alice, sympathizing with the goaded man, inquired of
+ her mother why these tiresome bickerings had been renewed, she always got
+ the brooding and cryptic answer, &ldquo;He COULD do it&mdash;if he wanted to.&rdquo;
+ Alice failed to comprehend the desirability of a glue factory&mdash;to her
+ mind a father engaged in a glue factory lacked impressiveness; had no
+ advantage over a father employed by Lamb and Company; and she supposed
+ that Adams knew better than her mother whether such an enterprise would be
+ profitable or not. Emphatically, he thought it would not, for she had
+ heard him shouting at the end of one of these painful interviews, &ldquo;You can
+ keep up your dang talk till YOU die and <i>I</i> die, but I'll never make
+ one God's cent that way!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been a culmination. Returning from church on the Sunday
+ preceding the collapse with which Adams's illness had begun, Alice found
+ her mother downstairs, weeping and intimidated, while her father's
+ stamping footsteps were loudly audible as he strode up and down his room
+ overhead. So were his endless repetitions of invective loudly audible:
+ &ldquo;That woman! Oh, that woman; Oh, that danged woman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams admitted to her daughter that it was &ldquo;the old glue factory&rdquo; and
+ that her husband's wildness had frightened her into a &ldquo;solemn promise&rdquo;
+ never to mention the subject again so long as she had breath. Alice
+ laughed. The &ldquo;glue factory" idea was not only a bore, but ridiculous, and
+ her mother's evident seriousness about it one of those inexplicable
+ vagaries we sometimes discover in the people we know best. But this Sunday
+ rampage appeared to be the end of it, and when Adams came down to dinner,
+ an hour later, he was unusually cheerful. Alice was glad he had gone wild
+ enough to settle the glue factory once and for all; and she had ceased to
+ think of the episode long before Friday of that week, when Adams was
+ brought home in the middle of the afternoon by his old employer, the
+ &ldquo;great J. A. Lamb,&rdquo; in the latter's car.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the long illness the &ldquo;glue factory&rdquo; was completely forgotten, by
+ Alice at least; and her laugh was rueful as well as derisive now, in the
+ kitchen, when she realized that her mother's mind again dwelt upon this
+ abandoned nuisance. &ldquo;I thought you'd got over all that nonsense, mama,&rdquo;
+ she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams smiled, pathetically. &ldquo;Of course you think it's nonsense,
+ dearie. Young people think everything's nonsense that they don't know
+ anything about.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good gracious!&rdquo; Alice cried. &ldquo;I should think I used to hear enough about
+ that horrible old glue factory to know something about it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; her mother returned patiently. &ldquo;You've never heard anything about it
+ at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. Your father and I didn't discuss it before you children. All you ever
+ heard was when he'd get in such a rage, after we'd been speaking of it,
+ that he couldn't control himself when you came in. Wasn't <i>I</i> always
+ quiet? Did <i>I</i> ever go on talking about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; perhaps not. But you're talking about it now, mama, after you
+ promised never to mention it again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I promised not to mention it to your father,&rdquo; said Mrs. Adams, gently. &ldquo;I
+ haven't mentioned it to him, have I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but if you mention it to me I'm afraid you WILL mention it to him.
+ You always do speak of things that you have on your mind, and you might
+ get papa all stirred up again about&mdash;&rdquo; Alice paused, a light of
+ divination flickering in her eyes. &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I SEE!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You HAVE been at him about it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not one single word!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; Alice cried. &ldquo;Not a WORD, but that's what you've meant all along!
+ You haven't spoken the words to him, but all this urging him to change, to
+ 'find something better to go into'&mdash;it's all been about nothing on
+ earth but your foolish old glue factory that you know upsets him, and you
+ gave your solemn word never to speak to him about again! You didn't say
+ it, but you meant it&mdash;and he KNOWS that's what you meant! Oh, mama!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams, with her hands still automatically at work in the flooded
+ dishpan, turned to face her daughter. &ldquo;Alice,&rdquo; she said, tremulously,
+ &ldquo;what do I ask for myself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say, What do I ask for myself? Do you suppose <i>I</i> want anything?
+ Don't you know I'd be perfectly content on your father's present income if
+ I were the only person to be considered? What do I care about any pleasure
+ for myself? I'd be willing never to have a maid again; <i>I</i> don't mind
+ doing the work. If we didn't have any children I'd be glad to do your
+ father's cooking and the housework and the washing and ironing, too, for
+ the rest of my life. I wouldn't care. I'm a poor cook and a poor
+ housekeeper; I don't do anything well; but it would be good enough for
+ just him and me. I wouldn't ever utter one word of com&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, goodness!&rdquo; Alice lamented. &ldquo;What IS it all about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's about this,&rdquo; said Mrs. Adams, swallowing. &ldquo;You and Walter are a new
+ generation and you ought to have the same as the rest of the new
+ generation get. Poor Walter&mdash;asking you to go to the movies and a
+ Chinese restaurant: the best he had to offer! Don't you suppose <i>I</i>
+ see how the poor boy is deteriorating? Don't you suppose I know what YOU
+ have to go through, Alice? And when I think of that man upstairs&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ The agitated voice grew louder. &ldquo;When I think of him and know that nothing
+ in the world but his STUBBORNNESS keeps my children from having all they
+ want and what they OUGHT to have, do you suppose I'm going to hold myself
+ bound to keep to the absolute letter of a silly promise he got from me by
+ behaving like a crazy man? I can't! I can't do it! No mother could sit by
+ and see him lock up a horn of plenty like that in his closet when the
+ children were starving!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, goodness, goodness me!&rdquo; Alice protested. &ldquo;We aren't precisely
+ 'starving,' are we?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams began to weep. &ldquo;It's just the same. Didn't I see how flushed
+ and pretty you looked, this afternoon, after you'd been walking with this
+ young man that's come here? Do you suppose he'd LOOK at a girl like
+ Mildred Palmer if you had what you ought to have? Do you suppose he'd be
+ going into business with her father if YOUR father&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good heavens, mama; you're worse than Walter: I just barely know the man!
+ DON'T be so absurd!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I'm always 'absurd,'&rdquo; Mrs. Adams moaned. &ldquo;All I can do is cry, while
+ your father sits upstairs, and his horn of plenty&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alice interrupted with a peal of desperate laughter. &ldquo;Oh, that 'horn
+ of plenty!' Do come down to earth, mama. How can you call a GLUE factory,
+ that doesn't exist except in your mind, a 'horn of plenty'? Do let's be a
+ little rational!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It COULD be a horn of plenty,&rdquo; the tearful Mrs. Adams insisted. &ldquo;It
+ could! You don't understand a thing about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I'm willing,&rdquo; Alice said, with tired skepticism. &ldquo;Make me
+ understand, then. Where'd you ever get the idea?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams withdrew her hands from the water, dried them on a towel, and
+ then wiped her eyes with a handkerchief. &ldquo;Your father could make a fortune
+ if he wanted to,&rdquo; she said, quietly. &ldquo;At least, I don't say a fortune, but
+ anyhow a great deal more than he does make.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I've heard that before, mama, and you think he could make it out of
+ a glue factory. What I'm asking is: How?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How? Why, by making glue and selling it. Don't you know how bad most glue
+ is when you try to mend anything? A good glue is one of the rarest things
+ there is; and it would just sell itself, once it got started. Well, your
+ father knows how to make as good a glue as there is in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was not interested. &ldquo;What of it? I suppose probably anybody could
+ make it if they wanted to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I SAID you didn't know anything about it. Nobody else could make it. Your
+ father knows a formula for making it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What of that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a secret formula. It isn't even down on paper. It's worth any amount
+ of money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Any amount?'&rdquo; Alice said, remaining incredulous. &ldquo;Why hasn't papa sold
+ it then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just because he's too stubborn to do anything with it at all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did papa get it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He got it before you were born, just after we were married. I didn't
+ think much about it then: it wasn't till you were growing up and I saw how
+ much we needed money that I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but how did papa get it?&rdquo; Alice began to feel a little more curious
+ about this possible buried treasure. &ldquo;Did he invent it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Partly,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, looking somewhat preoccupied. &ldquo;He and another
+ man invented it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then maybe the other man&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then his family&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think he left any family,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said. &ldquo;Anyhow, it belongs
+ to your father. At least it belongs to him as much as it does to any one
+ else. He's got an absolutely perfect right to do anything he wants to with
+ it, and it would make us all comfortable if he'd do what I want him to&mdash;and
+ he KNOWS it would, too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice shook her head pityingly. &ldquo;Poor mama!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Of course he knows
+ it wouldn't do anything of the kind, or else he'd have done it long ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would, you say?&rdquo; her mother cried. &ldquo;That only shows how little you
+ know him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor mama!&rdquo; Alice said again, soothingly. &ldquo;If papa were like what you say
+ he is, he'd be&mdash;why, he'd be crazy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams agreed with a vehemence near passion. &ldquo;You're right about him
+ for once: that's just what he is! He sits up there in his stubbornness and
+ lets us slave here in the kitchen when if he wanted to&mdash;if he'd so
+ much as lift his little finger&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, come, now!&rdquo; Alice laughed. &ldquo;You can't build even a glue factory with
+ just one little finger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams seemed about to reply that finding fault with a figure of
+ speech was beside the point; but a ringing of the front door bell
+ forestalled the retort. &ldquo;Now, who do you suppose that is?&rdquo; she wondered
+ aloud, then her face brightened. &ldquo;Ah&mdash;did Mr. Russell ask if he could&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, he wouldn't be coming this evening,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;Probably it's the
+ great J. A. Lamb: he usually stops for a minute on Thursdays to ask how
+ papa's getting along. I'll go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She tossed her apron off, and as she went through the house her expression
+ was thoughtful. She was thinking vaguely about the glue factory and
+ wondering if there might be &ldquo;something in it&rdquo; after all. If her mother was
+ right about the rich possibilities of Adams's secret&mdash;but that was as
+ far as Alice's speculations upon the matter went at this time: they were
+ checked, partly by the thought that her father probably hadn't enough
+ money for such an enterprise, and partly by the fact that she had arrived
+ at the front door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The fine old gentleman revealed when she opened the door was probably the
+ last great merchant in America to wear the chin beard. White as white
+ frost, it was trimmed short with exquisite precision, while his upper lip
+ and the lower expanses of his cheeks were clean and rosy from fresh
+ shaving. With this trim white chin beard, the white waistcoat, the white
+ tie, the suit of fine gray cloth, the broad and brilliantly polished black
+ shoes, and the wide-brimmed gray felt hat, here was a man who had found
+ his style in the seventies of the last century, and thenceforth kept it.
+ Files of old magazines of that period might show him, in woodcut, as,
+ &ldquo;Type of Boston Merchant&rdquo;; Nast might have drawn him as an honest
+ statesman. He was eighty, hale and sturdy, not aged; and his quick blue
+ eyes, still unflecked, and as brisk as a boy's, saw everything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well, well!&rdquo; he said, heartily. &ldquo;You haven't lost any of your good
+ looks since last week, I see, Miss Alice, so I guess I'm to take it you
+ haven't been worrying over your daddy. The young feller's getting along
+ all right, is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's much better; he's sitting up, Mr. Lamb. Won't you come in?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don't know but I might.&rdquo; He turned to call toward twin disks of
+ light at the curb, &ldquo;Be out in a minute, Billy&rdquo;; and the silhouette of a
+ chauffeur standing beside a car could be seen to salute in response, as
+ the old gentleman stepped into the hall. &ldquo;You don't suppose your daddy's
+ receiving callers yet, is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's a good deal stronger than he was when you were here last week, but
+ I'm afraid he's not very presentable, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Presentable?'&rdquo; The old man echoed her jovially. &ldquo;Pshaw! I've seen lots
+ of sick folks. <i>I</i> know what they look like and how they love to kind
+ of nest in among a pile of old blankets and wrappers. Don't you worry
+ about THAT, Miss Alice, if you think he'd like to see me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course he would&mdash;if&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Alice hesitated; then said
+ quickly, &ldquo;Of course he'd love to see you and he's quite able to, if you
+ care to come up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She ran up the stairs ahead of him, and had time to snatch the crocheted
+ wrap from her father's shoulders. Swathed as usual, he was sitting beside
+ a table, reading the evening paper; but when his employer appeared in the
+ doorway he half rose as if to come forward in greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sit still!&rdquo; the old gentleman shouted. &ldquo;What do you mean? Don't you know
+ you're weak as a cat? D'you think a man can be sick as long as you have
+ and NOT be weak as a cat? What you trying to do the polite with ME for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams gratefully protracted the handshake that accompanied these
+ inquiries. &ldquo;This is certainly mighty fine of you, Mr. Lamb,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I
+ guess Alice has told you how much our whole family appreciate your coming
+ here so regularly to see how this old bag o' bones was getting along.
+ Haven't you, Alice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, papa,&rdquo; she said; and turned to go out, but Lamb checked her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay right here, Miss Alice; I'm not even going to sit down. I know how
+ it upsets sick folks when people outside the family come in for the first
+ time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't upset me,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;I'll feel a lot better for getting a
+ glimpse of you, Mr. Lamb.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visitor's laugh was husky, but hearty and re-assuring, like his voice
+ in speaking. &ldquo;That's the way all my boys blarney me, Miss Alice,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;They think I'll make the work lighter on 'em if they can get me kind of
+ flattered up. You just tell your daddy it's no use; he doesn't get on MY
+ soft side, pretending he likes to see me even when he's sick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I'm not so sick any more,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;I expect to be back in my
+ place ten days from now at the longest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, now, don't hurry it, Virgil; don't hurry it. You take your time;
+ take your time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This brought to Adams's lips a feeble smile not lacking in a kind of
+ vanity, as feeble. &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;I suppose you think my department
+ runs itself down there, do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His employer's response was another husky laugh. &ldquo;Well, well, well!&rdquo; he
+ cried, and patted Adams's shoulder with a strong pink hand. &ldquo;Listen to
+ this young feller, Miss Alice, will you! He thinks we can't get along
+ without him a minute! Yes, sir, this daddy of yours believes the whole
+ works 'll just take and run down if he isn't there to keep 'em wound up. I
+ always suspected he thought a good deal of himself, and now I know he
+ does!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams looked troubled. &ldquo;Well, I don't like to feel that my salary's going
+ on with me not earning it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen to him, Miss Alice! Wouldn't you think, now, he'd let me be the
+ one to worry about that? Why, on my word, if your daddy had his way, <i>I</i>
+ wouldn't be anywhere. He'd take all my worrying and everything else off my
+ shoulders and shove me right out of Lamb and Company! He would!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems to me I've been soldiering on you a pretty long while, Mr.
+ Lamb,&rdquo; the convalescent said, querulously. &ldquo;I don't feel right about it;
+ but I'll be back in ten days. You'll see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man took his hand in parting. &ldquo;All right; we'll see, Virgil. Of
+ course we do need you, seriously speaking; but we don't need you so bad
+ we'll let you come down there before you're fully fit and able.&rdquo; He went
+ to the door. &ldquo;You hear, Miss Alice? That's what I wanted to make the old
+ feller understand, and what I want you to kind of enforce on him. The old
+ place is there waiting for him, and it'd wait ten years if it took him
+ that long to get good and well. You see that he remembers it, Miss Alice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went down the stairs with him, and he continued to impress this upon
+ her until he had gone out of the front door. And even after that, the
+ husky voice called back from the darkness, as he went to his car, &ldquo;Don't
+ forget, Miss Alice; let him take his own time. We always want him, but we
+ want him to get good and well first. Good-night, good-night, young lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she closed the door her mother came from the farther end of the
+ &ldquo;living-room,&rdquo; where there was no light; and Alice turned to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't help liking that old man, mama,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He always sounds so&mdash;well,
+ so solid and honest and friendly! I do like him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mrs. Adams failed in sympathy upon this point. &ldquo;He didn't say anything
+ about raising your father's salary, did he?&rdquo; she asked, dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I thought not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She would have said more, but Alice, indisposed to listen, began to
+ whistle, ran up the stairs, and went to sit with her father. She found him
+ bright-eyed with the excitement a first caller brings into a slow
+ convalescence: his cheeks showed actual hints of colour; and he was
+ smiling tremulously as he filled and lit his pipe. She brought the
+ crocheted scarf and put it about his shoulders again, then took a chair
+ near him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe seeing Mr. Lamb did do you good, papa,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I sort of
+ thought it might, and that's why I let him come up. You really look a
+ little like your old self again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams exhaled a breathy &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; with the smoke from his pipe as he waved the
+ match to extinguish it. &ldquo;That's fine,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The smoke I had before
+ dinner didn't taste the way it used to, and I kind of wondered if I'd lost
+ my liking for tobacco, but this one seems to be all right. You bet it did
+ me good to see J. A. Lamb! He's the biggest man that's ever lived in this
+ town or ever will live here; and you can take all the Governors and
+ Senators or anything they've raised here, and put 'em in a pot with him,
+ and they won't come out one-two-three alongside o' him! And to think as
+ big a man as that, with all his interests and everything he's got on his
+ mind&mdash;to think he'd never let anything prevent him from coming here
+ once every week to ask how I was getting along, and then walk right
+ upstairs and kind of CALL on me, as it were well, it makes me sort of feel
+ as if I wasn't so much of a nobody, so to speak, as your mother seems to
+ like to make out sometimes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How foolish, papa! Of COURSE you're not 'a nobody.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams chuckled faintly upon his pipe-stem, what vanity he had seeming to
+ be further stimulated by his daughter's applause. &ldquo;I guess there aren't a
+ whole lot of people in this town that could claim J. A. showed that much
+ interest in 'em,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Of course I don't set up to believe it's all
+ because of merit, or anything like that. He'd do the same for anybody else
+ that'd been with the company as long as I have, but still it IS something
+ to be with the company that long and have him show he appreciates it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, indeed, it is, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; Adams said, reflectively. &ldquo;Yes, sir, I guess that's so. And
+ besides, it all goes to show the kind of a man he is. Simon pure, that's
+ what that man is, Alice. Simon pure! There's never been anybody work for
+ him that didn't respect him more than they did any other man in the world,
+ I guess. And when you work for him you know he respects you, too. Right
+ from the start you get the feeling that J. A. puts absolute confidence in
+ you; and that's mighty stimulating: it makes you want to show him he
+ hasn't misplaced it. There's great big moral values to the way a man like
+ him gets you to feeling about your relations with the business: it ain't
+ all just dollars and cents&mdash;not by any means!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was silent for a time, then returned with increasing enthusiasm to this
+ theme, and Alice was glad to see so much renewal of life in him; he had
+ not spoken with a like cheerful vigour since before his illness. The visit
+ of his idolized great man had indeed been good for him, putting new spirit
+ into him; and liveliness of the body followed that of the spirit. His
+ improvement carried over the night: he slept well and awoke late,
+ declaring that he was &ldquo;pretty near a well man and ready for business right
+ now.&rdquo; Moreover, having slept again in the afternoon, he dressed and went
+ down to dinner, leaning but lightly on Alice, who conducted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My! but you and your mother have been at it with your scrubbing and
+ dusting!&rdquo; he said, as they came through the &ldquo;living-room.&rdquo; &ldquo;I don't know I
+ ever did see the house so spick and span before!&rdquo; His glance fell upon a
+ few carnations in a vase, and he chuckled admiringly. &ldquo;Flowers, too! So
+ THAT'S what you coaxed that dollar and a half out o 'me for, this
+ morning!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other embellishments brought forth his comment when he had taken his old
+ seat at the head of the small dinner-table. &ldquo;Why, I declare, Alice!&rdquo; he
+ exclaimed. &ldquo;I been so busy looking at all the spick-and-spanishness after
+ the house-cleaning, and the flowers out in the parlour&mdash;'living room'
+ I suppose you want me to call it, if I just GOT to be fashionable&mdash;I
+ been so busy studying over all this so-and-so, I declare I never noticed
+ YOU till this minute! My, but you ARE all dressed up! What's goin' on?
+ What's it about: you so all dressed up, and flowers in the parlour and
+ everything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you see, papa? It's in honour of your coming downstairs again, of
+ course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, so that's it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I never would 'a' thought of that, I guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Walter looked sidelong at his father, and gave forth his sly and
+ knowing laugh. &ldquo;Neither would I!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams lifted his eyebrows jocosely. &ldquo;You're jealous, are you, sonny? You
+ don't want the old man to think our young lady'd make so much fuss over
+ him, do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on thinkin' it's over you,&rdquo; Walter retorted, amused. &ldquo;Go on and think
+ it. It'll do you good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I'll think it,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;It isn't anybody's birthday.
+ Certainly the decorations are on account of me coming downstairs. Didn't
+ you hear Alice say so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure, I heard her say so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter interrupted him with a little music. Looking shrewdly at Alice, he
+ sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I was walkin' out on Monday with my sweet thing.
+ She's my neat thing,
+ My sweet thing:
+ I'll go round on Tuesday night to see her.
+ Oh, how we'll spoon&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter!&rdquo; his mother cried. &ldquo;WHERE do you learn such vulgar songs?&rdquo;
+ However, she seemed not greatly displeased with him, and laughed as she
+ spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So that's it, Alice!&rdquo; said Adams. &ldquo;Playing the hypocrite with your old
+ man, are you? It's some new beau, is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I only wish it were,&rdquo; she said, calmly. &ldquo;No. It's just what I said: it's
+ all for you, dear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't let her con you,&rdquo; Walter advised his father. &ldquo;She's got
+ expectations. You hang around downstairs a while after dinner and you'll
+ see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the prophecy failed, though Adams went to his own room without waiting
+ to test it. No one came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice stayed in the &ldquo;living-room&rdquo; until half-past nine, when she went
+ slowly upstairs. Her mother, almost tearful, met her at the top, and
+ whispered, &ldquo;You mustn't mind, dearie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mustn't mind what?&rdquo; Alice asked, and then, as she went on her way,
+ laughed scornfully. &ldquo;What utter nonsense!&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day she cut the stems of the rather scant show of carnations and
+ refreshed them with new water. At dinner, her father, still in high
+ spirits, observed that she had again &ldquo;dressed up&rdquo; in honour of his second
+ descent of the stairs; and Walter repeated his fragment of objectionable
+ song; but these jocularities were rendered pointless by the eventless
+ evening that followed; and in the morning the carnations began to appear
+ tarnished and flaccid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice gave them a long look, then threw them away; and neither Walter nor
+ her father was inspired to any rallying by her plain costume for that
+ evening. Mrs. Adams was visibly depressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Alice finished helping her mother with the dishes, she went outdoors
+ and sat upon the steps of the little front veranda. The night, gentle with
+ warm air from the south, surrounded her pleasantly, and the perpetual
+ smoke was thinner. Now that the furnaces of dwelling-houses were no longer
+ fired, life in that city had begun to be less like life in a railway
+ tunnel; people were aware of summer in the air, and in the thickened
+ foliage of the shade-trees, and in the sky. Stars were unveiled by the
+ passing of the denser smoke fogs, and to-night they could be seen clearly;
+ they looked warm and near. Other girls sat upon verandas and stoops in
+ Alice's street, cheerful as young fishermen along the banks of a stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice could hear them from time to time; thin sopranos persistent in
+ laughter that fell dismally upon her ears. She had set no lines or nets
+ herself, and what she had of &ldquo;expectations,&rdquo; as Walter called them, were
+ vanished. For Alice was experienced; and one of the conclusions she drew
+ from her experience was that when a man says, &ldquo;I'd take you for anything
+ you wanted me to,&rdquo; he may mean it or, he may not; but, if he does, he will
+ not postpone the first opportunity to say something more. Little affairs,
+ once begun, must be warmed quickly; for if they cool they are dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alice was not thinking of Arthur Russell. When she tossed away the
+ carnations she likewise tossed away her thoughts of that young man. She
+ had been like a boy who sees upon the street, some distance before him, a
+ bit of something round and glittering, a possible dime. He hopes it is a
+ dime, and, until he comes near enough to make sure, he plays that it is a
+ dime. In his mind he has an adventure with it: he buys something
+ delightful. If he picks it up, discovering only some tin-foil which has
+ happened upon a round shape, he feels a sinking. A dulness falls upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Alice was dull with the loss of an adventure; and when the laughter of
+ other girls reached her, intermittently, she had not sprightliness enough
+ left in her to be envious of their gaiety. Besides, these neighbours were
+ ineligible even for her envy, being of another caste; they could never
+ know a dance at the Palmers', except remotely, through a newspaper. Their
+ laughter was for the encouragement of snappy young men of the stores and
+ offices down-town, clerks, bookkeepers, what not&mdash;some of them
+ probably graduates of Frincke's Business College.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as she recalled that dark portal, with its dusty stairway mounting
+ between close walls to disappear in the upper shadows, her mind drew back
+ as from a doorway to Purgatory. Nevertheless, it was a picture often in
+ her reverie; and sometimes it came suddenly, without sequence, into the
+ midst of her other thoughts, as if it leaped up among them from a lower
+ darkness; and when it arrived it wanted to stay. So a traveller, still
+ roaming the world afar, sometimes broods without apparent reason upon his
+ family burial lot: &ldquo;I wonder if I shall end there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foreboding passed abruptly, with a jerk of her breath, as the
+ street-lamp revealed a tall and easy figure approaching from the north,
+ swinging a stick in time to its stride. She had given Russell up&mdash;and
+ he came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What luck for me!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;To find you alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice gave him her hand for an instant, not otherwise moving. &ldquo;I'm glad it
+ happened so,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Let's stay out here, shall we? Do you think it's
+ too provincial to sit on a girl's front steps with her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Provincial?' Why, it's the very best of our institutions,&rdquo; he returned,
+ taking his place beside her. &ldquo;At least, I think so to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks! Is that practice for other nights somewhere else?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he laughed. &ldquo;The practicing all led up to this. Did I come too
+ soon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied, gravely. &ldquo;Just in time!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm glad to be so accurate; I've spent two evenings wanting to come, Miss
+ Adams, instead of doing what I was doing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dinners. Large and long dinners. Your fellow-citizens are immensely
+ hospitable to a newcomer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;We don't do it for everybody. Didn't you find
+ yourself charmed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One was a men's dinner,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;Mr. Palmer seemed to think I
+ ought to be shown to the principal business men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was the other dinner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My cousin Mildred gave it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, DID she!&rdquo; Alice said, sharply, but she recovered herself in the same
+ instant, and laughed. &ldquo;She wanted to show you to the principal business
+ women, I suppose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know. At all events, I shouldn't give myself out to be so much
+ feted by your 'fellow-citizens,' after all, seeing these were both done by
+ my relatives, the Palmers. However, there are others to follow, I'm
+ afraid. I was wondering&mdash;I hoped maybe you'd be coming to some of
+ them. Aren't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I rather doubt it,&rdquo; Alice said, slowly. &ldquo;Mildred's dance was almost the
+ only evening I've gone out since my father's illness began. He seemed
+ better that day; so I went. He was better the other day when he wanted
+ those cigars. He's very much up and down.&rdquo; She paused. &ldquo;I'd almost
+ forgotten that Mildred is your cousin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a very near one,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;Mr. Palmer's father was my
+ great-uncle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still, of course you are related.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; that distantly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice said placidly, &ldquo;It's quite an advantage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He agreed. &ldquo;Yes. It is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said, in the same placid tone. &ldquo;I mean for Mildred.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She laughed. &ldquo;No. You wouldn't. I mean it's an advantage over the rest of
+ us who might like to compete for some of your time; and the worst of it is
+ we can't accuse her of being unfair about it. We can't prove she showed
+ any trickiness in having you for a cousin. Whatever else she might plan to
+ do with you, she didn't plan that. So the rest of us must just bear it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The 'rest of you!'&rdquo; he laughed. &ldquo;It's going to mean a great deal of
+ suffering!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice resumed her placid tone. &ldquo;You're staying at the Palmers', aren't
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not now. I've taken an apartment. I'm going to live here; I'm
+ permanent. Didn't I tell you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think I'd heard somewhere that you were,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Do you think
+ you'll like living here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can one tell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I were in your place I think I should be able to tell, Mr. Russell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, good gracious!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Haven't you got the most perfect
+ creature in town for your&mdash;your cousin? SHE expects to make you like
+ living here, doesn't she? How could you keep from liking it, even if you
+ tried not to, under the circumstances?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you see, there's such a lot of circumstances,&rdquo; he explained; &ldquo;I'm
+ not sure I'll like getting back into a business again. I suppose most of
+ the men of my age in the country have been going through the same
+ experience: the War left us with a considerable restlessness of spirit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were in the War?&rdquo; she asked, quickly, and as quickly answered
+ herself, &ldquo;Of course you were!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was a left-over; they only let me out about four months ago,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;It's quite a shake-up trying to settle down again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were in France, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes; but I didn't get up to the front much&mdash;only two or three
+ times, and then just for a day or so. I was in the transportation
+ service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were an officer, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;They let me play I was a major.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guessed a major,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You'd always be pretty grand, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell was amused. &ldquo;Well, you see,&rdquo; he informed her, &ldquo;as it happened, we
+ had at least several other majors in our army. Why would I always be
+ something 'pretty grand?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're related to the Palmers. Don't you notice they always affect the
+ pretty grand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you think I'm only one of their affectations, I take it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you seem to be the most successful one they've got!&rdquo; Alice said,
+ lightly. &ldquo;You certainly do belong to them.&rdquo; And she laughed as if at
+ something hidden from him. &ldquo;Don't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you've just excused me for that,&rdquo; he protested. &ldquo;You said nobody
+ could be blamed for my being their third cousin. What a contradictory girl
+ you are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice shook her head. &ldquo;Let's keep away from the kind of girl I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That's just what I came here to talk about.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shook her head again. &ldquo;Let's keep first to the kind of man you are.
+ I'm glad you were in the War.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I don't know.&rdquo; She was quiet a moment, for she was thinking that here
+ she spoke the truth: his service put about him a little glamour that
+ helped to please her with him. She had been pleased with him during their
+ walk; pleased with him on his own account; and now that pleasure was
+ growing keener. She looked at him, and though the light in which she saw
+ him was little more than starlight, she saw that he was looking steadily
+ at her with a kindly and smiling seriousness. All at once it seemed to her
+ that the night air was sweeter to breathe, as if a distant fragrance of
+ new blossoms had been blown to her. She smiled back to him, and said,
+ &ldquo;Well, what kind of man are you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know; I've often wondered,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;What kind of girl are
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you remember? I told you the other day. I'm just me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But who is that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget everything;&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;You told me what kind of a girl I
+ am. You seemed to think you'd taken quite a fancy to me from the very
+ first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So I did,&rdquo; he agreed, heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how quickly you forgot it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no. I only want YOU to say what kind of a girl you are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She mocked him. &ldquo;'I don't know; I've often wondered!' What kind of a girl
+ does Mildred tell you I am? What has she said about me since she told you
+ I was 'a Miss Adams?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know; I haven't asked her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then DON'T ask her,&rdquo; Alice said, quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because she's such a perfect creature and I'm such an imperfect one.
+ Perfect creatures have the most perfect way of ruining the imperfect
+ ones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But then they wouldn't be perfect. Not if they&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes, they remain perfectly perfect,&rdquo; she assured him. &ldquo;That's because
+ they never go into details. They're not so vulgar as to come right out and
+ TELL that you've been in jail for stealing chickens. They just look
+ absent-minded and say in a low voice, 'Oh, very; but I scarcely think
+ you'd like her particularly'; and then begin to talk of something else
+ right away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His smile had disappeared. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, somewhat ruefully. &ldquo;That does
+ sound like Mildred. You certainly do seem to know her! Do you know
+ everybody as well as that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not myself,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;I don't know myself at all. I got to wondering
+ about that&mdash;about who I was&mdash;the other day after you walked home
+ with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He uttered an exclamation, and added, explaining it, &ldquo;You do give a man a
+ chance to be fatuous, though! As if it were walking home with me that made
+ you wonder about yourself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was,&rdquo; Alice informed him, coolly. &ldquo;I was wondering what I wanted to
+ make you think of me, in case I should ever happen to see you again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This audacity appeared to take his breath. &ldquo;By George!&rdquo; he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mustn't be astonished,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What I decided then was that I
+ would probably never dare to be just myself with you&mdash;not if I cared
+ to have you want to see me again&mdash;and yet here I am, just being
+ myself after all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ARE the cheeriest series of shocks,&rdquo; Russell exclaimed, whereupon
+ Alice added to the series.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me: Is it a good policy for me to follow with you?&rdquo; she asked, and
+ he found the mockery in her voice delightful. &ldquo;Would you advise me to
+ offer you shocks as a sort of vacation from suavity?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suavity&rdquo; was yet another sketch of Mildred; a recognizable one, or it
+ would not have been humorous. In Alice's hands, so dexterous in this work,
+ her statuesque friend was becoming as ridiculous as a fine figure of wax
+ left to the mercies of a satirist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the lively young sculptress knew better than to overdo: what she did
+ must appear to spring all from mirth; so she laughed as if unwillingly,
+ and said, &ldquo;I MUSTN'T laugh at Mildred! In the first place, she's your&mdash;your
+ cousin. And in the second place, she's not meant to be funny; it isn't
+ right to laugh at really splendid people who take themselves seriously. In
+ the third place, you won't come again if I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be sure of that,&rdquo; Russell said, &ldquo;whatever you do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Whatever I do?'&rdquo; she echoed. &ldquo;That sounds as if you thought I COULD be
+ terrific! Be careful; there's one thing I could do that would keep you
+ away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could tell you not to come,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I wonder if I ought to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do you wonder if you 'ought to?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you guess?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then let's both be mysteries to each other,&rdquo; she suggested. &ldquo;I mystify
+ you because I wonder, and you mystify me because you don't guess why I
+ wonder. We'll let it go at that, shall we?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well; so long as it's certain that you DON'T tell me not to come
+ again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll not tell you that&mdash;yet,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;In fact&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She
+ paused, reflecting, with her head to one side. &ldquo;In fact, I won't tell you
+ not to come, probably, until I see that's what you want me to tell you.
+ I'll let you out easily&mdash;and I'll be sure to see it. Even before you
+ do, perhaps.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That arrangement suits me,&rdquo; Russell returned, and his voice held no trace
+ of jocularity: he had become serious. &ldquo;It suits me better if you're enough
+ in earnest to mean that I can come&mdash;oh, not whenever I want to; I
+ don't expect so much!&mdash;but if you mean that I can see you pretty
+ often.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I'm in earnest,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But before I say you can come
+ 'pretty often,' I'd like to know how much of my time you'd need if you did
+ come 'whenever you want to'; and of course you wouldn't dare make any
+ answer to that question except one. Wouldn't you let me have Thursdays
+ out?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he protested. &ldquo;I want to know. Will you let me come pretty
+ often?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lean toward me a little,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;I want you to understand.&rdquo; And as
+ he obediently bent his head near hers, she inclined toward him as if to
+ whisper; then, in a half-shout, she cried,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YES!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He clapped his hands. &ldquo;By George!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What a girl you are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, for the first reason, because you have such gaieties as that one. I
+ should think your father would actually like being ill, just to be in the
+ house with you all the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean by that,&rdquo; Alice inquired, &ldquo;I keep my family cheerful with my
+ amusing little ways?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. Don't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There were only boys in your family, weren't there, Mr. Russell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was an only child, unfortunately.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I see you hadn't any sisters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment he puzzled over her meaning, then saw it, and was more
+ delighted with her than ever. &ldquo;I can answer a question of yours, now, that
+ I couldn't a while ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know,&rdquo; she returned, quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how could you know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's the question I asked you about whether you were going to like living
+ here,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You're about to tell me that now you know you WILL like
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More telepathy!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Yes, that was it, precisely. I suppose
+ the same thing's been said to you so many times that you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it hasn't,&rdquo; Alice said, a little confused for the moment. &ldquo;Not at
+ all. I meant&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She paused, then asked in a gentle voice,
+ &ldquo;Would you really like to know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, I was only afraid you didn't mean it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See here,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I did mean it. I told you it was being pretty
+ difficult for me to settle down to things again. Well, it's more difficult
+ than you know, but I think I can pull through in fair spirits if I can see
+ a girl like you 'pretty often.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; she said, in a business-like tone. &ldquo;I've told you that you
+ can if you want to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do want to,&rdquo; he assured her. &ldquo;I do, indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How often is 'pretty often,' Mr. Russell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would you walk with me sometimes? To-morrow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sometimes. Not to-morrow. The day after.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's splendid!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You'll walk with me day after to-morrow, and
+ the night after that I'll see you at Miss Lamb's dance, won't I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this fell rather chillingly upon Alice. &ldquo;Miss Lamb's dance? Which Miss
+ Lamb?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know&mdash;it's the one that's just coming out of mourning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Henrietta&mdash;yes. Is her dance so soon? I'd forgotten.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll be there, won't you?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Please say you're going.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice did not respond at once, and he urged her again: &ldquo;Please do promise
+ you'll be there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I can't promise anything,&rdquo; she said, slowly. &ldquo;You see, for one thing,
+ papa might not be well enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if he is?&rdquo; said Russell. &ldquo;If he is you'll surely come, won't you? Or,
+ perhaps&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He hesitated, then went on quickly, &ldquo;I don't know
+ the rules in this place yet, and different places have different rules;
+ but do you have to have a chaperone, or don't girls just go to dances with
+ the men sometimes? If they do, would you&mdash;would you let me take you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was startled. &ldquo;Good gracious!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you think your relatives&mdash;&mdash;Aren't you expected to go
+ with Mildred&mdash;and Mrs. Palmer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not necessarily. It doesn't matter what I might be expected to do,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;Will you go with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;&mdash;No; I couldn't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't. I'm not going.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Papa's not really any better,&rdquo; Alice said, huskily. &ldquo;I'm too worried
+ about him to go to a dance.&rdquo; Her voice sounded emotional, genuinely
+ enough; there was something almost like a sob in it. &ldquo;Let's talk of other
+ things, please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He acquiesced gently; but Mrs. Adams, who had been listening to the
+ conversation at the open window, just overhead, did not hear him. She had
+ correctly interpreted the sob in Alice's voice, and, trembling with sudden
+ anger, she rose from her knees, and went fiercely to her husband's room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ He had not undressed, and he sat beside the table, smoking his pipe and
+ reading his newspaper. Upon his forehead the lines in that old pattern,
+ the historical map of his troubles, had grown a little vaguer lately;
+ relaxed by the complacency of a man who not only finds his health
+ restored, but sees the days before him promising once more a familiar
+ routine that he has always liked to follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As his wife came in, closing the door behind her, he looked up cheerfully,
+ &ldquo;Well, mother,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;what's the news downstairs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's what I came to tell you,&rdquo; she informed him, grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams lowered his newspaper to his knee and peered over his spectacles at
+ her. She had remained by the door, standing, and the great greenish shadow
+ of the small lamp-shade upon his table revealed her but dubiously. &ldquo;Isn't
+ everything all right?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't worry: I'm going to tell you,&rdquo; she said, her grimness not relaxed.
+ &ldquo;There's matter enough, Virgil Adams. Matter enough to make me sick of
+ being alive!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that, the markings on his brows began to emerge again in all their
+ sharpness; the old pattern reappeared. &ldquo;Oh, my, my!&rdquo; he lamented. &ldquo;I
+ thought maybe we were all going to settle down to a little peace for a
+ while. What's it about now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's about Alice. Did you think it was about ME or anything for MYSELF?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like some ready old machine, always in order, his irritability responded
+ immediately and automatically to her emotion. &ldquo;How in thunder could I
+ think what it's about, or who it's for? SAY it, and get it over!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I'll 'say' it,&rdquo; she promised, ominously. &ldquo;What I've come to ask you
+ is, How much longer do you expect me to put up with that old man and his
+ doings?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose doings? What old man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She came at him, fiercely accusing. &ldquo;You know well enough what old man,
+ Virgil Adams! That old man who was here the other night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Lamb?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; 'Mister Lamb!'&rdquo; She mocked his voice. &ldquo;What other old man would I be
+ likely to mean except J. A. Lamb?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's he been doing now?&rdquo; her husband inquired, satirically. &ldquo;Where'd
+ you get something new against him since the last time you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just this!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;The other night when that man was here, if I'd
+ known how he was going to make my child suffer, I'd never have let him set
+ his foot in my house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams leaned back in his chair as though her absurdity had eased his mind.
+ &ldquo;Oh, I see,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You've just gone plain crazy. That's the only
+ explanation of such talk, and it suits the case.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hasn't that man made us all suffer every day of our lives?&rdquo; she demanded.
+ &ldquo;I'd like to know why it is that my life and my children's lives have to
+ be sacrificed to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How are they 'sacrificed' to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because you keep on working for him! Because you keep on letting him hand
+ out whatever miserable little pittance he chooses to give you; that's why!
+ It's as if he were some horrible old Juggernaut and I had to see my
+ children's own father throwing them under the wheels to keep him
+ satisfied.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I won't hear any more such stuff!&rdquo; Lifting his paper, Adams affected to
+ read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'd better listen to me,&rdquo; she admonished him. &ldquo;You might be sorry you
+ didn't, in case he ever tried to set foot in my house again! I might tell
+ him to his face what I think of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this, Adams slapped the newspaper down upon his knee. &ldquo;Oh, the devil!
+ What's it matter what you think of him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It had better matter to you!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Do you suppose I'm going to
+ submit forever to him and his family and what they're doing to my child?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are he and his family doing to 'your child?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams came out with it. &ldquo;That snippy little Henrietta Lamb has always
+ snubbed Alice every time she's ever had the chance. She's followed the
+ lead of the other girls; they've always all of 'em been jealous of Alice
+ because she dared to try and be happy, and because she's showier and
+ better-looking than they are, even though you do give her only about
+ thirty-five cents a year to do it on! They've all done everything on earth
+ they could to drive the young men away from her and belittle her to 'em;
+ and this mean little Henrietta Lamb's been the worst of the whole crowd to
+ Alice, every time she could see a chance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What for?&rdquo; Adams asked, incredulously. &ldquo;Why should she or anybody else
+ pick on Alice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Why?' 'What for?'&rdquo; his wife repeated with a greater vehemence. &ldquo;Do YOU
+ ask me such a thing as that? Do you really want to know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; I'd want to know&mdash;I would if I believed it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I'll tell you,&rdquo; she said in a cold fury. &ldquo;It's on account of you,
+ Virgil, and nothing else in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hooted at her. &ldquo;Oh, yes! These girls don't like ME, so they pick on
+ Alice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quit your palavering and evading,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;A crowd of girls like that,
+ when they get a pretty girl like Alice among them, they act just like wild
+ beasts. They'll tear her to pieces, or else they'll chase her and run her
+ out, because they know if she had half a chance she'd outshine 'em. They
+ can't do that to a girl like Mildred Palmer because she's got money and
+ family to back her. Now you listen to me, Virgil Adams: the way the world
+ is now, money IS family. Alice would have just as much 'family' as any of
+ 'em every single bit&mdash;if you hadn't fallen behind in the race.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you did!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Twenty-five years ago when we were starting
+ and this town was smaller, you and I could have gone with any of 'em if
+ we'd tried hard enough. Look at the people we knew then that do hold their
+ heads up alongside of anybody in this town! WHY can they? Because the men
+ of those families made money and gave their children everything that makes
+ life worth living! Why can't we hold our heads up? Because those men
+ passed you in the race. They went up the ladder, and you&mdash;you're
+ still a clerk down at that old hole!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You leave that out, please,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I thought you were going to tell
+ me something Henrietta Lamb had done to our Alice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You BET I'm going to tell you,&rdquo; she assured him, vehemently. &ldquo;But first
+ I'm telling WHY she does it. It's because you've never given Alice any
+ backing nor any background, and they all know they can do anything they
+ like to her with perfect impunity. If she had the hundredth part of what
+ THEY have to fall back on she'd have made 'em sing a mighty different song
+ long ago!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How would she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my heavens, but you're slow!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams moaned. &ldquo;Look here! You
+ remember how practically all the nicest boys in this town used to come
+ here a few years ago. Why, they were all crazy over her; and the girls HAD
+ to be nice to her then. Look at the difference now! There'll be a whole
+ month go by and not a young man come to call on her, let alone send her
+ candy or flowers, or ever think of TAKING her any place and yet she's
+ prettier and brighter than she was when they used to come. It isn't the
+ child's fault she couldn't hold 'em, is it? Poor thing, SHE tried hard
+ enough! I suppose you'd say it was her fault, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I wouldn't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then whose fault is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, mine, mine,&rdquo; he said, wearily. &ldquo;I drove the young men away, of
+ course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might as well have driven 'em, Virgil. It amounts to just the same
+ thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How does it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because as they got older a good many of 'em began to think more about
+ money; that's one thing. Money's at the bottom of it all, for that matter.
+ Look at these country clubs and all such things: the other girls' families
+ belong and we don't, and Alice don't; and she can't go unless somebody
+ takes her, and nobody does any more. Look at the other girls' houses, and
+ then look at our house, so shabby and old-fashioned she'd be pretty near
+ ashamed to ask anybody to come in and sit down nowadays! Look at her
+ clothes&mdash;oh, yes; you think you shelled out a lot for that little
+ coat of hers and the hat and skirt she got last March; but it's nothing.
+ Some of these girls nowadays spend more than your whole salary on their
+ clothes. And what jewellery has she got? A plated watch and two or three
+ little pins and rings of the kind people's maids wouldn't wear now. Good
+ Lord, Virgil Adams, wake up! Don't sit there and tell me you don't know
+ things like this mean SUFFERING for the child!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had begun to rub his hands wretchedly back and forth over his bony
+ knees, as if in that way he somewhat alleviated the tedium caused by her
+ racking voice. &ldquo;Oh, my, my!&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;OH, my, my!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I should think you WOULD say 'Oh, my, my!'&rdquo; she took him up, loudly.
+ &ldquo;That doesn't help things much! If you ever wanted to DO anything about
+ it, the poor child might see some gleam of hope in her life. You don't
+ CARE for her, that's the trouble; you don't care a single thing about
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; you don't. Why, even with your miserable little salary you could have
+ given her more than you have. You're the closest man I ever knew: it's
+ like pulling teeth to get a dollar out of you for her, now and then, and
+ yet you hide some away, every month or so, in some wretched little
+ investment or other. You&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here, now,&rdquo; he interrupted, angrily. &ldquo;You look here! If I didn't put
+ a little by whenever I could, in a bond or something, where would you be
+ if anything happened to me? The insurance doctors never passed me; YOU
+ know that. Haven't we got to have SOMETHING to fall back on?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, we have!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;We ought to have something to go on with right
+ now, too, when we need it. Do you suppose these snippets would treat Alice
+ the way they do if she could afford to ENTERTAIN? They leave her out of
+ their dinners and dances simply because they know she can't give any
+ dinners and dances to leave them out of! They know she can't get EVEN, and
+ that's the whole story! That's why Henrietta Lamb's done this thing to her
+ now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams had gone back to his rubbing of his knees. &ldquo;Oh, my, my!&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;WHAT thing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She told him. &ldquo;Your dear, grand, old Mister Lamb's Henrietta has sent out
+ invitations for a large party&mdash;a LARGE one. Everybody that is anybody
+ in this town is asked, you can be sure. There's a very fine young man, a
+ Mr. Russell, has just come to town, and he's interested in Alice, and he's
+ asked her to go to this dance with him. Well, Alice can't accept. She
+ can't go with him, though she'd give anything in the world to do it. Do
+ you understand? The reason she can't is because Henrietta Lamb hasn't
+ invited her. Do you want to know why Henrietta hasn't invited her? It's
+ because she knows Alice can't get even, and because she thinks Alice ought
+ to be snubbed like this on account of only being the daughter of one of
+ her grandfather's clerks. I HOPE you understand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my, my!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;OH, my, my!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's your sweet old employer,&rdquo; his wife cried, tauntingly. &ldquo;That's your
+ dear, kind, grand old Mister Lamb! Alice has been left out of a good many
+ smaller things, like big dinners and little dances, but this is just the
+ same as serving her notice that she's out of everything! And it's all done
+ by your dear, grand old&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here!&rdquo; Adams exclaimed. &ldquo;I don't want to hear any more of that! You
+ can't hold him responsible for everything his grandchildren do, I guess!
+ He probably doesn't know a thing about it. You don't suppose he's
+ troubling HIS head over&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she burst out at him passionately. &ldquo;Suppose you trouble YOUR head
+ about it! You'd better, Virgil Adams! You'd better, unless you want to see
+ your child just dry up into a miserable old maid! She's still young and
+ she has a chance for happiness, if she had a father that didn't bring a
+ millstone to hang around her neck, instead of what he ought to give her!
+ You just wait till you die and God asks you what you had in your breast
+ instead of a heart!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my, my!&rdquo; he groaned. &ldquo;What's my heart got to do with it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing! You haven't got one or you'd give her what she needed. Am I
+ asking anything you CAN'T do? You know better; you know I'm not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this he sat suddenly rigid, his troubled hands ceasing to rub his
+ knees; and he looked at her fixedly. &ldquo;Now, tell me,&rdquo; he said, slowly.
+ &ldquo;Just what ARE you asking?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know!&rdquo; she sobbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean you've broken your word never to speak of THAT to me again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do <i>I</i> care for my word?&rdquo; she cried, and, sinking to the floor
+ at his feet, rocked herself back and forth there. &ldquo;Do you suppose I'll let
+ my 'word' keep me from struggling for a little happiness for my children?
+ It won't, I tell you; it won't! I'll struggle for that till I die! I will,
+ till I die till I die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rubbed his head now instead of his knees, and, shaking all over, he got
+ up and began with uncertain steps to pace the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hell, hell, hell!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I've got to go through THAT again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you have!&rdquo; she sobbed. &ldquo;Till I die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; that's what you been after all the time I was getting well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I have, and I'll keep on till I die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A fine wife for a man,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Beggin' a man to be a dirty dog!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! To be a MAN&mdash;and I'll keep on till I die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams again fell back upon his last solace: he walked, half staggering, up
+ and down the room, swearing in a rhythmic repetition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His wife had repetitions of her own, and she kept at them in a voice that
+ rose to a higher and higher pitch, like the sound of an old well-pump.
+ &ldquo;Till I die! Till I die! Till I DIE!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She ended in a scream; and Alice, coming up the stairs, thanked heaven
+ that Russell had gone. She ran to her father's door and went in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams looked at her, and gesticulated shakily at the convulsive figure on
+ the floor. &ldquo;Can you get her out of here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice helped Mrs. Adams to her feet; and the stricken woman threw her arms
+ passionately about her daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get her out!&rdquo; Adams said, harshly; then cried, &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice, moving toward the door, halted, and looked at him blankly, over her
+ mother's shoulder. &ldquo;What is it, papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stretched out his arm and pointed at her. &ldquo;She says&mdash;she says you
+ have a mean life, Alice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams turned in her daughter's arms. &ldquo;Do you hear her lie? Couldn't
+ you be as brave as she is, Virgil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you lying, Alice?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Do you have a mean time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came toward her. &ldquo;Look at me!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Things like this dance now&mdash;is
+ that so hard to bear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice tried to say, &ldquo;No, papa,&rdquo; again, but she couldn't. Suddenly and in
+ spite of herself she began to cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you hear her?&rdquo; his wife sobbed. &ldquo;Now do you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He waved at them fiercely. &ldquo;Get out of here!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Both of you! Get
+ out of here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they went, he dropped in his chair and bent far forward, so that his
+ haggard face was concealed from them. Then, as Alice closed the door, he
+ began to rub his knees again, muttering, &ldquo;Oh, my, my! OH, my, my!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There shone a jovial sun overhead on the appointed &ldquo;day after to-morrow&rdquo;;
+ a day not cool yet of a temperature friendly to walkers; and the air,
+ powdered with sunshine, had so much life in it that it seemed to sparkle.
+ To Arthur Russell this was a day like a gay companion who pleased him
+ well; but the gay companion at his side pleased him even better. She
+ looked her prettiest, chattered her wittiest, smiled her wistfulest, and
+ delighted him with all together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You look so happy it's easy to see your father's taken a good turn,&rdquo; he
+ told her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; he has this afternoon, at least,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I might have other
+ reasons for looking cheerful, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For instance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Exactly!&rdquo; she said, giving him a sweet look just enough mocked by her
+ laughter. &ldquo;For instance!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, go on,&rdquo; he begged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't it expected?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of you, you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she returned. &ldquo;For you, I mean!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this style, which uses a word for any meaning that quick look and
+ colourful gesture care to endow it with, she was an expert; and she
+ carried it merrily on, leaving him at liberty (one of the great values of
+ the style) to choose as he would how much or how little she meant. He was
+ content to supply mere cues, for although he had little coquetry of his
+ own, he had lately begun to find that the only interesting moments in his
+ life were those during which Alice Adams coquetted with him. Happily,
+ these obliging moments extended themselves to cover all the time he spent
+ with her. However serious she might seem, whatever appeared to be her
+ topic, all was thou-and-I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He planned for more of it, seeing otherwise a dull evening ahead; and
+ reverted, afterwhile, to a forbidden subject. &ldquo;About that dance at Miss
+ Lamb's&mdash;since your father's so much better&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She flushed a little. &ldquo;Now, now!&rdquo; she chided him. &ldquo;We agreed not to say
+ any more about that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but since he IS better&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice shook her head. &ldquo;He won't be better to-morrow. He always has a bad
+ day after a good one especially after such a good one as this is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if this time it should be different,&rdquo; Russell persisted; &ldquo;wouldn't
+ you be willing to come if he's better by to-morrow evening? Why not wait
+ and decide at the last minute?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She waved her hands airily. &ldquo;What a pother!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;What does it
+ matter whether poor little Alice Adams goes to a dance or not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I thought I'd made it clear that it looks fairly bleak to me if you
+ don't go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes!&rdquo; she jeered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's the simple truth,&rdquo; he insisted. &ldquo;I don't care a great deal about
+ dances these days; and if you aren't going to be there&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You could stay away,&rdquo; she suggested. &ldquo;You wouldn't!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unfortunately, I can't. I'm afraid I'm supposed to be the excuse. Miss
+ Lamb, in her capacity as a friend of my relatives&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, she's giving it for YOU! I see! On Mildred's account you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that his face showed an increase of colour. &ldquo;I suppose just on account
+ of my being a cousin of Mildred's and of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course! You'll have a beautiful time, too. Henrietta'll see that you
+ have somebody to dance with besides Miss Dowling, poor man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what I want somebody to see is that I dance with you! And perhaps
+ your father&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; she said, frowning as if she debated whether or not to tell him
+ something of import; then, seeming to decide affirmatively, she asked:
+ &ldquo;Would you really like to know the truth about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it isn't too unflattering.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It hasn't anything to do with you at all,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Of course I'd like
+ to go with you and to dance with you&mdash;though you don't seem to
+ realize that you wouldn't be permitted much time with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes, I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind!&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;Of course you wouldn't. But even if papa
+ should be better to-morrow, I doubt if I'd go. In fact, I know I wouldn't.
+ There's another reason besides papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. The truth is, I don't get on with Henrietta Lamb. As a matter of
+ fact, I dislike her, and of course that means she dislikes me. I should
+ never think of asking her to anything I gave, and I really wonder she asks
+ me to things SHE gives.&rdquo; This was a new inspiration; and Alice, beginning
+ to see her way out of a perplexity, wished that she had thought of it
+ earlier: she should have told him from the first that she and Henrietta
+ had a feud, and consequently exchanged no invitations. Moreover, there was
+ another thing to beset her with little anxieties: she might better not
+ have told him from the first, as she had indeed told him by intimation,
+ that she was the pampered daughter of an indulgent father, presumably able
+ to indulge her; for now she must elaborately keep to the part. Veracity is
+ usually simple; and its opposite, to be successful, should be as simple;
+ but practitioners of the opposite are most often impulsive, like Alice;
+ and, like her, they become enmeshed in elaborations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It wouldn't be very nice for me to go to her house,&rdquo; Alice went on, &ldquo;when
+ I wouldn't want her in mine. I've never admired her. I've always thought
+ she was lacking in some things most people are supposed to be equipped
+ with&mdash;for instance, a certain feeling about the death of a father who
+ was always pretty decent to his daughter. Henrietta's father died just,
+ eleven months and twenty-seven days before your cousin's dance, but she
+ couldn't stick out those few last days and make it a year; she was there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice stopped, then laughed ruefully, exclaiming, &ldquo;But this is dreadful of
+ me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blackguarding her to you when she's giving a big party for you! Just the
+ way Henrietta would blackguard me to you&mdash;heaven knows what she
+ WOULDN'T say if she talked about me to you! It would be fair, of course,
+ but&mdash;well, I'd rather she didn't!&rdquo; And with that, Alice let her
+ pretty hand, in its white glove, rest upon his arm for a moment; and he
+ looked down at it, not unmoved to see it there. &ldquo;I want to be unfair about
+ just this,&rdquo; she said, letting a troubled laughter tremble through her
+ appealing voice as she spoke. &ldquo;I won't take advantage of her with anybody,
+ except just&mdash;you! I'd a little rather you didn't hear anybody
+ blackguard me, and, if you don't mind&mdash;could you promise not to give
+ Henrietta the chance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was charmingly done, with a humorous, faint pathos altogether genuine;
+ and Russell found himself suddenly wanting to shout at her, &ldquo;Oh, you
+ DEAR!&rdquo; Nothing else seemed adequate; but he controlled the impulse in
+ favour of something more conservative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Imagine any one speaking unkindly of you&mdash;not praising you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who HAS praised me to you?&rdquo; she asked, quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't talked about you with any one; but if I did, I know they'd&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; she cried, and went on, again accompanying her words with little
+ tremulous runs of laughter. &ldquo;You don't understand this town yet. You'll be
+ surprised when you do; we're different. We talk about one another
+ fearfully! Haven't I just proved it, the way I've been going for
+ Henrietta? Of course I didn't say anything really very terrible about her,
+ but that's only because I don't follow that practice the way most of the
+ others do. They don't stop with the worst of the truth they can find: they
+ make UP things&mdash;yes, they really do! And, oh, I'd RATHER they didn't
+ make up things about me&mdash;to you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What difference would it make if they did?&rdquo; he inquired, cheerfully. &ldquo;I'd
+ know they weren't true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even if you did know that, they'd make a difference,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Oh, yes,
+ they would! It's too bad, but we don't like anything quite so well that's
+ had specks on it, even if we've wiped the specks off;&mdash;it's just that
+ much spoiled, and some things are all spoiled the instant they're the
+ least bit spoiled. What a man thinks about a girl, for instance. Do you
+ want to have what you think about me spoiled, Mr. Russell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but that's already far beyond reach,&rdquo; he said, lightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it can't be!&rdquo; she protested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because it never can be. Men don't change their minds about one another
+ often: they make it quite an event when they do, and talk about it as if
+ something important had happened. But a girl only has to go down-town with
+ a shoe-string unfastened, and every man who sees her will change his mind
+ about her. Don't you know that's true?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not of myself, I think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;That's precisely what every man in the world would
+ say!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you wouldn't trust me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;I'll be awfully worried if you give 'em a chance to tell you
+ that I'm too lazy to tie my shoe-strings!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed delightedly. &ldquo;Is that what they do say?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just about! Whatever they hope will get results.&rdquo; She shook her head
+ wisely. &ldquo;Oh, yes; we do that here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I don't mind loose shoe-strings,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Not if they're yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They'll find out what you do mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But suppose,&rdquo; he said, looking at her whimsically; &ldquo;suppose I wouldn't
+ mind anything&mdash;so long as it's yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She courtesied. &ldquo;Oh, pretty enough! But a girl who's talked about has a
+ weakness that's often a fatal one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's this: when she's talked about she isn't THERE. That's how they kill
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid I don't follow you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you see? If Henrietta&mdash;or Mildred&mdash;or any of 'em&mdash;or
+ some of their mothers&mdash;oh, we ALL do it! Well, if any of 'em told you
+ I didn't tie my shoe-strings, and if I were there, so that you could see
+ me, you'd know it wasn't true. Even if I were sitting so that you couldn't
+ see my feet, and couldn't tell whether the strings were tied or not just
+ then, still you could look at me, and see that I wasn't the sort of girl
+ to neglect my shoe-strings. But that isn't the way it happens: they'll get
+ at you when I'm nowhere around and can't remind you of the sort of girl I
+ really am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you don't do that,&rdquo; he complained. &ldquo;You don't remind me you don't
+ even tell me&mdash;the sort of girl you really are! I'd like to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let's be serious then,&rdquo; she said, and looked serious enough herself.
+ &ldquo;Would you honestly like to know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, you must be careful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Careful?'&rdquo; The word amused him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mean careful not to get me mixed up,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Careful not to mix up
+ the girl you might hear somebody talking about with the me I honestly try
+ to make you see. If you do get those two mixed up&mdash;well, the whole
+ show'll be spoiled!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What makes you think so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because it's&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She checked herself, having begun to speak
+ too impulsively; and she was disturbed, realizing in what tricky stuff she
+ dealt. What had been on her lips to say was, &ldquo;Because it's happened
+ before!&rdquo; She changed to, &ldquo;Because it's so easy to spoil anything&mdash;easiest
+ of all to spoil anything that's pleasant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That might depend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; it's so. And if you care at all about&mdash;about knowing a girl
+ who'd like someone to know her&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just 'someone?' That's disappointing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;you,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me how 'careful' you want me to be, then!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, don't you think it would be nice if you didn't give anybody the
+ chance to talk about me the way&mdash;the way I've just been talking about
+ Henrietta Lamb?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that they laughed together, and he said, &ldquo;You may be cutting me off
+ from a great deal of information, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Alice admitted. &ldquo;Somebody might begin to praise me to you, too; so
+ it's dangerous to ask you to change the subject if I ever happen to be
+ mentioned. But after all&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'After all' isn't the end of a thought, is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sometimes it is of a girl's thought; I suppose men are neater about their
+ thoughts, and always finish 'em. It isn't the end of the thought I had
+ then, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the end of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him impulsively. &ldquo;Oh, it's foolish,&rdquo; she said, and she
+ laughed as laughs one who proposes something probably impossible. &ldquo;But,
+ WOULDN'T it be pleasant if two people could ever just keep themselves TO
+ themselves, so far as they two were concerned? I mean, if they could just
+ manage to be friends without people talking about it, or talking to THEM
+ about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose that might be rather difficult,&rdquo; he said, more amused than
+ impressed by her idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know: it might be done,&rdquo; she returned, hopefully. &ldquo;Especially in
+ a town of this size; it's grown so it's quite a huge place these days.
+ People can keep themselves to themselves in a big place better, you know.
+ For instance, nobody knows that you and I are taking a walk together
+ today.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How absurd, when here we are on exhibition!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; we aren't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We aren't?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a bit of it!&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;We were the other day, when you walked
+ home with me, but anybody could tell that had just happened by chance, on
+ account of your overtaking me; people can always see things like that. But
+ we're not on exhibition now. Look where I've led you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amused and a little bewildered, he looked up and down the street, which
+ was one of gaunt-faced apartment-houses, old, sooty, frame
+ boarding-houses, small groceries and drug-stores, laundries and one-room
+ plumbers' shops, with the sign of a clairvoyant here and there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I've been leading you without your knowing it. Of
+ course that's because you're new to the town, and you give yourself up to
+ the guidance of an old citizen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not so sure, Miss Adams. It might mean that I don't care where I
+ follow so long as I follow you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I'd like you to keep on following me at least long
+ enough for me to show you that there's something nicer ahead of us than
+ this dingy street.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that figurative?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Might be!&rdquo; she returned, gaily. &ldquo;There's a pretty little park at the end,
+ but it's very proletarian, and nobody you and I know will be more likely
+ to see us there than on this street.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What an imagination you have!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;You turn our proper little
+ walk into a Parisian adventure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him in what seemed to be a momentary grave puzzlement.
+ &ldquo;Perhaps you feel that a Parisian adventure mightn't please your&mdash;your
+ relatives?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; he returned. &ldquo;You seem to think of them oftener than I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This appeared to amuse Alice, or at least to please her, for she laughed.
+ &ldquo;Then I can afford to quit thinking of them, I suppose. It's only that I
+ used to be quite a friend of Mildred's&mdash;but there! we needn't to go
+ into that. I've never been a friend of Henrietta Lamb's, though, and I
+ almost wish she weren't taking such pains to be a friend of yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but she's not. It's all on account of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On Mildred's account,&rdquo; Alice finished this for him, coolly. &ldquo;Yes, of
+ course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's on account of the two families,&rdquo; he was at pains to explain, a
+ little awkwardly. &ldquo;It's because I'm a relative of the Palmers, and the
+ Palmers and the Lambs seem to be old family friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something the Adamses certainly are not,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;Not with either of
+ 'em; particularly not with the Lambs!&rdquo; And here, scarce aware of what
+ impelled her, she returned to her former elaborations and colourings. &ldquo;You
+ see, the differences between Henrietta and me aren't entirely personal: I
+ couldn't go to her house even if I liked her. The Lambs and Adamses don't
+ get on with each other, and we've just about come to the breaking-point as
+ it happens.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope it's nothing to bother you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why? A lot of things bother me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sorry they do,&rdquo; he said, and seemed simply to mean it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She nodded gratefully. &ldquo;That's nice of you, Mr. Russell. It helps. The
+ break between the Adamses and the Lambs is a pretty bothersome thing. It's
+ been coming on a long time.&rdquo; She sighed deeply, and the sigh was half
+ genuine; this half being for her father, but the other half probably
+ belonged to her instinctive rendering of Juliet Capulet, daughter to a
+ warring house. &ldquo;I hate it all so!&rdquo; she added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course you must.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose most quarrels between families are on account of business,&rdquo; she
+ said. &ldquo;That's why they're so sordid. Certainly the Lambs seem a sordid lot
+ to me, though of course I'm biased.&rdquo; And with that she began to sketch a
+ history of the commercial antagonism that had risen between the Adamses
+ and the Lambs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sketching was spontaneous and dramatic. Mathematics had no part in it;
+ nor was there accurate definition of Mr. Adams's relation to the
+ institution of Lamb and Company. The point was clouded, in fact; though
+ that might easily be set down to the general haziness of young ladies
+ confronted with the mysteries of trade or commerce. Mr. Adams either had
+ been a vague sort of junior member of the firm, it appeared, or else he
+ should have been made some such thing; at all events, he was an old
+ mainstay of the business; and he, as much as any Lamb, had helped to build
+ up the prosperity of the company. But at last, tired of providing so much
+ intelligence and energy for which other people took profit greater than
+ his own, he had decided to leave the company and found a business entirely
+ for himself. The Lambs were going to be enraged when they learned what was
+ afoot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the impression, a little misted, wrought by Alice's quick
+ narrative. But there was dolorous fact behind it: Adams had succumbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His wife, grave and nervous, rather than triumphant, in success, had told
+ their daughter that the great J. A. would be furious and possibly
+ vindictive. Adams was afraid of him, she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what for, mama?&rdquo; Alice asked, since this seemed a turn of affairs out
+ of reason. &ldquo;What in the world has Mr. Lamb to do with papa's leaving the
+ company to set up for himself? What right has he to be angry about it? If
+ he's such a friend as he claims to be, I should think he'd be glad&mdash;that
+ is, if the glue factory turns out well. What will he be angry for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams gave Alice an uneasy glance, hesitated, and then explained that
+ a resignation from Lamb's had always been looked upon, especially by &ldquo;that
+ old man,&rdquo; as treachery. You were supposed to die in the service, she said
+ bitterly, and her daughter, a little mystified, accepted this explanation.
+ Adams had not spoken to her of his surrender; he seemed not inclined to
+ speak to her at all, or to any one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was not serious too long, and she began to laugh as she came to the
+ end of her decorative sketch. &ldquo;After all, the whole thing is perfectly
+ ridiculous,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;In fact, it's FUNNY! That's on account of what
+ papa's going to throw over the Lamb business FOR! To save your life you
+ couldn't imagine what he's going to do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I won't try, then,&rdquo; Russell assented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It takes all the romance out of ME,&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;You'll never go for a
+ Parisian walk with me again, after I tell you what I'll be heiress to.&rdquo;
+ They had come to the entrance of the little park; and, as Alice had said,
+ it was a pretty place, especially on a day so radiant. Trees of the oldest
+ forest stood there, hale and serene over the trim, bright grass; and the
+ proletarians had not come from their factories at this hour; only a few
+ mothers and their babies were to be seen, here and there, in the shade. &ldquo;I
+ think I'll postpone telling you about it till we get nearly home again,&rdquo;
+ Alice said, as they began to saunter down one of the gravelled paths.
+ &ldquo;There's a bench beside a spring farther on; we can sit there and talk
+ about a lot of things&mdash;things not so sticky as my dowry's going to
+ be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Sticky?'&rdquo; he echoed. &ldquo;What in the world&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She laughed
+ despairingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A glue factory!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he laughed, too, as much from friendliness as from amusement; and she
+ remembered to tell him that the project of a glue factory was still &ldquo;an
+ Adams secret.&rdquo; It would be known soon, however, she added; and the whole
+ Lamb connection would probably begin saying all sorts of things, heaven
+ knew what!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Alice built her walls of flimsy, working always gaily, or with at
+ least the air of gaiety; and even as she rattled on, there was somewhere
+ in her mind a constant little wonder. Everything she said seemed to be
+ necessary to support something else she had said. How had it happened? She
+ found herself telling him that since her father had decided on making so
+ great a change in his ways, she and her mother hoped at last to persuade
+ him to give up that &ldquo;foolish little house&rdquo; he had been so obstinate about;
+ and she checked herself abruptly on this declivity just as she was about
+ to slide into a remark concerning her own preference for a &ldquo;country
+ place.&rdquo; Discretion caught her in time; and something else, in company with
+ discretion, caught her, for she stopped short in her talk and blushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had taken possession of the bench beside the spring, by this time;
+ and Russell, his elbow on the back of the bench and his chin on his hand,
+ the better to look at her, had no guess at the cause of the blush, but was
+ content to find it lovely. At his first sight of Alice she had seemed
+ pretty in the particular way of being pretty that he happened to like
+ best; and, with every moment he spent with her, this prettiness appeared
+ to increase. He felt that he could not look at her enough: his gaze
+ followed the fluttering of the graceful hands in almost continual gesture
+ as she talked; then lifted happily to the vivacious face again. She
+ charmed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After her abrupt pause, she sighed, then looked at him with her eyebrows
+ lifted in a comedy appeal. &ldquo;You haven't said you wouldn't give Henrietta
+ the chance,&rdquo; she said, in the softest voice that can still have a little
+ laugh running in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was puzzled. &ldquo;Give Henrietta the chance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YOU know! You'll let me keep on being unfair, won't you? Not give the
+ other girls a chance to get even?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He promised, heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Alice had said that no one who knew either Russell or herself would be
+ likely to see them in the park or upon the dingy street; but although they
+ returned by that same ungenteel thoroughfare they were seen by a person
+ who knew them both. Also, with some surprise on the part of Russell, and
+ something more poignant than surprise for Alice, they saw this person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of the dingy street was ugly, but the greater part of it appeared to
+ be honest. The two pedestrians came upon a block or two, however, where it
+ offered suggestions of a less upright character, like a steady enough
+ workingman with a naughty book sticking out of his pocket. Three or four
+ dim shops, a single story in height, exhibited foul signboards, yet fair
+ enough so far as the wording went; one proclaiming a tobacconist, one a
+ junk-dealer, one a dispenser of &ldquo;soft drinks and cigars.&rdquo; The most
+ credulous would have doubted these signboards; for the craft of the modern
+ tradesman is exerted to lure indoors the passing glance, since if the
+ glance is pleased the feet may follow; but this alleged tobacconist and
+ his neighbours had long been fond of dust on their windows, evidently, and
+ shades were pulled far down on the glass of their doors. Thus the public
+ eye, small of pupil in the light of the open street, was intentionally not
+ invited to the dusky interiors. Something different from mere lack of
+ enterprise was apparent; and the signboards might have been omitted; they
+ were pains thrown away, since it was plain to the world that the business
+ parts of these shops were the brighter back rooms implied by the dark
+ front rooms; and that the commerce there was in perilous new liquors and
+ in dice and rough girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could have been more innocent than the serenity with which these
+ wicked little places revealed themselves for what they were; and, bound by
+ this final tie of guilelessness, they stood together in a row which ended
+ with a companionable barbershop, much like them. Beyond was a series of
+ soot-harried frame two-story houses, once part of a cheerful neighbourhood
+ when the town was middle-aged and settled, and not old and growing. These
+ houses, all carrying the label. &ldquo;Rooms,&rdquo; had the worried look of vacancy
+ that houses have when they are too full of everybody without being
+ anybody's home; and there was, too, a surreptitious air about them, as if,
+ like the false little shops, they advertised something by concealing it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of them&mdash;the one next to the barber-shop&mdash;had across its
+ front an ample, jig-sawed veranda, where aforetime, no doubt, the father
+ of a family had fanned himself with a palm-leaf fan on Sunday afternoons,
+ watching the surreys go by, and where his daughter listened to mandolins
+ and badinage on starlit evenings; but, although youth still held the
+ veranda, both the youth and the veranda were in decay. The four or five
+ young men who lounged there this afternoon were of a type known to shady
+ pool-parlours. Hats found no favour with them; all of them wore caps; and
+ their tight clothes, apparently from a common source, showed a vivacious
+ fancy for oblique pockets, false belts, and Easter-egg colourings. Another
+ thing common to the group was the expression of eye and mouth; and Alice,
+ in the midst of her other thoughts, had a distasteful thought about this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The veranda was within a dozen feet of the sidewalk, and as she and her
+ escort came nearer, she took note of the young men, her face hardening a
+ little, even before she suspected there might be a resemblance between
+ them and any one she knew. Then she observed that each of these loungers
+ wore not for the occasion, but as of habit, a look of furtively amused
+ contempt; the mouth smiled to one side as if not to dislodge a cigarette,
+ while the eyes kept languidly superior. All at once Alice was reminded of
+ Walter; and the slight frown caused by this idea had just begun to darken
+ her forehead when Walter himself stepped out of the open door of the house
+ and appeared upon the veranda. Upon his head was a new straw hat, and in
+ his hand was a Malacca stick with an ivory top, for Alice had finally
+ decided against it for herself and had given it to him. His mood was
+ lively: he twirled the stick through his fingers like a drum-major's
+ baton, and whistled loudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, he was indeed accompanied. With him was a thin girl who had made
+ a violent black-and-white poster of herself: black dress, black flimsy
+ boa, black stockings, white slippers, great black hat down upon the black
+ eyes; and beneath the hat a curve of cheek and chin made white as
+ whitewash, and in strong bilateral motion with gum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loungers on the veranda were familiars of the pair; hailed them with
+ cacklings; and one began to sing, in a voice all tin:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Then my skirt, Sal, and me did go
+ Right straight to the moving-pitcher show.
+ OH, you bashful vamp!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The girl laughed airily. &ldquo;God, but you guys are wise!&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come on, Wallie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter stared at his sister; then grinned faintly, and nodded at Russell
+ as the latter lifted his hat in salutation. Alice uttered an incoherent
+ syllable of exclamation, and, as she began to walk faster, she bit her lip
+ hard, not in order to look wistful, this time, but to help her keep tears
+ of anger from her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell laughed cheerfully. &ldquo;Your brother certainly seems to have found
+ the place for 'colour' today,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That girl's talk must be full of
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alice had forgotten the colour she herself had used in accounting for
+ Walter's peculiarities, and she did not understand. &ldquo;What?&rdquo; she said,
+ huskily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you remember telling me about him? How he was going to write,
+ probably, and would go anywhere to pick up types and get them to talk?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She kept her eyes ahead, and said sharply, &ldquo;I think his literary tastes
+ scarcely cover this case!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be too sure. He didn't look at all disconcerted. He didn't seem to
+ mind your seeing him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's all the worse, isn't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; her friend said, genially. &ldquo;It means he didn't consider that he
+ was engaged in anything out of the way. You can't expect to understand
+ everything boys do at his age; they do all sorts of queer things, and
+ outgrow them. Your brother evidently has a taste for queer people, and
+ very likely he's been at least half sincere when he's made you believe he
+ had a literary motive behind it. We all go through&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks, Mr. Russell,&rdquo; she interrupted. &ldquo;Let's don't say any more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her flushed face and enlarged eyes; and he liked her all the
+ better for her indignation: this was how good sisters ought to feel, he
+ thought, failing to understand that most of what she felt was not about
+ Walter. He ventured only a word more. &ldquo;Try not to mind it so much; it
+ really doesn't amount to anything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shook her head, and they went on in silence; she did not look at him
+ again until they stopped before her own house. Then she gave him only one
+ glimpse of her eyes before she looked down. &ldquo;It's spoiled, isn't it?&rdquo; she
+ said, in a low voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's 'spoiled?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our walk&mdash;well, everything. Somehow it always&mdash;is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Always is' what?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoiled,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed at that; but without looking at him she suddenly offered him
+ her hand, and, as he took it, he felt a hurried, violent pressure upon his
+ fingers, as if she meant to thank him almost passionately for being kind.
+ She was gone before he could speak to her again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her room, with the door locked, she did not go to her mirror, but to
+ her bed, flinging herself face down, not caring how far the pillows put
+ her hat awry. Sheer grief had followed her anger; grief for the calamitous
+ end of her bright afternoon, grief for the &ldquo;end of everything,&rdquo; as she
+ thought then. Nevertheless, she gradually grew more composed, and, when
+ her mother tapped on the door presently, let her in. Mrs. Adams looked at
+ her with quick apprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, poor child! Wasn't he&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice told her. &ldquo;You see how it&mdash;how it made me look, mama,&rdquo; she
+ quavered, having concluded her narrative. &ldquo;I'd tried to cover up Walter's
+ awfulness at the dance with that story about his being 'literary,' but no
+ story was big enough to cover this up&mdash;and oh! it must make him think
+ I tell stories about other things!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, no!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams protested. &ldquo;Don't you see? At the worst, all HE
+ could think is that Walter told stories to you about why he likes to be
+ with such dreadful people, and you believed them. That's all HE'D think;
+ don't you see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice's wet eyes began to show a little hopefulness. &ldquo;You honestly think
+ it might be that way, mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, from what you've told me he said, I KNOW it's that way. Didn't he
+ say he wanted to come again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;N-no,&rdquo; Alice said, uncertainly. &ldquo;But I think he will. At least I begin to
+ think so now. He&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From all you tell me, he seems to be a very desirable young man,&rdquo; Mrs.
+ Adams said, primly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her daughter was silent for several moments; then new tears gathered upon
+ her downcast lashes. &ldquo;He's just&mdash;dear!&rdquo; she faltered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams nodded. &ldquo;He's told you he isn't engaged, hasn't he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. But I know he isn't. Maybe when he first came here he was near it,
+ but I know he's not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess Mildred Palmer would LIKE him to be, all right!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams was
+ frank enough to say, rather triumphantly; and Alice, with a lowered head,
+ murmured:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anybody&mdash;would.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words were all but inaudible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you worry,&rdquo; her mother said, and patted her on the shoulder.
+ &ldquo;Everything will come out all right; don't you fear, Alice. Can't you see
+ that beside any other girl in town you're just a perfect QUEEN? Do you
+ think any young man that wasn't prejudiced, or something, would need more
+ than just one look to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alice moved away from the caressing hand. &ldquo;Never mind, mama. I wonder
+ he looks at me at all. And if he does again, after seeing my brother with
+ those horrible people&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, now!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams interrupted, expostulating mournfully. &ldquo;I'm sure
+ Walter's a GOOD boy&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are?&rdquo; Alice cried, with a sudden vigour. &ldquo;You ARE?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sure he's GOOD, yes&mdash;and if he isn't, it's not his fault. It's
+ mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What nonsense!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it's true,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams lamented. &ldquo;I tried to bring him up to be good,
+ God knows; and when he was little he was the best boy I ever saw. When he
+ came from Sunday-school he'd always run to me and we'd go over the lesson
+ together; and he let me come in his room at night to hear his prayers
+ almost until he was sixteen. Most boys won't do that with their mothers&mdash;not
+ nearly that long. I tried so hard to bring him up right&mdash;but if
+ anything's gone wrong it's my fault.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How could it be? You've just said&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's because I didn't make your father this&mdash;this new step earlier.
+ Then Walter might have had all the advantages that other&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, mama, PLEASE!&rdquo; Alice begged her. &ldquo;Let's don't go over all that again.
+ Isn't it more important to think what's to be done about him? Is he going
+ to be allowed to go on disgracing us as he does?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams sighed profoundly. &ldquo;I don't know what to do,&rdquo; she confessed,
+ unhappily. &ldquo;Your father's so upset about&mdash;about this new step he's
+ taking&mdash;I don't feel as if we ought to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; Alice cried. &ldquo;Papa mustn't be distressed with this, on top of
+ everything else. But SOMETHING'S got to be done about Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What can be?&rdquo; her mother asked, helplessly. &ldquo;What can be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice admitted that she didn't know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At dinner, an hour later, Walter's habitually veiled glance lifted, now
+ and then, to touch her furtively;&mdash;he was waiting, as he would have
+ said, for her to &ldquo;spring it&rdquo;; and he had prepared a brief and sincere
+ defense to the effect that he made his own living, and would like to
+ inquire whose business it was to offer intrusive comment upon his private
+ conduct. But she said nothing, while his father and mother were as silent
+ as she. Walter concluded that there was to be no attack, but changed his
+ mind when his father, who ate only a little, and broodingly at that, rose
+ to leave the table and spoke to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Walter,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when you've finished I wish you'd come up to my room.
+ I got something I want to say to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter shot a hard look at his apathetic sister, then turned to his
+ father. &ldquo;Make it to-morrow,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;This is Satad'y night and I got a
+ date.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Adams said, frowning. &ldquo;You come up before you go out. It's
+ important.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right; I've had all I want to eat,&rdquo; Walter returned. &ldquo;I got a few
+ minutes. Make it quick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He followed his father upstairs, and when they were in the room together
+ Adams shut the door, sat down, and began to rub his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rheumatism?&rdquo; the boy inquired, slyly. &ldquo;That what you want to talk to me
+ about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo; But Adams did not go on; he seemed to be in difficulties for words,
+ and Walter decided to help him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hop ahead and spring it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Get it off your mind: I'll tell the
+ world <i>I</i> should worry! You aren't goin' to bother ME any, so why
+ bother yourself? Alice hopped home and told you she saw me playin' around
+ with some pretty gay-lookin' berries and you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alice?&rdquo; his father said, obviously surprised. &ldquo;It's nothing about Alice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't she tell you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't talked with her all day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I see,&rdquo; Walter said. &ldquo;She told mother and mother told you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, neither of 'em have told me anything. What was there to tell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter laughed. &ldquo;Oh, it's nothin',&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I was just startin' out to
+ buy a girl friend o' mine a rhinestone buckle I lost to her on a bet, this
+ afternoon, and Alice came along with that big Russell fish; and I thought
+ she looked sore. She expects me to like the kind she likes, and I don't
+ like 'em. I thought she'd prob'ly got you all stirred up about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; his father said, peevishly. &ldquo;I don't know anything about it, and
+ I don't care to know anything about it. I want to talk to you about
+ something important.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as he was again silent, Walter said, &ldquo;Well, TALK about it; I'm
+ listening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's this,&rdquo; Adams began, heavily. &ldquo;It's about me going into this glue
+ business. Your mother's told you, hasn't she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She said you were goin' to leave the old place down-town and start a glue
+ factory. That's all I know about it; I got my own affairs to 'tend to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, this is your affair,&rdquo; his father said, frowning. &ldquo;You can't stay
+ with Lamb and Company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter looked a little startled. &ldquo;What you mean, I can't? Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've got to help me,&rdquo; Adams explained slowly; and he frowned more
+ deeply, as if the interview were growing increasingly laborious for him.
+ &ldquo;It's going to be a big pull to get this business on its feet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; Walter exclaimed with a sharp skepticism. &ldquo;I should say it was!&rdquo; He
+ stared at his father incredulously. &ldquo;Look here; aren't you just a little
+ bit sudden, the way you're goin' about things? You've let mother shove you
+ a little too fast, haven't you? Do you know anything about what it means
+ to set up a new business these days?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know all about it,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;About this business, I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I made a long study of it. I'm not afraid of going about it the
+ wrong way; but it's a hard job and you'll have to put in all whatever
+ sense and strength you've got.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter began to breathe quickly, and his lips were agitated; then he set
+ them obstinately. &ldquo;Oh; I will,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you will,&rdquo; Adams returned, not noticing that his son's inflection
+ was satiric. &ldquo;It's going to take every bit of energy in your body, and all
+ the energy I got left in mine, and every cent of the little I've saved,
+ besides something I'll have to raise on this house. I'm going right at it,
+ now I've got to; and you'll have to quit Lamb's by the end of next week.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I will?&rdquo; Walter's voice grew louder, and there was a shrillness in
+ it. &ldquo;I got to quit Lamb's the end of next week, have I?&rdquo; He stepped
+ forward, angrily. &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'm not walkin' out o' Lamb's, see?
+ I'm not quittin' down there: I stay with 'em, see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams looked up at him, astonished. &ldquo;You'll leave there next Saturday,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;I've got to have you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't anything o' the kind,&rdquo; Walter told him, sharply. &ldquo;Do you expect
+ to pay me anything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'd pay you about what you been getting down there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then pay somebody else; <i>I</i> don't know anything about glue. You get
+ somebody else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. You've got to&mdash;-&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter cut him off with the utmost vehemence. &ldquo;Don't tell me what I got to
+ do! I know what I got to do better'n you, I guess! I stay at Lamb's, see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams rose angrily. &ldquo;You'll do what I tell you. You can't stay down
+ there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why can't I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I won't let you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen! Keep on not lettin' me: I'll be there just the same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that his father broke into a sour laughter. &ldquo;THEY won't let you,
+ Walter! They won't have you down there after they find out I'm going.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why won't they? You don't think they're goin' to be all shot to pieces
+ over losin' YOU, do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you they won't let you stay,&rdquo; his father insisted, loudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what do they care whether you go or not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They'll care enough to fire YOU, my boy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here, then; show me why.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They'll do it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Walter jeered; &ldquo;you keep sayin' they will, but when I ask you to
+ show me why, you keep sayin' they will! That makes little headway with ME,
+ I can tell you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams groaned, and, rubbing his head, began to pace the floor. Walter's
+ refusal was something he had not anticipated; and he felt the weakness of
+ his own attempt to meet it: he seemed powerless to do anything but utter
+ angry words, which, as Walter said, made little headway. &ldquo;Oh, my, my!&rdquo; he
+ muttered, &ldquo;OH, my, my!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter, usually sallow, had grown pale: he watched his father narrowly,
+ and now took a sudden resolution. &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;When you say
+ Lamb's is likely to fire me because you're goin' to quit, you talk like
+ the people that have to be locked up. I don't know where you get such
+ things in your head; Lamb and Company won't know you're gone. Listen: I
+ can stay there long as I want to. But I'll tell you what I'll do: make it
+ worth my while and I'll hook up with your old glue factory, after all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams stopped his pacing abruptly, and stared at him. &ldquo;'Make it worth your
+ while?' What you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I got a good use for three hundred dollars right now,&rdquo; Walter said. &ldquo;Let
+ me have it and I'll quit Lamb's to work for you. Don't let me have it and
+ I SWEAR I won't!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you crazy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is everybody crazy that needs three hundred dollars?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;They are if they ask ME for it, when I got to stretch
+ every cent I can lay my hands on to make it look like a dollar!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You won't do it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams burst out at him. &ldquo;You little fool! If I had three hundred dollars
+ to throw away, besides the pay I expected to give you, haven't you got
+ sense enough to see I could hire a man worth three hundred dollars more to
+ me than you'd be? It's a FINE time to ask me for three hundred dollars,
+ isn't it! What FOR? Rhinestone buckles to throw around on your 'girl
+ friends?' Shame on you! Ask me to BRIBE you to help yourself and your own
+ family!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll give you a last chance,&rdquo; Walter said. &ldquo;Either you do what I want, or
+ I won't do what you want. Don't ask me again after this, because&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams interrupted him fiercely. &ldquo;'Ask you again!' Don't worry about that,
+ my boy! All I ask you is to get out o' my room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; Walter said, quietly; and his lopsided smile distorted his
+ livid cheek. &ldquo;Look here: I expect YOU wouldn't give me three hundred
+ dollars to save my life, would you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You make me sick,&rdquo; Adams said, in his bitterness. &ldquo;Get out of here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter went out, whistling; and Adams drooped into his old chair again as
+ the door closed. &ldquo;OH, my, my!&rdquo; he groaned. &ldquo;Oh, Lordy, Lordy! The way of
+ the transgressor&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ He meant his own transgression and his own way; for Walter's stubborn
+ refusal appeared to Adams just then as one of the inexplicable but
+ righteous besettings he must encounter in following that way. &ldquo;Oh, Lordy,
+ Lord!&rdquo; he groaned, and then, as resentment moved him&mdash;&ldquo;That dang boy!
+ Dang idiot!&rdquo; Yet he knew himself for a greater idiot because he had not
+ been able to tell Walter the truth. He could not bring himself to do it,
+ nor even to state his case in its best terms; and that was because he felt
+ that even in its best terms the case was a bad one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all his regrets the greatest was that in a moment of vanity and
+ tenderness, twenty-five years ago, he had told his young wife a business
+ secret. He had wanted to show how important her husband was becoming, and
+ how much the head of the universe, J. A. Lamb, trusted to his integrity
+ and ability. The great man had an idea: he thought of &ldquo;branching out a
+ little,&rdquo; he told Adams confidentially, and there were possibilities of
+ profit in glue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What he wanted was a liquid glue to be put into little bottles and sold
+ cheaply. &ldquo;The kind of thing that sells itself,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;the kind of
+ thing that pays its own small way as it goes along, until it has profits
+ enough to begin advertising it right. Everybody has to use glue, and if I
+ make mine convenient and cheap, everybody'll buy mine. But it's got to be
+ glue that'll STICK; it's got to be the best; and if we find how to make it
+ we've got to keep it a big secret, of course, or anybody can steal it from
+ us. There was a man here last month; he knew a formula he wanted to sell
+ me, 'sight unseen'; but he was in such a hurry I got suspicious, and I
+ found he'd managed to steal it, working for the big packers in their
+ glue-works. We've got to find a better glue than that, anyhow. I'm going
+ to set you and Campbell at it. You're a practical, wide-awake young
+ feller, and Campbell's a mighty good chemist; I guess you two boys ought
+ to make something happen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His guess was shrewd enough. Working in a shed a little way outside the
+ town, where their cheery employer visited them sometimes to study their
+ malodorous stews, the two young men found what Lamb had set them to find.
+ But Campbell was thoughtful over the discovery. &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why
+ ain't this just about yours and mine? After all, it may be Lamb's money
+ that's paid for the stuff we've used, but it hasn't cost much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he pays US,&rdquo; Adams remonstrated, horrified by his companion's idea.
+ &ldquo;He paid us to do it. It belongs absolutely to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I know he THINKS it does,&rdquo; Campbell admitted, plaintively. &ldquo;I suppose
+ we've got to let him take it. It's not patentable, and he'll have to do
+ pretty well by us when he starts his factory, because he's got to depend
+ on us to run the making of the stuff so that the workmen can't get onto
+ the process. You better ask him the same salary I do, and mine's going to
+ be high.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the high salary, thus pleasantly imagined, was never paid. Campbell
+ died of typhoid fever, that summer, leaving Adams and his employer the
+ only possessors of the formula, an unwritten one; and Adams, pleased to
+ think himself more important to the great man than ever, told his wife
+ that there could be little doubt of his being put in sole charge of the
+ prospective glue-works. Unfortunately, the enterprise remained
+ prospective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its projector had already become &ldquo;inveigled into another side-line,&rdquo; as he
+ told Adams. One of his sons had persuaded him to take up a
+ &ldquo;cough-lozenge,&rdquo; to be called the &ldquo;Jalamb Balm Trochee&rdquo;; and the lozenge
+ did well enough to amuse Mr. Lamb and occupy his spare time, which was
+ really about all he had asked of the glue project. He had &ldquo;all the MONEY
+ anybody ought to want,&rdquo; he said, when Adams urged him; and he could &ldquo;start
+ up this little glue side-line&rdquo; at any time; the formula was safe in their
+ two heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At intervals Adams would seek opportunity to speak of &ldquo;the little glue
+ side-line&rdquo; to his patron, and to suggest that the years were passing; but
+ Lamb, petting other hobbies, had lost interest. &ldquo;Oh, I'll start it up some
+ day, maybe. If I don't, I may turn it over to my heirs: it's always an
+ asset, worth something or other, of course. We'll probably take it up some
+ day, though, you and I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun persistently declined to rise on that day, and, as time went on,
+ Adams saw that his rather timid urgings bored his employer, and he ceased
+ to bring up the subject. Lamb apparently forgot all about glue, but Adams
+ discovered that unfortunately there was someone else who remembered it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's really YOURS,&rdquo; she argued, that painful day when for the first time
+ she suggested his using his knowledge for the benefit of himself and his
+ family. &ldquo;Mr. Campbell might have had a right to part of it, but he died
+ and didn't leave any kin, so it belongs to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose J. A. Lamb hired me to saw some wood,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;Would the
+ sticks belong to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He hasn't got any right to take your invention and bury it,&rdquo; she
+ protested. &ldquo;What good is it doing him if he doesn't DO anything with it?
+ What good is it doing ANYBODY? None in the world! And what harm would it
+ do him if you went ahead and did this for yourself and for your children?
+ None in the world! And what could he do to you if he WAS old pig enough to
+ get angry with you for doing it? He couldn't do a single thing, and you've
+ admitted he couldn't, yourself. So what's your reason for depriving your
+ children and your wife of the benefits you know you could give 'em?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing but decency,&rdquo; he answered; and she had her reply ready for that.
+ It seemed to him that, strive as he would, he could not reach her mind
+ with even the plainest language; while everything that she said to him,
+ with such vehemence, sounded like so much obstinate gibberish. Over and
+ over he pressed her with the same illustration, on the point of ownership,
+ though he thought he was varying it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose he hired me to build him a house: would that be MY house?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't hire you to build him a house. You and Campbell invented&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here: suppose you give a cook a soup-bone and some vegetables, and
+ pay her to make you a soup: has she got a right to take and sell it? You
+ know better!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know ONE thing: if that old man tried to keep your own invention from
+ you he's no better than a robber!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They never found any point of contact in all their passionate discussions
+ of this ethical question; and the question was no more settled between
+ them, now that Adams had succumbed, than it had ever been. But at least
+ the wrangling about it was over: they were grave together, almost silent,
+ and an uneasiness prevailed with her as much as with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had already been out of the house, to walk about the small green yard;
+ and on Monday afternoon he sent for a taxicab and went down-town, but kept
+ a long way from the &ldquo;wholesale section,&rdquo; where stood the formidable old
+ oblong pile of Lamb and Company. He arranged for the sale of the bonds he
+ had laid away, and for placing a mortgage upon his house; and on his way
+ home, after five o'clock, he went to see an old friend, a man whose term
+ of service with Lamb and Company was even a little longer than his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This veteran, returned from the day's work, was sitting in front of the
+ apartment house where he lived, but when the cab stopped at the curb he
+ rose and came forward, offering a jocular greeting. &ldquo;Well, well, Virgil
+ Adams! I always thought you had a sporty streak in you. Travel in your own
+ hired private automobile nowadays, do you? Pamperin' yourself because
+ you're still layin' off sick, I expect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I'm well enough again, Charley Lohr,&rdquo; Adams said, as he got out and
+ shook hands. Then, telling the driver to wait, he took his friend's arm,
+ walked to the bench with him, and sat down. &ldquo;I been practically well for
+ some time,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'm fixin' to get into harness again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bein' sick has certainly produced a change of heart in you,&rdquo; his friend
+ laughed. &ldquo;You're the last man I ever expected to see blowin' yourself&mdash;or
+ anybody else to a taxicab! For that matter, I never heard of you bein' in
+ ANY kind of a cab, 'less'n it might be when you been pall-bearer for
+ somebody. What's come over you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I got to turn over a new leaf, and that's a fact,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;I
+ got a lot to do, and the only way to accomplish it, it's got to be done
+ soon, or I won't have anything to live on while I'm doing it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you talkin' about? What you got to do except to get strong enough to
+ come back to the old place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Adams paused, then coughed, and said slowly, &ldquo;Fact
+ is, Charley Lohr, I been thinking likely I wouldn't come back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! What you talkin' about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Adams. &ldquo;I been thinking I might likely kind of branch out on my
+ own account.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I'll be doggoned!&rdquo; Old Charley Lohr was amazed; he ruffled up his
+ gray moustache with thumb and forefinger, leaving his mouth open beneath,
+ like a dark cave under a tangled wintry thicket. &ldquo;Why, that's the
+ doggonedest thing I ever heard!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I already am the oldest
+ inhabitant down there, but if you go, there won't be anybody else of the
+ old generation at all. What on earth you thinkin' of goin' into?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Adams, &ldquo;I rather you didn't mention it till I get started of
+ course anybody'll know what it is by then&mdash;but I HAVE been kind of
+ planning to put a liquid glue on the market.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His friend, still ruffling the gray moustache upward, stared at him in
+ frowning perplexity. &ldquo;Glue?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;GLUE!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. I been sort of milling over the idea of taking up something like
+ that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Handlin' it for some firm, you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. Making it. Sort of a glue-works likely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lohr continued to frown. &ldquo;Let me think,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Didn't the ole man have
+ some such idea once, himself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams leaned forward, rubbing his knees; and he coughed again before he
+ spoke. &ldquo;Well, yes. Fact is, he did. That is to say, a mighty long while
+ ago he did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I remember,&rdquo; said Lohr. &ldquo;He never said anything about it that I know of;
+ but seems to me I recollect we had sort of a rumour around the place how
+ you and that man&mdash;le's see, wasn't his name Campbell, that died of
+ typhoid fever? Yes, that was it, Campbell. Didn't the ole man have you and
+ Campbell workin' sort of private on some glue proposition or other?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he did.&rdquo; Adams nodded. &ldquo;I found out a good deal about glue then,
+ too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Been workin' on it since, I suppose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. Kept it in my mind and studied out new things about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lohr looked serious. &ldquo;Well, but see here,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I hope it ain't
+ anything the ole man'll think might infringe on whatever he had you doin'
+ for HIM. You know how he is: broad-minded, liberal, free-handed man as
+ walks this earth, and if he thought he owed you a cent he'd sell his right
+ hand for a pork-chop to pay it, if that was the only way; but if he got
+ the idea anybody was tryin' to get the better of him, he'd sell BOTH his
+ hands, if he had to, to keep 'em from doin' it. Yes, at eighty, he would!
+ Not that I mean I think you might be tryin' to get the better of him,
+ Virg. You're a mighty close ole codger, but such a thing ain't in you.
+ What I mean: I hope there ain't any chance for the ole man to THINK you
+ might be&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; Adams interrupted. &ldquo;As a matter of fact, I don't believe he'll
+ ever think about it at all, and if he did he wouldn't have any real right
+ to feel offended at me: the process I'm going to use is one I expect to
+ change and improve a lot different from the one Campbell and I worked on
+ for him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that's good,&rdquo; said Lohr. &ldquo;Of course you know what you're up to:
+ you're old enough, God knows!&rdquo; He laughed ruefully. &ldquo;My, but it will seem
+ funny to me&mdash;down there with you gone! I expect you and I both been
+ gettin' to be pretty much dead-wood in the place, the way the young
+ fellows look at it, and the only one that'd miss either of us would be the
+ other one! Have you told the ole man yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Adams spoke laboriously. &ldquo;No. No, I haven't. I
+ thought&mdash;well, that's what I wanted to see you about.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What can I do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought I'd write him a letter and get you to hand it to him for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My soul!&rdquo; his friend exclaimed. &ldquo;Why on earth don't you just go down
+ there and tell him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams became pitiably embarrassed. He stammered, coughed, stammered again,
+ wrinkling his face so deeply he seemed about to weep; but finally he
+ contrived to utter an apologetic laugh. &ldquo;I ought to do that, of course;
+ but in some way or other I just don't seem to be able to&mdash;to manage
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why in the world not?&rdquo; the mystified Lohr inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could hardly tell you&mdash;'less'n it is to say that when you been
+ with one boss all your life it's so&mdash;so kind of embarrassing&mdash;to
+ quit him, I just can't make up my mind to go and speak to him about it.
+ No; I got it in my head a letter's the only satisfactory way to do it, and
+ I thought I'd ask you to hand it to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, of course I don't mind doin' that for you,&rdquo; Lohr said, mildly. &ldquo;But
+ why in the world don't you just mail it to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I'll tell you,&rdquo; Adams returned. &ldquo;You know, like that, it'd have to
+ go through a clerk and that secretary of his, and I don't know who all.
+ There's a couple of kind of delicate points I want to put in it: for
+ instance, I want to explain to him how much improvement and so on I'm
+ going to introduce on the old process I helped to work out with Campbell
+ when we were working for him, so't he'll understand it's a different
+ article and no infringement at all. Then there's another thing: you see
+ all during while I was sick he had my salary paid to me it amounts to
+ considerable, I was on my back so long. Under the circumstances, because
+ I'm quitting, I don't feel as if I ought to accept it, and so I'll have a
+ check for him in the letter to cover it, and I want to be sure he knows
+ it, and gets it personally. If it had to go through a lot of other people,
+ the way it would if I put it in the mail, why, you can't tell. So what I
+ thought: if you'd hand it to him for me, and maybe if he happened to read
+ it right then, or anything, it might be you'd notice whatever he'd happen
+ to say about it&mdash;and you could tell me afterward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Lohr said. &ldquo;Certainly if you'd rather do it that way, I'll
+ hand it to him and tell you what he says; that is, if he says anything and
+ I hear him. Got it written?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I'll send it around to you last of the week.&rdquo; Adams moved toward his
+ taxicab. &ldquo;Don't say anything to anybody about it, Charley, especially till
+ after that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, Charley, I'll be mighty obliged to you,&rdquo; Adams said, and came back
+ to shake hands in farewell. &ldquo;There's one thing more you might do&mdash;if
+ you'd ever happen to feel like it.&rdquo; He kept his eyes rather vaguely fixed
+ on a point above his friend's head as he spoke, and his voice was not well
+ controlled. &ldquo;I been&mdash;I been down there a good many years and I may
+ not 'a' been so much use lately as I was at first, but I always tried to
+ do my best for the old firm. If anything turned out so's they DID kind of
+ take offense with me, down there, why, just say a good word for me&mdash;if
+ you'd happen to feel like it, maybe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Charley Lohr assured him that he would speak a good word if
+ opportunity became available; then, after the cab had driven away, he went
+ up to his small apartment on the third floor and muttered ruminatively
+ until his wife inquired what he was talking to himself about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ole Virg Adams,&rdquo; he told her. &ldquo;He's out again after his long spell of
+ sickness, and the way it looks to me he'd better stayed in bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean he still looks too bad to be out?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I expect he's gettin' his HEALTH back,&rdquo; Lohr said, frowning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then what's the matter with him? You mean he's lost his mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My goodness, but women do jump at conclusions!&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mrs. Lohr, &ldquo;what other conclusion did you leave me to jump
+ at?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her husband explained with a little heat: &ldquo;People can have a sickness that
+ AFFECTS their mind, can't they? Their mind can get some affected without
+ bein' LOST, can't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you mean the poor man's mind does seem affected?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, no; I'd scarcely go as far as that,&rdquo; Lohr said, inconsistently, and
+ declined to be more definite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams devoted the latter part of that evening to the composition of his
+ letter&mdash;a disquieting task not completed when, at eleven o'clock, he
+ heard his daughter coming up the stairs. She was singing to herself in a
+ low, sweet voice, and Adams paused to listen incredulously, with his pen
+ lifted and his mouth open, as if he heard the strangest sound in the
+ world. Then he set down the pen upon a blotter, went to his door, and
+ opened it, looking out at her as she came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, dearie, you seem to be feeling pretty good,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What you
+ been doing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just sitting out on the front steps, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All alone, I suppose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. Mr. Russell called.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he did?&rdquo; Adams pretended to be surprised. &ldquo;What all could you and he
+ find to talk about till this hour o' the night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She laughed gaily. &ldquo;You don't know me, papa!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've never found out that I always do all the talking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't you let him get a word in all evening?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes; every now and then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams took her hand and petted it. &ldquo;Well, what did he say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice gave him a radiant look and kissed him. &ldquo;Not what you think!&rdquo; she
+ laughed; then slapped his cheek with saucy affection, pirouetted across
+ the narrow hall and into her own room, and curtsied to him as she closed
+ her door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams went back to his writing with a lighter heart; for since Alice was
+ born she had been to him the apple of his eye, his own phrase in thinking
+ of her; and what he was doing now was for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled as he picked up his pen to begin a new draft of the painful
+ letter; but presently he looked puzzled. After all, she could be happy
+ just as things were, it seemed. Then why had he taken what his wife called
+ &ldquo;this new step,&rdquo; which he had so long resisted?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could only sigh and wonder. &ldquo;Life works out pretty peculiarly,&rdquo; he
+ thought; for he couldn't go back now, though the reason he couldn't was
+ not clearly apparent. He had to go ahead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ He was out in his taxicab again the next morning, and by noon he had
+ secured what he wanted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was curiously significant that he worked so quickly. All the years
+ during which his wife had pressed him toward his present shift he had
+ sworn to himself, as well as to her, that he would never yield; and yet
+ when he did yield he had no plans to make, because he found them already
+ prepared and worked out in detail in his mind; as if he had long
+ contemplated the &ldquo;step&rdquo; he believed himself incapable of taking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes he had thought of improving his income by exchanging his little
+ collection of bonds for a &ldquo;small rental property,&rdquo; if he could find &ldquo;a
+ good buy&rdquo;; and he had spent many of his spare hours rambling over the
+ enormously spreading city and its purlieus, looking for the ideal &ldquo;buy.&rdquo;
+ It remained unattainable, so far as he was concerned; but he found other
+ things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not twice a crow's mile from his own house there was a dismal and slummish
+ quarter, a decayed &ldquo;industrial district&rdquo; of earlier days. Most of the
+ industries were small; some of them died, perishing of bankruptcy or fire;
+ and a few had moved, leaving their shells. Of the relics, the best was a
+ brick building which had been the largest and most important factory in
+ the quarter: it had been injured by a long vacancy almost as serious as a
+ fire, in effect, and Adams had often guessed at the sum needed to put it
+ in repair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he passed it, he would look at it with an interest which he supposed
+ detached and idly speculative. &ldquo;That'd be just the thing,&rdquo; he thought. &ldquo;If
+ a fellow had money enough, and took a notion to set up some new business
+ on a big scale, this would be a pretty good place&mdash;to make glue, for
+ instance, if that wasn't out of the question, of course. It would take a
+ lot of money, though; a great deal too much for me to expect to handle&mdash;even
+ if I'd ever dream of doing such a thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposite the dismantled factory was a muddy, open lot of two acres or so,
+ and near the middle of the lot, a long brick shed stood in a desolate
+ abandonment, not happily decorated by old coatings of theatrical and
+ medicinal advertisements. But the brick shed had two wooden ells, and,
+ though both shed and ells were of a single story, here was empty space
+ enough for a modest enterprise&mdash;&ldquo;space enough for almost anything, to
+ start with,&rdquo; Adams thought, as he walked through the low buildings, one
+ day, when he was prospecting in that section. &ldquo;Yes, I suppose I COULD
+ swing this,&rdquo; he thought. &ldquo;If the process belonged to me, say, instead of
+ being out of the question because it isn't my property&mdash;or if I was
+ the kind of man to do such a thing anyhow, here would be something I could
+ probably get hold of pretty cheap. They'd want a lot of money for a lease
+ on that big building over the way&mdash;but this, why, I should think it'd
+ be practically nothing at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, by chance, meeting an agent he knew, he made inquiries&mdash;merely
+ to satisfy a casual curiosity, he thought&mdash;and he found matters much
+ as he had supposed, except that the owners of the big building did not
+ wish to let, but to sell it, and this at a price so exorbitant that Adams
+ laughed. But the long brick shed in the great muddy lot was for sale or to
+ let, or &ldquo;pretty near to be given away,&rdquo; he learned, if anybody would take
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams took it now, though without seeing that he had been destined to take
+ it, and that some dreary wizard in the back of his head had foreseen all
+ along that he would take it, and planned to be ready. He drove in his
+ taxicab to look the place over again, then down-town to arrange for a
+ lease; and came home to lunch with his wife and daughter. Things were
+ &ldquo;moving,&rdquo; he told them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He boasted a little of having acted so decisively, and said that since the
+ dang thing had to be done, it was &ldquo;going to be done RIGHT!&rdquo; He was almost
+ cheerful, in a feverish way, and when the cab came for him again, soon
+ after lunch, he explained that he intended not only to get things done
+ right, but also to &ldquo;get 'em done quick!&rdquo; Alice, following him to the front
+ door, looked at him anxiously and asked if she couldn't help. He laughed
+ at her grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then let me go along with you in the cab,&rdquo; she begged. &ldquo;You don't look
+ able to start in so hard, papa, just when you're barely beginning to get
+ your strength back. Do let me go with you and see if I can't help&mdash;or
+ at least take care of you if you should get to feeling badly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He declined, but upon pressure let her put a tiny bottle of spirits of
+ ammonia in his pocket, and promised to make use of it if he &ldquo;felt faint or
+ anything.&rdquo; Then he was off again; and the next morning had men at work in
+ his sheds, though the wages he had to pay frightened him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He directed the workmen in every detail, hurrying them by example and
+ exhortations, and receiving, in consequence, several declarations of
+ independence, as well as one resignation, which took effect immediately.
+ &ldquo;Yous capitalusts seem to think a man's got nothin' to do but break his
+ back p'doosin' wealth fer yous to squander,&rdquo; the resigning person loudly
+ complained. &ldquo;You look out: the toiler's day is a-comin', and it ain't so
+ fur off, neither!&rdquo; But the capitalist was already out of hearing, gone to
+ find a man to take this orator's place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the end of the week, Adams felt that he had moved satisfactorily
+ forward in his preparations for the simple equipment he needed; but he
+ hated the pause of Sunday. He didn't WANT any rest, he told Alice
+ impatiently, when she suggested that the idle day might be good for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late that afternoon he walked over to the apartment house where old
+ Charley Lohr lived, and gave his friend the letter he wanted the head of
+ Lamb and Company to receive &ldquo;personally.&rdquo; &ldquo;I'll take it as a mighty great
+ favour in you to hand it to him personally, Charley,&rdquo; he said, in parting.
+ &ldquo;And you won't forget, in case he says anything about it&mdash;and
+ remember if you ever do get a chance to put in a good word for me later,
+ you know&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Charley promised to remember, and, when Mrs. Lohr came out of the
+ &ldquo;kitchenette,&rdquo; after the door closed, he said thoughtfully, &ldquo;Just skin and
+ bones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean Mr. Adams is?&rdquo; Mrs. Lohr inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who'd you think I meant?&rdquo; he returned. &ldquo;One o' these partridges in the
+ wall-paper?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did he look so badly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looked kind of distracted to me,&rdquo; her husband replied. &ldquo;These little thin
+ fellers can stand a heap sometimes, though. He'll be over here again
+ Monday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did he say he would?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Lohr. &ldquo;But he will. You'll see. He'll be over to find out what
+ the big boss says when I give him this letter. Expect I'd be kind of
+ anxious, myself, if I was him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why would you? What's Mr. Adams doing to be so anxious about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lohr's expression became one of reserve, the look of a man who has found
+ that when he speaks his inner thoughts his wife jumps too far to
+ conclusions. &ldquo;Oh, nothing,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Of course any man starting up a new
+ business is bound to be pretty nervous a while. He'll be over here
+ to-morrow evening, all right; you'll see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prediction was fulfilled: Adams arrived just after Mrs. Lohr had
+ removed the dinner dishes to her &ldquo;kitchenette&rdquo;; but Lohr had little
+ information to give his caller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't say a word, Virgil; nary a word. I took it into his office and
+ handed it to him, and he just sat and read it; that's all. I kind of stood
+ around as long as I could, but he was sittin' at his desk with his side to
+ me, and he never turned around full toward me, as it were, so I couldn't
+ hardly even tell anything. All I know: he just read it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, but see here,&rdquo; Adams began, nervously. &ldquo;Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well what, Virg?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, but what did he say when he DID speak?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't speak. Not so long I was in there, anyhow. He just sat there
+ and read it. Read kind of slow. Then, when he came to the end, he turned
+ back and started to read it all over again. By that time there was three
+ or four other men standin' around in the office waitin' to speak to him,
+ and I had to go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams sighed, and stared at the floor, irresolute. &ldquo;Well, I'll be getting
+ along back home then, I guess, Charley. So you're sure you couldn't tell
+ anything what he might have thought about it, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a thing in the world. I've told you all I know, Virg.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess so, I guess so,&rdquo; Adams said, mournfully. &ldquo;I feel mighty obliged
+ to you, Charley Lohr; mighty obliged. Good-night to you.&rdquo; And he departed,
+ sighing in perplexity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his way home, preoccupied with many thoughts, he walked so slowly that
+ once or twice he stopped and stood motionless for a few moments, without
+ being aware of it; and when he reached the juncture of the sidewalk with
+ the short brick path that led to his own front door, he stopped again, and
+ stood for more than a minute. &ldquo;Ah, I wish I knew,&rdquo; he whispered,
+ plaintively. &ldquo;I do wish I knew what he thought about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was roused by a laugh that came lightly from the little veranda near
+ by. &ldquo;Papa!&rdquo; Alice called gaily. &ldquo;What are you standing there muttering to
+ yourself about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, are you there, dearie?&rdquo; he said, and came up the path. A tall figure
+ rose from a chair on the veranda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Papa, this is Mr. Russell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men shook hands, Adams saying, &ldquo;Pleased to make your
+ acquaintance,&rdquo; as they looked at each other in the faint light diffused
+ through the opaque glass in the upper part of the door. Adams's impression
+ was of a strong and tall young man, fashionable but gentle; and Russell's
+ was of a dried, little old business man with a grizzled moustache, worried
+ bright eyes, shapeless dark clothes, and a homely manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nice evening,&rdquo; Adams said further, as their hands parted. &ldquo;Nice time o'
+ year it is, but we don't always have as good weather as this; that's the
+ trouble of it. Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He went to the door. &ldquo;Well&mdash;I bid
+ you good evening,&rdquo; he said, and retired within the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice laughed. &ldquo;He's the old-fashionedest man in town, I suppose and
+ frightfully impressed with you, I could see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What nonsense!&rdquo; said Russell. &ldquo;How could anybody be impressed with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not? Because you're quiet? Good gracious! Don't you know that you're
+ the most impressive sort? We chatterers spend all our time playing to you
+ quiet people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; we're only the audience.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Only!'&rdquo; she echoed. &ldquo;Why, we live for you, and we can't live without
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you couldn't,&rdquo; said Russell. &ldquo;That would be a new experience for
+ both of us, wouldn't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It might be a rather bleak one for me,&rdquo; she answered, lightly. &ldquo;I'm
+ afraid I'll miss these summer evenings with you when they're over. I'll
+ miss them enough, thanks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do they have to be over some time?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, everything's over some time, isn't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell laughed at her. &ldquo;Don't let's look so far ahead as that,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;We don't need to be already thinking of the cemetery, do we?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't,&rdquo; she said, shaking her head. &ldquo;Our summer evenings will be over
+ before then, Mr. Russell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good heavens!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;THERE'S laconic eloquence: almost a proposal in
+ a single word! Never mind, I shan't hold you to it. But to answer you:
+ well, I'm always looking ahead, and somehow I usually see about how things
+ are coming out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I suppose most of us do; at least it seems as if we did,
+ because we so seldom feel surprised by the way they do come out. But maybe
+ that's only because life isn't like a play in a theatre, and most things
+ come about so gradually we get used to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I'm sure I can see quite a long way ahead,&rdquo; she insisted, gravely.
+ &ldquo;And it doesn't seem to me as if our summer evenings could last very long.
+ Something'll interfere&mdash;somebody will, I mean&mdash;they'll SAY
+ something&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What if they do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She moved her shoulders in a little apprehensive shiver. &ldquo;It'll change
+ you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I'm just sure something spiteful's going to happen to me.
+ You'll feel differently about&mdash;things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, isn't that an idea!&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will,&rdquo; she insisted. &ldquo;I know something spiteful's going to happen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You seem possessed by a notion not a bit flattering to me,&rdquo; he remarked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but isn't it? That's just what it is! Why isn't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because it implies that I'm made of such soft material the slightest
+ breeze will mess me all up. I'm not so like that as I evidently appear;
+ and if it's true that we're afraid other people will do the things we'd be
+ most likely to do ourselves, it seems to me that I ought to be the one to
+ be afraid. I ought to be afraid that somebody may say something about me
+ to you that will make you believe I'm a professional forger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. We both know they won't,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We both know you're the sort of
+ person everybody in the world says nice things about.&rdquo; She lifted her hand
+ to silence him as he laughed at this. &ldquo;Oh, of course you are! I think
+ perhaps you're a little flirtatious&mdash;most quiet men have that one sly
+ way with 'em&mdash;oh, yes, they do! But you happen to be the kind of man
+ everybody loves to praise. And if you weren't, <i>I</i> shouldn't hear
+ anything terrible about you. I told you I was unpopular: I don't see
+ anybody at all any more. The only man except you who's been to see me in a
+ month is that fearful little fat Frank Dowling, and I sent word to HIM I
+ wasn't home. Nobody'd tell me of your wickedness, you see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then let me break some news to you,&rdquo; Russell said. &ldquo;Nobody would tell me
+ of yours, either. Nobody's even mentioned you to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She burlesqued a cry of anguish. &ldquo;That IS obscurity! I suppose I'm too apt
+ to forget that they say the population's about half a million nowadays.
+ There ARE other people to talk about, you feel, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None that I want to,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But I should think the size of the place
+ might relieve your mind of what seems to insist on burdening it. Besides,
+ I'd rather you thought me a better man than you do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What kind of a man do I think you are?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The kind affected by what's said about people instead of by what they do
+ themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aren't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I'm not,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If you want our summer evenings to be over you'll
+ have to drive me away yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody else could?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was silent, leaning forward, with her elbows on her knees and her
+ clasped hands against her lips. Then, not moving, she said softly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;I won't!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was silent again, and he said nothing, but looked at her, seeming to
+ be content with looking. Her attitude was one only a graceful person
+ should assume, but she was graceful; and, in the wan light, which made a
+ prettily shaped mist of her, she had beauty. Perhaps it was beauty of the
+ hour, and of the love scene almost made into form by what they had both
+ just said, but she had it; and though beauty of the hour passes, he who
+ sees it will long remember it and the hour when it came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you thinking of?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She leaned back in her chair and did not answer at once. Then she said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know; I doubt if I was thinking of anything. It seems to me I
+ wasn't. I think I was just being sort of sadly happy just then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were you? Was it 'sadly,' too?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you know?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It seems to me that only little children can
+ be just happily happy. I think when we get older our happiest moments are
+ like the one I had just then: it's as if we heard strains of minor music
+ running through them&mdash;oh, so sweet, but oh, so sad!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what makes it sad for YOU?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; she said, in a lighter tone. &ldquo;Perhaps it's a kind of
+ useless foreboding I seem to have pretty often. It may be that&mdash;or it
+ may be poor papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ARE a funny, delightful girl, though!&rdquo; Russell laughed. &ldquo;When your
+ father's so well again that he goes out walking in the evenings!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He does too much walking,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;Too much altogether, over at his
+ new plant. But there isn't any stopping him.&rdquo; She laughed and shook her
+ head. &ldquo;When a man gets an ambition to be a multi-millionaire his family
+ don't appear to have much weight with him. He'll walk all he wants to, in
+ spite of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose so,&rdquo; Russell said, absently; then he leaned forward. &ldquo;I wish I
+ could understand better why you were 'sadly' happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, as Alice shed what further light she could on this point, the
+ man ambitious to be a &ldquo;multi-millionaire&rdquo; was indeed walking too much for
+ his own good. He had gone to bed, hoping to sleep well and rise early for
+ a long day's work, but he could not rest, and now, in his nightgown and
+ slippers, he was pacing the floor of his room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I DID know,&rdquo; he thought, over and over. &ldquo;I DO wish I knew how he
+ feels about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That was a thought almost continuously in his mind, even when he was
+ hardest at work; and, as the days went on and he could not free himself,
+ he became querulous about it. &ldquo;I guess I'm the biggest dang fool alive,&rdquo;
+ he told his wife as they sat together one evening. &ldquo;I got plenty else to
+ bother me, without worrying my head off about what HE thinks. I can't help
+ what he thinks; it's too late for that. So why should I keep pestering
+ myself about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It'll wear off, Virgil,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, reassuringly. She was gentle
+ and sympathetic with him, and for the first time in many years he would
+ come to sit with her and talk, when he had finished his day's work. He had
+ told her, evading her eye, &ldquo;Oh, I don't blame you. You didn't get after me
+ to do this on your own account; you couldn't help it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but it don't wear off,&rdquo; he complained. &ldquo;This afternoon I was showing
+ the men how I wanted my vats to go, and I caught my fool self standing
+ there saying to my fool self, 'It's funny I don't hear how he feels about
+ it from SOMEbody.' I was saying it aloud, almost&mdash;and it IS funny I
+ don't hear anything!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you see what it means, don't you, Virgil? It only means he hasn't
+ said anything to anybody about it. Don't you think you're getting kind of
+ morbid over it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe, maybe,&rdquo; he muttered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, yes,&rdquo; she said, briskly. &ldquo;You don't realize what a little bit of a
+ thing all this is to him. It's been a long, long while since the last time
+ you even mentioned glue to him, and he's probably forgotten everything
+ about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're off your base; it isn't like him to forget things,&rdquo; Adams
+ returned, peevishly. &ldquo;He may seem to forget 'em, but he don't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he's not thinking about this, or you'd have heard from him before
+ now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her husband shook his head. &ldquo;Ah, that's just it!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why HAVEN'T I
+ heard from him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's all your morbidness, Virgil. Look at Walter: if Mr. Lamb held this
+ up against you, would he still let Walter stay there? Wouldn't he have
+ discharged Walter if he felt angry with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That dang boy!&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;If he WANTED to come with me now, I wouldn't
+ hardly let him, What do you suppose makes him so bull-headed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But hasn't he a right to choose for himself?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;I suppose he
+ feels he ought to stick to what he thinks is sure pay. As soon as he sees
+ that you're going to succeed with the glue-works he'll want to be with you
+ quick enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, he better get a little sense in his head,&rdquo; Adams returned, crossly.
+ &ldquo;He wanted me to pay him a three-hundred-dollar bonus in advance, when
+ anybody with a grain of common sense knows I need every penny I can lay my
+ hands on!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He'll come around later and be glad of the
+ chance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He'll have to beg for it then! <i>I</i> won't ask him again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Walter will come out all right; you needn't worry. And don't you see
+ that Mr. Lamb's not discharging him means there's no hard feeling against
+ you, Virgil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't make it out at all,&rdquo; he said, frowning. &ldquo;The only thing I can
+ THINK it means is that J. A. Lamb is so fair-minded&mdash;and of course he
+ IS one of the fair-mindedest men alive I suppose that's the reason he
+ hasn't fired Walter. He may know,&rdquo; Adams concluded, morosely&mdash;&ldquo;he may
+ know that's just another thing to make me feel all the meaner: keeping my
+ boy there on a salary after I've done him an injury.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, now!&rdquo; she said, trying to comfort him. &ldquo;You couldn't do anybody an
+ injury to save your life, and everybody knows it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, anybody ought to know I wouldn't WANT to do an injury, but this
+ world isn't built so't we can do just what we want.&rdquo; He paused,
+ reflecting. &ldquo;Of course there may be one explanation of why Walter's still
+ there: J. A. maybe hasn't noticed that he IS there. There's so many I
+ expect he hardly knows him by sight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, just do quit thinking about it,&rdquo; she urged him. &ldquo;It only bothers
+ you without doing any good. Don't you know that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't I, though!&rdquo; he laughed, feebly. &ldquo;I know it better'n anybody! How
+ funny that is: when you know thinking about a thing only pesters you
+ without helping anything at all, and yet you keep right on pestering
+ yourself with it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But WHY?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What's the use when you know you haven't done
+ anything wrong, Virgil? You said yourself you were going to improve the
+ process so much it would be different from the old one, and you'd REALLY
+ have a right to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams had persuaded himself of this when he yielded; he had found it
+ necessary to persuade himself of it&mdash;though there was a part of him,
+ of course, that remained unpersuaded; and this discomfiting part of him
+ was what made his present trouble. &ldquo;Yes, I know,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That's true,
+ but I can't quite seem to get away from the fact that the principle of the
+ process is a good deal the same&mdash;well, it's more'n that; it's just
+ about the same as the one he hired Campbell and me to work out for him.
+ Truth is, nobody could tell the difference, and I don't know as there IS
+ any difference except in these improvements I'm making. Of course, the
+ improvements do give me pretty near a perfect right to it, as a person
+ might say; and that's one of the things I thought of putting in my letter
+ to him; but I was afraid he'd just think I was trying to make up excuses,
+ so I left it out. I kind of worried all the time I was writing that
+ letter, because if he thought I WAS just making up excuses, why, it might
+ set him just so much more against me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ever since Mrs. Adams had found that she was to have her way, the depths
+ of her eyes had been troubled by a continuous uneasiness; and, although
+ she knew it was there, and sometimes veiled it by keeping the revealing
+ eyes averted from her husband and children, she could not always cover it
+ under that assumption of absent-mindedness. The uneasy look became vivid,
+ and her voice was slightly tremulous now, as she said, &ldquo;But what if he
+ SHOULD be against you&mdash;although I don't believe he is, of course&mdash;you
+ told me he couldn't DO anything to you, Virgil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, slowly. &ldquo;I can't see how he could do anything. It was just
+ a secret, not a patent; the thing ain't patentable. I've tried to think
+ what he could do&mdash;supposing he was to want to&mdash;but I can't
+ figure out anything at all that would be any harm to me. There isn't any
+ way in the world it could be made a question of law. Only thing he could
+ do'd be to TELL people his side of it, and set 'em against me. I been kind
+ of waiting for that to happen, all along.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked somewhat relieved. &ldquo;So did I expect it,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I was
+ dreading it most on Alice's account: it might have&mdash;well, young men
+ are so easily influenced and all. But so far as the business is concerned,
+ what if Mr. Lamb did talk? That wouldn't amount to much. It wouldn't
+ affect the business; not to hurt. And, besides, he isn't even doing that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; anyhow not yet, it seems.&rdquo; And Adams sighed again, wistfully. &ldquo;But I
+ WOULD give a good deal to know what he thinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before his surrender he had always supposed that if he did such an
+ unthinkable thing as to seize upon the glue process for himself, what he
+ would feel must be an overpowering shame. But shame is the rarest thing in
+ the world: what he felt was this unremittent curiosity about his old
+ employer's thoughts. It was an obsession, yet he did not want to hear what
+ Lamb &ldquo;thought&rdquo; from Lamb himself, for Adams had a second obsession, and
+ this was his dread of meeting the old man face to face. Such an encounter
+ could happen only by chance and unexpectedly; since Adams would have
+ avoided any deliberate meeting, so long as his legs had strength to carry
+ him, even if Lamb came to the house to see him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But people do meet unexpectedly; and when Adams had to be down-town he
+ kept away from the &ldquo;wholesale district.&rdquo; One day he did see Lamb, as the
+ latter went by in his car, impassive, going home to lunch; and Adams, in
+ the crowd at a corner, knew that the old man had not seen him.
+ Nevertheless, in a street car, on the way back to his sheds, an hour
+ later, he was still subject to little shivering seizures of horror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He worked unceasingly, seeming to keep at it even in his sleep, for he
+ always woke in the midst of a planning and estimating that must have been
+ going on in his mind before consciousness of himself returned. Moreover,
+ the work, thus urged, went rapidly, in spite of the high wages he had to
+ pay his labourers for their short hours. &ldquo;It eats money,&rdquo; he complained,
+ and, in fact, by the time his vats and boilers were in place it had eaten
+ almost all he could supply; but in addition to his equipment he now owned
+ a stock of &ldquo;raw material,&rdquo; raw indeed; and when operations should be a
+ little further along he was confident his banker would be willing to
+ &ldquo;carry&rdquo; him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six weeks from the day he had obtained his lease he began his glue-making.
+ The terrible smells came out of the sheds and went writhing like snakes
+ all through that quarter of the town. A smiling man, strolling and
+ breathing the air with satisfaction, would turn a corner and smile no
+ more, but hurry. However, coloured people had almost all the dwellings of
+ this old section to themselves; and although even they were troubled,
+ there was recompense for them. Being philosophic about what appeared to
+ them as in the order of nature, they sought neither escape nor redress,
+ and soon learned to bear what the wind brought them. They even made use of
+ it to enrich those figures of speech with which the native impulses of
+ coloured people decorate their communications: they flavoured metaphor,
+ simile, and invective with it; and thus may be said to have enjoyed it.
+ But the man who produced it took a hot bath as soon as he reached his home
+ the evening of that first day when his manufacturing began. Then he put on
+ fresh clothes; but after dinner he seemed to be haunted, and asked his
+ wife if she &ldquo;noticed anything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She laughed and inquired what he meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seems to me as if that glue-works smell hadn't quit hanging to me,&rdquo; he
+ explained. &ldquo;Don't you notice it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! What an idea!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed, too, but uneasily; and told her he was sure &ldquo;the dang glue
+ smell&rdquo; was somehow sticking to him. Later, he went outdoors and walked up
+ and down the small yard in the dusk; but now and then he stood still, with
+ his head lifted, and sniffed the air suspiciously. &ldquo;Can YOU smell it?&rdquo; he
+ called to Alice, who sat upon the veranda, prettily dressed and waiting in
+ a reverie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Smell what, papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That dang glue-works.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did the same thing her mother had done: laughed, and said, &ldquo;No! How
+ foolish! Why, papa, it's over two miles from here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't get it at all?&rdquo; he insisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The idea! The air is lovely to-night, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The air did not seem lovely to him, for he was positive that he detected
+ the taint. He wondered how far it carried, and if J. A. Lamb would smell
+ it, too, out on his own lawn a mile to the north; and if he did, would he
+ guess what it was? Then Adams laughed at himself for such nonsense; but
+ could not rid his nostrils of their disgust. To him the whole town seemed
+ to smell of his glue-works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, the glue was making, and his sheds were busy. &ldquo;Guess we're
+ stirrin' up this ole neighbourhood with more than the smell,&rdquo; his foreman
+ remarked one morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How's that?&rdquo; Adams inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That great big, enormous ole dead butterine factory across the street
+ from our lot,&rdquo; the man said. &ldquo;Nothin' like settin' an example to bring
+ real estate to life. That place is full o' carpenters startin' in to make
+ a regular buildin' of it again. Guess you ought to have the credit of it,
+ because you was the first man in ten years to see any possibilities in
+ this neighbourhood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams was pleased, and, going out to see for himself, heard a great
+ hammering and sawing from within the building; while carpenters were just
+ emerging gingerly upon the dangerous roof. He walked out over the dried
+ mud of his deep lot, crossed the street, and spoke genially to a workman
+ who was removing the broken glass of a window on the ground floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here! What's all this howdy-do over here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goin' to fix her all up, I guess,&rdquo; the workman said. &ldquo;Big job it is,
+ too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sh' think it would be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir; a pretty big job&mdash;a pretty big job. Got men at it on all
+ four floors and on the roof. They're doin' it RIGHT.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who's doing it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord! I d' know. Some o' these here big manufacturing corporations, I
+ guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's it going to be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They tell ME,&rdquo; the workman answered&mdash;&ldquo;they tell ME she's goin' to be
+ a butterine factory again. Anyways, I hope she won't be anything to smell
+ like that glue-works you got over there not while I'm workin' around her,
+ anyways!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That smell's all right,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;You soon get used to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do?&rdquo; The man appeared incredulous. &ldquo;Listen! I was over in France:
+ it's a good thing them Dutchmen never thought of it; we'd of had to quit!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams laughed, and went back to his sheds. &ldquo;I guess my foreman was right,&rdquo;
+ he told his wife, that evening, with a little satisfaction. &ldquo;As soon as
+ one man shows enterprise enough to found an industry in a broken-down
+ neighbourhood, somebody else is sure to follow. I kind of like the look of
+ it: it'll help make our place seem sort of more busy and prosperous when
+ it comes to getting a loan from the bank&mdash;and I got to get one mighty
+ soon, too. I did think some that if things go as well as there's every
+ reason to think they OUGHT to, I might want to spread out and maybe get
+ hold of that old factory myself; but I hardly expected to be able to
+ handle a proposition of that size before two or three years from now, and
+ anyhow there's room enough on the lot I got, if we need more buildings
+ some day. Things are going about as fine as I could ask: I hired some
+ girls to-day to do the bottling&mdash;coloured girls along about sixteen
+ to twenty years old. Afterwhile, I expect to get a machine to put the
+ stuff in the little bottles, when we begin to get good returns; but half a
+ dozen of these coloured girls can do it all right now, by hand. We're
+ getting to have really quite a little plant over there: yes, sir, quite a
+ regular little plant!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He chuckled, and at this cheerful sound, of a kind his wife had almost
+ forgotten he was capable of producing, she ventured to put her hand upon
+ his arm. They had gone outdoors, after dinner, taking two chairs with
+ them, and were sitting through the late twilight together, keeping well
+ away from the &ldquo;front porch,&rdquo; which was not yet occupied, however Alice was
+ in her room changing her dress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, honey,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, taking confidence not only to put her hand
+ upon his arm, but to revive this disused endearment;&mdash;&ldquo;it's grand to
+ have you so optimistic. Maybe some time you'll admit I was right, after
+ all. Everything's going so well, it seems a pity you didn't take this&mdash;this
+ step&mdash;long ago. Don't you think maybe so, Virgil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;if I was ever going to, I don't know but I might as well of. I
+ got to admit the proposition begins to look pretty good: I know the
+ stuff'll sell, and I can't see a thing in the world to stop it. It does
+ look good, and if&mdash;if&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If what?&rdquo; she said, suddenly anxious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed plaintively, as if confessing a superstition. &ldquo;It's funny&mdash;well,
+ it's mighty funny about that smell. I've got so used to it at the plant I
+ never seem to notice it at all over there. It's only when I get away.
+ Honestly, can't you notice&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Virgil!&rdquo; She lifted her hand to strike his arm chidingly. &ldquo;Do quit
+ harping on that nonsense!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, of course it don't amount to anything,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;A person can stand
+ a good deal of just smell. It don't WORRY me any.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think not especially as there isn't any.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I feel pretty fair over the whole thing&mdash;a lot
+ better'n I ever expected to, anyhow. I don't know as there's any reason I
+ shouldn't tell you so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was deeply pleased with this acknowledgment, and her voice had
+ tenderness in it as she responded: &ldquo;There, honey! Didn't I always say
+ you'd be glad if you did it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Embarrassed, he coughed loudly, then filled his pipe and lit it. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo;
+ he said, slowly, &ldquo;it's a puzzle. Yes, sir, it's a puzzle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pretty much everything, I guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, a song came to them from a lighted window over their heads.
+ Then the window darkened abruptly, but the song continued as Alice went
+ down through the house to wait on the little veranda. &ldquo;Mi chiamo Mimi,&rdquo;
+ she sang, and in her voice throbbed something almost startling in its
+ sweetness. Her father and mother listened, not speaking until the song
+ stopped with the click of the wire screen at the front door as Alice came
+ out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My!&rdquo; said her father. &ldquo;How sweet she does sing! I don't know as I ever
+ heard her voice sound nicer than it did just then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's something that makes it sound that way,&rdquo; his wife told him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose so,&rdquo; he said, sighing. &ldquo;I suppose so. You think&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She's just terribly in love with him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I expect that's the way it ought to be,&rdquo; he said, then drew upon his pipe
+ for reflection, and became murmurous with the symptoms of melancholy
+ laughter. &ldquo;It don't make things less of a puzzle, though, does it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In what way, Virgil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, here,&rdquo; he said&mdash;&ldquo;here we go through all this muck and moil to
+ help fix things nicer for her at home, and what's it all amount to? Seems
+ like she's just gone ahead the way she'd 'a' gone anyhow; and now, I
+ suppose, getting ready to up and leave us! Ain't that a puzzle to you? It
+ is to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but things haven't gone that far yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, you just said&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She gave a little cry of protest. &ldquo;Oh, they aren't ENGAGED yet. Of course
+ they WILL be; he's just as much interested in her as she is in him, but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what's the trouble then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ARE a simple old fellow!&rdquo; his wife exclaimed, and then rose from her
+ chair. &ldquo;That reminds me,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What of?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;What's my being simple remind you of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;It wasn't you that reminded me. It was just
+ something that's been on my mind. I don't believe he's actually ever been
+ inside our house!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hasn't he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I actually don't believe he ever has,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Of course we must&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ She paused, debating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess I better talk to Alice about it right now,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He don't
+ usually come for about half an hour yet; I guess I've got time.&rdquo; And with
+ that she walked away, leaving him to his puzzles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Alice was softly crooning to herself as her mother turned the corner of
+ the house and approached through the dusk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't it the most BEAUTIFUL evening!&rdquo; the daughter said. &ldquo;WHY can't
+ summer last all year? Did you ever know a lovelier twilight than this,
+ mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams laughed, and answered, &ldquo;Not since I was your age, I expect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was wistful at once. &ldquo;Don't they stay beautiful after my age?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it's not the same thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't it? Not ever?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may have a different kind from mine,&rdquo; the mother said, a little
+ sadly. &ldquo;I think you will, Alice. You deserve&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don't. I don't deserve anything, and I know it. But I'm getting a
+ great deal these days&mdash;more than I ever dreamed COULD come to me. I'm&mdash;I'm
+ pretty happy, mama!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dearie!&rdquo; Her mother would have kissed her, but Alice drew away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I don't mean&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She laughed nervously. &ldquo;I wasn't meaning
+ to tell you I'm ENGAGED, mama. We're not. I mean&mdash;oh! things seem
+ pretty beautiful in spite of all I've done to spoil 'em.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams cried, incredulously. &ldquo;What have you done to spoil
+ anything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little things,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;A thousand little silly&mdash;oh, what's the
+ use? He's so honestly what he is&mdash;just simple and good and
+ intelligent&mdash;I feel a tricky mess beside him! I don't see why he
+ likes me; and sometimes I'm afraid he wouldn't if he knew me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He'd just worship you,&rdquo; said the fond mother. &ldquo;And the more he knew you,
+ the more he'd worship you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice shook her head. &ldquo;He's not the worshiping kind. Not like that at all.
+ He's more&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mrs. Adams was not interested in this analysis, and she interrupted
+ briskly, &ldquo;Of course it's time your father and I showed some interest in
+ him. I was just saying I actually don't believe he's ever been inside the
+ house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Alice said, musingly; &ldquo;that's true: I don't believe he has. Except
+ when we've walked in the evening we've always sat out here, even those two
+ times when it was drizzly. It's so much nicer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We'll have to do SOMETHING or other, of course,&rdquo; her mother said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was thinking&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Mrs. Adams paused. &ldquo;Well, of course we
+ could hardly put off asking him to dinner, or something, much longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was not enthusiastic; so far from it, indeed, that there was a
+ melancholy alarm in her voice. &ldquo;Oh, mama, must we? Do you think so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I do. I really do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Couldn't we&mdash;well, couldn't we wait?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It looks queer,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said. &ldquo;It isn't the thing at all for a young
+ man to come as much as he does, and never more than just barely meet your
+ father and mother. No. We ought to do something.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But a dinner!&rdquo; Alice objected. &ldquo;In the first place, there isn't anybody I
+ want to ask. There isn't anybody I WOULD ask.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't mean trying to give a big dinner,&rdquo; her mother explained. &ldquo;I just
+ mean having him to dinner. That mulatto woman, Malena Burns, goes out by
+ the day, and she could bring a waitress. We can get some flowers for the
+ table and some to put in the living-room. We might just as well go ahead
+ and do it to-morrow as any other time; because your father's in a fine
+ mood, and I saw Malena this afternoon and told her I might want her soon.
+ She said she didn't have any engagements this week, and I can let her know
+ to-night. Suppose when he comes you ask him for to-morrow, Alice.
+ Everything'll be very nice, I'm sure. Don't worry about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Alice was uncertain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But don't you see, it looks so queer, not to do SOMETHING?&rdquo; her mother
+ urged. &ldquo;It looks so kind of poverty-stricken. We really oughtn't to wait
+ any longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice assented, though not with a good heart. &ldquo;Very well, I'll ask him, if
+ you think we've got to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That matter's settled then,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said. &ldquo;I'll go telephone Malena,
+ and then I'll tell your father about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when she went back to her husband, she found him in an excited state
+ of mind, and Walter standing before him in the darkness. Adams was almost
+ shouting, so great was his vehemence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, hush!&rdquo; his wife implored, as she came near them. &ldquo;They'll hear you
+ out on the front porch!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't care who hears me,&rdquo; Adams said, harshly, though he tempered his
+ loudness. &ldquo;Do you want to know what this boy's asking me for? I thought
+ he'd maybe come to tell me he'd got a little sense in his head at last,
+ and a little decency about what's due his family! I thought he was going
+ to ask me to take him into my plant. No, ma'am; THAT'S not what he wants!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it isn't,&rdquo; Walter said. In the darkness his face could not be seen;
+ he stood motionless, in what seemed an apathetic attitude; and he spoke
+ quietly, &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;That isn't what I want.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You stay down at that place,&rdquo; Adams went on, hotly, &ldquo;instead of trying to
+ be a little use to your family; and the only reason you're ALLOWED to stay
+ there is because Mr. Lamb's never happened to notice you ARE still there!
+ You just wait&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're off,&rdquo; Walter said, in the same quiet way. &ldquo;He knows I'm there. He
+ spoke to me yesterday: he asked me how I was getting along with my work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He did?&rdquo; Adams said, seeming not to believe him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. He did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What else did he say, Walter?&rdquo; Mrs. Adams asked quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothin'. Just walked on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't believe he knew who you were,&rdquo; Adams declared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think not? He called me 'Walter Adams.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this Adams was silent; and Walter, after waiting a moment, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, are you going to do anything about me? About what I told you I got
+ to have?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it, Walter?&rdquo; his mother asked, since Adams did not speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter cleared his throat, and replied in a tone as quiet as that he had
+ used before, though with a slight huskiness, &ldquo;I got to have three hundred
+ and fifty dollars. You better get him to give it to me if you can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams found his voice. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, bitterly. &ldquo;That's all he asks! He
+ won't do anything I ask HIM to, and in return he asks me for three hundred
+ and fifty dollars! That's all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What in the world!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams exclaimed. &ldquo;What FOR, Walter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I got to have it,&rdquo; Walter said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what FOR?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His quiet huskiness did not alter. &ldquo;I got to have it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But can't you tell us&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I got to have it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's all you can get out of him,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;He seems to think it'll
+ bring him in three hundred and fifty dollars!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A faint tremulousness became evident in the husky voice. &ldquo;Haven't you got
+ it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;NO, I haven't got it!&rdquo; his father answered. &ldquo;And I've got to go to a bank
+ for more than my pay-roll next week. Do you think I'm a mint?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand what you mean, Walter,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams interposed,
+ perplexed and distressed. &ldquo;If your father had the money, of course he'd
+ need every cent of it, especially just now, and, anyhow, you could
+ scarcely expect him to give it to you, unless you told us what you want
+ with it. But he hasn't got it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Walter said; and after standing a moment more, in silence, he
+ added, impersonally, &ldquo;I don't see as you ever did anything much for me,
+ anyhow either of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as if this were his valedictory, he turned his back upon them,
+ walked away quickly, and was at once lost to their sight in the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's a fine boy to've had the trouble of raising!&rdquo; Adams grumbled.
+ &ldquo;Just crazy, that's all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What in the world do you suppose he wants all that money for?&rdquo; his wife
+ said, wonderingly. &ldquo;I can't imagine what he could DO with it. I wonder&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ She paused. &ldquo;I wonder if he&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he what?&rdquo; Adams prompted her irritably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he COULD have bad&mdash;associates.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God knows!&rdquo; said Adams. &ldquo;<i>I</i> don't! It just looks to me like he had
+ something in him I don't understand. You can't keep your eye on a boy all
+ the time in a city this size, not a boy Walter's age. You got a girl
+ pretty much in the house, but a boy'll follow his nature. <i>I</i> don't
+ know what to do with him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams brightened a little. &ldquo;He'll come out all right,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I'm
+ sure he will. I'm sure he'd never be anything really bad: and he'll come
+ around all right about the glue-works, too; you'll see. Of course every
+ young man wants money&mdash;it doesn't prove he's doing anything wrong
+ just because he asks you for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. All it proves to me is that he hasn't got good sense asking me for
+ three hundred and fifty dollars, when he knows as well as you do the
+ position I'm in! If I wanted to, I couldn't hardly let him have three
+ hundred and fifty cents, let alone dollars!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid you'll have to let ME have that much&mdash;and maybe a little
+ more,&rdquo; she ventured, timidly; and she told him of her plans for the
+ morrow. He objected vehemently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but Alice has probably asked him by this time,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said. &ldquo;It
+ really must be done, Virgil: you don't want him to think she's ashamed of
+ us, do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, go ahead, but just let me stay away,&rdquo; he begged. &ldquo;Of course I
+ expect to undergo a kind of talk with him, when he gets ready to say
+ something to us about Alice, but I do hate to have to sit through a
+ fashionable dinner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it isn't going to bother you,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;just one young man as a
+ guest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know; but you want to have all this fancy cookin'; and I see well
+ enough you're going to get that old dress suit out of the cedar chest in
+ the attic, and try to make me put it on me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do think you better, Virgil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope the moths have got in it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Last time I wore it was to
+ the banquet, and it was pretty old then. Of course I didn't mind wearing
+ it to the banquet so much, because that was what you might call quite an
+ occasion.&rdquo; He spoke with some reminiscent complacency; &ldquo;the banquet,&rdquo; an
+ affair now five years past, having provided the one time in his life when
+ he had been so distinguished among his fellow-citizens as to receive an
+ invitation to be present, with some seven hundred others, at the annual
+ eating and speech-making of the city's Chamber of Commerce. &ldquo;Anyhow, as
+ you say, I think it would look foolish of me to wear a dress suit for just
+ one young man,&rdquo; he went on protesting, feebly. &ldquo;What's the use of all so
+ much howdy-do, anyway? You don't expect him to believe we put on all that
+ style every night, do you? Is that what you're after?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we want him to think we live nicely,&rdquo; she admitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So that's it!&rdquo; he said, querulously. &ldquo;You want him to think that's our
+ regular gait, do you? Well, he'll know better about me, no matter how you
+ fix me up, because he saw me in my regular suit the evening she introduced
+ me to him, and he could tell anyway I'm not one of these moving-picture
+ sporting-men that's always got a dress suit on. Besides, you and Alice
+ certainly have some idea he'll come AGAIN, haven't you? If they get things
+ settled between 'em he'll be around the house and to meals most any time,
+ won't he? You don't hardly expect to put on style all the time, I guess.
+ Well, he'll see then that this kind of thing was all show-off, and bluff,
+ won't he? What about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well, by THAT time&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She left the sentence unfinished,
+ as if absently. &ldquo;You could let us have a little money for to-morrow,
+ couldn't you, honey?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I reckon, I reckon,&rdquo; he mumbled. &ldquo;A girl like Alice is some comfort:
+ she don't come around acting as if she'd commit suicide if she didn't get
+ three hundred and fifty dollars in the next five minutes. I expect I can
+ spare five or six dollars for your show-off if I got to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, she finally obtained fifteen before his bedtime; and the next
+ morning &ldquo;went to market&rdquo; after breakfast, leaving Alice to make the beds.
+ Walter had not yet come downstairs. &ldquo;You had better call him,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams
+ said, as she departed with a big basket on her arm. &ldquo;I expect he's pretty
+ sleepy; he was out so late last night I didn't hear him come in, though I
+ kept awake till after midnight, listening for him. Tell him he'll be late
+ to work if he doesn't hurry; and see that he drinks his coffee, even if he
+ hasn't time for anything else. And when Malena comes, get her started in
+ the kitchen: show her where everything is.&rdquo; She waved her hand, as she set
+ out for a corner where the cars stopped. &ldquo;Everything'll be lovely. Don't
+ forget about Walter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, Alice forgot about Walter for a few minutes. She closed the
+ door, went into the &ldquo;living-room&rdquo; absently, and stared vaguely at one of
+ the old brown-plush rocking-chairs there. Upon her forehead were the
+ little shadows of an apprehensive reverie, and her thoughts overlapped one
+ another in a fretful jumble. &ldquo;What will he think? These old chairs&mdash;they're
+ hideous. I'll scrub those soot-streaks on the columns: it won't do any
+ good, though. That long crack in the column&mdash;nothing can help it.
+ What will he think of papa? I hope mama won't talk too much. When he
+ thinks of Mildred's house, or of Henrietta's, or any of 'em, beside this&mdash;She
+ said she'd buy plenty of roses; that ought to help some. Nothing could be
+ done about these horrible chairs: can't take 'em up in the attic&mdash;a
+ room's got to have chairs! Might have rented some. No; if he ever comes
+ again he'd see they weren't here. 'If he ever comes again'&mdash;oh, it
+ won't be THAT bad! But it won't be what he expects. I'm responsible for
+ what he expects: he expects just what the airs I've put on have made him
+ expect. What did I want to pose so to him for&mdash;as if papa were a
+ wealthy man and all that? What WILL he think? The photograph of the
+ Colosseum's a rather good thing, though. It helps some&mdash;as if we'd
+ bought it in Rome perhaps. I hope he'll think so; he believes I've been
+ abroad, of course. The other night he said, 'You remember the feeling you
+ get in the Sainte-Chapelle'.&mdash;There's another lie of mine, not saying
+ I didn't remember because I'd never been there. What makes me do it? Papa
+ MUST wear his evening clothes. But Walter&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that she recalled her mother's admonition, and went upstairs to
+ Walter's door. She tapped upon it with her fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Time to get up, Walter. The rest of us had breakfast over half an hour
+ ago, and it's nearly eight o'clock. You'll be late. Hurry down and I'll
+ have some coffee and toast ready for you.&rdquo; There came no sound from within
+ the room, so she rapped louder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wake up, Walter!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She called and rapped again, without getting any response, and then,
+ finding that the door yielded to her, opened it and went in. Walter was
+ not there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been there, however; had slept upon the bed, though not inside the
+ covers; and Alice supposed he must have come home so late that he had been
+ too sleepy to take off his clothes. Near the foot of the bed was a shallow
+ closet where he kept his &ldquo;other suit&rdquo; and his evening clothes; and the
+ door stood open, showing a bare wall. Nothing whatever was in the closet,
+ and Alice was rather surprised at this for a moment. &ldquo;That's queer,&rdquo; she
+ murmured; and then she decided that when he woke he found the clothes he
+ had slept in &ldquo;so mussy&rdquo; he had put on his &ldquo;other suit,&rdquo; and had gone out
+ before breakfast with the mussed clothes to have them pressed, taking his
+ evening things with them. Satisfied with this explanation, and failing to
+ observe that it did not account for the absence of shoes from the closet
+ floor, she nodded absently, &ldquo;Yes, that must be it&rdquo;; and, when her mother
+ returned, told her that Walter had probably breakfasted down-town. They
+ did not delay over this; the coloured woman had arrived, and the basket's
+ disclosures were important.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I stopped at Worlig's on the way back,&rdquo; said Mrs. Adams, flushed with
+ hurry and excitement. &ldquo;I bought a can of caviar there. I thought we'd have
+ little sandwiches brought into the 'living-room' before dinner, the way
+ you said they did when you went to that dinner at the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I think that was to go with cocktails, mama, and of course we haven't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said. &ldquo;Still, I think it would be nice. We can make them
+ look very dainty, on a tray, and the waitress can bring them in. I thought
+ we'd have the soup already on the table; and we can walk right out as soon
+ as we have the sandwiches, so it won't get cold. Then, after the soup,
+ Malena says she can make sweetbread pates with mushrooms: and for the meat
+ course we'll have larded fillet. Malena's really a fancy cook, you know,
+ and she says she can do anything like that to perfection. We'll have peas
+ with the fillet, and potato balls and Brussels sprouts. Brussels sprouts
+ are fashionable now, they told me at market. Then will come the chicken
+ salad, and after that the ice-cream&mdash;she's going to make an
+ angel-food cake to go with it&mdash;and then coffee and crackers and a new
+ kind of cheese I got at Worlig's, he says is very fine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was alarmed. &ldquo;Don't you think perhaps it's too much, mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's better to have too much than too little,&rdquo; her mother said,
+ cheerfully. &ldquo;We don't want him to think we're the kind that skimp. Lord
+ knows we have to enough, though, most of the time! Get the flowers in
+ water, child. I bought 'em at market because they're so much cheaper
+ there, but they'll keep fresh and nice. You fix 'em any way you want.
+ Hurry! It's got to be a busy day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had bought three dozen little roses. Alice took them and began to
+ arrange them in vases, keeping the stems separated as far as possible so
+ that the clumps would look larger. She put half a dozen in each of three
+ vases in the &ldquo;living-room,&rdquo; placing one vase on the table in the center of
+ the room, and one at each end of the mantelpiece. Then she took the rest
+ of the roses to the dining-room; but she postponed the arrangement of them
+ until the table should be set, just before dinner. She was thoughtful;
+ planning to dry the stems and lay them on the tablecloth like a vine of
+ roses running in a delicate design, if she found that the dozen and a half
+ she had left were enough for that. If they weren't she would arrange them
+ in a vase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked a long time at the little roses in the basin of water, where
+ she had put them; then she sighed, and went away to heavier tasks, while
+ her mother worked in the kitchen with Malena. Alice dusted the
+ &ldquo;living-room&rdquo; and the dining-room vigorously, though all the time with a
+ look that grew more and more pensive; and having dusted everything, she
+ wiped the furniture; rubbed it hard. After that, she washed the floors and
+ the woodwork.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emerging from the kitchen at noon, Mrs. Adams found her daughter on hands
+ and knees, scrubbing the bases of the columns between the hall and the
+ &ldquo;living-room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, dearie,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you mustn't tire yourself out, and you'd better
+ come and eat something. Your father said he'd get a bite down-town to-day&mdash;he
+ was going down to the bank&mdash;and Walter eats down-town all the time
+ lately, so I thought we wouldn't bother to set the table for lunch. Come
+ on and we'll have something in the kitchen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Alice said, dully, as she went on with the work. &ldquo;I don't want
+ anything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her mother came closer to her. &ldquo;Why, what's the matter?&rdquo; she asked,
+ briskly. &ldquo;You seem kind of pale, to me; and you don't look&mdash;you don't
+ look HAPPY.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Alice began, uncertainly, but said no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See here!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams exclaimed. &ldquo;This is all just for you! You ought to
+ be ENJOYING it. Why, it's the first time we've&mdash;we've entertained in
+ I don't know how long! I guess it's almost since we had that little party
+ when you were eighteen. What's the matter with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing. I don't know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, dearie, aren't you looking FORWARD to this evening?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl looked up, showing a pallid and solemn face. &ldquo;Oh, yes, of
+ course,&rdquo; she said, and tried to smile. &ldquo;Of course we had to do it&mdash;I
+ do think it'll be nice. Of course I'm looking forward to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ She was indeed &ldquo;looking forward&rdquo; to that evening, but in a cloud of
+ apprehension; and, although she could never have guessed it, this was the
+ simultaneous condition of another person&mdash;none other than the guest
+ for whose pleasure so much cooking and scrubbing seemed to be necessary.
+ Moreover, Mr. Arthur Russell's premonitions were no product of mere
+ coincidence; neither had any magical sympathy produced them. His state of
+ mind was rather the result of rougher undercurrents which had all the time
+ been running beneath the surface of a romantic friendship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never shrewder than when she analyzed the gentlemen, Alice did not libel
+ him when she said he was one of those quiet men who are a bit flirtatious,
+ by which she meant that he was a bit &ldquo;susceptible,&rdquo; the same thing&mdash;and
+ he had proved himself susceptible to Alice upon his first sight of her.
+ &ldquo;There!&rdquo; he said to himself. &ldquo;Who's that?&rdquo; And in the crowd of girls at
+ his cousin's dance, all strangers to him, she was the one he wanted to
+ know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since then, his summer evenings with her had been as secluded as if, for
+ three hours after the falling of dusk, they two had drawn apart from the
+ world to some dear bower of their own. The little veranda was that
+ glamorous nook, with a faint golden light falling through the glass of the
+ closed door upon Alice, and darkness elsewhere, except for the one round
+ globe of the street lamp at the corner. The people who passed along the
+ sidewalk, now and then, were only shadows with voices, moving vaguely
+ under the maple trees that loomed in obscure contours against the stars.
+ So, as the two sat together, the back of the world was the wall and closed
+ door behind them; and Russell, when he was away from Alice, always thought
+ of her as sitting there before the closed door. A glamour was about her
+ thus, and a spell upon him; but he had a formless anxiety never put into
+ words: all the pictures of her in his mind stopped at the closed door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had another anxiety; and, for the greater part, this was of her own
+ creating. She had too often asked him (no matter how gaily) what he heard
+ about her, too often begged him not to hear anything. Then, hoping to
+ forestall whatever he might hear, she had been at too great pains to
+ account for it, to discredit and mock it; and, though he laughed at her
+ for this, telling her truthfully he did not even hear her mentioned, the
+ everlasting irony that deals with all such human forefendings prevailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lately, he had half confessed to her what a nervousness she had produced.
+ &ldquo;You make me dread the day when I'll hear somebody speaking of you. You're
+ getting me so upset about it that if I ever hear anybody so much as say
+ the name 'Alice Adams,' I'll run!&rdquo; The confession was but half of one
+ because he laughed; and she took it for an assurance of loyalty in the
+ form of burlesque.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She misunderstood: he laughed, but his nervousness was genuine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After any stroke of events, whether a happy one or a catastrophe, we see
+ that the materials for it were a long time gathering, and the only marvel
+ is that the stroke was not prophesied. What bore the air of fatal
+ coincidence may remain fatal indeed, to this later view; but, with the
+ haphazard aspect dispelled, there is left for scrutiny the same ancient
+ hint from the Infinite to the effect that since events have never yet
+ failed to be law-abiding, perhaps it were well for us to deduce that they
+ will continue to be so until further notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ . . . On the day that was to open the closed door in the background of his
+ pictures of Alice, Russell lunched with his relatives. There were but the
+ four people, Russell and Mildred and her mother and father, in the great,
+ cool dining-room. Arched French windows, shaded by awnings, admitted a
+ mellow light and looked out upon a green lawn ending in a long
+ conservatory, which revealed through its glass panes a carnival of plants
+ in luxuriant blossom. From his seat at the table, Russell glanced out at
+ this pretty display, and informed his cousins that he was surprised. &ldquo;You
+ have such a glorious spread of flowers all over the house,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I
+ didn't suppose you'd have any left out yonder. In fact, I didn't know
+ there were so many splendid flowers in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Palmer, large, calm, fair, like her daughter, responded with a mild
+ reproach: &ldquo;That's because you haven't been cousinly enough to get used to
+ them, Arthur. You've almost taught us to forget what you look like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In defense Russell waved a hand toward her husband. &ldquo;You see, he's begun
+ to keep me so hard at work&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mr. Palmer declined the responsibility. &ldquo;Up to four or five in the
+ afternoon, perhaps,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;After that, the young gentleman is as much
+ a stranger to me as he is to my family. I've been wondering who she could
+ be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When a man's preoccupied there must be a lady then?&rdquo; Russell inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That seems to be the view of your sex,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer suggested. &ldquo;It was my
+ husband who said it, not Mildred or I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred smiled faintly. &ldquo;Papa may be singular in his ideas; they may come
+ entirely from his own experience, and have nothing to do with Arthur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, Mildred,&rdquo; her cousin said, bowing to her gratefully. &ldquo;You seem
+ to understand my character&mdash;and your father's quite as well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, Mildred remained grave in the face of this customary pleasantry,
+ not because the old jest, worn round, like what preceded it, rolled in an
+ old groove, but because of some preoccupation of her own. Her faint smile
+ had disappeared, and, as her cousin's glance met hers, she looked down;
+ yet not before he had seen in her eyes the flicker of something like a
+ question&mdash;a question both poignant and dismayed. He may have
+ understood it; for his own smile vanished at once in favour of a
+ reciprocal solemnity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, Arthur,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer said, &ldquo;Mildred is always a good cousin. She
+ and I stand by you, even if you do stay away from us for weeks and weeks.&rdquo;
+ Then, observing that he appeared to be so occupied with a bunch of iced
+ grapes upon his plate that he had not heard her, she began to talk to her
+ husband, asking him what was &ldquo;going on down-town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur continued to eat his grapes, but he ventured to look again at
+ Mildred after a few moments. She, also, appeared to be occupied with a
+ bunch of grapes though she ate none, and only pulled them from their
+ stems. She sat straight, her features as composed and pure as those of a
+ new marble saint in a cathedral niche; yet her downcast eyes seemed to
+ conceal many thoughts; and her cousin, against his will, was more aware of
+ what these thoughts might be than of the leisurely conversation between
+ her father and mother. All at once, however, he heard something that
+ startled him, and he listened&mdash;and here was the effect of all Alice's
+ forefendings; he listened from the first with a sinking heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Palmer, mildly amused by what he was telling his wife, had just spoken
+ the words, &ldquo;this Virgil Adams.&rdquo; What he had said was, &ldquo;this Virgil Adams&mdash;that's
+ the man's name. Queer case.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who told you?&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer inquired, not much interested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alfred Lamb,&rdquo; her husband answered. &ldquo;He was laughing about his father, at
+ the club. You see the old gentleman takes a great pride in his judgment of
+ men, and always boasted to his sons that he'd never in his life made a
+ mistake in trusting the wrong man. Now Alfred and James Albert, Junior,
+ think they have a great joke on him; and they've twitted him so much about
+ it he'll scarcely speak to them. From the first, Alfred says, the old
+ chap's only repartee was, 'You wait and you'll see!' And they've asked him
+ so often to show them what they're going to see that he won't say anything
+ at all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's a funny old fellow,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer observed. &ldquo;But he's so shrewd I
+ can't imagine his being deceived for such a long time. Twenty years, you
+ said?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, longer than that, I understand. It appears when this man&mdash;this
+ Adams&mdash;was a young clerk, the old gentleman trusted him with one of
+ his business secrets, a glue process that Mr. Lamb had spent some money to
+ get hold of. The old chap thought this Adams was going to have quite a
+ future with the Lamb concern, and of course never dreamed he was
+ dishonest. Alfred says this Adams hasn't been of any real use for years,
+ and they should have let him go as dead wood, but the old gentleman
+ wouldn't hear of it, and insisted on his being kept on the payroll; so
+ they just decided to look on it as a sort of pension. Well, one morning
+ last March the man had an attack of some sort down there, and Mr. Lamb got
+ his own car out and went home with him, himself, and worried about him and
+ went to see him no end, all the time he was ill.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer said, approvingly. &ldquo;He's a kind-hearted creature,
+ that old man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her husband laughed. &ldquo;Alfred says he thinks his kind-heartedness is about
+ cured! It seems that as soon as the man got well again he deliberately
+ walked off with the old gentleman's glue secret. Just calmly stole it!
+ Alfred says he believes that if he had a stroke in the office now,
+ himself, his father wouldn't lift a finger to help him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Palmer repeated the name to herself thoughtfully. &ldquo;'Adams'&mdash;'Virgil
+ Adams.' You said his name was Virgil Adams?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at her daughter. &ldquo;Why, you know who that is, Mildred,&rdquo; she
+ said, casually. &ldquo;It's that Alice Adams's father, isn't it? Wasn't his name
+ Virgil Adams?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it is,&rdquo; Mildred said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Palmer turned toward her husband. &ldquo;You've seen this Alice Adams here.
+ Mr. Lamb's pet swindler must be her father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Palmer passed a smooth hand over his neat gray hair, which was not
+ disturbed by this effort to stimulate recollection. &ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;Of course&mdash;certainly. Quite a good-looking girl&mdash;one of
+ Mildred's friends. How queer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred looked up, as if in a little alarm, but did not speak. Her mother
+ set matters straight. &ldquo;Fathers ARE amusing,&rdquo; she said smilingly to
+ Russell, who was looking at her, though how fixedly she did not notice;
+ for she turned from him at once to enlighten her husband. &ldquo;Every girl who
+ meets Mildred, and tries to push the acquaintance by coming here until the
+ poor child has to hide, isn't a FRIEND of hers, my dear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred's eyes were downcast again, and a faint colour rose in her cheeks.
+ &ldquo;Oh, I shouldn't put it quite that way about Alice Adams,&rdquo; she said, in a
+ low voice. &ldquo;I saw something of her for a time. She's not unattractive in a
+ way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Palmer settled the whole case of Alice carelessly. &ldquo;A pushing sort of
+ girl,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;A very pushing little person.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Mildred began; and, after hesitating, concluded, &ldquo;I
+ rather dropped her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fortunate you've done so,&rdquo; her father remarked, cheerfully. &ldquo;Especially
+ since various members of the Lamb connection are here frequently. They
+ mightn't think you'd show great tact in having her about the place.&rdquo; He
+ laughed, and turned to his cousin. &ldquo;All this isn't very interesting to
+ poor Arthur. How terrible people are with a newcomer in a town; they talk
+ as if he knew all about everybody!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But we don't know anything about these queer people, ourselves,&rdquo; said
+ Mrs. Palmer. &ldquo;We know something about the girl, of course&mdash;she used
+ to be a bit too conspicuous, in fact! However, as you say, we might find a
+ subject more interesting for Arthur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled whimsically upon the young man. &ldquo;Tell the truth,&rdquo; she said.
+ &ldquo;Don't you fairly detest going into business with that tyrant yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What? Yes&mdash;I beg your pardon!&rdquo; he stammered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were right,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer said to her husband. &ldquo;You've bored him so,
+ talking about thievish clerks, he can't even answer an honest question.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Russell was beginning to recover his outward composure. &ldquo;Try me
+ again,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'm afraid I was thinking of something else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the best he found to say. There was a part of him that wanted to
+ protest and deny, but he had not heat enough, in the chill that had come
+ upon him. Here was the first &ldquo;mention&rdquo; of Alice, and with it the reason
+ why it was the first: Mr. Palmer had difficulty in recalling her, and she
+ happened to be spoken of, only because her father's betrayal of a
+ benefactor's trust had been so peculiarly atrocious that, in the view of
+ the benefactor's family, it contained enough of the element of humour to
+ warrant a mild laugh at a club. There was the deadliness of the story: its
+ lack of malice, even of resentment. Deadlier still were Mrs. Palmer's
+ phrases: &ldquo;a pushing sort of girl,&rdquo; &ldquo;a very pushing little person,&rdquo; and
+ &ldquo;used to be a bit TOO conspicuous, in fact.&rdquo; But she spoke placidly and by
+ chance; being as obviously without unkindly motive as Mr. Palmer was when
+ he related the cause of Alfred Lamb's amusement. Her opinion of the
+ obscure young lady momentarily her topic had been expressed, moreover, to
+ her husband, and at her own table. She sat there, large, kind, serene&mdash;a
+ protest might astonish but could not change her; and Russell, crumpling in
+ his strained fingers the lace-edged little web of a napkin on his knee,
+ found heart enough to grow red, but not enough to challenge her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She noticed his colour, and attributed it to the embarrassment of a
+ scrupulously gallant gentleman caught in a lapse of attention to a lady.
+ &ldquo;Don't be disturbed,&rdquo; she said, benevolently. &ldquo;People aren't expected to
+ listen all the time to their relatives. A high colour's very becoming to
+ you, Arthur; but it really isn't necessary between cousins. You can always
+ be informal enough with us to listen only when you care to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His complexion continued to be ruddier than usual, however, throughout the
+ meal, and was still somewhat tinted when Mrs. Palmer rose. &ldquo;The man's
+ bringing you cigarettes here,&rdquo; she said, nodding to the two gentlemen.
+ &ldquo;We'll give you a chance to do the sordid kind of talking we know you
+ really like. Afterwhile, Mildred will show you what's in bloom in the
+ hothouse, if you wish, Arthur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred followed her, and, when they were alone in another of the spacious
+ rooms, went to a window and looked out, while her mother seated herself
+ near the center of the room in a gilt armchair, mellowed with old Aubusson
+ tapestry. Mrs. Palmer looked thoughtfully at her daughter's back, but did
+ not speak to her until coffee had been brought for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks,&rdquo; Mildred said, not turning, &ldquo;I don't care for any coffee, I
+ believe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No?&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer said, gently. &ldquo;I'm afraid our good-looking cousin won't
+ think you're very talkative, Mildred. You spoke only about twice at lunch.
+ I shouldn't care for him to get the idea you're piqued because he's come
+ here so little lately, should you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I shouldn't,&rdquo; Mildred answered in a low voice, and with that she
+ turned quickly, and came to sit near her mother. &ldquo;But it's what I am
+ afraid of! Mama, did you notice how red he got?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean when he was caught not listening to a question of mine? Yes;
+ it's very becoming to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama, I don't think that was the reason. I don't think it was because he
+ wasn't listening, I mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think his colour and his not listening came from the same reason,&rdquo;
+ Mildred said, and although she had come to sit near her mother, she did
+ not look at her. &ldquo;I think it happened because you and papa&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ She stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer said, good-naturedly, to prompt her. &ldquo;Your father and I
+ did something embarrassing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama, it was because of those things that came out about Alice Adams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How could that bother Arthur? Does he know her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you remember?&rdquo; the daughter asked. &ldquo;The day after my dance I
+ mentioned how odd I thought it was in him&mdash;I was a little
+ disappointed in him. I'd been seeing that he met everybody, of course, but
+ she was the only girl HE asked to meet; and he did it as soon as he
+ noticed her. I hadn't meant to have him meet her&mdash;in fact, I was
+ rather sorry I'd felt I had to ask her, because she oh, well, she's the
+ sort that 'tries for the new man,' if she has half a chance; and sometimes
+ they seem quite fascinated&mdash;for a time, that is. I thought Arthur was
+ above all that; or at the very least I gave him credit for being too
+ sophisticated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer said, thoughtfully. &ldquo;I remember now that you spoke of
+ it. You said it seemed a little peculiar, but of course it really wasn't:
+ a 'new man' has nothing to go by, except his own first impressions. You
+ can't blame poor Arthur&mdash;she's quite a piquant looking little person.
+ You think he's seen something of her since then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred nodded slowly. &ldquo;I never dreamed such a thing till yesterday, and
+ even then I rather doubted it&mdash;till he got so red, just now! I was
+ surprised when he asked to meet her, but he just danced with her once and
+ didn't mention her afterward; I forgot all about it&mdash;in fact, I
+ virtually forgot all about HER. I'd seen quite a little of her&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mrs. Palmer. &ldquo;She did keep coming here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I'd just about decided that it really wouldn't do,&rdquo; Mildred went on.
+ &ldquo;She isn't&mdash;well, I didn't admire her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; her mother assented, and evidently followed a direct connection of
+ thought in a speech apparently irrelevant. &ldquo;I understand the young Malone
+ wants to marry Henrietta. I hope she won't; he seems rather a gross type
+ of person.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he's just one,&rdquo; Mildred said. &ldquo;I don't know that he and Alice Adams
+ were ever engaged&mdash;she never told me so. She may not have been
+ engaged to any of them; she was just enough among the other girls to get
+ talked about&mdash;and one of the reasons I felt a little inclined to be
+ nice to her was that they seemed to be rather edging her out of the
+ circle. It wasn't long before I saw they were right, though. I happened to
+ mention I was going to give a dance and she pretended to take it as a
+ matter of course that I meant to invite her brother&mdash;at least, I
+ thought she pretended; she may have really believed it. At any rate, I had
+ to send him a card; but I didn't intend to be let in for that sort of
+ thing again, of course. She's what you said, 'pushing'; though I'm awfully
+ sorry you said it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why shouldn't I have said it, my dear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I didn't say 'shouldn't.'&rdquo; Mildred explained, gravely. &ldquo;I meant
+ only that I'm sorry it happened.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama&rdquo;&mdash;Mildred turned to her, leaning forward and speaking in a
+ lowered voice&mdash;&ldquo;Mama, at first the change was so little it seemed as
+ if Arthur hardly knew it himself. He'd been lovely to me always, and he
+ was still lovely to me but&mdash;oh, well, you've understood&mdash;after
+ my dance it was more as if it was just his nature and his training to be
+ lovely to me, as he would be to everyone a kind of politeness. He'd never
+ said he CARED for me, but after that I could see he didn't. It was clear&mdash;after
+ that. I didn't know what had happened; I couldn't think of anything I'd
+ done. Mama&mdash;it was Alice Adams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Palmer set her little coffee-cup upon the table beside her, calmly
+ following her own motion with her eyes, and not seeming to realize with
+ what serious entreaty her daughter's gaze was fixed upon her. Mildred
+ repeated the last sentence of her revelation, and introduced a stress of
+ insistence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama, it WAS Alice Adams!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mrs. Palmer declined to be greatly impressed, so far as her appearance
+ went, at least; and to emphasize her refusal, she smiled indulgently.
+ &ldquo;What makes you think so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Henrietta told me yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this Mrs. Palmer permitted herself to laugh softly aloud. &ldquo;Good
+ heavens! Is Henrietta a soothsayer? Or is she Arthur's particular
+ confidante?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. Ella Dowling told her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Palmer's laughter continued. &ldquo;Now we have it!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;It's a
+ game of gossip: Arthur tells Ella, Ella tells Henrietta, and Henrietta
+ tells&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't laugh, please, mama,&rdquo; Mildred begged. &ldquo;Of course Arthur didn't tell
+ anybody. It's roundabout enough, but it's true. I know it! I hadn't quite
+ believed it, but I knew it was true when he got so red. He looked&mdash;oh,
+ for a second or so he looked&mdash;stricken! He thought I didn't notice
+ it. Mama, he's been to see her almost every evening lately. They take long
+ walks together. That's why he hasn't been here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Mrs. Palmer's laughter there was left only her indulgent smile, which
+ she had not allowed to vanish. &ldquo;Well, what of it?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mrs. Palmer. &ldquo;What of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But don't you see?&rdquo; Mildred's well-tutored voice, though modulated and
+ repressed even in her present emotion, nevertheless had a tendency to
+ quaver. &ldquo;It's true. Frank Dowling was going to see her one evening and he
+ saw Arthur sitting on the stoop with her, and didn't go in. And Ella used
+ to go to school with a girl who lives across the street from here. She
+ told Ella&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I understand,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer interrupted. &ldquo;Suppose he does go there. My
+ dear, I said, 'What of it?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see what you mean, mama. I'm so afraid he might think we knew
+ about it, and that you and papa said those things about her and her father
+ on that account&mdash;as if we abused them because he goes there instead
+ of coming here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer rose, went to a window, and, turning there, stood
+ with her back to it, facing her daughter and looking at her cheerfully.
+ &ldquo;Nonsense, my dear! It was perfectly clear that she was mentioned by
+ accident, and so was her father. What an extraordinary man! If Arthur
+ makes friends with people like that, he certainly knows better than to
+ expect to hear favourable opinions of them. Besides, it's only a little
+ passing thing with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama! When he goes there almost every&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer said, dryly. &ldquo;It seems to me I've heard somewhere that
+ other young men have gone there 'almost every!' She doesn't last,
+ apparently. Arthur's gallant, and he's impressionable&mdash;but he's
+ fastidious, and fastidiousness is always the check on impressionableness.
+ A girl belongs to her family, too&mdash;and this one does especially, it
+ strikes me! Arthur's very sensible; he sees more than you'd think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred looked at her hopefully. &ldquo;Then you don't believe he's likely to
+ imagine we said those things of her in any meaning way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this, Mrs. Palmer laughed again. &ldquo;There's one thing you seem not to
+ have noticed, Mildred.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems to have escaped your attention that he never said a word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mightn't that mean&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo; Mildred began, but she stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it mightn't,&rdquo; her mother replied, comprehending easily. &ldquo;On the
+ contrary, it might mean that instead of his feeling it too deeply to
+ speak, he was getting a little illumination.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mildred rose and came to her. &ldquo;WHY do you suppose he never told us he went
+ there? Do you think he's&mdash;do you think he's pleased with her, and yet
+ ashamed of it? WHY do you suppose he's never spoken of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, that,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer said,&mdash;&ldquo;that might possibly be her own doing.
+ If it is, she's well paid by what your father and I said, because we
+ wouldn't have said it if we'd known that Arthur&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She checked
+ herself quickly. Looking over her daughter's shoulder, she saw the two
+ gentlemen coming from the corridor toward the wide doorway of the room;
+ and she greeted them cheerfully. &ldquo;If you've finished with each other for a
+ while,&rdquo; she added, &ldquo;Arthur may find it a relief to put his thoughts on
+ something prettier than a trust company&mdash;and more fragrant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur came to Mildred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your mother said at lunch that perhaps you'd&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't say 'perhaps,' Arthur,&rdquo; Mrs. Palmer interrupted, to correct him.
+ &ldquo;I said she would. If you care to see and smell those lovely things out
+ yonder, she'll show them to you. Run along, children!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half an hour later, glancing from a window, she saw them come from the
+ hothouses and slowly cross the lawn. Arthur had a fine rose in his
+ buttonhole and looked profoundly thoughtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That morning and noon had been warm, though the stirrings of a feeble
+ breeze made weather not flagrantly intemperate; but at about three o'clock
+ in the afternoon there came out of the southwest a heat like an affliction
+ sent upon an accursed people, and the air was soon dead of it. Dripping
+ negro ditch-diggers whooped with satires praising hell and hot weather, as
+ the tossing shovels flickered up to the street level, where sluggish male
+ pedestrians carried coats upon hot arms, and fanned themselves with straw
+ hats, or, remaining covered, wore soaked handkerchiefs between scalp and
+ straw. Clerks drooped in silent, big department stores, stenographers in
+ offices kept as close to electric fans as the intervening bulk of their
+ employers would let them; guests in hotels left the lobbies and went to
+ lie unclad upon their beds; while in hospitals the patients murmured
+ querulously against the heat, and perhaps against some noisy motorist who
+ strove to feel the air by splitting it, not troubled by any foreboding
+ that he, too, that hour next week, might need quiet near a hospital. The
+ &ldquo;hot spell&rdquo; was a true spell, one upon men's spirits; for it was so hot
+ that, in suburban outskirts, golfers crept slowly back over the low
+ undulations of their club lands, abandoning their matches and returning to
+ shelter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even on such a day, sizzling work had to be done, as in winter. There were
+ glowing furnaces to be stoked, liquid metals to be poured; but such tasks
+ found seasoned men standing to them; and in all the city probably no brave
+ soul challenged the heat more gamely than Mrs. Adams did, when, in a
+ corner of her small and fiery kitchen, where all day long her hired
+ African immune cooked fiercely, she pressed her husband's evening clothes
+ with a hot iron. No doubt she risked her life, but she risked it
+ cheerfully in so good and necessary a service for him. She would have
+ given her life for him at any time, and both his and her own for her
+ children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unconscious of her own heroism, she was surprised to find herself rather
+ faint when she finished her ironing. However, she took heart to believe
+ that the clothes looked better, in spite of one or two scorched places;
+ and she carried them upstairs to her husband's room before increasing
+ blindness forced her to grope for the nearest chair. Then, trying to rise
+ and walk, without having sufficiently recovered, she had to sit down
+ again; but after a little while she was able to get upon her feet; and,
+ keeping her hand against the wall, moved successfully to the door of her
+ own room. Here she wavered; might have gone down, had she not been
+ stimulated by the thought of how much depended upon her;&mdash;she made a
+ final great effort, and floundered across the room to her bureau, where
+ she kept some simple restoratives. They served her need, or her faith in
+ them did; and she returned to her work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went down the stairs, keeping a still tremulous hand upon the rail;
+ but she smiled brightly when Alice looked up from below, where the
+ woodwork was again being tormented with superfluous attentions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alice, DON'T!&rdquo; her mother said, commiseratingly. &ldquo;You did all that this
+ morning and it looks lovely. What's the use of wearing yourself out on it?
+ You ought to be lying down, so's to look fresh for to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hadn't you better lie down yourself?&rdquo; the daughter returned. &ldquo;Are you
+ ill, mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not. What in the world makes you think so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You look pretty pale,&rdquo; Alice said, and sighed heavily. &ldquo;It makes me
+ ashamed, having you work so hard&mdash;for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How foolish! I think it's fun, getting ready to entertain a little again,
+ like this. I only wish it hadn't turned so hot: I'm afraid your poor
+ father'll suffer&mdash;his things are pretty heavy, I noticed. Well, it'll
+ do him good to bear something for style's sake this once, anyhow!&rdquo; She
+ laughed, and coming to Alice, bent down and kissed her. &ldquo;Dearie,&rdquo; she
+ said, tenderly, &ldquo;wouldn't you please slip upstairs now and take just a
+ little teeny nap to please your mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alice responded only by moving her head slowly, in token of refusal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams urged. &ldquo;You don't want to look worn out, do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll LOOK all right,&rdquo; Alice said, huskily. &ldquo;Do you like the way I've
+ arranged the furniture now? I've tried all the different ways it'll go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's lovely,&rdquo; her mother said, admiringly. &ldquo;I thought the last way you
+ had it was pretty, too. But you know best; I never knew anybody with so
+ much taste. If you'd only just quit now, and take a little rest&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There'd hardly be time, even if I wanted to; it's after five but I
+ couldn't; really, I couldn't. How do you think we can manage about Walter&mdash;to
+ see that he wears his evening things, I mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams pondered. &ldquo;I'm afraid he'll make a lot of objections, on
+ account of the weather and everything. I wish we'd had a chance to tell
+ him last night or this morning. I'd have telephoned to him this afternoon
+ except&mdash;well, I scarcely like to call him up at that place, since
+ your father&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, of course not, mama.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If Walter gets home late,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams went on, &ldquo;I'll just slip out and
+ speak to him, in case Mr. Russell's here before he comes. I'll just tell
+ him he's got to hurry and get his things on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe he won't come home to dinner,&rdquo; Alice suggested, rather hopefully.
+ &ldquo;Sometimes he doesn't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I think he'll be here. When he doesn't come he usually telephones by
+ this time to say not to wait for him; he's very thoughtful about that.
+ Well, it really is getting late: I must go and tell her she ought to be
+ preparing her fillet. Dearie, DO rest a little.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'd much better do that yourself,&rdquo; Alice called after her, but Mrs.
+ Adams shook her head cheerily, not pausing on her way to the fiery
+ kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice continued her useless labours for a time; then carried her bucket to
+ the head of the cellar stairway, where she left it upon the top step; and,
+ closing the door, returned to the &ldquo;living-room;&rdquo; Again she changed the
+ positions of the old plush rocking-chairs, moving them into the corners
+ where she thought they might be least noticeable; and while thus engaged
+ she was startled by a loud ringing of the door-bell. For a moment her face
+ was panic-stricken, and she stood staring, then she realized that Russell
+ would not arrive for another hour, at the earliest, and recovering her
+ equipoise, went to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Waiting there, in a languid attitude, was a young coloured woman, with a
+ small bundle under her arm and something malleable in her mouth. &ldquo;Listen,&rdquo;
+ she said. &ldquo;You folks expectin' a coloured lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;Especially not at the front door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; the coloured woman said again. &ldquo;Listen. Say, listen. Ain't they
+ another coloured lady awready here by the day? Listen. Ain't Miz Malena
+ Burns here by the day this evenin'? Say, listen. This the number house she
+ give ME.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you the waitress?&rdquo; Alice asked, dismally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes'm, if Malena here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Malena is here,&rdquo; Alice said, and hesitated; but she decided not to send
+ the waitress to the back door; it might be a risk. She let her in. &ldquo;What's
+ your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Me? I'm name' Gertrude. Miss Gertrude Collamus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you bring a cap and apron?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gertrude took the little bundle from under her arm. &ldquo;Yes'm. I'm all fix'.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've already set the table,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;I'll show you what we want
+ done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She led the way to the dining-room, and, after offering some instruction
+ there, received by Gertrude with languor and a slowly moving jaw, she took
+ her into the kitchen, where the cap and apron were put on. The effect was
+ not fortunate; Gertrude's eyes were noticeably bloodshot, an affliction
+ made more apparent by the white cap; and Alice drew her mother apart,
+ whispering anxiously,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you suppose it's too late to get someone else?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid it is,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said. &ldquo;Malena says it was hard enough to
+ get HER! You have to pay them so much that they only work when they feel
+ like it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama, could you ask her to wear her cap straighter? Every time she moves
+ her head she gets it on one side, and her skirt's too long behind and too
+ short in front&mdash;and oh, I've NEVER seen such FEET!&rdquo; Alice laughed
+ desolately. &ldquo;And she MUST quit that terrible chewing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind; I'll get to work with her. I'll straighten her out all I can,
+ dearie; don't worry.&rdquo; Mrs. Adams patted her daughter's shoulder
+ encouragingly. &ldquo;Now YOU can't do another thing, and if you don't run and
+ begin dressing you won't be ready. It'll only take me a minute to dress,
+ myself, and I'll be down long before you will. Run, darling! I'll look
+ after everything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice nodded vaguely, went up to her room, and, after only a moment with
+ her mirror, brought from her closet the dress of white organdie she had
+ worn the night when she met Russell for the first time. She laid it
+ carefully upon her bed, and began to make ready to put it on. Her mother
+ came in, half an hour later, to &ldquo;fasten&rdquo; her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'M all dressed,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams said, briskly. &ldquo;Of course it doesn't matter.
+ He won't know what the rest of us even look like: How could he? I know I'm
+ an old SIGHT, but all I want is to look respectable. Do I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You look like the best woman in the world; that's all!&rdquo; Alice said, with
+ a little gulp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her mother laughed and gave her a final scrutiny. &ldquo;You might use just a
+ tiny bit more colour, dearie&mdash;I'm afraid the excitement's made you a
+ little pale. And you MUST brighten up! There's sort of a look in your eyes
+ as if you'd got in a trance and couldn't get out. You've had it all day. I
+ must run: your father wants me to help him with his studs. Walter hasn't
+ come yet, but I'll look after him; don't worry, And you better HURRY,
+ dearie, if you're going to take any time fixing the flowers on the table.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She departed, while Alice sat at the mirror again, to follow her advice
+ concerning a &ldquo;tiny bit more colour.&rdquo; Before she had finished, her father
+ knocked at the door, and, when she responded, came in. He was dressed in
+ the clothes his wife had pressed; but he had lost substantially in weight
+ since they were made for him; no one would have thought that they had been
+ pressed. They hung from him voluminously, seeming to be the clothes of a
+ larger man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your mother's gone downstairs,&rdquo; he said, in a voice of distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One of the buttonholes in my shirt is too large and I can't keep the dang
+ thing fastened. <i>I</i> don't know what to do about it! I only got one
+ other white shirt, and it's kind of ruined: I tried it before I did this
+ one. Do you s'pose you could do anything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll see,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My collar's got a frayed edge,&rdquo; he complained, as she examined his
+ troublesome shirt. &ldquo;It's a good deal like wearing a saw; but I expect
+ it'll wilt down flat pretty soon, and not bother me long. I'm liable to
+ wilt down flat, myself, I expect; I don't know as I remember any such hot
+ night in the last ten or twelve years.&rdquo; He lifted his head and sniffed the
+ flaccid air, which was laden with a heavy odour. &ldquo;My, but that smell is
+ pretty strong!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand still, please, papa,&rdquo; Alice begged him. &ldquo;I can't see what's the
+ matter if you move around. How absurd you are about your old glue smell,
+ papa! There isn't a vestige of it, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't mean glue,&rdquo; he informed her. &ldquo;I mean cabbage. Is that
+ fashionable now, to have cabbage when there's company for dinner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn't cabbage, papa. It's Brussels sprouts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, is it? I don't mind it much, because it keeps that glue smell off me,
+ but it's fairly strong. I expect you don't notice it so much because you
+ been in the house with it all along, and got used to it while it was
+ growing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is pretty dreadful,&rdquo; Alice said. &ldquo;Are all the windows open
+ downstairs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll go down and see, if you'll just fix that hole up for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid I can't,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Not unless you take your shirt off and
+ bring it to me. I'll have to sew the hole smaller.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well, I'll go ask your mother to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;She's got everything on her hands. Run and take it off.
+ Hurry, papa; I've got to arrange the flowers on the table before he
+ comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went away, and came back presently, half undressed, bringing the shirt.
+ &ldquo;There's ONE comfort,&rdquo; he remarked, pensively, as she worked. &ldquo;I've got
+ that collar off&mdash;for a while, anyway. I wish I could go to table like
+ this; I could stand it a good deal better. Do you seem to be making any
+ headway with the dang thing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think probably I can&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Downstairs the door-bell rang, and Alice's arms jerked with the shock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Golly!&rdquo; her father said. &ldquo;Did you stick your finger with that fool
+ needle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She gave him a blank stare. &ldquo;He's come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was not mistaken, for, upon the little veranda, Russell stood facing
+ the closed door at last. However, it remained closed for a considerable
+ time after he rang. Inside the house the warning summons of the bell was
+ immediately followed by another sound, audible to Alice and her father as
+ a crash preceding a series of muffled falls. Then came a distant voice,
+ bitter in complaint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Lord!&rdquo; said Adams. &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice went to the top of the front stairs, and her mother appeared in the
+ hall below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mama!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams looked up. &ldquo;It's all right,&rdquo; she said, in a loud whisper.
+ &ldquo;Gertrude fell down the cellar stairs. Somebody left a bucket there, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ She was interrupted by a gasp from Alice, and hastened to reassure her.
+ &ldquo;Don't worry, dearie. She may limp a little, but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams leaned over the banisters. &ldquo;Did she break anything?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; his wife whispered. &ldquo;No. She seems upset and angry about it, more
+ than anything else; but she's rubbing herself, and she'll be all right in
+ time to bring in the little sandwiches. Alice! Those flowers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know, mama. But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hurry!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams warned her. &ldquo;Both of you hurry! I MUST let him in!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned to the door, smiling cordially, even before she opened it. &ldquo;Do
+ come right in, Mr. Russell,&rdquo; she said, loudly, lifting her voice for
+ additional warning to those above. &ldquo;I'm SO glad to receive you informally,
+ this way, in our own little home. There's a hat-rack here under the
+ stairway,&rdquo; she continued, as Russell, murmuring some response, came into
+ the hall. &ldquo;I'm afraid you'll think it's almost TOO informal, my coming to
+ the door, but unfortunately our housemaid's just had a little accident&mdash;oh,
+ nothing to mention! I just thought we better not keep you waiting any
+ longer. Will you step into our living-room, please?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She led the way between the two small columns, and seated herself in one
+ of the plush rocking-chairs, selecting it because Alice had once pointed
+ out that the chairs, themselves, were less noticeable when they had people
+ sitting in them. &ldquo;Do sit down, Mr. Russell; it's so very warm it's really
+ quite a trial just to stand up!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; he said, as he took a seat. &ldquo;Yes. It is quite warm.&rdquo; And this
+ seemed to be the extent of his responsiveness for the moment. He was
+ grave, rather pale; and Mrs. Adams's impression of him, as she formed it
+ then, was of &ldquo;a distinguished-looking young man, really elegant in the
+ best sense of the word, but timid and formal when he first meets you.&rdquo; She
+ beamed upon him, and used with everything she said a continuous
+ accompaniment of laughter, meaningless except that it was meant to convey
+ cordiality. &ldquo;Of course we DO have a great deal of warm weather,&rdquo; she
+ informed him. &ldquo;I'm glad it's so much cooler in the house than it is
+ outdoors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is pleasanter indoors.&rdquo; And, stopping with this single
+ untruth, he permitted himself the briefest glance about the room; then his
+ eyes returned to his smiling hostess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most people make a great fuss about hot weather,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The only
+ person I know who doesn't mind the heat the way other people do is Alice.
+ She always seems as cool as if we had a breeze blowing, no matter how hot
+ it is. But then she's so amiable she never minds anything. It's just her
+ character. She's always been that way since she was a little child; always
+ the same to everybody, high and low. I think character's the most
+ important thing in the world, after all, don't you, Mr. Russell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, solemnly; and touched his bedewed white forehead with a
+ handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed it is,&rdquo; she agreed with herself, never failing to continue her
+ murmur of laughter. &ldquo;That's what I've always told Alice; but she never
+ sees anything good in herself, and she just laughs at me when I praise
+ her. She sees good in everybody ELSE in the world, no matter how unworthy
+ they are, or how they behave toward HER; but she always underestimates
+ herself. From the time she was a little child she was always that way.
+ When some other little girl would behave selfishly or meanly toward her,
+ do you think she'd come and tell me? Never a word to anybody! The little
+ thing was too proud! She was the same way about school. The teachers had
+ to tell me when she took a prize; she'd bring it home and keep it in her
+ room without a word about it to her father and mother. Now, Walter was
+ just the other way. Walter would&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; But here Mrs. Adams
+ checked herself, though she increased the volume of her laughter. &ldquo;How
+ silly of me!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;I expect you know how mothers ARE, though,
+ Mr. Russell. Give us a chance and we'll talk about our children forever!
+ Alice would feel terribly if she knew how I've been going on about her to
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this Mrs. Adams was right, though she did not herself suspect it, and
+ upon an almost inaudible word or two from him she went on with her topic.
+ &ldquo;Of course my excuse is that few mothers have a daughter like Alice. I
+ suppose we all think the same way about our children, but SOME of us must
+ be right when we feel we've got the best. Don't you think so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. Yes, indeed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sure <i>I</i> am!&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;I'll let the others speak for
+ themselves.&rdquo; She paused reflectively. &ldquo;No; I think a mother knows when
+ she's got a treasure in her family. If she HASN'T got one, she'll pretend
+ she has, maybe; but if she has, she knows it. I certainly know <i>I</i>
+ have. She's always been what people call 'the joy of the household'&mdash;always
+ cheerful, no matter what went wrong, and always ready to smooth things
+ over with some bright, witty saying. You must be sure not to TELL we've
+ had this little chat about her&mdash;she'd just be furious with me&mdash;but
+ she IS such a dear child! You won't tell her, will you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, and again applied the handkerchief to his forehead for an
+ instant. &ldquo;No, I'll&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He paused, and finished lamely: &ldquo;I'll&mdash;not
+ tell her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus reassured, Mrs. Adams set before him some details of her daughter's
+ popularity at sixteen, dwelling upon Alice's impartiality among her young
+ suitors: &ldquo;She never could BEAR to hurt their feelings, and always treated
+ all of them just alike. About half a dozen of them were just BOUND to
+ marry her! Naturally, her father and I considered any such idea
+ ridiculous; she was too young, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the mother went on with her biographical sketches, while the pale
+ young man sat facing her under the hard overhead light of a white globe,
+ set to the ceiling; and listened without interrupting. She was glad to
+ have the chance to tell him a few things about Alice he might not have
+ guessed for himself, and, indeed, she had planned to find such an
+ opportunity, if she could; but this was getting to be altogether too much
+ of one, she felt. As time passed, she was like an actor who must improvise
+ to keep the audience from perceiving that his fellow-players have missed
+ their cues; but her anxiety was not betrayed to the still listener; she
+ had a valiant soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice, meanwhile, had arranged her little roses on the table in as many
+ ways, probably, as there were blossoms; and she was still at it when her
+ father arrived in the dining-room by way of the back stairs and the
+ kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's pulled out again,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But I guess there's no help for it now;
+ it's too late, and anyway it lets some air into me when it bulges. I can
+ sit so's it won't be noticed much, I expect. Isn't it time you quit
+ bothering about the looks of the table? Your mother's been talking to him
+ about half an hour now, and I had the idea he came on your account, not
+ hers. Hadn't you better go and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just a minute.&rdquo; Alice said, piteously. &ldquo;Do YOU think it looks all right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The flowers? Fine! Hadn't you better leave 'em the way they are, though?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just a minute,&rdquo; she begged again. &ldquo;Just ONE minute, papa!&rdquo; And she
+ exchanged a rose in front of Russell's plate for one that seemed to her a
+ little larger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You better come on,&rdquo; Adams said, moving to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just ONE more second, papa.&rdquo; She shook her head, lamenting. &ldquo;Oh, I wish
+ we'd rented some silver!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because so much of the plating has rubbed off a lot of it. JUST a second,
+ papa.&rdquo; And as she spoke she hastily went round the table, gathering the
+ knives and forks and spoons that she thought had their plating best
+ preserved, and exchanging them for more damaged pieces at Russell's place.
+ &ldquo;There!&rdquo; she sighed, finally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I'll come.&rdquo; But at the door she paused to look back dubiously, over
+ her shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The roses. I believe after all I shouldn't have tried that vine effect; I
+ ought to have kept them in water, in the vase. It's so hot, they already
+ begin to look a little wilted, out on the dry tablecloth like that. I
+ believe I'll&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, look here, Alice!&rdquo; he remonstrated, as she seemed disposed to turn
+ back. &ldquo;Everything'll burn up on the stove if you keep on&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the vase was terribly ugly; I can't do any better.
+ We'll go in.&rdquo; But with her hand on the door-knob she paused. &ldquo;No, papa. We
+ mustn't go in by this door. It might look as if&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As if what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Let's go the other way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see what difference it makes,&rdquo; he grumbled, but nevertheless
+ followed her through the kitchen, and up the back stairs then through the
+ upper hallway. At the top of the front stairs she paused for a moment,
+ drawing a deep breath; and then, before her father's puzzled eyes, a
+ transformation came upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her shoulders, like her eyelids, had been drooping, but now she threw her
+ head back: the shoulders straightened, and the lashes lifted over
+ sparkling eyes; vivacity came to her whole body in a flash; and she
+ tripped down the steps, with her pretty hands rising in time to the
+ lilting little tune she had begun to hum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the foot of the stairs, one of those pretty hands extended itself at
+ full arm's length toward Russell, and continued to be extended until it
+ reached his own hand as he came to meet her. &ldquo;How terrible of me!&rdquo; she
+ exclaimed. &ldquo;To be so late coming down! And papa, too&mdash;I think you
+ know each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her father was advancing toward the young man, expecting to shake hands
+ with him, but Alice stood between them, and Russell, a little flushed,
+ bowed to him gravely over her shoulder, without looking at him; whereupon
+ Adams, slightly disconcerted, put his hands in his pockets and turned to
+ his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess dinner's more'n ready,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We better go sit down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she shook her head at him fiercely, &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What for? For Walter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; he can't be coming,&rdquo; she returned, hurriedly, and again warned him by
+ a shake of her head. &ldquo;Be quiet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he muttered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sit down!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was thoroughly mystified, but obeyed her gesture and went to the
+ rocking-chair in the opposite corner, where he sat down, and, with an
+ expression of meek inquiry, awaited events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Alice prattled on: &ldquo;It's really not a fault of mine, being
+ tardy. The shameful truth is I was trying to hurry papa. He's
+ incorrigible: he stays so late at his terrible old factory&mdash;terrible
+ new factory, I should say. I hope you don't HATE us for making you dine
+ with us in such fearful weather! I'm nearly dying of the heat, myself, so
+ you have a fellow-sufferer, if that pleases you. Why is it we always bear
+ things better if we think other people have to stand them, too?&rdquo; And she
+ added, with an excited laugh: &ldquo;SILLY of us, don't you think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gertrude had just made her entrance from the dining-room, bearing a tray.
+ She came slowly, with an air of resentment; and her skirt still needed
+ adjusting, while her lower jaw moved at intervals, though not now upon any
+ substance, but reminiscently, of habit. She halted before Adams, facing
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked plaintive. &ldquo;What you want o' me?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For response, she extended the tray toward him with a gesture of
+ indifference; but he still appeared to be puzzled. &ldquo;What in the world&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ he began, then caught his wife's eye, and had presence of mind enough to
+ take a damp and plastic sandwich from the tray. &ldquo;Well, I'll TRY one,&rdquo; he
+ said, but a moment later, as he fulfilled this promise, an expression of
+ intense dislike came upon his features, and he would have returned the
+ sandwich to Gertrude. However, as she had crossed the room to Mrs. Adams
+ he checked the gesture, and sat helplessly, with the sandwich in his hand.
+ He made another effort to get rid of it as the waitress passed him, on her
+ way back to the dining-room, but she appeared not to observe him, and he
+ continued to be troubled by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice was a loyal daughter. &ldquo;These are delicious, mama,&rdquo; she said; and
+ turning to Russell, &ldquo;You missed it; you should have taken one. Too bad we
+ couldn't have offered you what ought to go with it, of course, but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was interrupted by the second entrance of Gertrude, who announced,
+ &ldquo;Dinner serve',&rdquo; and retired from view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; Adams said, rising from his chair, with relief. &ldquo;That's
+ good! Let's go see if we can eat it.&rdquo; And as the little group moved toward
+ the open door of the dining-room he disposed of his sandwich by dropping
+ it in the empty fireplace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice, glancing back over her shoulder, was the only one who saw him, and
+ she shuddered in spite of herself. Then, seeing that he looked at her
+ entreatingly, as if he wanted to explain that he was doing the best he
+ could, she smiled upon him sunnily, and began to chatter to Russell again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Alice kept her sprightly chatter going when they sat down, though the
+ temperature of the room and the sight of hot soup might have discouraged a
+ less determined gayety. Moreover, there were details as unpropitious as
+ the heat: the expiring roses expressed not beauty but pathos, and what
+ faint odour they exhaled was no rival to the lusty emanations of the
+ Brussels sprouts; at the head of the table, Adams, sitting low in his
+ chair, appeared to be unable to flatten the uprising wave of his starched
+ bosom; and Gertrude's manner and expression were of a recognizable
+ hostility during the long period of vain waiting for the cups of soup to
+ be emptied. Only Mrs. Adams made any progress in this direction; the
+ others merely feinting, now and then lifting their spoons as if they
+ intended to do something with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice's talk was little more than cheerful sound, but, to fill a desolate
+ interval, served its purpose; and her mother supported her with
+ ever-faithful cooings of applausive laughter. &ldquo;What a funny thing weather
+ is!&rdquo; the girl ran on. &ldquo;Yesterday it was cool&mdash;angels had charge of it&mdash;and
+ to-day they had an engagement somewhere else, so the devil saw his chance
+ and started to move the equator to the North Pole; but by the time he got
+ half-way, he thought of something else he wanted to do, and went off; and
+ left the equator here, right on top of US! I wish he'd come back and get
+ it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Alice dear!&rdquo; her mother cried, fondly. &ldquo;What an imagination! Not a
+ very pious one, I'm afraid Mr. Russell might think, though!&rdquo; Here she gave
+ Gertrude a hidden signal to remove the soup; but, as there was no
+ response, she had to make the signal more conspicuous. Gertrude was
+ leaning against the wall, her chin moving like a slow pendulum, her
+ streaked eyes fixed mutinously upon Russell. Mrs. Adams nodded several
+ times, increasing the emphasis of her gesture, while Alice talked briskly;
+ but the brooding waitress continued to brood. A faint snap of the fingers
+ failed to disturb her; nor was a covert hissing whisper of avail, and Mrs.
+ Adams was beginning to show signs of strain when her daughter relieved
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Imagine our trying to eat anything so hot as soup on a night like this!&rdquo;
+ Alice laughed. &ldquo;What COULD have been in the cook's mind not to give us
+ something iced and jellied instead? Of course it's because she's
+ equatorial, herself, originally, and only feels at home when Mr. Satan
+ moves it north.&rdquo; She looked round at Gertrude, who stood behind her. &ldquo;Do
+ take this dreadful soup away!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus directly addressed, Gertrude yielded her attention, though
+ unwillingly, and as if she decided only by a hair's weight not to revolt,
+ instead. However, she finally set herself in slow motion; but overlooked
+ the supposed head of the table, seeming to be unaware of the sweltering
+ little man who sat there. As she disappeared toward the kitchen with but
+ three of the cups upon her tray he turned to look plaintively after her,
+ and ventured an attempt to recall her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here!&rdquo; he said, in a low voice. &ldquo;Here, you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it, Virgil?&rdquo; his wife asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's her name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams gave him a glance of sudden panic, and, seeing that the guest
+ of the evening was not looking at her, but down at the white cloth before
+ him, she frowned hard, and shook her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately Alice was not observing her mother, and asked, innocently:
+ &ldquo;What's whose name, papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, this young darky woman,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;She left mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; Alice laughed. &ldquo;There's hope for you, papa. She hasn't gone
+ forever!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know about that,&rdquo; he said, not content with this impulsive
+ assurance. &ldquo;She LOOKED like she is.&rdquo; And his remark, considered as a
+ prediction, had begun to seem warranted before Gertrude's return with
+ china preliminary to the next stage of the banquet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice proved herself equal to the long gap, and rattled on through it with
+ a spirit richly justifying her mother's praise of her as &ldquo;always ready to
+ smooth things over&rdquo;; for here was more than long delay to be smoothed
+ over. She smoothed over her father and mother for Russell; and she
+ smoothed over him for them, though he did not know it, and remained
+ unaware of what he owed her. With all this, throughout her prattlings, the
+ girl's bright eyes kept seeking his with an eager gayety, which but little
+ veiled both interrogation and entreaty&mdash;as if she asked: &ldquo;Is it too
+ much for you? Can't you bear it? Won't you PLEASE bear it? I would for
+ you. Won't you give me a sign that it's all right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her but fleetingly, and seemed to suffer from the heat, in
+ spite of every manly effort not to wipe his brow too often. His colour,
+ after rising when he greeted Alice and her father, had departed, leaving
+ him again moistly pallid; a condition arising from discomfort, no doubt,
+ but, considered as a decoration, almost poetically becoming to him. Not
+ less becoming was the faint, kindly smile, which showed his wish to
+ express amusement and approval; and yet it was a smile rather strained and
+ plaintive, as if he, like Adams, could only do the best he could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He pleased Adams, who thought him a fine young man, and decidedly the
+ quietest that Alice had ever shown to her family. In her father's opinion
+ this was no small merit; and it was to Russell's credit, too, that he
+ showed embarrassment upon this first intimate presentation; here was an
+ applicant with both reserve and modesty. &ldquo;So far, he seems to be first
+ rate a mighty fine young man,&rdquo; Adams thought; and, prompted by no wish to
+ part from Alice but by reminiscences of apparent candidates less pleasing,
+ he added, &ldquo;At last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice's liveliness never flagged. Her smoothing over of things was an
+ almost continuous performance, and had to be. Yet, while she chattered
+ through the hot and heavy courses, the questions she asked herself were as
+ continuous as the performance, and as poignant as what her eyes seemed to
+ be asking Russell. Why had she not prevailed over her mother's fear of
+ being &ldquo;skimpy?&rdquo; Had she been, indeed, as her mother said she looked, &ldquo;in a
+ trance?&rdquo; But above all: What was the matter with HIM? What had happened?
+ For she told herself with painful humour that something even worse than
+ this dinner must be &ldquo;the matter with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The small room, suffocated with the odour of boiled sprouts, grew hotter
+ and hotter as more and more food appeared, slowly borne in, between
+ deathly long waits, by the resentful, loud-breathing Gertrude. And while
+ Alice still sought Russell's glance, and read the look upon his face a
+ dozen different ways, fearing all of them; and while the straggling little
+ flowers died upon the stained cloth, she felt her heart grow as heavy as
+ the food, and wondered that it did not die like the roses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the arrival of coffee, the host bestirred himself to make known a
+ hospitable regret, &ldquo;By George!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I meant to buy some cigars.&rdquo; He
+ addressed himself apologetically to the guest. &ldquo;I don't know what I was
+ thinking about, to forget to bring some home with me. I don't use 'em
+ myself&mdash;unless somebody hands me one, you might say. I've always been
+ a pipe-smoker, pure and simple, but I ought to remembered for kind of an
+ occasion like this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; Russell said. &ldquo;I'm not smoking at all lately; but when I do,
+ I'm like you, and smoke a pipe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice started, remembering what she had told him when he overtook her on
+ her way from the tobacconist's; but, after a moment, looking at him, she
+ decided that he must have forgotten it. If he had remembered, she thought,
+ he could not have helped glancing at her. On the contrary, he seemed more
+ at ease, just then, than he had since they sat down, for he was favouring
+ her father with a thoughtful attention as Adams responded to the
+ introduction of a man's topic into the conversation at last. &ldquo;Well, Mr.
+ Russell, I guess you're right, at that. I don't say but what cigars may be
+ all right for a man that can afford 'em, if he likes 'em better than a
+ pipe, but you take a good old pipe now&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He continued, and was getting well into the eulogium customarily provoked
+ by this theme, when there came an interruption: the door-bell rang, and he
+ paused inquiringly, rather surprised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams spoke to Gertrude in an undertone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just say, 'Not at home.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it's callers, just say we're not at home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gertrude spoke out freely: &ldquo;You mean you astin' me to 'tend you' front do'
+ fer you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She seemed both incredulous and affronted, but Mrs. Adams persisted,
+ though somewhat apprehensively. &ldquo;Yes. Hurry&mdash;uh&mdash;please. Just
+ say we're not at home if you please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Gertrude obviously hesitated between compliance and revolt, and
+ again the meeker course fortunately prevailed with her. She gave Mrs.
+ Adams a stare, grimly derisive, then departed. When she came back she
+ said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He say he wait.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I told you to tell anybody we were not at home,&rdquo; Mrs Adams returned.
+ &ldquo;Who is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say he name Mr. Law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We don't know any Mr. Law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes'm; he know you. Say he anxious to speak Mr. Adams. Say he wait.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell him Mr. Adams is engaged.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold on a minute,&rdquo; Adams intervened. &ldquo;Law? No. I don't know any Mr. Law.
+ You sure you got the name right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say he name Law,&rdquo; Gertrude replied, looking at the ceiling to express her
+ fatigue. &ldquo;Law. 'S all he tell me; 's all I know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams frowned. &ldquo;Law,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Wasn't it maybe 'Lohr?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Law,&rdquo; Gertrude repeated. &ldquo;'S all he tell me; 's all I know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's he look like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He ain't much,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;'Bout you' age; got brustly white moustache,
+ nice eye-glasses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's Charley Lohr!&rdquo; Adams exclaimed. &ldquo;I'll go see what he wants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Virgil,&rdquo; his wife remonstrated, &ldquo;do finish your coffee; he might
+ stay all evening. Maybe he's come to call.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams laughed. &ldquo;He isn't much of a caller, I expect. Don't worry: I'll
+ take him up to my room.&rdquo; And turning toward Russell, &ldquo;Ah&mdash;if you'll
+ just excuse me,&rdquo; he said; and went out to his visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had gone, Mrs. Adams finished her coffee, and, having glanced
+ intelligently from her guest to her daughter, she rose. &ldquo;I think perhaps I
+ ought to go and shake hands with Mr. Lohr, myself,&rdquo; she said, adding in
+ explanation to Russell, as she reached the door, &ldquo;He's an old friend of my
+ husband's and it's a very long time since he's been here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice nodded and smiled to her brightly, but upon the closing of the door,
+ the smile vanished; all her liveliness disappeared; and with this change
+ of expression her complexion itself appeared to change, so that her rouge
+ became obvious, for she was pale beneath it. However, Russell did not see
+ the alteration, for he did not look at her; and it was but a momentary
+ lapse the vacation of a tired girl, who for ten seconds lets herself look
+ as she feels. Then she shot her vivacity back into place as by some
+ powerful spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Penny for your thoughts!&rdquo; she cried, and tossed one of the wilted roses
+ at him, across the table. &ldquo;I'll bid more than a penny; I'll bid tuppence&mdash;no,
+ a poor little dead rose a rose for your thoughts, Mr. Arthur Russell! What
+ are they?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook his head. &ldquo;I'm afraid I haven't any.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, of course not,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Who could have thoughts in weather like
+ this? Will you EVER forgive us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Making you eat such a heavy dinner&mdash;I mean LOOK at such a heavy
+ dinner, because you certainly didn't do more than look at it&mdash;on such
+ a night! But the crime draws to a close, and you can begin to cheer up!&rdquo;
+ She laughed gaily, and, rising, moved to the door. &ldquo;Let's go in the other
+ room; your fearful duty is almost done, and you can run home as soon as
+ you want to. That's what you're dying to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; he said in a voice so feeble that she laughed aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good gracious!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I hadn't realized it was THAT bad!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this, though he contrived to laugh, he seemed to have no verbal retort
+ whatever; but followed her into the &ldquo;living-room,&rdquo; where she stopped and
+ turned, facing him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has it really been so frightful?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, of course not. Not at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course yes, though, you mean!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all. It's been most kind of your mother and father and you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you've never once looked at me for more than a
+ second at a time the whole evening? And it seemed to me I looked rather
+ nice to-night, too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You always do,&rdquo; he murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see how you know,&rdquo; she returned; and then stepping closer to him,
+ spoke with gentle solicitude: &ldquo;Tell me: you're really feeling wretchedly,
+ aren't you? I know you've got a fearful headache, or something. Tell me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are ill&mdash;I'm sure of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On your word?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm really quite all right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if you are&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; she began; and then, looking at him with a
+ desperate sweetness, as if this were her last resource to rouse him,
+ &ldquo;What's the matter, little boy?&rdquo; she said with lisping tenderness. &ldquo;Tell
+ auntie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a mistake, for he seemed to flinch, and to lean backward, however,
+ slightly. She turned away instantly, with a flippant lift and drop of both
+ hands. &ldquo;Oh, my dear!&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;I won't eat you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as the discomfited young man watched her, seeming able to lift his
+ eyes, now that her back was turned, she went to the front door and pushed
+ open the screen. &ldquo;Let's go out on the porch,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Where we belong!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, when he had followed her out, and they were seated, &ldquo;Isn't this
+ better?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;Don't you feel more like yourself out here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He began a murmur: &ldquo;Not at&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she cut him off sharply: &ldquo;Please don't say 'Not at all' again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sorry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do seem sorry about something,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What is it? Isn't it time
+ you were telling me what's the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing. Indeed nothing's the matter. Of course one IS rather affected by
+ such weather as this. It may make one a little quieter than usual, of
+ course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sighed, and let the tired muscles of her face rest. Under the hard
+ lights, indoors, they had served her until they ached, and it was a luxury
+ to feel that in the darkness no grimacings need call upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course, if you won't tell me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can only assure you there's nothing to tell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know what an ugly little house it is,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Maybe it was the
+ furniture&mdash;or mama's vases that upset you. Or was it mama herself&mdash;or
+ papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing 'upset' me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that she uttered a monosyllable of doubting laughter. &ldquo;I wonder why you
+ say that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because it's so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. It's because you're too kind, or too conscientious, or too
+ embarrassed&mdash;anyhow too something&mdash;to tell me.&rdquo; She leaned
+ forward, elbows on knees and chin in hands, in the reflective attitude she
+ knew how to make graceful. &ldquo;I have a feeling that you're not going to tell
+ me,&rdquo; she said, slowly. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;even that you're never going to tell me.
+ I wonder&mdash;I wonder&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes? What do you wonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was just thinking&mdash;I wonder if they haven't done it, after all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder,&rdquo; she went on, still slowly, and in a voice of reflection, &ldquo;I
+ wonder who HAS been talking about me to you, after all? Isn't that it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he began, but checked himself and substituted
+ another form of denial. &ldquo;Nothing is 'it.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How curious!&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because all evening you've been so utterly different.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But in this weather&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. That wouldn't make you afraid to look at me all evening!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I did look at you. Often.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. Not really a LOOK.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I'm looking at you now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes&mdash;in the dark!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;No&mdash;the weather might make you
+ even quieter than usual, but it wouldn't strike you so nearly dumb. No&mdash;and
+ it wouldn't make you seem to be under such a strain&mdash;as if you
+ thought only of escape!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I haven't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shouldn't,&rdquo; she interrupted, gently. &ldquo;There's nothing you have to
+ escape from, you know. You aren't committed to&mdash;to this friendship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sorry you think&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he began, but did not complete the
+ fragment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took it up. &ldquo;You're sorry I think you're so different, you mean to
+ say, don't you? Never mind: that's what you did mean to say, but you
+ couldn't finish it because you're not good at deceiving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; he protested, feebly. &ldquo;I'm not deceiving. I'm&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; she said again. &ldquo;You're sorry I think you're so different&mdash;and
+ all in one day&mdash;since last night. Yes, your voice SOUNDS sorry, too.
+ It sounds sorrier than it would just because of my thinking something you
+ could change my mind about in a minute so it means you're sorry you ARE
+ different.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But disregarding the faint denial, &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Do you
+ remember one night when you told me that nothing anybody else could do
+ would ever keep you from coming here? That if you&mdash;if you left me it
+ would be because I drove you away myself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, huskily. &ldquo;It was true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed I am,&rdquo; he answered in a low voice, but with conviction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She paused. &ldquo;Well&mdash;but I haven't driven you
+ away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet you've gone,&rdquo; she said, quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do I seem so stupid as all that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know what I mean.&rdquo; She leaned back in her chair again, and her hands,
+ inactive for once, lay motionless in her lap. When she spoke it was in a
+ rueful whisper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder if I HAVE driven you away?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've done nothing&mdash;nothing at all,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; she said once more, but she stopped. In her mind
+ she was going back over their time together since the first meeting&mdash;fragments
+ of talk, moments of silence, little things of no importance, little things
+ that might be important; moonshine, sunshine, starlight; and her thoughts
+ zigzagged among the jumbling memories; but, as if she made for herself a
+ picture of all these fragments, throwing them upon the canvas haphazard,
+ she saw them all just touched with the one tainting quality that gave them
+ coherence, the faint, false haze she had put over this friendship by her
+ own pretendings. And, if this terrible dinner, or anything, or everything,
+ had shown that saffron tint in its true colour to the man at her side,
+ last night almost a lover, then she had indeed of herself driven him away,
+ and might well feel that she was lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know?&rdquo; she said, suddenly, in a clear, loud voice. &ldquo;I have the
+ strangest feeling. I feel as if I were going to be with you only about
+ five minutes more in all the rest of my life!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Of course I'm coming to see you&mdash;often. I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she interrupted. &ldquo;I've never had a feeling like this before. It's&mdash;it's
+ just SO; that's all! You're GOING&mdash;why, you're never coming here
+ again!&rdquo; She stood up, abruptly, beginning to tremble all over. &ldquo;Why, it's
+ FINISHED, isn't it?&rdquo; she said, and her trembling was manifest now in her
+ voice. &ldquo;Why, it's all OVER, isn't it? Why, yes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had risen as she did. &ldquo;I'm afraid you're awfully tired and nervous,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;I really ought to be going.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, of COURSE you ought,&rdquo; she cried, despairingly. &ldquo;There's nothing else
+ for you to do. When anything's spoiled, people CAN'T do anything but run
+ away from it. So good-bye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At least,&rdquo; he returned, huskily, &ldquo;we'll only&mdash;only say good-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as moving to go, he stumbled upon the veranda steps, &ldquo;Your HAT!&rdquo; she
+ cried. &ldquo;I'd like to keep it for a souvenir, but I'm afraid you need it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She ran into the hall and brought his straw hat from the chair where he
+ had left it. &ldquo;You poor thing!&rdquo; she said, with quavering laughter. &ldquo;Don't
+ you know you can't go without your hat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as they faced each other for the short moment which both of them
+ knew would be the last of all their veranda moments, Alice's broken
+ laughter grew louder. &ldquo;What a thing to say!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;What a romantic
+ parting&mdash;talking about HATS!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her laughter continued as he turned away, but other sounds came from
+ within the house, clearly audible with the opening of a door upstairs&mdash;a
+ long and wailing cry of lamentation in the voice of Mrs. Adams. Russell
+ paused at the steps, uncertain, but Alice waved to him to go on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don't bother,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We have lots of that in this funny little
+ old house! Good-bye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as he went down the steps, she ran back into the house and closed the
+ door heavily behind her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Her mother's wailing could still be heard from overhead, though more
+ faintly; and old Charley Lohr was coming down the stairs alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at Alice compassionately. &ldquo;I was just comin' to suggest maybe
+ you'd excuse yourself from your company,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Your mother was bound
+ not to disturb you, and tried her best to keep you from hearin' how she's
+ takin' on, but I thought probably you better see to her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I'll come. What's the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;<i>I</i> only stepped over to offer my sympathy and
+ services, as it were. <i>I</i> thought of course you folks knew all about
+ it. Fact is, it was in the evening paper&mdash;just a little bit of an
+ item on the back page, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He coughed. &ldquo;Well, it ain't anything so terrible,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Fact is, your
+ brother Walter's got in a little trouble&mdash;well, I suppose you might
+ call it quite a good deal of trouble. Fact is, he's quite considerable
+ short in his accounts down at Lamb and Company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice ran up the stairs and into her father's room, where Mrs. Adams threw
+ herself into her daughter's arms. &ldquo;Is he gone?&rdquo; she sobbed. &ldquo;He didn't
+ hear me, did he? I tried so hard&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice patted the heaving shoulders her arms enclosed. &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; she said.
+ &ldquo;He didn't hear you&mdash;it wouldn't have mattered&mdash;he doesn't
+ matter anyway.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, POOR Walter!&rdquo; The mother cried. &ldquo;Oh, the POOR boy! Poor, poor Walter!
+ Poor, poor, poor, POOR&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, dear, hush!&rdquo; Alice tried to soothe her, but the lament could not be
+ abated, and from the other side of the room a repetition in a different
+ spirit was as continuous. Adams paced furiously there, pounding his fist
+ into his left palm as he strode. &ldquo;The dang boy!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Dang little
+ fool! Dang idiot! Dang fool! Whyn't he TELL me, the dang little fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He DID!&rdquo; Mrs. Adams sobbed. &ldquo;He DID tell you, and you wouldn't GIVE it to
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He DID, did he?&rdquo; Adams shouted at her. &ldquo;What he begged me for was money
+ to run away with! He never dreamed of putting back what he took. What the
+ dangnation you talking about&mdash;accusing me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He NEEDED it,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He needed it to run away with! How could he
+ expect to LIVE, after he got away, if he didn't have a little money? Oh,
+ poor, poor, POOR Walter! Poor, poor, poor&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went back to this repetition; and Adams went back to his own, then
+ paused, seeing his old friend standing in the hallway outside the open
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah&mdash;I'll just be goin', I guess, Virgil,&rdquo; Lohr said. &ldquo;I don't see as
+ there's any use my tryin' to say any more. I'll do anything you want me
+ to, you understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait a minute,&rdquo; Adams said, and, groaning, came and went down the stairs
+ with him. &ldquo;You say you didn't see the old man at all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don't know a thing about what he's going to do,&rdquo; Lohr said, as they
+ reached the lower floor. &ldquo;Not a thing. But look here, Virgil, I don't see
+ as this calls for you and your wife to take on so hard about&mdash;anyhow
+ not as hard as the way you've started.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Adams gulped. &ldquo;It always seems that way to the other party that's
+ only looking on!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well, I know that, of course,&rdquo; old Charley returned, soothingly. &ldquo;But
+ look here, Virgil: they may not catch the boy; they didn't even seem to be
+ sure what train he made, and if they do get him, why, the ole man might
+ decide not to prosecute if&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;HIM?&rdquo; Adams cried, interrupting. &ldquo;Him not prosecute? Why, that's what
+ he's been waiting for, all along! He thinks my boy and me both cheated
+ him! Why, he was just letting Walter walk into a trap! Didn't you say
+ they'd been suspecting him for some time back? Didn't you say they'd been
+ watching him and were just about fixing to arrest him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know,&rdquo; said Lohr; &ldquo;but you can't tell, especially if you raise the
+ money and pay it back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every cent!&rdquo; Adams vociferated. &ldquo;Every last penny! I can raise it&mdash;I
+ GOT to raise it! I'm going to put a loan on my factory to-morrow. Oh, I'll
+ get it for him, you tell him! Every last penny!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, ole feller, you just try and get quieted down some now.&rdquo; Charley
+ held out his hand in parting. &ldquo;You and your wife just quiet down some. You
+ AIN'T the healthiest man in the world, you know, and you already been
+ under quite some strain before this happened. You want to take care of
+ yourself for the sake of your wife and that sweet little girl upstairs,
+ you know. Now, good-night,&rdquo; he finished, stepping out upon the veranda.
+ &ldquo;You send for me if there's anything I can do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do?&rdquo; Adams echoed. &ldquo;There ain't anything ANYBODY can do!&rdquo; And then, as
+ his old friend went down the path to the sidewalk, he called after him,
+ &ldquo;You tell him I'll pay him every last cent! Every last, dang, dirty
+ PENNY!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He slammed the door and went rapidly up the stairs, talking loudly to
+ himself. &ldquo;Every dang, last, dirty penny! Thinks EVERYBODY in this family
+ wants to steal from him, does he? Thinks we're ALL yellow, does he? I'll
+ show him!&rdquo; And he came into his own room vociferating, &ldquo;Every last, dang,
+ dirty penny!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams had collapsed, and Alice had put her upon his bed, where she
+ lay tossing convulsively and sobbing, &ldquo;Oh, POOR Walter!&rdquo; over and over,
+ but after a time she varied the sorry tune. &ldquo;Oh, poor Alice!&rdquo; she moaned,
+ clinging to her daughter's hand. &ldquo;Oh, poor, POOR Alice to have THIS come
+ on the night of your dinner&mdash;just when everything seemed to be going
+ so well&mdash;at last&mdash;oh, poor, poor, POOR&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; Alice said, sharply. &ldquo;Don't say 'poor Alice!' I'm all right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You MUST be!&rdquo; her mother cried, clutching her. &ldquo;You've just GOT to be!
+ ONE of us has got to be all right&mdash;surely God wouldn't mind just ONE
+ of us being all right&mdash;that wouldn't hurt Him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, hush, mother! Hush!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mrs. Adams only clutched her the more tightly. &ldquo;He seemed SUCH a nice
+ young man, dearie! He may not see this in the paper&mdash;Mr. Lohr said it
+ was just a little bit of an item&mdash;he MAY not see it, dearie&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then her anguish went back to Walter again; and to his needs as a fugitive&mdash;she
+ had meant to repair his underwear, but had postponed doing so, and her
+ neglect now appeared to be a detail as lamentable as the calamity itself.
+ She could neither be stilled upon it, nor herself exhaust its urgings to
+ self-reproach, though she finally took up another theme temporarily. Upon
+ an unusually violent outbreak of her husband's, in denunciation of the
+ runaway, she cried out faintly that he was cruel; and further wearied her
+ broken voice with details of Walter's beauty as a baby, and of his bedtime
+ pieties throughout his infancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the hot night wore on. Three had struck before Mrs. Adams was got to
+ bed; and Alice, returning to her own room, could hear her father's bare
+ feet thudding back and forth after that. &ldquo;Poor papa!&rdquo; she whispered in
+ helpless imitation of her mother. &ldquo;Poor papa! Poor mama! Poor Walter! Poor
+ all of us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She fell asleep, after a time, while from across the hall the bare feet
+ still thudded over their changeless route; and she woke at seven, hearing
+ Adams pass her door, shod. In her wrapper she ran out into the hallway and
+ found him descending the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Papa!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush,&rdquo; he said, and looked up at her with reddened eyes. &ldquo;Don't wake your
+ mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I won't,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;How about you? You haven't slept any at all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I did. I got some sleep. I'm going over to the works now. I got to
+ throw some figures together to show the bank. Don't worry: I'll get things
+ fixed up. You go back to bed. Good-bye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; she bade him sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've got to have some breakfast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't want 'ny.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You wait!&rdquo; she said, imperiously, and disappeared to return almost at
+ once. &ldquo;I can cook in my bedroom slippers,&rdquo; she explained, &ldquo;but I don't
+ believe I could in my bare feet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Descending softly, she made him wait in the dining-room until she brought
+ him toast and eggs and coffee. &ldquo;Eat!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;And I'm going to
+ telephone for a taxicab to take you, if you think you've really got to
+ go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I'm going to walk&mdash;I WANT to walk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shook her head anxiously. &ldquo;You don't look able. You've walked all
+ night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I didn't,&rdquo; he returned. &ldquo;I tell you I got some sleep. I got all I
+ wanted anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, papa&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here!&rdquo; he interrupted, looking up at her suddenly and setting down his
+ cup of coffee. &ldquo;Look here! What about this Mr. Russell? I forgot all about
+ him. What about him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her lip trembled a little, but she controlled it before she spoke. &ldquo;Well,
+ what about him, papa?&rdquo; she asked, calmly enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we could hardly&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Adams paused, frowning heavily. &ldquo;We
+ could hardly expect he wouldn't hear something about all this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; of course he'll hear it, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what?&rdquo; she asked, gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't think he'd be the&mdash;the cheap kind it'd make a difference
+ with, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no; he isn't cheap. It won't make any difference with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams suffered a profound sigh to escape him. &ldquo;Well&mdash;I'm glad of
+ that, anyway.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The difference,&rdquo; she explained&mdash;&ldquo;the difference was made without his
+ hearing anything about Walter. He doesn't know about THAT yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what does he know about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;about me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you mean by that, Alice?&rdquo; he asked, helplessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It's nothing beside the real trouble we're in&mdash;I'll
+ tell you some time. You eat your eggs and toast; you can't keep going on
+ just coffee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't eat any eggs and toast,&rdquo; he objected, rising. &ldquo;I can't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then wait till I can bring you something else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, irritably. &ldquo;I won't do it! I don't want any dang food! And
+ look here&rdquo;&mdash;he spoke sharply to stop her, as she went toward the
+ telephone&mdash;&ldquo;I don't want any dang taxi, either! You look after your
+ mother when she wakes up. I got to be at WORK!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And though she followed him to the front door, entreating, he could not be
+ stayed or hindered. He went through the quiet morning streets at a
+ rickety, rapid gait, swinging his old straw hat in his hands, and
+ whispering angrily to himself as he went. His grizzled hair, not trimmed
+ for a month, blew back from his damp forehead in the warm breeze; his
+ reddened eyes stared hard at nothing from under blinking lids; and one
+ side of his face twitched startlingly from time to time;&mdash;children
+ might have run from him, or mocked him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had come into that fallen quarter his industry had partly revived
+ and wholly made odorous, a negro woman, leaning upon her whitewashed gate,
+ gazed after him and chuckled for the benefit of a gossiping friend in the
+ next tiny yard. &ldquo;Oh, good Satan! Wha'ssa matter that ole glue man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who? Him?&rdquo; the neighbour inquired. &ldquo;What he do now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talkin' to his ole se'f!&rdquo; the first explained, joyously. &ldquo;Look like gone
+ distracted&mdash;ole glue man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams's legs had grown more uncertain with his hard walk, and he stumbled
+ heavily as he crossed the baked mud of his broad lot, but cared little for
+ that, was almost unaware of it, in fact. Thus his eyes saw as little as
+ his body felt, and so he failed to observe something that would have given
+ him additional light upon an old phrase that already meant quite enough
+ for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are in the wide world people who have never learned its meaning; but
+ most are either young or beautifully unobservant who remain wholly unaware
+ of the inner poignancies the words convey: &ldquo;a rain of misfortunes.&rdquo; It is
+ a boiling rain, seemingly whimsical in its choice of spots whereon to
+ fall; and, so far as mortal eye can tell, neither the just nor the unjust
+ may hope to avoid it, or need worry themselves by expecting it. It had
+ selected the Adams family for its scaldings; no question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The glue-works foreman, standing in the doorway of the brick shed,
+ observed his employer's eccentric approach, and doubtfully stroked a
+ whiskered chin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, they ain't no putticular use gettin' so upset over it,&rdquo; he said, as
+ Adams came up. &ldquo;When a thing happens, why, it happens, and that's all
+ there is to it. When a thing's so, why, it's so. All you can do about it
+ is think if there's anything you CAN do; and that's what you better be
+ doin' with this case.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams halted, and seemed to gape at him. &ldquo;What&mdash;case?&rdquo; he said, with
+ difficulty. &ldquo;Was it in the morning papers, too?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it ain't in no morning papers. My land! It don't need to be in no
+ papers; look at the SIZE of it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The size of what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, great God!&rdquo; the foreman exclaimed. &ldquo;He ain't even seen it. Look!
+ Look yonder!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams stared vaguely at the man's outstretched hand and pointing
+ forefinger, then turned and saw a great sign upon the facade of the big
+ factory building across the street. The letters were large enough to be
+ read two blocks away.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;AFTER THE FIFTEENTH OF NEXT MONTH
+ THIS BUILDING WILL BE OCCUPIED BY
+ THE J. A. LAMB LIQUID GLUE CO. INC.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ A gray touring-car had just come to rest before the principal entrance of
+ the building, and J. A. Lamb himself descended from it. He glanced over
+ toward the humble rival of his projected great industry, saw his old
+ clerk, and immediately walked across the street and the lot to speak to
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Adams,&rdquo; he said, in his husky, cheerful voice, &ldquo;how's your
+ glue-works?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams uttered an inarticulate sound, and lifted the hand that held his hat
+ as if to make a protective gesture, but failed to carry it out; and his
+ arm sank limp at his side. The foreman, however, seemed to feel that
+ something ought to be said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our glue-works, hell!&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;I guess we won't HAVE no glue-works
+ over here not very long, if we got to compete with the sized thing you got
+ over there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lamb chuckled. &ldquo;I kind of had some such notion,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You see,
+ Virgil, I couldn't exactly let you walk off with it like swallering a pat
+ o' butter, now, could I? It didn't look exactly reasonable to expect me to
+ let go like that, now, did it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams found a half-choked voice somewhere in his throat. &ldquo;Do you&mdash;would
+ you step into my office a minute, Mr. Lamb?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, certainly I'm willing to have a little talk with you,&rdquo; the old
+ gentleman said, as he followed his former employee indoors, and he added,
+ &ldquo;I feel a lot more like it than I did before I got THAT up, over yonder,
+ Virgil!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams threw open the door of the rough room he called his office, having
+ as justification for this title little more than the fact that he had a
+ telephone there and a deal table that served as a desk. &ldquo;Just step into
+ the office, please,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lamb glanced at the desk, at the kitchen chair before it, at the
+ telephone, and at the partition walls built of old boards, some covered
+ with ancient paint and some merely weatherbeaten, the salvage of a
+ house-wrecker; and he smiled broadly. &ldquo;So these are your offices, are
+ they?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;You expect to do quite a business here, I guess, don't
+ you, Virgil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams turned upon him a stricken and tortured face. &ldquo;Have you seen Charley
+ Lohr since last night, Mr. Lamb?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I haven't seen Charley.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I told him to tell you,&rdquo; Adams began;&mdash;&ldquo;I told him I'd pay you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pay me what you expect to make out o' glue, you mean, Virgil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Adams said, swallowing. &ldquo;I mean what my boy owes you. That's what I
+ told Charley to tell you. I told him to tell you I'd pay you every last&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; the old gentleman interrupted, testily. &ldquo;I don't know
+ anything about that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm expecting to pay you,&rdquo; Adams went on, swallowing again, painfully. &ldquo;I
+ was expecting to do it out of a loan I thought I could get on my
+ glue-works.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman lifted his frosted eyebrows. &ldquo;Oh, out o' the GLUE-works?
+ You expected to raise money on the glue-works, did you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that, Adams's agitation increased prodigiously. &ldquo;How'd you THINK I
+ expected to pay you?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Did you think I expected to get money on
+ my own old bones?&rdquo; He slapped himself harshly upon the chest and legs. &ldquo;Do
+ you think a bank'll lend money on a man's ribs and his broken-down old
+ knee-bones? They won't do it! You got to have some BUSINESS prospects to
+ show 'em, if you haven't got any property nor securities; and what
+ business prospects have I got now, with that sign of yours up over yonder?
+ Why, you don't need to make an OUNCE o' glue; your sign's fixed ME without
+ your doing another lick! THAT'S all you had to do; just put your sign up!
+ You needn't to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just let me tell you something, Virgil Adams,&rdquo; the old man interrupted,
+ harshly. &ldquo;I got just one right important thing to tell you before we talk
+ any further business; and that's this: there's some few men in this town
+ made their money in off-colour ways, but there aren't many; and those
+ there are have had to be a darn sight slicker than you know how to be, or
+ ever WILL know how to be! Yes, sir, and they none of them had the little
+ gumption to try to make it out of a man that had the spirit not to let
+ 'em, and the STRENGTH not to let 'em! I know what you thought. 'Here,' you
+ said to yourself, 'here's this ole fool J. A. Lamb; he's kind of worn out
+ and in his second childhood like; I can put it over on him, without his
+ ever&mdash;&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not!&rdquo; Adams shouted. &ldquo;A great deal YOU know about my feelings and
+ all what I said to myself! There's one thing I want to tell YOU, and
+ that's what I'm saying to myself NOW, and what my feelings are this
+ MINUTE!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He struck the table a great blow with his thin fist, and shook the damaged
+ knuckles in the air. &ldquo;I just want to tell you, whatever I did feel, I
+ don't feel MEAN any more; not to-day, I don't. There's a meaner man in
+ this world than <i>I</i> am, Mr. Lamb!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, so you feel better about yourself to-day, do you, Virgil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You bet I do! You worked till you got me where you want me; and I
+ wouldn't do that to another man, no matter what he did to me! I wouldn't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you talkin' about! How've I 'got you where I want you?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ain't it plain enough?&rdquo; Adams cried. &ldquo;You even got me where I can't raise
+ the money to pay back what my boy owes you! Do you suppose anybody's fool
+ enough to let me have a cent on this business after one look at what you
+ got over there across the road?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, you don't,&rdquo; Adams echoed, hoarsely. &ldquo;What's more, you knew my house
+ was mortgaged, and my&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not,&rdquo; Lamb interrupted, angrily. &ldquo;What do <i>I</i> care about your
+ house?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the use your talking like that?&rdquo; Adams cried. &ldquo;You got me where I
+ can't even raise the money to pay what my boy owes the company, so't I
+ can't show any reason to stop the prosecution and keep him out the
+ penitentiary. That's where you worked till you got ME!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; Lamb shouted. &ldquo;You accuse me of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Accuse you?' What am I telling you? Do you think I got no EYES?&rdquo; And
+ Adams hammered the table again. &ldquo;Why, you knew the boy was weak&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen: you kept him there after you got mad at my leaving the way I did.
+ You kept him there after you suspected him; and you had him watched; you
+ let him go on; just waited to catch him and ruin him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're crazy!&rdquo; the old man bellowed. &ldquo;I didn't know there was anything
+ against the boy till last night. You're CRAZY, I say!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adams looked it. With his hair disordered over his haggard forehead and
+ bloodshot eyes; with his bruised hands pounding the table and flying in a
+ hundred wild and absurd gestures, while his feet shuffled constantly to
+ preserve his balance upon staggering legs, he was the picture of a man
+ with a mind gone to rags.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe I AM crazy!&rdquo; he cried, his voice breaking and quavering. &ldquo;Maybe I
+ am, but I wouldn't stand there and taunt a man with it if I'd done to him
+ what you've done to me! Just look at me: I worked all my life for you, and
+ what I did when I quit never harmed you&mdash;it didn't make two cents'
+ worth o' difference in your life and it looked like it'd mean all the
+ difference in the world to my family&mdash;and now look what you've DONE
+ to me for it! I tell you, Mr. Lamb, there never was a man looked up to
+ another man the way I looked up to you the whole o' my life, but I don't
+ look up to you any more! You think you got a fine day of it now, riding up
+ in your automobile to look at that sign&mdash;and then over here at my
+ poor little works that you've ruined. But listen to me just this one last
+ time!&rdquo; The cracking voice broke into falsetto, and the gesticulating hands
+ fluttered uncontrollably. &ldquo;Just you listen!&rdquo; he panted. &ldquo;You think I did
+ you a bad turn, and now you got me ruined for it, and you got my works
+ ruined, and my family ruined; and if anybody'd 'a' told me this time last
+ year I'd ever say such a thing to you I'd called him a dang liar, but I DO
+ say it: I say you've acted toward me like&mdash;like a&mdash;a doggone
+ mean&mdash;man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His voice, exhausted, like his body, was just able to do him this final
+ service; then he sank, crumpled, into the chair by the table, his chin
+ down hard upon his chest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you, you're crazy!&rdquo; Lamb said again. &ldquo;I never in the world&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ But he checked himself, staring in sudden perplexity at his accuser. &ldquo;Look
+ here!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What's the matter of you? Have you got another of those&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ He put his hand upon Adams's shoulder, which jerked feebly under the
+ touch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man went to the door and called to the foreman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Run and tell my chauffeur to bring my car over here.
+ Tell him to drive right up over the sidewalk and across the lot. Tell him
+ to hurry!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, it happened, the great J. A. Lamb a second time brought his former
+ clerk home, stricken and almost inanimate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ About five o'clock that afternoon, the old gentleman came back to Adams's
+ house; and when Alice opened the door, he nodded, walked into the
+ &ldquo;living-room&rdquo; without speaking; then stood frowning as if he hesitated to
+ decide some perplexing question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, how is he now?&rdquo; he asked, finally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The doctor was here again a little while ago; he thinks papa's coming
+ through it. He's pretty sure he will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something like the way it was last spring?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a bit of sense to it!&rdquo; Lamb said, gruffly. &ldquo;When he was getting well
+ the other time the doctor told me it wasn't a regular stroke, so to speak&mdash;this
+ 'cerebral effusion' thing. Said there wasn't any particular reason for
+ your father to expect he'd ever have another attack, if he'd take a little
+ care of himself. Said he could consider himself well as anybody else long
+ as he did that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. But he didn't do it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lamb nodded, sighed aloud, and crossed the room to a chair. &ldquo;I guess not,&rdquo;
+ he said, as he sat down. &ldquo;Bustin' his health up over his glue-works, I
+ expect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess so; I guess so.&rdquo; Then he looked up at her with a glimmer of
+ anxiety in his eyes. &ldquo;Has he came to yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. He's talked a little. His mind's clear; he spoke to mama and me and
+ to Miss Perry.&rdquo; Alice laughed sadly. &ldquo;We were lucky enough to get her
+ back, but papa didn't seem to think it was lucky. When he recognized her
+ he said, 'Oh, my goodness, 'tisn't YOU, is it!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that's a good sign, if he's getting a little cross. Did he&mdash;did
+ he happen to say anything&mdash;for instance, about me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This question, awkwardly delivered, had the effect of removing the girl's
+ pallor; rosy tints came quickly upon her cheeks. &ldquo;He&mdash;yes, he did,&rdquo;
+ she said. &ldquo;Naturally, he's troubled about&mdash;about&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She
+ stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About your brother, maybe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, about making up the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, now,&rdquo; Lamb said, uncomfortably, as she stopped again. &ldquo;Listen,
+ young lady; let's don't talk about that just yet. I want to ask you: you
+ understand all about this glue business, I expect, don't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not sure. I only know&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me tell you,&rdquo; he interrupted, impatiently. &ldquo;I'll tell you all about
+ it in two words. The process belonged to me, and your father up and walked
+ off with it; there's no getting around THAT much, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't there?&rdquo; Alice stared at him. &ldquo;I think you're mistaken, Mr. Lamb.
+ Didn't papa improve it so that it virtually belonged to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a spark in the old blue eyes at this. &ldquo;What?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Is that
+ the way he got around it? Why, in all my life I never heard of such a&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ But he left the sentence unfinished; the testiness went out of his husky
+ voice and the anger out of his eyes. &ldquo;Well, I expect maybe that was the
+ way of it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Anyhow, it's right for you to stand up for your
+ father; and if you think he had a right to it&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he did!&rdquo; she cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I expect so,&rdquo; the old man returned, pacifically. &ldquo;I expect so, probably.
+ Anyhow, it's a question that's neither here nor there, right now. What I
+ was thinking of saying&mdash;well, did your father happen to let out that
+ he and I had words this morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we did.&rdquo; He sighed and shook his head. &ldquo;Your father&mdash;well, he
+ used some pretty hard expressions toward me, young lady. They weren't SO,
+ I'm glad to say, but he used 'em to me, and the worst of it was he
+ believed 'em. Well, I been thinking it over, and I thought I'd just have a
+ kind of little talk with you to set matters straight, so to speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Mr. Lamb.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For instance,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it's like this. Now, I hope you won't think I
+ mean any indelicacy, but you take your brother's case, since we got to
+ mention it, why, your father had the whole thing worked out in his mind
+ about as wrong as anybody ever got anything. If I'd acted the way your
+ father thought I did about that, why, somebody just ought to take me out
+ and shoot me! Do YOU know what that man thought?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not sure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He frowned at her, and asked, &ldquo;Well, what do you think about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I don't believe I think anything at all about
+ anything to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; he returned; &ldquo;I expect not; I expect not. You kind of look
+ to me as if you ought to be in bed yourself, young lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess you mean 'Oh, yes'; and I won't keep you long, but there's
+ something we got to get fixed up, and I'd rather talk to you than I would
+ to your mother, because you're a smart girl and always friendly; and I
+ want to be sure I'm understood. Now, listen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will,&rdquo; Alice promised, smiling faintly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never even hardly noticed your brother was still working for me,&rdquo; he
+ explained, earnestly. &ldquo;I never thought anything about it. My sons sort of
+ tried to tease me about the way your father&mdash;about his taking up this
+ glue business, so to speak&mdash;and one day Albert, Junior, asked me if I
+ felt all right about your brother's staying there after that, and I told
+ him&mdash;well, I just asked him to shut up. If the boy wanted to stay
+ there, I didn't consider it my business to send him away on account of any
+ feeling I had toward his father; not as long as he did his work right&mdash;and
+ the report showed he did. Well, as it happens, it looks now as if he
+ stayed because he HAD to; he couldn't quit because he'd 'a' been found out
+ if he did. Well, he'd been covering up his shortage for a considerable
+ time&mdash;and do you know what your father practically charged me with
+ about that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Mr. Lamb.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his resentment, the old gentleman's ruddy face became ruddier and his
+ husky voice huskier. &ldquo;Thinks I kept the boy there because I suspected him!
+ Thinks I did it to get even with HIM! Do I look to YOU like a man that'd
+ do such a thing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said, gently. &ldquo;I don't think you would.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Nor HE wouldn't think so if he was himself; he's
+ known me too long. But he must been sort of brooding over this whole
+ business&mdash;I mean before Walter's trouble he must been taking it to
+ heart pretty hard for some time back. He thought I didn't think much of
+ him any more&mdash;and I expect he maybe wondered some what I was going to
+ DO&mdash;and there's nothing worse'n that state of mind to make a man
+ suspicious of all kinds of meanness. Well, he practically stood up there
+ and accused me to my face of fixing things so't he couldn't ever raise the
+ money to settle for Walter and ask us not to prosecute. That's the state
+ of mind your father's brooding got him into, young lady&mdash;charging me
+ with a trick like that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm sorry,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I know you'd never&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man slapped his sturdy knee, angrily. &ldquo;Why, that dang fool of a
+ Virgil Adams!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;He wouldn't even give me a chance to talk;
+ and he got me so mad I couldn't hardly talk, anyway! He might 'a' known
+ from the first I wasn't going to let him walk in and beat me out of my own&mdash;that
+ is, he might 'a' known I wouldn't let him get ahead of me in a business
+ matter&mdash;not with my boys twitting me about it every few minutes! But
+ to talk to me the way he did this morning&mdash;well, he was out of his
+ head; that's all! Now, wait just a minute,&rdquo; he interposed, as she seemed
+ about to speak. &ldquo;In the first place, we aren't going to push this case
+ against your brother. I believe in the law, all right, and business men
+ got to protect themselves; but in a case like this, where restitution's
+ made by the family, why, I expect it's just as well sometimes to use a
+ little influence and let matters drop. Of course your brother'll have to
+ keep out o' this state; that's all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But&mdash;you said&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; she faltered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. What'd I say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You said, 'where restitution's made by the family.' That's what seemed to
+ trouble papa so terribly, because&mdash;because restitution couldn't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, yes, it could. That's what I'm here to talk to you about.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm going to TELL you, ain't I?&rdquo; he said, gruffly. &ldquo;Just hold your horses
+ a minute, please.&rdquo; He coughed, rose from his chair, walked up and down the
+ room, then halted before her. &ldquo;It's like this,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;After I brought
+ your father home, this morning, there was one of the things he told me,
+ when he was going for me, over yonder&mdash;it kind of stuck in my craw.
+ It was something about all this glue controversy not meaning anything to
+ me in particular, and meaning a whole heap to him and his family. Well, he
+ was wrong about that two ways. The first one was, it did mean a good deal
+ to me to have him go back on me after so many years. I don't need to say
+ any more about it, except just to tell you it meant quite a little more to
+ me than you'd think, maybe. The other way he was wrong is, that how much a
+ thing means to one man and how little it means to another ain't the right
+ way to look at a business matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose it isn't, Mr. Lamb.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It isn't. It's not the right way to look at anything. Yes,
+ and your father knows it as well as I do, when he's in his right mind; and
+ I expect that's one of the reasons he got so mad at me&mdash;but anyhow, I
+ couldn't help thinking about how much all this thing HAD maybe meant to
+ him;&mdash;as I say, it kind of stuck in my craw. I want you to tell him
+ something from me, and I want you to go and tell him right off, if he's
+ able and willing to listen. You tell him I got kind of a notion he was
+ pushed into this thing by circumstances, and tell him I've lived long
+ enough to know that circumstances can beat the best of us&mdash;you tell
+ him I said 'the BEST of us.' Tell him I haven't got a bit of feeling
+ against him&mdash;not any more&mdash;and tell him I came here to ask him
+ not to have any against me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Mr. Lamb.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell him I said&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; The old man paused abruptly and Alice was
+ surprised, in a dull and tired way, when she saw that his lips had begun
+ to twitch and his eyelids to blink; but he recovered himself almost at
+ once, and continued: &ldquo;I want him to remember, 'Forgive us our
+ transgressions, as we forgive those that transgress against us'; and if he
+ and I been transgressing against each other, why, tell him I think it's
+ time we QUIT such foolishness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He coughed again, smiled heartily upon her, and walked toward the door;
+ then turned back to her with an exclamation: &ldquo;Well, if I ain't an old
+ fool!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I forgot what we were just talking about! Your father wants to
+ settle for Walter's deficit. Tell him we'll be glad to accept it; but of
+ course we don't expect him to clean the matter up until he's able to talk
+ business again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice stared at him blankly enough for him to perceive that further
+ explanations were necessary. &ldquo;It's like this,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You see, if your
+ father decided to keep his works going over yonder, I don't say but he
+ might give us some little competition for a time, 'specially as he's got
+ the start on us and about ready for the market. Then I was figuring we
+ could use his plant&mdash;it's small, but it'd be to our benefit to have
+ the use of it&mdash;and he's got a lease on that big lot; it may come in
+ handy for us if we want to expand some. Well, I'd prefer to make a deal
+ with him as quietly as possible&mdash;-no good in every Tom, Dick and
+ Harry hearing about things like this&mdash;but I figured he could sell out
+ to me for a little something more'n enough to cover the mortgage he put on
+ this house, and Walter's deficit, too&mdash;THAT don't amount to much in
+ dollars and cents. The way I figure it, I could offer him about
+ ninety-three hundred dollars as a total&mdash;or say ninety-three hundred
+ and fifty&mdash;and if he feels like accepting, why, I'll send a
+ confidential man up here with the papers soon's your father's able to look
+ 'em over. You tell him, will you, and ask him if he sees his way to
+ accepting that figure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Alice said; and now her own lips twitched, while her eyes filled so
+ that she saw but a blurred image of the old man, who held out his hand in
+ parting. &ldquo;I'll tell him. Thank you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook her hand hastily. &ldquo;Well, let's just keep it kind of quiet,&rdquo; he
+ said, at the door. &ldquo;No good in every Tom, Dick and Harry knowing all what
+ goes on in town! You telephone me when your papa's ready to go over the
+ papers&mdash;and call me up at my house to-night, will you? Let me hear
+ how he's feeling?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will,&rdquo; she said, and through her grateful tears gave him a smile almost
+ radiant. &ldquo;He'll be better, Mr. Lamb. We all will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One morning, that autumn, Mrs. Adams came into Alice's room, and found her
+ completing a sober toilet for the street; moreover, the expression
+ revealed in her mirror was harmonious with the business-like severity of
+ her attire. &ldquo;What makes you look so cross, dearie?&rdquo; the mother asked.
+ &ldquo;Couldn't you find anything nicer to wear than that plain old dark dress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't believe I'm cross,&rdquo; the girl said, absently. &ldquo;I believe I'm just
+ thinking. Isn't it about time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Time for what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Time for thinking&mdash;for me, I mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Disregarding this, Mrs. Adams looked her over thoughtfully. &ldquo;I can't see
+ why you don't wear more colour,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;At your age it's becoming and
+ proper, too. Anyhow, when you're going on the street, I think you ought to
+ look just as gay and lively as you can manage. You want to show 'em you've
+ got some spunk!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you mean, mama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mean about Walter's running away and the mess your father made of his
+ business. It would help to show 'em you're holding up your head just the
+ same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Show whom!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All these other girls that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I!&rdquo; Alice laughed shortly, shaking her head. &ldquo;I've quit dressing at
+ them, and if they saw me they wouldn't think what you want 'em to. It's
+ funny; but we don't often make people think what we want 'em to, mama. You
+ do thus and so; and you tell yourself, 'Now, seeing me do thus and so,
+ people will naturally think this and that'; but they don't. They think
+ something else&mdash;usually just what you DON'T want 'em to. I suppose
+ about the only good in pretending is the fun we get out of fooling
+ ourselves that we fool somebody.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, but it wouldn't be pretending. You ought to let people see you're
+ still holding your head up because you ARE. You wouldn't want that Mildred
+ Palmer to think you're cast down about&mdash;well, you know you wouldn't
+ want HER not to think you're holding your head up, would you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She wouldn't know whether I am or not, mama.&rdquo; Alice bit her lip, then
+ smiled faintly as she said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anyhow, I'm not thinking about my head in that way&mdash;not this
+ morning, I'm not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams dropped the subject casually. &ldquo;Are you going down-town?&rdquo; she
+ inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just something I want to see about. I'll tell you when I come back.
+ Anything you want me to do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I guess not to-day. I thought you might look for a rug, but I'd
+ rather go with you to select it. We'll have to get a new rug for your
+ father's room, I expect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm glad you think so, mama. I don't suppose he's ever even noticed it,
+ but that old rug of his&mdash;well, really!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't mean for him,&rdquo; her mother explained, thoughtfully. &ldquo;No; he don't
+ mind it, and he'd likely make a fuss if we changed it on his account. No;
+ what I meant&mdash;we'll have to put your father in Walter's room. He
+ won't mind, I don't expect&mdash;not much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I suppose not,&rdquo; Alice agreed, rather sadly. &ldquo;I heard the bell awhile
+ ago. Was it somebody about that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; just before I came upstairs. Mrs. Lohr gave him a note to me, and he
+ was really a very pleasant-looking young man. A VERY pleasant-looking
+ young man,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams repeated with increased animation and a thoughtful
+ glance at her daughter. &ldquo;He's a Mr. Will Dickson; he has a first-rate
+ position with the gas works, Mrs. Lohr says, and he's fully able to afford
+ a nice room. So if you and I double up in here, then with that young
+ married couple in my room, and this Mr. Dickson in your father's, we'll
+ just about have things settled. I thought maybe I could make one more
+ place at table, too, so that with the other people from outside we'd be
+ serving eleven altogether. You see if I have to pay this cook twelve
+ dollars a week&mdash;it can't be helped, I guess&mdash;well, one more
+ would certainly help toward a profit. Of course it's a terribly worrying
+ thing to see how we WILL come out. Don't you suppose we could squeeze in
+ one more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose it COULD be managed; yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams brightened. &ldquo;I'm sure it'll be pleasant having that young
+ married couple in the house and especially this Mr. Will Dickson. He
+ seemed very much of a gentleman, and anxious to get settled in good
+ surroundings. I was very favourably impressed with him in every way; and
+ he explained to me about his name; it seems it isn't William, it's just
+ 'Will'; his parents had him christened that way. It's curious.&rdquo; She
+ paused, and then, with an effort to seem casual, which veiled nothing from
+ her daughter: &ldquo;It's QUITE curious,&rdquo; she said again. &ldquo;But it's rather
+ attractive and different, don't you think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor mama!&rdquo; Alice laughed compassionately. &ldquo;Poor mama!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is, though,&rdquo; Mrs. Adams maintained. &ldquo;He's very much of a gentleman,
+ unless I'm no judge of appearances; and it'll really be nice to have him
+ in the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; Alice said, as she opened her door to depart. &ldquo;I don't suppose
+ we'll mind having any of 'em as much as we thought we would. Good-bye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But her mother detained her, catching her by the arm. &ldquo;Alice, you do hate
+ it, don't you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; the girl said, quickly. &ldquo;There wasn't anything else to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Adams became emotional at once: her face cried tragedy, and her voice
+ misfortune. &ldquo;There MIGHT have been something else to do! Oh, Alice, you
+ gave your father bad advice when you upheld him in taking a miserable
+ little ninety-three hundred and fifty from that old wretch! If your
+ father'd just had the gumption to hold out, they'd have had to pay him
+ anything he asked. If he'd just had the gumption and a little manly
+ COURAGE&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; Alice whispered, for her mother's voice grew louder. &ldquo;Hush! He'll
+ hear you, mama.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Could he hear me too often?&rdquo; the embittered lady asked. &ldquo;If he'd listened
+ to me at the right time, would we have to be taking in boarders and
+ sinking DOWN in the scale at the end of our lives, instead of going UP?
+ You were both wrong; we didn't need to be so panicky&mdash;that was just
+ what that old man wanted: to scare us and buy us out for nothing! If your
+ father'd just listened to me then, or if for once in his life he'd just
+ been half a MAN&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice put her hand over her mother's mouth. &ldquo;You mustn't! He WILL hear
+ you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But from the other side of Adams's closed door his voice came querulously.
+ &ldquo;Oh, I HEAR her, all right!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, mama?&rdquo; Alice said, and, as Mrs. Adams turned away, weeping, the
+ daughter sighed; then went in to speak to her father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was in his old chair by the table, with a pillow behind his head, but
+ the crocheted scarf and Mrs. Adams's wrapper swathed him no more; he wore
+ a dressing-gown his wife had bought for him, and was smoking his pipe.
+ &ldquo;The old story, is it?&rdquo; he said, as Alice came in. &ldquo;The same, same old
+ story! Well, well! Has she gone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, papa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Got your hat on,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Where you going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm going down-town on an errand of my own. Is there anything you want,
+ papa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, there is.&rdquo; He smiled at her. &ldquo;I wish you'd sit down a while and talk
+ to me unless your errand&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said, taking a chair near him. &ldquo;I was just going down to see
+ about some arrangements I was making for myself. There's no hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What arrangements for yourself, dearie?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll tell you afterwards&mdash;after I find out something about 'em
+ myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; he said, indulgently. &ldquo;Keep your secrets; keep your secrets.&rdquo;
+ He paused, drew musingly upon his pipe, and shook his head. &ldquo;Funny&mdash;the
+ way your mother looks at things! For the matter o' that, everything's
+ pretty funny, I expect, if you stop to think about it. For instance, let
+ her say all she likes, but we were pushed right spang to the wall, if J.
+ A. Lamb hadn't taken it into his head to make that offer for the works;
+ and there's one of the things I been thinking about lately, Alice:
+ thinking about how funny they work out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did you think about it, papa!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I've seen it happen in other people's lives, time and time again;
+ and now it's happened in ours. You think you're going to be pushed right
+ up against the wall; you can't see any way out, or any hope at all; you
+ think you're GONE&mdash;and then something you never counted on turns up;
+ and, while maybe you never do get back to where you used to be, yet
+ somehow you kind of squirm out of being right SPANG against the wall. You
+ keep on going&mdash;maybe you can't go much, but you do go a little. See
+ what I mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. I understand, dear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I'm afraid you do,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Too bad! You oughtn't to understand it
+ at your age. It seems to me a good deal as if the Lord really meant for
+ the young people to have the good times, and for the old to have the
+ troubles; and when anybody as young as you has trouble there's a big
+ mistake somewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; she protested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he persisted whimsically in this view of divine error: &ldquo;Yes, it does
+ look a good deal that way. But of course we can't tell; we're never
+ certain about anything&mdash;not about anything at all. Sometimes I look
+ at it another way, though. Sometimes it looks to me as if a body's
+ troubles came on him mainly because he hadn't had sense enough to know how
+ not to have any&mdash;as if his troubles were kind of like a boy's getting
+ kept in after school by the teacher, to give him discipline, or something
+ or other. But, my, my! We don't learn easy!&rdquo; He chuckled mournfully. &ldquo;Not
+ to learn how to live till we're about ready to die, it certainly seems to
+ me dang tough!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I wouldn't brood on such a notion, papa,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Brood?' No!&rdquo; he returned. &ldquo;I just kind o' mull it over.&rdquo; He chuckled
+ again, sighed, and then, not looking at her, he said, &ldquo;That Mr. Russell&mdash;your
+ mother tells me he hasn't been here again&mdash;not since&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said, quietly, as Adams paused. &ldquo;He never came again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, but maybe&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;There isn't any 'maybe.' I told him good-bye that night,
+ papa. It was before he knew about Walter&mdash;I told you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; Adams said. &ldquo;Young people are entitled to their own privacy;
+ I don't want to pry.&rdquo; He emptied his pipe into a chipped saucer on the
+ table beside him, laid the pipe aside, and reverted to a former topic.
+ &ldquo;Speaking of dying&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, but we weren't!&rdquo; Alice protested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, about not knowing how to live till you're through living&mdash;and
+ THEN maybe not!&rdquo; he said, chuckling at his own determined pessimism. &ldquo;I
+ see I'm pretty old because I talk this way&mdash;I remember my grandmother
+ saying things a good deal like all what I'm saying now; I used to hear her
+ at it when I was a young fellow&mdash;she was a right gloomy old lady, I
+ remember. Well, anyhow, it reminds me: I want to get on my feet again as
+ soon as I can; I got to look around and find something to go into.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice shook her head gently. &ldquo;But, papa, he told you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind throwing that dang doctor up at me!&rdquo; Adams interrupted,
+ peevishly. &ldquo;He said I'd be good for SOME kind of light job&mdash;if I
+ could find just the right thing. 'Where there wouldn't be either any
+ physical or mental strain,' he said. Well, I got to find something like
+ that. Anyway, I'll feel better if I can just get out LOOKING for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, papa, I'm afraid you won't find it, and you'll be disappointed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I want to hunt around and SEE, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice patted his hand. &ldquo;You must just be contented, papa. Everything's
+ going to be all right, and you mustn't get to worrying about doing
+ anything. We own this house; it's all clear&mdash;and you've taken care of
+ mama and me all our lives; now it's our turn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir!&rdquo; he said, querulously. &ldquo;I don't like the idea of being the
+ landlady's husband around a boarding-house; it goes against my gizzard. <i>I</i>
+ know: makes out the bills for his wife Sunday mornings&mdash;works with a
+ screw-driver on somebody's bureau drawer sometimes&mdash;'tends the
+ furnace maybe&mdash;one the boarders gives him a cigar now and then.
+ That's a FINE life to look forward to! No, sir; I don't want to finish as
+ a landlady's husband!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice looked grave; for she knew the sketch was but too accurately
+ prophetic in every probability. &ldquo;But, papa,&rdquo; she said, to console him,
+ &ldquo;don't you think maybe there isn't such a thing as a 'finish,' after all!
+ You say perhaps we don't learn to live till we die but maybe that's how it
+ is AFTER we die, too&mdash;just learning some more, the way we do here,
+ and maybe through trouble again, even after that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it might be,&rdquo; he sighed. &ldquo;I expect so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;what's the use of talking about a 'finish?' We do
+ keep looking ahead to things as if they'd finish something, but when we
+ get TO them, they don't finish anything. They're just part of going on.
+ I'll tell you&mdash;I looked ahead all summer to something I was afraid
+ of, and I said to myself, 'Well, if that happens, I'm finished!' But it
+ wasn't so, papa. It did happen, and nothing's finished; I'm going on, just
+ the same only&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She stopped and blushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only what?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She blushed more deeply, then jumped up, and,
+ standing before him, caught both his hands in hers. &ldquo;Well, don't you
+ think, since we do have to go on, we ought at least to have learned some
+ sense about how to do it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked up at her adoringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What <i>I</i> think,&rdquo; he said, and his voice trembled;&mdash;&ldquo;I think
+ you're the smartest girl in the world! I wouldn't trade you for the whole
+ kit-and-boodle of 'em!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as this folly of his threatened to make her tearful, she kissed him
+ hastily, and went forth upon her errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the night of the tragic-comic dinner she had not seen Russell, nor
+ caught even the remotest chance glimpse of him; and it was curious that
+ she should encounter him as she went upon such an errand as now engaged
+ her. At a corner, not far from that tobacconist's shop she had just left
+ when he overtook her and walked with her for the first time, she met him
+ to-day. He turned the corner, coming toward her, and they were face to
+ face; whereupon that engaging face of Russell's was instantly reddened,
+ but Alice's remained serene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped short, though; and so did he; then she smiled brightly as she
+ put out her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Mr. Russell!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm so&mdash;I'm so glad to have this&mdash;this chance,&rdquo; he stammered.
+ &ldquo;I've wanted to tell you&mdash;it's just that going into a new undertaking&mdash;this
+ business life&mdash;one doesn't get to do a great many things he'd like
+ to. I hope you'll let me call again some time, if I can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, do!&rdquo; she said, cordially, and then, with a quick nod, went briskly
+ on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She breathed more rapidly, but knew that he could not have detected it,
+ and she took some pride in herself for the way she had met this little
+ crisis. But to have met it with such easy courage meant to her something
+ more reassuring than a momentary pride in the serenity she had shown. For
+ she found that what she had resolved in her inmost heart was now really
+ true: she was &ldquo;through with all that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She walked on, but more slowly, for the tobacconist's shop was not far
+ from her now&mdash;and, beyond it, that portal of doom, Frincke's Business
+ College. Already Alice could read the begrimed gilt letters of the sign;
+ and although they had spelled destiny never with a more painful imminence
+ than just then, an old habit of dramatizing herself still prevailed with
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There came into her mind a whimsical comparison of her fate with that of
+ the heroine in a French romance she had read long ago and remembered well,
+ for she had cried over it. The story ended with the heroine's taking the
+ veil after a death blow to love; and the final scene again became vivid to
+ Alice, for a moment. Again, as when she had read and wept, she seemed
+ herself to stand among the great shadows in the cathedral nave; smelled
+ the smoky incense on the enclosed air, and heard the solemn pulses of the
+ organ. She remembered how the novice's father knelt, trembling, beside a
+ pillar of gray stone; how the faithless lover watched and shivered behind
+ the statue of a saint; how stifled sobs and outcries were heard when the
+ novice came to the altar; and how a shaft of light struck through the
+ rose-window, enveloping her in an amber glow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the vision of a moment only, and for no longer than a moment did
+ Alice tell herself that the romance provided a prettier way of taking the
+ veil than she had chosen, and that a faithless lover, shaking with remorse
+ behind a saint's statue, was a greater solace than one left on a street
+ corner protesting that he'd like to call some time&mdash;if he could! Her
+ pity for herself vanished more reluctantly; but she shook it off and tried
+ to smile at it, and at her romantic recollections&mdash;at all of them.
+ She had something important to think of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She passed the tobacconist's, and before her was that dark entrance to the
+ wooden stairway leading up to Frincke's Business College&mdash;the very
+ doorway she had always looked upon as the end of youth and the end of
+ hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How often she had gone by here, hating the dreary obscurity of that
+ stairway; how often she had thought of this obscurity as something lying
+ in wait to obliterate the footsteps of any girl who should ascend into the
+ smoky darkness above! Never had she passed without those ominous
+ imaginings of hers: pretty girls turning into old maids &ldquo;taking dictation&rdquo;&mdash;old
+ maids of a dozen different types, yet all looking a little like herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, she was here at last! She looked up and down the street quickly, and
+ then, with a little heave of the shoulders, she went bravely in, under the
+ sign, and began to climb the wooden steps. Half-way up the shadows were
+ heaviest, but after that the place began to seem brighter. There was an
+ open window overhead somewhere, she found; and the steps at the top were
+ gay with sunshine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALICE ADAMS ***
+
+***** This file should be named 980-h.htm or 980-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/9/8/980/
+
+Produced by Charles Keller, and David Widger
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &ldquo;Project
+Gutenberg&rdquo;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&ldquo;the Foundation&rdquo;
+ or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; appears, or with which the phrase &ldquo;Project
+Gutenberg&rdquo; is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+&ldquo;Plain Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original &ldquo;Plain Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, &ldquo;Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.&rdquo;
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+&ldquo;Defects,&rdquo; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &ldquo;Right
+of Replacement or Refund&rdquo; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/980.txt b/980.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f0de0f9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/980.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,10651 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Alice Adams
+
+Author: Booth Tarkington
+
+Posting Date: July 21, 2008 [EBook #980]
+Release Date: July, 1997
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALICE ADAMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller
+
+
+
+
+
+ALICE ADAMS
+
+By Booth Tarkington
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+The patient, an old-fashioned man, thought the nurse made a mistake in
+keeping both of the windows open, and her sprightly disregard of his
+protests added something to his hatred of her. Every evening he told her
+that anybody with ordinary gumption ought to realize that night air was
+bad for the human frame. "The human frame won't stand everything,
+Miss Perry," he warned her, resentfully. "Even a child, if it had just
+ordinary gumption, ought to know enough not to let the night air blow on
+sick people yes, nor well people, either! 'Keep out of the night air, no
+matter how well you feel.' That's what my mother used to tell me when I
+was a boy. 'Keep out of the night air, Virgil,' she'd say. 'Keep out of
+the night air.'"
+
+"I expect probably her mother told her the same thing," the nurse
+suggested.
+
+"Of course she did. My grandmother----"
+
+"Oh, I guess your GRANDmother thought so, Mr. Adams! That was when all
+this flat central country was swampish and hadn't been drained off yet.
+I guess the truth must been the swamp mosquitoes bit people and gave 'em
+malaria, especially before they began to put screens in their windows.
+Well, we got screens in these windows, and no mosquitoes are goin' to
+bite us; so just you be a good boy and rest your mind and go to sleep
+like you need to."
+
+"Sleep?" he said. "Likely!"
+
+He thought the night air worst of all in April; he hadn't a doubt it
+would kill him, he declared. "It's miraculous what the human frame WILL
+survive," he admitted on the last evening of that month. "But you and
+the doctor ought to both be taught it won't stand too dang much! You
+poison a man and poison and poison him with this April night air----"
+
+"Can't poison you with much more of it," Miss Perry interrupted him,
+indulgently. "To-morrow it'll be May night air, and I expect that'll be
+a lot better for you, don't you? Now let's just sober down and be a good
+boy and get some nice sound sleep."
+
+She gave him his medicine, and, having set the glass upon the center
+table, returned to her cot, where, after a still interval, she snored
+faintly. Upon this, his expression became that of a man goaded out of
+overpowering weariness into irony.
+
+"Sleep? Oh, CERTAINLY, thank you!"
+
+However, he did sleep intermittently, drowsed between times, and even
+dreamed; but, forgetting his dreams before he opened his eyes, and
+having some part of him all the while aware of his discomfort, he
+believed, as usual, that he lay awake the whole night long. He was
+conscious of the city as of some single great creature resting fitfully
+in the dark outside his windows. It lay all round about, in the damp
+cover of its night cloud of smoke, and tried to keep quiet for a few
+hours after midnight, but was too powerful a growing thing ever to
+lie altogether still. Even while it strove to sleep it muttered with
+digestions of the day before, and these already merged with rumblings
+of the morrow. "Owl" cars, bringing in last passengers over distant
+trolley-lines, now and then howled on a curve; faraway metallic
+stirrings could be heard from factories in the sooty suburbs on the
+plain outside the city; east, west, and south, switch-engines chugged
+and snorted on sidings; and everywhere in the air there seemed to be
+a faint, voluminous hum as of innumerable wires trembling overhead to
+vibration of machinery underground.
+
+In his youth Adams might have been less resentful of sounds such as
+these when they interfered with his night's sleep: even during
+an illness he might have taken some pride in them as proof of his
+citizenship in a "live town"; but at fifty-five he merely hated them
+because they kept him awake. They "pressed on his nerves," as he put it;
+and so did almost everything else, for that matter.
+
+He heard the milk-wagon drive into the cross-street beneath his windows
+and stop at each house. The milkman carried his jars round to the "back
+porch," while the horse moved slowly ahead to the gate of the next
+customer and waited there. "He's gone into Pollocks'," Adams thought,
+following this progress. "I hope it'll sour on 'em before breakfast.
+Delivered the Andersons'. Now he's getting out ours. Listen to the darn
+brute! What's HE care who wants to sleep!" His complaint was of the
+horse, who casually shifted weight with a clink of steel shoes on the
+worn brick pavement of the street, and then heartily shook himself in
+his harness, perhaps to dislodge a fly far ahead of its season. Light
+had just filmed the windows; and with that the first sparrow woke,
+chirped instantly, and roused neighbours in the trees of the small yard,
+including a loud-voiced robin. Vociferations began irregularly, but were
+soon unanimous.
+
+"Sleep? Dang likely now, ain't it!"
+
+Night sounds were becoming day sounds; the far-away hooting of
+freight-engines seemed brisker than an hour ago in the dark. A cheerful
+whistler passed the house, even more careless of sleepers than the
+milkman's horse had been; then a group of coloured workmen came by, and
+although it was impossible to be sure whether they were homeward bound
+from night-work or on their way to day-work, at least it was certain
+that they were jocose. Loose, aboriginal laughter preceded them afar,
+and beat on the air long after they had gone by.
+
+The sick-room night-light, shielded from his eyes by a newspaper propped
+against a water-pitcher, still showed a thin glimmering that had grown
+offensive to Adams. In his wandering and enfeebled thoughts, which
+were much more often imaginings than reasonings, the attempt of the
+night-light to resist the dawn reminded him of something unpleasant,
+though he could not discover just what the unpleasant thing was. Here
+was a puzzle that irritated him the more because he could not solve it,
+yet always seemed just on the point of a solution. However, he may have
+lost nothing cheerful by remaining in the dark upon the matter; for
+if he had been a little sharper in this introspection he might have
+concluded that the squalor of the night-light, in its seeming effort
+to show against the forerunning of the sun itself, had stimulated some
+half-buried perception within him to sketch the painful little synopsis
+of an autobiography.
+
+In spite of noises without, he drowsed again, not knowing that he did;
+and when he opened his eyes the nurse was just rising from her cot. He
+took no pleasure in the sight, it may be said. She exhibited to him a
+face mismodelled by sleep, and set like a clay face left on its cheek in
+a hot and dry studio. She was still only in part awake, however, and by
+the time she had extinguished the night-light and given her patient his
+tonic, she had recovered enough plasticity. "Well, isn't that grand!
+We've had another good night," she said as she departed to dress in the
+bathroom.
+
+"Yes, you had another!" he retorted, though not until after she had
+closed the door.
+
+Presently he heard his daughter moving about in her room across the
+narrow hall, and so knew that she had risen. He hoped she would come
+in to see him soon, for she was the one thing that didn't press on his
+nerves, he felt; though the thought of her hurt him, as, indeed, every
+thought hurt him. But it was his wife who came first.
+
+She wore a lank cotton wrapper, and a crescent of gray hair escaped to
+one temple from beneath the handkerchief she had worn upon her head for
+the night and still retained; but she did everything possible to make
+her expression cheering.
+
+"Oh, you're better again! I can see that, as soon as I look at you," she
+said. "Miss Perry tells me you've had another splendid night."
+
+He made a sound of irony, which seemed to dispose unfavourably of Miss
+Perry, and then, in order to be more certainly intelligible, he added,
+"She slept well, as usual!"
+
+But his wife's smile persisted. "It's a good sign to be cross; it means
+you're practically convalescent right now."
+
+"Oh, I am, am I?"
+
+"No doubt in the world!" she exclaimed. "Why, you're practically a well
+man, Virgil--all except getting your strength back, of course, and that
+isn't going to take long. You'll be right on your feet in a couple of
+weeks from now."
+
+"Oh, I will?"
+
+"Of course you will!" She laughed briskly, and, going to the table in
+the center of the room, moved his glass of medicine an inch or two,
+turned a book over so that it lay upon its other side, and for a few
+moments occupied herself with similar futilities, having taken on the
+air of a person who makes things neat, though she produced no such
+actual effect upon them. "Of course you will," she repeated, absently.
+"You'll be as strong as you ever were; maybe stronger." She paused for a
+moment, not looking at him, then added, cheerfully, "So that you can fly
+around and find something really good to get into."
+
+Something important between them came near the surface here, for though
+she spoke with what seemed but a casual cheerfulness, there was a
+little betraying break in her voice, a trembling just perceptible in the
+utterance of the final word. And she still kept up the affectation of
+being helpfully preoccupied with the table, and did not look at her
+husband--perhaps because they had been married so many years that
+without looking she knew just what his expression would be, and
+preferred to avoid the actual sight of it as long as possible.
+Meanwhile, he stared hard at her, his lips beginning to move with little
+distortions not lacking in the pathos of a sick man's agitation.
+
+"So that's it," he said. "That's what you're hinting at."
+
+"'Hinting?'" Mrs. Adams looked surprised and indulgent. "Why, I'm not
+doing any hinting, Virgil."
+
+"What did you say about my finding 'something good to get into?'" he
+asked, sharply. "Don't you call that hinting?"
+
+Mrs. Adams turned toward him now; she came to the bedside and would have
+taken his hand, but he quickly moved it away from her.
+
+"You mustn't let yourself get nervous," she said. "But of course when
+you get well there's only one thing to do. You mustn't go back to that
+old hole again."
+
+"'Old hole?' That's what you call it, is it?" In spite of his weakness,
+anger made his voice strident, and upon this stimulation she spoke more
+urgently.
+
+"You just mustn't go back to it, Virgil. It's not fair to any of us, and
+you know it isn't."
+
+"Don't tell me what I know, please!"
+
+She clasped her hands, suddenly carrying her urgency to plaintive
+entreaty. "Virgil, you WON'T go back to that hole?"
+
+"That's a nice word to use to me!" he said. "Call a man's business a
+hole!"
+
+"Virgil, if you don't owe it to me to look for something different,
+don't you owe it to your children? Don't tell me you won't do what we
+all want you to, and what you know in your heart you ought to! And if
+you HAVE got into one of your stubborn fits and are bound to go back
+there for no other reason except to have your own way, don't tell me so,
+for I can't bear it!"
+
+He looked up at her fiercely. "You've got a fine way to cure a sick
+man!" he said; but she had concluded her appeal--for that time--and
+instead of making any more words in the matter, let him see that there
+were tears in her eyes, shook her head, and left the room.
+
+Alone, he lay breathing rapidly, his emaciated chest proving itself
+equal to the demands his emotion put upon it. "Fine!" he repeated, with
+husky indignation. "Fine way to cure a sick man! Fine!" Then, after a
+silence, he gave forth whispering sounds as of laughter, his expression
+the while remaining sore and far from humour.
+
+"And give us our daily bread!" he added, meaning that his wife's little
+performance was no novelty.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+In fact, the agitation of Mrs. Adams was genuine, but so well under her
+control that its traces vanished during the three short steps she
+took to cross the narrow hall between her husband's door and the one
+opposite. Her expression was matter-of-course, rather than pathetic, as
+she entered the pretty room where her daughter, half dressed, sat before
+a dressing-table and played with the reflections of a three-leafed
+mirror framed in blue enamel. That is, just before the moment of
+her mother's entrance, Alice had been playing with the mirror's
+reflections--posturing her arms and her expressions, clasping her hands
+behind her neck, and tilting back her head to foreshorten the face in a
+tableau conceived to represent sauciness, then one of smiling weariness,
+then one of scornful toleration, and all very piquant; but as the door
+opened she hurriedly resumed the practical, and occupied her hands in
+the arrangement of her plentiful brownish hair.
+
+They were pretty hands, of a shapeliness delicate and fine. "The best
+things she's got!" a cold-blooded girl friend said of them, and meant
+to include Alice's mind and character in the implied list of possessions
+surpassed by the notable hands. However that may have been, the rest
+of her was well enough. She was often called "a right pretty
+girl"--temperate praise meaning a girl rather pretty than otherwise,
+and this she deserved, to say the least. Even in repose she deserved
+it, though repose was anything but her habit, being seldom seen upon
+her except at home. On exhibition she led a life of gestures, the unkind
+said to make her lovely hands more memorable; but all of her usually
+accompanied the gestures of the hands, the shoulders ever giving them
+their impulses first, and even her feet being called upon, at the same
+time, for eloquence.
+
+So much liveliness took proper place as only accessory to that of the
+face, where her vivacity reached its climax; and it was unfortunate that
+an ungifted young man, new in the town, should have attempted to define
+the effect upon him of all this generosity of emphasis. He said that
+"the way she used her cute hazel eyes and the wonderful glow of her
+facial expression gave her a mighty spiritual quality." His actual
+rendition of the word was "spirichul"; but it was not his pronunciation
+that embalmed this outburst in the perennial laughter of Alice's girl
+friends; they made the misfortune far less his than hers.
+
+Her mother comforted her too heartily, insisting that Alice had "plenty
+enough spiritual qualities," certainly more than possessed by the other
+girls who flung the phrase at her, wooden things, jealous of everything
+they were incapable of themselves; and then Alice, getting more
+championship than she sought, grew uneasy lest Mrs. Adams should repeat
+such defenses "outside the family"; and Mrs. Adams ended by weeping
+because the daughter so distrusted her intelligence. Alice frequently
+thought it necessary to instruct her mother.
+
+Her morning greeting was an instruction to-day; or, rather, it was
+an admonition in the style of an entreaty, the more petulant as Alice
+thought that Mrs. Adams might have had a glimpse of the posturings to
+the mirror. This was a needless worry; the mother had caught a thousand
+such glimpses, with Alice unaware, and she thought nothing of the one
+just flitted.
+
+"For heaven's sake, mama, come clear inside the room and shut the door!
+PLEASE don't leave it open for everybody to look at me!"
+
+"There isn't anybody to see you," Mrs. Adams explained, obeying. "Miss
+Perry's gone downstairs, and----"
+
+"Mama, I heard you in papa's room," Alice said, not dropping the note of
+complaint. "I could hear both of you, and I don't think you ought to get
+poor old papa so upset--not in his present condition, anyhow."
+
+Mrs. Adams seated herself on the edge of the bed. "He's better all the
+time," she said, not disturbed. "He's almost well. The doctor says so
+and Miss Perry says so; and if we don't get him into the right frame
+of mind now we never will. The first day he's outdoors he'll go back to
+that old hole--you'll see! And if he once does that, he'll settle down
+there and it'll be too late and we'll never get him out."
+
+"Well, anyhow, I think you could use a little more tact with him."
+
+"I do try to," the mother sighed. "It never was much use with him. I
+don't think you understand him as well as I do, Alice."
+
+"There's one thing I don't understand about either of you," Alice
+returned, crisply. "Before people get married they can do anything they
+want to with each other. Why can't they do the same thing after they're
+married? When you and papa were young people and engaged, he'd have done
+anything you wanted him to. That must have been because you knew how to
+manage him then. Why can't you go at him the same way now?"
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed again, and laughed a little, making no other response;
+but Alice persisted. "Well, WHY can't you? Why can't you ask him to do
+things the way you used to ask him when you were just in love with each
+other? Why don't you anyhow try it, mama, instead of ding-donging at
+him?"
+
+"'Ding-donging at him,' Alice?" Mrs. Adams said, with a pathos somewhat
+emphasized. "Is that how my trying to do what I can for you strikes
+you?"
+
+"Never mind that; it's nothing to hurt your feelings." Alice disposed of
+the pathos briskly. "Why don't you answer my question? What's the matter
+with using a little more tact on papa? Why can't you treat him the way
+you probably did when you were young people, before you were married? I
+never have understood why people can't do that."
+
+"Perhaps you WILL understand some day," her mother said, gently. "Maybe
+you will when you've been married twenty-five years."
+
+"You keep evading. Why don't you answer my question right straight out?"
+
+"There are questions you can't answer to young people, Alice."
+
+"You mean because we're too young to understand the answer? I don't see
+that at all. At twenty-two a girl's supposed to have some intelligence,
+isn't she? And intelligence is the ability to understand, isn't it?
+Why do I have to wait till I've lived with a man twenty-five years to
+understand why you can't be tactful with papa?"
+
+"You may understand some things before that," Mrs. Adams said,
+tremulously. "You may understand how you hurt me sometimes. Youth
+can't know everything by being intelligent, and by the time you could
+understand the answer you're asking for you'd know it, and wouldn't need
+to ask. You don't understand your father, Alice; you don't know what it
+takes to change him when he's made up his mind to be stubborn."
+
+Alice rose and began to get herself into a skirt. "Well, I don't think
+making scenes ever changes anybody," she grumbled. "I think a little
+jolly persuasion goes twice as far, myself."
+
+"'A little jolly persuasion!'" Her mother turned the echo of this phrase
+into an ironic lament. "Yes, there was a time when I thought that, too!
+It didn't work; that's all."
+
+"Perhaps you left the 'jolly' part of it out, mama."
+
+For the second time that morning--it was now a little after seven
+o'clock--tears seemed about to offer their solace to Mrs. Adams. "I
+might have expected you to say that, Alice; you never do miss a chance,"
+she said, gently. "It seems queer you don't some time miss just ONE
+chance!"
+
+But Alice, progressing with her toilet, appeared to be little concerned.
+"Oh, well, I think there are better ways of managing a man than just
+hammering at him."
+
+Mrs. Adams uttered a little cry of pain. "'Hammering,' Alice?"
+
+"If you'd left it entirely to me," her daughter went on, briskly, "I
+believe papa'd already be willing to do anything we want him to."
+
+"That's it; tell me I spoil everything. Well, I won't interfere from now
+on, you can be sure of it."
+
+"Please don't talk like that," Alice said, quickly. "I'm old enough to
+realize that papa may need pressure of all sorts; I only think it makes
+him more obstinate to get him cross. You probably do understand him
+better, but that's one thing I've found out and you haven't. There!"
+She gave her mother a friendly tap on the shoulder and went to the door.
+"I'll hop in and say hello to him now."
+
+As she went, she continued the fastening of her blouse, and appeared in
+her father's room with one hand still thus engaged, but she patted his
+forehead with the other.
+
+"Poor old papa-daddy!" she said, gaily. "Every time he's better somebody
+talks him into getting so mad he has a relapse. It's a shame!"
+
+Her father's eyes, beneath their melancholy brows, looked up at her
+wistfully. "I suppose you heard your mother going for me," he said.
+
+"I heard you going for her, too!" Alice laughed. "What was it all
+about?"
+
+"Oh, the same danged old story!"
+
+"You mean she wants you to try something new when you get well?" Alice
+asked, with cheerful innocence. "So we could all have a lot more money?"
+
+At this his sorrowful forehead was more sorrowful than ever. The deep
+horizontal lines moved upward to a pattern of suffering so familiar to
+his daughter that it meant nothing to her; but he spoke quietly. "Yes;
+so we wouldn't have any money at all, most likely."
+
+"Oh, no!" she laughed, and, finishing with her blouse, patted his cheeks
+with both hands. "Just think how many grand openings there must be for
+a man that knows as much as you do! I always did believe you could get
+rich if you only cared to, papa."
+
+But upon his forehead the painful pattern still deepened. "Don't you
+think we've always had enough, the way things are, Alice?"
+
+"Not the way things ARE!" She patted his cheeks again; laughed again.
+"It used to be enough, maybe anyway we did skimp along on it--but the
+way things are now I expect mama's really pretty practical in her ideas,
+though, I think it's a shame for her to bother you about it while you're
+so weak. Don't you worry about it, though; just think about other things
+till you get strong."
+
+"You know," he said; "you know it isn't exactly the easiest thing in the
+world for a man of my age to find these grand openings you speak of. And
+when you've passed half-way from fifty to sixty you're apt to see some
+risk in giving up what you know how to do and trying something new."
+
+"My, what a frown!" she cried, blithely. "Didn't I tell you to stop
+thinking about it till you get ALL well?" She bent over him, giving
+him a gay little kiss on the bridge of his nose. "There! I must run to
+breakfast. Cheer up now! Au 'voir!" And with her pretty hand she waved
+further encouragement from the closing door as she departed.
+
+Lightsomely descending the narrow stairway, she whistled as she went,
+her fingers drumming time on the rail; and, still whistling, she came
+into the dining-room, where her mother and her brother were already at
+the table. The brother, a thin and sallow boy of twenty, greeted her
+without much approval as she took her place.
+
+"Nothing seems to trouble you!" he said.
+
+"No; nothing much," she made airy response. "What's troubling yourself,
+Walter?"
+
+"Don't let that worry you!" he returned, seeming to consider this to be
+repartee of an effective sort; for he furnished a short laugh to go
+with it, and turned to his coffee with the manner of one who has
+satisfactorily closed an episode.
+
+"Walter always seems to have so many secrets!" Alice said, studying
+him shrewdly, but with a friendly enough amusement in her scrutiny.
+"Everything he does or says seems to be acted for the benefit of some
+mysterious audience inside himself, and he always gets its applause.
+Take what he said just now: he seems to think it means something, but
+if it does, why, that's just another secret between him and the secret
+audience inside of him! We don't really know anything about Walter at
+all, do we, mama?"
+
+Walter laughed again, in a manner that sustained her theory well enough;
+then after finishing his coffee, he took from his pocket a flattened
+packet in glazed blue paper; extracted with stained fingers a bent and
+wrinkled little cigarette, lighted it, hitched up his belted trousers
+with the air of a person who turns from trifles to things better worth
+his attention, and left the room.
+
+Alice laughed as the door closed. "He's ALL secrets," she said. "Don't
+you think you really ought to know more about him, mama?"
+
+"I'm sure he's a good boy," Mrs. Adams returned, thoughtfully. "He's
+been very brave about not being able to have the advantages that are
+enjoyed by the boys he's grown up with. I've never heard a word of
+complaint from him."
+
+"About his not being sent to college?" Alice cried. "I should think you
+wouldn't! He didn't even have enough ambition to finish high school!"
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed. "It seemed to me Walter lost his ambition when nearly
+all the boys he'd grown up with went to Eastern schools to prepare for
+college, and we couldn't afford to send him. If only your father would
+have listened----"
+
+Alice interrupted: "What nonsense! Walter hated books and studying, and
+athletics, too, for that matter. He doesn't care for anything nice that
+I ever heard of. What do you suppose he does like, mama? He must like
+something or other somewhere, but what do you suppose it is? What does
+he do with his time?"
+
+"Why, the poor boy's at Lamb and Company's all day. He doesn't get
+through until five in the afternoon; he doesn't HAVE much time."
+
+"Well, we never have dinner until about seven, and he's always late for
+dinner, and goes out, heaven knows where, right afterward!" Alice shook
+her head. "He used to go with our friends' boys, but I don't think he
+does now."
+
+"Why, how could he?" Mrs. Adams protested. "That isn't his fault, poor
+child! The boys he knew when he was younger are nearly all away at
+college."
+
+"Yes, but he doesn't see anything of 'em when they're here at
+holiday-time or vacation. None of 'em come to the house any more."
+
+"I suppose he's made other friends. It's natural for him to want
+companions, at his age."
+
+"Yes," Alice said, with disapproving emphasis. "But who are they? I've
+got an idea he plays pool at some rough place down-town."
+
+"Oh, no; I'm sure he's a steady boy," Mrs. Adams protested, but her tone
+was not that of thoroughgoing conviction, and she added, "Life might
+be a very different thing for him if only your father can be brought to
+see----"
+
+"Never mind, mama! It isn't me that has to be convinced, you know; and
+we can do a lot more with papa if we just let him alone about it for a
+day or two. Promise me you won't say any more to him until--well, until
+he's able to come downstairs to table. Will you?"
+
+Mrs. Adams bit her lip, which had begun to tremble. "I think you can
+trust me to know a FEW things, Alice," she said. "I'm a little older
+than you, you know."
+
+"That's a good girl!" Alice jumped up, laughing. "Don't forget it's the
+same as a promise, and do just cheer him up a little. I'll say good-bye
+to him before I go out."
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"Oh, I've got lots to do. I thought I'd run out to Mildred's to see what
+she's going to wear to-night, and then I want to go down and buy a
+yard of chiffon and some narrow ribbon to make new bows for my
+slippers--you'll have to give me some money----"
+
+"If he'll give it to me!" her mother lamented, as they went toward the
+front stairs together; but an hour later she came into Alice's room with
+a bill in her hand.
+
+"He has some money in his bureau drawer," she said. "He finally told me
+where it was."
+
+There were traces of emotion in her voice, and Alice, looking shrewdly
+at her, saw moisture in her eyes.
+
+"Mama!" she cried. "You didn't do what you promised me you wouldn't, did
+you--NOT before Miss Perry!"
+
+"Miss Perry's getting him some broth," Mrs. Adams returned, calmly.
+"Besides, you're mistaken in saying I promised you anything; I said I
+thought you could trust me to know what is right."
+
+"So you did bring it up again!" And Alice swung away from her, strode
+to her father's door, flung it open, went to him, and put a light hand
+soothingly over his unrelaxed forehead.
+
+"Poor old papa!" she said. "It's a shame how everybody wants to trouble
+him. He shan't be bothered any more at all! He doesn't need to have
+everybody telling him how to get away from that old hole he's worked in
+so long and begin to make us all nice and rich. HE knows how!"
+
+Thereupon she kissed him a consoling good-bye, and made another gay
+departure, the charming hand again fluttering like a white butterfly in
+the shadow of the closing door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Mrs. Adams had remained in Alice's room, but her mood seemed to have
+changed, during her daughter's little more than momentary absence.
+
+"What did he SAY?" she asked, quickly, and her tone was hopeful.
+
+"'Say?'" Alice repeated, impatiently. "Why, nothing. I didn't let him.
+Really, mama, I think the best thing for you to do would be to just keep
+out of his room, because I don't believe you can go in there and not
+talk to him about it, and if you do talk we'll never get him to do the
+right thing. Never!"
+
+The mother's response was a grieving silence; she turned from her
+daughter and walked to the door.
+
+"Now, for goodness' sake!" Alice cried. "Don't go making tragedy out of
+my offering you a little practical advice!"
+
+"I'm not," Mrs. Adams gulped, halting. "I'm just--just going to dust the
+downstairs, Alice." And with her face still averted, she went out into
+the little hallway, closing the door behind her. A moment later she
+could be heard descending the stairs, the sound of her footsteps
+carrying somehow an effect of resignation.
+
+Alice listened, sighed, and, breathing the words, "Oh, murder!" turned
+to cheerier matters. She put on a little apple-green turban with a dim
+gold band round it, and then, having shrouded the turban in a white
+veil, which she kept pushed up above her forehead, she got herself into
+a tan coat of soft cloth fashioned with rakish severity. After that,
+having studied herself gravely in a long glass, she took from one of
+the drawers of her dressing-table a black leather card-case cornered in
+silver filigree, but found it empty.
+
+She opened another drawer wherein were two white pasteboard boxes of
+cards, the one set showing simply "Miss Adams," the other engraved in
+Gothic characters, "Miss Alys Tuttle Adams." The latter belonged to
+Alice's "Alys" period--most girls go through it; and Alice must have
+felt that she had graduated, for, after frowning thoughtfully at the
+exhibit this morning, she took the box with its contents, and let the
+white shower fall from her fingers into the waste-basket beside her
+small desk. She replenished the card-case from the "Miss Adams"
+box; then, having found a pair of fresh white gloves, she tucked an
+ivory-topped Malacca walking-stick under her arm and set forth.
+
+She went down the stairs, buttoning her gloves and still wearing
+the frown with which she had put "Alys" finally out of her life. She
+descended slowly, and paused on the lowest step, looking about her with
+an expression that needed but a slight deepening to betoken bitterness.
+Its connection with her dropping "Alys" forever was slight, however.
+
+The small frame house, about fifteen years old, was already inclining
+to become a new Colonial relic. The Adamses had built it, moving into it
+from the "Queen Anne" house they had rented until they took this step in
+fashion. But fifteen years is a long time to stand still in the midland
+country, even for a house, and this one was lightly made, though the
+Adamses had not realized how flimsily until they had lived in it for
+some time. "Solid, compact, and convenient" were the instructions to the
+architect, and he had made it compact successfully. Alice, pausing
+at the foot of the stairway, was at the same time fairly in the
+"living-room," for the only separation between the "living room" and the
+hall was a demarcation suggested to willing imaginations by a pair of
+wooden columns painted white. These columns, pine under the paint,
+were bruised and chipped at the base; one of them showed a crack that
+threatened to become a split; the "hard-wood" floor had become uneven;
+and in a corner the walls apparently failed of solidity, where the
+wall-paper had declined to accompany some staggerings of the plaster
+beneath it.
+
+The furniture was in great part an accumulation begun with the wedding
+gifts; though some of it was older, two large patent rocking-chairs and
+a footstool having belonged to Mrs. Adams's mother in the days of hard
+brown plush and veneer. For decoration there were pictures and vases.
+Mrs. Adams had always been fond of vases, she said, and every year
+her husband's Christmas present to her was a vase of one sort or
+another--whatever the clerk showed him, marked at about twelve or
+fourteen dollars. The pictures were some of them etchings framed in
+gilt: Rheims, Canterbury, schooners grouped against a wharf; and Alice
+could remember how, in her childhood, her father sometimes pointed out
+the watery reflections in this last as very fine. But it was a long time
+since he had shown interest in such things--"or in anything much," as
+she thought.
+
+Other pictures were two water-colours in baroque frames; one being the
+Amalfi monk on a pergola wall, while the second was a yard-wide display
+of iris blossoms, painted by Alice herself at fourteen, as a birthday
+gift to her mother. Alice's glance paused upon it now with no great
+pride, but showed more approval of an enormous photograph of the
+Colosseum. This she thought of as "the only good thing in the room";
+it possessed and bestowed distinction, she felt; and she did not regret
+having won her struggle to get it hung in its conspicuous place of
+honour over the mantelpiece. Formerly that place had been held for
+years by a steel-engraving, an accurate representation of the Suspension
+Bridge at Niagara Falls. It was almost as large as its successor, the
+"Colosseum," and it had been presented to Mr. Adams by colleagues in
+his department at Lamb and Company's. Adams had shown some feeling when
+Alice began to urge its removal to obscurity in the "upstairs hall"; he
+even resisted for several days after she had the "Colosseum" charged
+to him, framed in oak, and sent to the house. She cheered him up, of
+course, when he gave way; and her heart never misgave her that there
+might be a doubt which of the two pictures was the more dismaying.
+
+Over the pictures, the vases, the old brown plush rocking-chairs and
+the stool, over the three gilt chairs, over the new chintz-covered easy
+chair and the gray velure sofa--over everything everywhere, was the
+familiar coating of smoke grime. It had worked into every fibre of
+the lace curtains, dingying them to an unpleasant gray; it lay on
+the window-sills and it dimmed the glass panes; it covered the walls,
+covered the ceiling, and was smeared darker and thicker in all corners.
+Yet here was no fault of housewifery; the curse could not be lifted, as
+the ingrained smudges permanent on the once white woodwork proved. The
+grime was perpetually renewed; scrubbing only ground it in.
+
+This particular ugliness was small part of Alice's discontent, for
+though the coating grew a little deeper each year she was used to it.
+Moreover, she knew that she was not likely to find anything better in
+a thousand miles, so long as she kept to cities, and that none of
+her friends, however opulent, had any advantage of her here. Indeed,
+throughout all the great soft-coal country, people who consider
+themselves comparatively poor may find this consolation: cleanliness has
+been added to the virtues and beatitudes that money can not buy.
+
+Alice brightened a little as she went forward to the front door, and
+she brightened more when the spring breeze met her there. Then all
+depression left her as she walked down the short brick path to the
+sidewalk, looked up and down the street, and saw how bravely the maple
+shade-trees, in spite of the black powder they breathed, were flinging
+out their thousands of young green particles overhead.
+
+She turned north, treading the new little shadows on the pavement
+briskly, and, having finished buttoning her gloves, swung down her
+Malacca stick from under her arm to let it tap a more leisurely
+accompaniment to her quick, short step. She had to step quickly if she
+was to get anywhere; for the closeness of her skirt, in spite of its
+little length, permitted no natural stride; but she was pleased to be
+impeded, these brevities forming part of her show of fashion.
+
+Other pedestrians found them not without charm, though approval may have
+been lacking here and there, and at the first crossing Alice suffered
+what she might have accounted an actual injury, had she allowed herself
+to be so sensitive. An elderly woman in fussy black silk stood there,
+waiting for a streetcar; she was all of a globular modelling, with
+a face patterned like a frost-bitten peach; and that the approaching
+gracefulness was uncongenial she naively made too evident. Her round,
+wan eyes seemed roused to bitter life as they rose from the curved high
+heels of the buckled slippers to the tight little skirt, and thence with
+startled ferocity to the Malacca cane, which plainly appeared to her as
+a decoration not more astounding than it was insulting.
+
+Perceiving that the girl was bowing to her, the globular lady hurriedly
+made shift to alter her injurious expression. "Good morning, Mrs.
+Dowling," Alice said, gravely. Mrs. Dowling returned the salutation with
+a smile as convincingly benevolent as the ghastly smile upon a Santa
+Claus face; and then, while Alice passed on, exploded toward her a
+single compacted breath through tightened lips.
+
+The sound was eloquently audible, though Mrs. Dowling remained unaware
+that in this or any manner whatever she had shed a light upon her
+thoughts; for it was her lifelong innocent conviction that other people
+saw her only as she wished to be seen, and heard from her only what she
+intended to be heard. At home it was always her husband who pulled down
+the shades of their bedroom window.
+
+Alice looked serious for a few moments after the little encounter, then
+found some consolation in the behaviour of a gentleman of forty or
+so who was coming toward her. Like Mrs. Dowling, he had begun to show
+consciousness of Alice's approach while she was yet afar off; but his
+tokens were of a kind pleasanter to her. He was like Mrs. Dowling again,
+however, in his conception that Alice would not realize the significance
+of what he did. He passed his hand over his neck-scarf to see that it
+lay neatly to his collar, smoothed a lapel of his coat, and adjusted
+his hat, seeming to be preoccupied the while with problems that kept
+his eyes to the pavement; then, as he came within a few feet of her,
+he looked up, as in a surprised recognition almost dramatic, smiled
+winningly, lifted his hat decisively, and carried it to the full arm's
+length.
+
+Alice's response was all he could have asked. The cane in her right
+hand stopped short in its swing, while her left hand moved in a pretty
+gesture as if an impulse carried it toward the heart; and she smiled,
+with her under lip caught suddenly between her teeth. Months ago she had
+seen an actress use this smile in a play, and it came perfectly to Alice
+now, without conscious direction, it had been so well acquired; but the
+pretty hand's little impulse toward the heart was an original bit all
+her own, on the spur of the moment.
+
+The gentleman went on, passing from her forward vision as he replaced
+his hat. Of himself he was nothing to Alice, except for the gracious
+circumstance that he had shown strong consciousness of a pretty girl. He
+was middle-aged, substantial, a family man, securely married; and
+Alice had with him one of those long acquaintances that never become
+emphasized by so much as five minutes of talk; yet for this inconsequent
+meeting she had enacted a little part like a fragment in a pantomime of
+Spanish wooing.
+
+It was not for him--not even to impress him, except as a messenger.
+Alice was herself almost unaware of her thought, which was one of the
+running thousands of her thoughts that took no deliberate form in words.
+Nevertheless, she had it, and it was the impulse of all her pretty
+bits of pantomime when she met other acquaintances who made their
+appreciation visible, as this substantial gentleman did. In Alice's
+unworded thought, he was to be thus encouraged as in some measure a
+champion to speak well of her to the world; but more than this: he was
+to tell some magnificent unknown bachelor how wonderful, how mysterious,
+she was.
+
+She hastened on gravely, a little stirred reciprocally with the
+supposed stirrings in the breast of that shadowy ducal mate, who must be
+somewhere "waiting," or perhaps already seeking her; for she more often
+thought of herself as "waiting" while he sought her; and sometimes this
+view of things became so definite that it shaped into a murmur on her
+lips. "Waiting. Just waiting." And she might add, "For him!" Then, being
+twenty-two, she was apt to conclude the mystic interview by laughing at
+herself, though not without a continued wistfulness.
+
+She came to a group of small coloured children playing waywardly in a
+puddle at the mouth of a muddy alley; and at sight of her they gave over
+their pastime in order to stare. She smiled brilliantly upon them, but
+they were too struck with wonder to comprehend that the manifestation
+was friendly; and as Alice picked her way in a little detour to keep
+from the mud, she heard one of them say, "Lady got cane! Jeez'!"
+
+She knew that many coloured children use impieties familiarly, and she
+was not startled. She was disturbed, however, by an unfavourable hint in
+the speaker's tone. He was six, probably, but the sting of a criticism
+is not necessarily allayed by knowledge of its ignoble source, and
+Alice had already begun to feel a slight uneasiness about her cane. Mrs.
+Dowling's stare had been strikingly projected at it; other women more
+than merely glanced, their brows and lips contracting impulsively; and
+Alice was aware that one or two of them frankly halted as soon as she
+had passed.
+
+She had seen in several magazines pictures of ladies with canes, and on
+that account she had bought this one, never questioning that fashion is
+recognized, even in the provinces, as soon as beheld. On the contrary,
+these staring women obviously failed to realize that what they were
+being shown was not an eccentric outburst, but the bright harbinger of
+an illustrious mode. Alice had applied a bit of artificial pigment to
+her lips and cheeks before she set forth this morning; she did not
+need it, having a ready colour of her own, which now mounted high with
+annoyance.
+
+Then a splendidly shining closed black automobile, with windows of
+polished glass, came silently down the street toward her. Within it, as
+in a luxurious little apartment, three comely ladies in mourning sat
+and gossiped; but when they saw Alice they clutched one another. They
+instantly recovered, bowing to her solemnly as they were borne by, yet
+were not gone from her sight so swiftly but the edge of her side glance
+caught a flash of teeth in mouths suddenly opened, and the dark glisten
+of black gloves again clutching to share mirth.
+
+The colour that outdid the rouge on Alice's cheek extended its area and
+grew warmer as she realized how all too cordial had been her nod and
+smile to these humorous ladies. But in their identity lay a significance
+causing her a sharper smart, for they were of the family of that Lamb,
+chief of Lamb and Company, who had employed her father since before she
+was born.
+
+"And know his salary! They'd be SURE to find out about that!" was her
+thought, coupled with another bitter one to the effect that they had
+probably made instantaneous financial estimates of what she wore though
+certainly her walking-stick had most fed their hilarity.
+
+She tucked it under her arm, not swinging it again; and her breath
+became quick and irregular as emotion beset her. She had been enjoying
+her walk, but within the space of the few blocks she had gone since she
+met the substantial gentleman, she found that more than the walk was
+spoiled: suddenly her life seemed to be spoiled, too; though she did not
+view the ruin with complaisance. These Lamb women thought her and her
+cane ridiculous, did they? she said to herself. That was their parvenu
+blood: to think because a girl's father worked for their grandfather
+she had no right to be rather striking in style, especially when the
+striking WAS her style. Probably all the other girls and women would
+agree with them and would laugh at her when they got together, and,
+what might be fatal, would try to make all the men think her a silly
+pretender. Men were just like sheep, and nothing was easier than for
+women to set up as shepherds and pen them in a fold. "To keep out
+outsiders," Alice thought. "And make 'em believe I AM an outsider.
+What's the use of living?"
+
+All seemed lost when a trim young man appeared, striding out of a
+cross-street not far before her, and, turning at the corner, came
+toward her. Visibly, he slackened his gait to lengthen the time of his
+approach, and, as he was a stranger to her, no motive could be ascribed
+to him other than a wish to have a longer time to look at her.
+
+She lifted a pretty hand to a pin at her throat, bit her lip--not with
+the smile, but mysteriously--and at the last instant before her shadow
+touched the stranger, let her eyes gravely meet his. A moment later,
+having arrived before the house which was her destination, she halted
+at the entrance to a driveway leading through fine lawns to the
+intentionally important mansion. It was a pleasant and impressive
+place to be seen entering, but Alice did not enter at once. She paused,
+examining a tiny bit of mortar which the masons had forgotten to scrape
+from a brick in one of the massive gate-posts. She frowned at this tiny
+defacement, and with an air of annoyance scraped it away, using the
+ferrule of her cane an act of fastidious proprietorship. If any one had
+looked back over his shoulder he would not have doubted that she lived
+there.
+
+Alice did not turn to see whether anything of the sort happened or not,
+but she may have surmised that it did. At all events, it was with
+an invigorated step that she left the gateway behind her and went
+cheerfully up the drive to the house of her friend Mildred.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Adams had a restless morning, and toward noon he asked Miss Perry to
+call his daughter; he wished to say something to her.
+
+"I thought I heard her leaving the house a couple of hours ago--maybe
+longer," the nurse told him. "I'll go see." And she returned from the
+brief errand, her impression confirmed by information from Mrs. Adams.
+"Yes. She went up to Miss Mildred Palmer's to see what she's going to
+wear to-night."
+
+Adams looked at Miss Perry wearily, but remained passive, making no
+inquiries; for he was long accustomed to what seemed to him a kind of
+jargon among ladies, which became the more incomprehensible when they
+tried to explain it. A man's best course, he had found, was just to let
+it go as so much sound. His sorrowful eyes followed the nurse as she
+went back to her rocking-chair by the window, and her placidity showed
+him that there was no mystery for her in the fact that Alice walked
+two miles to ask so simple a question when there was a telephone in
+the house. Obviously Miss Perry also comprehended why Alice thought it
+important to know what Mildred meant to wear. Adams understood why Alice
+should be concerned with what she herself wore "to look neat and tidy
+and at her best, why, of course she'd want to," he thought--but he
+realized that it was forever beyond him to understand why the clothing
+of other people had long since become an absorbing part of her life.
+
+Her excursion this morning was no novelty; she was continually going to
+see what Mildred meant to wear, or what some other girl meant to wear;
+and when Alice came home from wherever other girls or women had been
+gathered, she always hurried to her mother with earnest descriptions of
+the clothing she had seen. At such times, if Adams was present, he might
+recognize "organdie," or "taffeta," or "chiffon," as words defining
+certain textiles, but the rest was too technical for him, and he
+was like a dismal boy at a sermon, just waiting for it to get itself
+finished. Not the least of the mystery was his wife's interest: she was
+almost indifferent about her own clothes, and when she consulted Alice
+about them spoke hurriedly and with an air of apology; but when Alice
+described other people's clothes, Mrs. Adams listened as eagerly as the
+daughter talked.
+
+"There they go!" he muttered to-day, a moment after he heard the front
+door closing, a sound recognizable throughout most of the thinly built
+house. Alice had just returned, and Mrs. Adams called to her from the
+upper hallway, not far from Adams's door.
+
+"What did she SAY?"
+
+"She was sort of snippy about it," Alice returned, ascending the stairs.
+"She gets that way sometimes, and pretended she hadn't made up her mind,
+but I'm pretty sure it'll be the maize Georgette with Malines flounces."
+
+"Didn't you say she wore that at the Pattersons'?" Mrs. Adams inquired,
+as Alice arrived at the top of the stairs. "And didn't you tell me she
+wore it again at the----"
+
+"Certainly not," Alice interrupted, rather petulantly. "She's never worn
+it but once, and of course she wouldn't want to wear anything to-night
+that people have seen her in a lot."
+
+Miss Perry opened the door of Adams's room and stepped out. "Your father
+wants to know if you'll come and see him a minute, Miss Adams."
+
+"Poor old thing! Of course!" Alice exclaimed, and went quickly into the
+room, Miss Perry remaining outside. "What's the matter, papa? Getting
+awful sick of lying on his tired old back, I expect."
+
+"I've had kind of a poor morning," Adams said, as she patted his hand
+comfortingly. "I been thinking----"
+
+"Didn't I tell you not to?" she cried, gaily. "Of course you'll have
+poor times when you go and do just exactly what I say you mustn't. You
+stop thinking this very minute!"
+
+He smiled ruefully, closing his eyes; was silent for a moment, then
+asked her to sit beside the bed. "I been thinking of something I wanted
+to say," he added.
+
+"What like, papa?"
+
+"Well, it's nothing--much," he said, with something deprecatory in his
+tone, as if he felt vague impulses toward both humour and apology. "I
+just thought maybe I ought to've said more to you some time or other
+about--well, about the way things ARE, down at Lamb and Company's, for
+instance."
+
+"Now, papa!" She leaned forward in the chair she had taken, and
+pretended to slap his hand crossly. "Isn't that exactly what I said you
+couldn't think one single think about till you get ALL well?"
+
+"Well----" he said, and went on slowly, not looking at her, but at the
+ceiling. "I just thought maybe it wouldn't been any harm if some time or
+other I told you something about the way they sort of depend on me down
+there."
+
+"Why don't they show it, then?" she asked, quickly. "That's just what
+mama and I have been feeling so much; they don't appreciate you."
+
+"Why, yes, they do," he said. "Yes, they do. They began h'isting my
+salary the second year I went in there, and they've h'isted it a little
+every two years all the time I've worked for 'em. I've been head of the
+sundries department for seven years now, and I could hardly have more
+authority in that department unless I was a member of the firm itself."
+
+"Well, why don't they make you a member of the firm? That's what they
+ought to've done! Yes, and long ago!"
+
+Adams laughed, but sighed with more heartiness than he had laughed.
+"They call me their 'oldest stand-by' down there." He laughed again,
+apologetically, as if to excuse himself for taking a little pride in
+this title. "Yes, sir; they say I'm their 'oldest stand-by'; and I guess
+they know they can count on my department's turning in as good a report
+as they look for, at the end of every month; but they don't have to take
+a man into the firm to get him to do my work, dearie."
+
+"But you said they depended on you, papa."
+
+"So they do; but of course not so's they couldn't get along without me."
+He paused, reflecting. "I don't just seem to know how to put it--I
+mean how to put what I started out to say. I kind of wanted to tell
+you--well, it seems funny to me, these last few years, the way your
+mother's taken to feeling about it. I'd like to see a better
+established wholesale drug business than Lamb and Company this side the
+Alleghanies--I don't say bigger, I say better established--and it's kind
+of funny for a man that's been with a business like that as long as
+I have to hear it called a 'hole.' It's kind of funny when you think,
+yourself, you've done pretty fairly well in a business like that, and
+the men at the head of it seem to think so, too, and put your salary
+just about as high as anybody could consider customary--well, what I
+mean, Alice, it's kind of funny to have your mother think it's mostly
+just--mostly just a failure, so to speak."
+
+His voice had become tremulous in spite of him; and this sign of
+weakness and emotion had sufficient effect upon Alice. She bent over him
+suddenly, with her arm about him and her cheek against his. "Poor papa!"
+she murmured. "Poor papa!"
+
+"No, no," he said. "I didn't mean anything to trouble you. I just
+thought----" He hesitated. "I just wondered--I thought maybe it wouldn't
+be any harm if I said something about how things ARE down there. I
+got to thinking maybe you didn't understand it's a pretty good place.
+They're fine people to work for; and they've always seemed to think
+something of me;--the way they took Walter on, for instance, soon as I
+asked 'em, last year. Don't you think that looked a good deal as if they
+thought something of me, Alice?"
+
+"Yes, papa," she said, not moving.
+
+"And the work's right pleasant," he went on. "Mighty nice boys in our
+department, Alice. Well, they are in all the departments, for that
+matter. We have a good deal of fun down there some days."
+
+She lifted her head. "More than you do at home 'some days,' I expect,
+papa!" she said.
+
+He protested feebly. "Now, I didn't mean that--I didn't want to trouble
+you----"
+
+She looked at him through winking eyelashes. "I'm sorry I called it a
+'hole,' papa."
+
+"No, no," he protested, gently. "It was your mother said that."
+
+"No. I did, too."
+
+"Well, if you did, it was only because you'd heard her."
+
+She shook her head, then kissed him. "I'm going to talk to her," she
+said, and rose decisively.
+
+But at this, her father's troubled voice became quickly louder: "You
+better let her alone. I just wanted to have a little talk with you. I
+didn't mean to start any--your mother won't----"
+
+"Now, papa!" Alice spoke cheerfully again, and smiled upon him. "I want
+you to quit worrying! Everything's going to be all right and nobody's
+going to bother you any more about anything. You'll see!"
+
+She carried her smile out into the hall, but after she had closed the
+door her face was all pity; and her mother, waiting for her in the
+opposite room, spoke sympathetically.
+
+"What's the matter, Alice? What did he say that's upset you?"
+
+"Wait a minute, mama." Alice found a handkerchief, used it for eyes and
+suffused nose, gulped, then suddenly and desolately sat upon the bed.
+"Poor, poor, POOR papa!" she whispered.
+
+"Why?" Mrs. Adams inquired, mildly. "What's the matter with him?
+Sometimes you act as if he weren't getting well. What's he been talking
+about?"
+
+"Mama--well, I think I'm pretty selfish. Oh, I do!"
+
+"Did he say you were?"
+
+"Papa? No, indeed! What I mean is, maybe we're both a little selfish to
+try to make him go out and hunt around for something new."
+
+Mrs. Adams looked thoughtful. "Oh, that's what he was up to!"
+
+"Mama, I think we ought to give it up. I didn't dream it had really hurt
+him."
+
+"Well, doesn't he hurt us?"
+
+"Never that I know of, mama."
+
+"I don't mean by SAYING things," Mrs. Adams explained, impatiently.
+"There are more ways than that of hurting people. When a man sticks to a
+salary that doesn't provide for his family, isn't that hurting them?"
+
+"Oh, it 'provides' for us well enough, mama. We have what we need--if I
+weren't so extravagant. Oh, _I_ know I am!"
+
+But at this admission her mother cried out sharply. "'Extravagant!'
+You haven't one tenth of what the other girls you go with have. And
+you CAN'T have what you ought to as long as he doesn't get out of that
+horrible place. It provides bare food and shelter for us, but what's
+that?"
+
+"I don't think we ought to try any more to change him."
+
+"You don't?" Mrs. Adams came and stood before her. "Listen, Alice: your
+father's asleep; that's his trouble, and he's got to be waked up. He
+doesn't know that things have changed. When you and Walter were little
+children we did have enough--at least it seemed to be about as much
+as most of the people we knew. But the town isn't what it was in those
+days, and times aren't what they were then, and these fearful PRICES
+aren't the old prices. Everything else but your father has changed, and
+all the time he's stood still. He doesn't know it; he thinks because
+they've given him a hundred dollars more every two years he's quite a
+prosperous man! And he thinks that because his children cost him more
+than he and I cost our parents he gives them--enough!"
+
+"But Walter----" Alice faltered. "Walter doesn't cost him anything at
+all any more." And she concluded, in a stricken voice, "It's all--me!"
+
+"Why shouldn't it be?" her mother cried. "You're young--you're just at
+the time when your life should be fullest of good things and happiness.
+Yet what do you get?"
+
+Alice's lip quivered; she was not unsusceptible to such an appeal, but
+she contrived the semblance of a protest. "I don't have such a bad time
+not a good DEAL of the time, anyhow. I've got a good MANY of the things
+other girls have----"
+
+"You have?" Mrs. Adams was piteously satirical. "I suppose you've got
+a limousine to go to that dance to-night? I suppose you've only got
+to call a florist and tell him to send you some orchids? I suppose
+you've----"
+
+But Alice interrupted this list. Apparently in a single instant all
+emotion left her, and she became businesslike, as one in the midst of
+trifles reminded of really serious matters. She got up from the bed
+and went to the door of the closet where she kept her dresses. "Oh, see
+here," she said, briskly. "I've decided to wear my white organdie if you
+could put in a new lining for me. I'm afraid it'll take you nearly all
+afternoon."
+
+She brought forth the dress, displayed it upon the bed, and Mrs. Adams
+examined it attentively.
+
+"Do you think you could get it done, mama?"
+
+"I don't see why not," Mrs. Adams answered, passing a thoughtful hand
+over the fabric. "It oughtn't to take more than four or five hours."
+
+"It's a shame to have you sit at the machine that long," Alice said,
+absently, adding, "And I'm sure we ought to let papa alone. Let's just
+give it up, mama."
+
+Mrs. Adams continued her thoughtful examination of the dress. "Did you
+buy the chiffon and ribbon, Alice?"
+
+"Yes. I'm sure we oughtn't to talk to him about it any more, mama."
+
+"Well, we'll see."
+
+"Let's both agree that we'll NEVER say another single word to him about
+it," said Alice. "It'll be a great deal better if we just let him make
+up his mind for himself."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+With this, having more immediately practical questions before them, they
+dropped the subject, to bend their entire attention upon the dress; and
+when the lunch-gong sounded downstairs Alice was still sketching repairs
+and alterations. She continued to sketch them, not heeding the summons.
+
+"I suppose we'd better go down to lunch," Mrs. Adams said, absently.
+"She's at the gong again." "In a minute, mama. Now about the
+sleeves----" And she went on with her planning. Unfortunately the
+gong was inexpressive of the mood of the person who beat upon it. It
+consisted of three little metal bowls upon a string; they were unequal
+in size, and, upon being tapped with a padded stick, gave forth
+vibrations almost musically pleasant. It was Alice who had substituted
+this contrivance for the brass "dinner-bell" in use throughout her
+childhood; and neither she nor the others of her family realized that
+the substitution of sweeter sounds had made the life of that household
+more difficult. In spite of dismaying increases in wages, the Adamses
+still strove to keep a cook; and, as they were unable to pay the higher
+rates demanded by a good one, what they usually had was a whimsical
+coloured woman of nomadic impulses. In the hands of such a person the
+old-fashioned "dinner-bell" was satisfying; life could instantly be
+made intolerable for any one dawdling on his way to a meal; the bell was
+capable of every desirable profanity and left nothing bottled up in the
+breast of the ringer. But the chamois-covered stick might whack upon
+Alice's little Chinese bowls for a considerable length of time and
+produce no great effect of urgency upon a hearer, nor any other effect,
+except fury in the cook. The ironical impossibility of expressing
+indignation otherwise than by sounds of gentle harmony proved
+exasperating; the cook was apt to become surcharged, so that explosive
+resignations, never rare, were somewhat more frequent after the
+introduction of the gong.
+
+Mrs. Adams took this increased frequency to be only another
+manifestation of the inexplicable new difficulties that beset all
+housekeeping. You paid a cook double what you had paid one a few years
+before; and the cook knew half as much of cookery, and had no gratitude.
+The more you gave these people, it seemed, the worse they behaved--a
+condition not to be remedied by simply giving them less, because you
+couldn't even get the worst unless you paid her what she demanded.
+Nevertheless, Mrs. Adams remained fitfully an optimist in the matter.
+Brought up by her mother to speak of a female cook as "the girl," she
+had been instructed by Alice to drop that definition in favour of one
+not an improvement in accuracy: "the maid." Almost always, during
+the first day or so after every cook came, Mrs. Adams would say, at
+intervals, with an air of triumph: "I believe--of course it's a little
+soon to be sure--but I do really believe this new maid is the treasure
+we've been looking for so long!" Much in the same way that Alice dreamed
+of a mysterious perfect mate for whom she "waited," her mother had
+a fairy theory that hidden somewhere in the universe there was the
+treasure, the perfect "maid," who would come and cook in the Adamses'
+kitchen, not four days or four weeks, but forever.
+
+The present incumbent was not she. Alice, profoundly interested herself,
+kept her mother likewise so preoccupied with the dress that they were
+but vaguely conscious of the gong's soft warnings, though these were
+repeated and protracted unusually. Finally the sound of a hearty voice,
+independent and enraged, reached the pair. It came from the hall below.
+
+"I says goo'-BYE!" it called. "Da'ss all!"
+
+Then the front door slammed.
+
+"Why, what----" Mrs. Adams began.
+
+They went down hurriedly to find out. Miss Perry informed them.
+
+"I couldn't make her listen to reason," she said. "She rang the gong
+four or five times and got to talking to herself; and then she went up
+to her room and packed her bag. I told her she had no business to go out
+the front door, anyhow."
+
+Mrs. Adams took the news philosophically. "I thought she had something
+like that in her eye when I paid her this morning, and I'm not
+surprised. Well, we won't let Mr. Adams know anything's the matter till
+I get a new one."
+
+They lunched upon what the late incumbent had left chilling on the
+table, and then Mrs. Adams prepared to wash the dishes; she would "have
+them done in a jiffy," she said, cheerfully. But it was Alice who washed
+the dishes.
+
+"I DON'T like to have you do that, Alice," her mother protested,
+following her into the kitchen. "It roughens the hands, and when a girl
+has hands like yours----"
+
+"I know, mama." Alice looked troubled, but shook her head. "It can't be
+helped this time; you'll need every minute to get that dress done."
+
+Mrs. Adams went away lamenting, while Alice, no expert, began to splash
+the plates and cups and saucers in the warm water. After a while, as
+she worked, her eyes grew dreamy: she was making little gay-coloured
+pictures of herself, unfounded prophecies of how she would look and what
+would happen to her that evening. She saw herself, charming and demure,
+wearing a fluffy idealization of the dress her mother now determinedly
+struggled with upstairs; she saw herself framed in a garlanded archway,
+the entrance to a ballroom, and saw the people on the shining floor
+turning dramatically to look at her; then from all points a rush of
+young men shouting for dances with her; and she constructed a superb
+stranger, tall, dark, masterfully smiling, who swung her out of the
+clamouring group as the music began. She saw herself dancing with him,
+saw the half-troubled smile she would give him; and she accurately
+smiled that smile as she rinsed the knives and forks.
+
+These hopeful fragments of drama were not to be realized, she knew; but
+she played that they were true, and went on creating them. In all of
+them she wore or carried flowers--her mother's sorrow for her in this
+detail but made it the more important--and she saw herself glamorous
+with orchids; discarded these for an armful of long-stemmed, heavy
+roses; tossed them away for a great bouquet of white camellias; and
+so wandered down a lengthening hothouse gallery of floral beauty, all
+costly and beyond her reach except in such a wistful day-dream. And upon
+her present whole horizon, though she searched it earnestly, she could
+discover no figure of a sender of flowers.
+
+Out of her fancies the desire for flowers to wear that night emerged
+definitely and became poignant; she began to feel that it might be
+particularly important to have them. "This might be the night!" She was
+still at the age to dream that the night of any dance may be the vital
+point in destiny. No matter how commonplace or disappointing other
+dance nights have been this one may bring the great meeting. The unknown
+magnifico may be there.
+
+Alice was almost unaware of her own reveries in which this being
+appeared--reveries often so transitory that they developed and passed in
+a few seconds. And in some of them the being was not wholly a stranger;
+there were moments when he seemed to be composed of recognizable
+fragments of young men she knew--a smile she had liked, from one; the
+figure of another, the hair of another--and sometimes she thought
+he might be concealed, so to say, within the person of an actual
+acquaintance, someone she had never suspected of being the right seeker
+for her, someone who had never suspected that it was she who "waited"
+for him. Anything might reveal them to each other: a look, a turn of the
+head, a singular word--perhaps some flowers upon her breast or in her
+hand.
+
+She wiped the dishes slowly, concluding the operation by dropping a
+saucer upon the floor and dreamily sweeping the fragments under the
+stove. She sighed and replaced the broom near a window, letting her
+glance wander over the small yard outside. The grass, repulsively
+besooted to the colour of coal-smoke all winter, had lately come to life
+again and now sparkled with green, in the midst of which a tiny shot of
+blue suddenly fixed her absent eyes. They remained upon it for several
+moments, becoming less absent.
+
+It was a violet.
+
+Alice ran upstairs, put on her hat, went outdoors and began to search
+out the violets. She found twenty-two, a bright omen--since the number
+was that of her years--but not enough violets. There were no more; she
+had ransacked every foot of the yard.
+
+She looked dubiously at the little bunch in her hand, glanced at
+the lawn next door, which offered no favourable prospect; then went
+thoughtfully into the house, left her twenty-two violets in a bowl
+of water, and came quickly out again, her brow marked with a frown of
+decision. She went to a trolley-line and took a car to the outskirts of
+the city where a new park had been opened.
+
+Here she resumed her search, but it was not an easily rewarded one,
+and for an hour after her arrival she found no violets. She walked
+conscientiously over the whole stretch of meadow, her eyes roving
+discontentedly; there was never a blue dot in the groomed expanse; but
+at last, as she came near the borders of an old grove of trees, left
+untouched by the municipal landscapers, the little flowers appeared, and
+she began to gather them. She picked them carefully, loosening the earth
+round each tiny plant, so as to bring the roots up with it, that it
+might live the longer; and she had brought a napkin, which she
+drenched at a hydrant, and kept loosely wrapped about the stems of her
+collection.
+
+The turf was too damp for her to kneel; she worked patiently, stooping
+from the waist; and when she got home in a drizzle of rain at five
+o'clock her knees were tremulous with strain, her back ached, and she
+was tired all over, but she had three hundred violets. Her mother moaned
+when Alice showed them to her, fragrant in a basin of water.
+
+"Oh, you POOR child! To think of your having to work so hard to get
+things that other girls only need lift their little fingers for!"
+
+"Never mind," said Alice, huskily. "I've got 'em and I AM going to have
+a good time to-night!"
+
+"You've just got to!" Mrs. Adams agreed, intensely sympathetic. "The
+Lord knows you deserve to, after picking all these violets, poor thing,
+and He wouldn't be mean enough to keep you from it. I may have to get
+dinner before I finish the dress, but I can get it done in a few minutes
+afterward, and it's going to look right pretty. Don't you worry about
+THAT! And with all these lovely violets----"
+
+"I wonder----" Alice began, paused, then went on, fragmentarily: "I
+suppose--well, I wonder--do you suppose it would have been better policy
+to have told Walter before----"
+
+"No," said her mother. "It would only have given him longer to grumble."
+
+"But he might----"
+
+"Don't worry," Mrs. Adams reassured her. "He'll be a little cross, but
+he won't be stubborn; just let me talk to him and don't you say anything
+at all, no matter what HE says."
+
+These references to Walter concerned some necessary manoeuvres which
+took place at dinner, and were conducted by the mother, Alice having
+accepted her advice to sit in silence. Mrs. Adams began by laughing
+cheerfully. "I wonder how much longer it took me to cook this dinner
+than it does Walter to eat it?" she said. "Don't gobble, child! There's
+no hurry."
+
+In contact with his own family Walter was no squanderer of words.
+
+"Is for me," he said. "Got date."
+
+"I know you have, but there's plenty of time."
+
+He smiled in benevolent pity. "YOU know, do you? If you made any
+coffee--don't bother if you didn't. Get some down-town." He seemed
+about to rise and depart; whereupon Alice, biting her lip, sent a
+panic-stricken glance at her mother.
+
+But Mrs. Adams seemed not at all disturbed; and laughed again. "Why,
+what nonsense, Walter! I'll bring your coffee in a few minutes, but
+we're going to have dessert first."
+
+"What sort?"
+
+"Some lovely peaches."
+
+"Doe' want 'ny canned peaches," said the frank Walter, moving back his
+chair. "G'-night."
+
+"Walter! It doesn't begin till about nine o'clock at the earliest."
+
+He paused, mystified. "What doesn't?"
+
+"The dance."
+
+"What dance?"
+
+"Why, Mildred Palmer's dance, of course."
+
+Walter laughed briefly. "What's that to me?"
+
+"Why, you haven't forgotten it's TO-NIGHT, have you?" Mrs. Adams cried.
+"What a boy!"
+
+"I told you a week ago I wasn't going to that ole dance," he returned,
+frowning. "You heard me."
+
+"Walter!" she exclaimed. "Of COURSE you're going. I got your clothes all
+out this afternoon, and brushed them for you. They'll look very nice,
+and----"
+
+"They won't look nice on ME," he interrupted. "Got date down-town, I
+tell you."
+
+"But of course you'll----"
+
+"See here!" Walter said, decisively. "Don't get any wrong ideas in your
+head. I'm just as liable to go up to that ole dance at the Palmers' as I
+am to eat a couple of barrels of broken glass."
+
+"But, Walter----"
+
+Walter was beginning to be seriously annoyed. "Don't 'Walter' me! I'm no
+s'ciety snake. I wouldn't jazz with that Palmer crowd if they coaxed me
+with diamonds."
+
+"Walter----"
+
+"Didn't I tell you it's no use to 'Walter' me?" he demanded.
+
+"My dear child----"
+
+"Oh, Glory!"
+
+At this Mrs. Adams abandoned her air of amusement, looked hurt, and
+glanced at the demure Miss Perry across the table. "I'm afraid Miss
+Perry won't think you have very good manners, Walter."
+
+"You're right she won't," he agreed, grimly. "Not if I haf to hear any
+more about me goin' to----"
+
+But his mother interrupted him with some asperity: "It seems very
+strange that you always object to going anywhere among OUR friends,
+Walter."
+
+"YOUR friends!" he said, and, rising from his chair, gave utterance to
+an ironical laugh strictly monosyllabic. "Your friends!" he repeated,
+going to the door. "Oh, yes! Certainly! Good-NIGHT!"
+
+And looking back over his shoulder to offer a final brief view of his
+derisive face, he took himself out of the room.
+
+Alice gasped: "Mama----"
+
+"I'll stop him!" her mother responded, sharply; and hurried after the
+truant, catching him at the front door with his hat and raincoat on.
+
+"Walter----"
+
+"Told you had a date down-town," he said, gruffly, and would have opened
+the door, but she caught his arm and detained him.
+
+"Walter, please come back and finish your dinner. When I take all the
+trouble to cook it for you, I think you might at least----"
+
+"Now, now!" he said. "That isn't what you're up to. You don't want to
+make me eat; you want to make me listen."
+
+"Well, you MUST listen!" She retained her grasp upon his arm, and
+made it tighter. "Walter, please!" she entreated, her voice becoming
+tremulous. "PLEASE don't make me so much trouble!"
+
+He drew back from her as far as her hold upon him permitted, and looked
+at her sharply. "Look here!" he said. "I get you, all right! What's the
+matter of Alice GOIN' to that party by herself?"
+
+"She just CAN'T!"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"It makes things too MEAN for her, Walter. All the other girls have
+somebody to depend on after they get there."
+
+"Well, why doesn't she have somebody?" he asked, testily. "Somebody
+besides ME, I mean! Why hasn't somebody asked her to go? She ought to be
+THAT popular, anyhow, I sh'd think--she TRIES enough!"
+
+"I don't understand how you can be so hard," his mother wailed, huskily.
+"You know why they don't run after her the way they do the other girls
+she goes with, Walter. It's because we're poor, and she hasn't got any
+background.
+
+"'Background?'" Walter repeated. "'Background?' What kind of talk is
+that?"
+
+"You WILL go with her to-night, Walter?" his mother pleaded, not
+stopping to enlighten him. "You don't understand how hard things are for
+her and how brave she is about them, or you COULDN'T be so selfish! It'd
+be more than I can bear to see her disappointed to-night! She went clear
+out to Belleview Park this afternoon, Walter, and spent hours and hours
+picking violets to wear. You WILL----"
+
+Walter's heart was not iron, and the episode of the violets may have
+reached it. "Oh, BLUB!" he said, and flung his soft hat violently at the
+wall.
+
+His mother beamed with delight. "THAT'S a good boy, darling! You'll
+never be sorry you----"
+
+"Cut it out," he requested. "If I take her, will you pay for a taxi?"
+
+"Oh, Walter!" And again Mrs. Adams showed distress. "Couldn't you?"
+
+"No, I couldn't; I'm not goin' to throw away my good money like that,
+and you can't tell what time o' night it'll be before she's willin' to
+come home. What's the matter you payin' for one?"
+
+"I haven't any money."
+
+"Well, father----"
+
+She shook her head dolefully. "I got some from him this morning, and
+I can't bother him for any more; it upsets him. He's ALWAYS been so
+terribly close with money----"
+
+"I guess he couldn't help that," Walter observed. "We're liable to go to
+the poorhouse the way it is. Well, what's the matter our walkin' to this
+rotten party?"
+
+"In the rain, Walter?"
+
+"Well, it's only a drizzle and we can take a streetcar to within a block
+of the house."
+
+Again his mother shook her head. "It wouldn't do."
+
+"Well, darn the luck, all right!" he consented, explosively. "I'll get
+her something to ride in. It means seventy-five cents."
+
+"Why, Walter!" Mrs. Adams cried, much pleased. "Do you know how to get a
+cab for that little? How splendid!"
+
+"Tain't a cab," Walter informed her crossly. "It's a tin Lizzie, but you
+don't haf' to tell her what it is till I get her into it, do you?"
+
+Mrs. Adams agreed that she didn't.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+Alice was busy with herself for two hours after dinner; but a little
+before nine o'clock she stood in front of her long mirror, completed,
+bright-eyed and solemn. Her hair, exquisitely arranged, gave all she
+asked of it; what artificialities in colour she had used upon her face
+were only bits of emphasis that made her prettiness the more distinct;
+and the dress, not rumpled by her mother's careful hours of work, was a
+white cloud of loveliness. Finally there were two triumphant bouquets
+of violets, each with the stems wrapped in tin-foil shrouded by a bow of
+purple chiffon; and one bouquet she wore at her waist and the other she
+carried in her hand.
+
+Miss Perry, called in by a rapturous mother for the free treat of a look
+at this radiance, insisted that Alice was a vision. "Purely and simply
+a vision!" she said, meaning that no other definition whatever would
+satisfy her. "I never saw anybody look a vision if she don't look one
+to-night," the admiring nurse declared. "Her papa'll think the same I do
+about it. You see if he doesn't say she's purely and simply a vision."
+
+Adams did not fulfil the prediction quite literally when Alice paid a
+brief visit to his room to "show" him and bid him good-night; but he
+chuckled feebly. "Well, well, well!" he said.
+
+"You look mighty fine--MIGHTY fine!" And he waggled a bony finger at her
+two bouquets. "Why, Alice, who's your beau?"
+
+"Never you mind!" she laughed, archly brushing his nose with the violets
+in her hand. "He treats me pretty well, doesn't he?"
+
+"Must like to throw his money around! These violets smell mighty sweet,
+and they ought to, if they're going to a party with YOU. Have a good
+time, dearie."
+
+"I mean to!" she cried; and she repeated this gaily, but with an
+emphasis expressing sharp determination as she left him. "I MEAN to!"
+
+"What was he talking about?" her mother inquired, smoothing the rather
+worn and old evening wrap she had placed on Alice's bed. "What were you
+telling him you 'mean to?'"
+
+Alice went back to her triple mirror for the last time, then stood
+before the long one. "That I mean to have a good time to-night," she
+said; and as she turned from her reflection to the wrap Mrs. Adams held
+up for her, "It looks as though I COULD, don't you think so?"
+
+"You'll just be a queen to-night," her mother whispered in fond emotion.
+"You mustn't doubt yourself."
+
+"Well, there's one thing," said Alice. "I think I do look nice enough to
+get along without having to dance with that Frank Dowling! All I ask is
+for it to happen just once; and if he comes near me to-night I'm going
+to treat him the way the other girls do. Do you suppose Walter's got the
+taxi out in front?"
+
+"He--he's waiting down in the hall," Mrs. Adams answered, nervously; and
+she held up another garment to go over the wrap.
+
+Alice frowned at it. "What's that, mama?"
+
+"It's--it's your father's raincoat. I thought you'd put it on over----"
+
+"But I won't need it in a taxicab."
+
+"You will to get in and out, and you needn't take it into the Palmers'.
+You can leave it in the--in the--It's drizzling, and you'll need it."
+
+"Oh, well," Alice consented; and a few minutes later, as with Walter's
+assistance she climbed into the vehicle he had provided, she better
+understood her mother's solicitude.
+
+"What on earth IS this, Walter?" she asked.
+
+"Never mind; it'll keep you dry enough with the top up," he returned,
+taking his seat beside her. Then for a time, as they went rather jerkily
+up the street, she was silent; but finally she repeated her question:
+"What IS it, Walter?"
+
+"What's what?"
+
+"This--this CAR?"
+
+"It's a ottomobile."
+
+"I mean--what kind is it?"
+
+"Haven't you got eyes?"
+
+"It's too dark."
+
+"It's a second-hand tin Lizzie," said Walter. "D'you know what that
+means? It means a flivver."
+
+"Yes, Walter."
+
+"Got 'ny 'bjections?"
+
+"Why, no, dear," she said, placatively. "Is it yours, Walter? Have you
+bought it?"
+
+"Me?" he laughed. "_I_ couldn't buy a used wheelbarrow. I rent this
+sometimes when I'm goin' out among 'em. Costs me seventy-five cents and
+the price o' the gas."
+
+"That seems very moderate."
+
+"I guess it is! The feller owes me some money, and this is the only way
+I'd ever get it off him."
+
+"Is he a garage-keeper?"
+
+"Not exactly!" Walter uttered husky sounds of amusement. "You'll be just
+as happy, I guess, if you don't know who he is," he said.
+
+His tone misgave her; and she said truthfully that she was content not
+to know who owned the car. "I joke sometimes about how you keep things
+to yourself," she added, "but I really never do pry in your affairs,
+Walter."
+
+"Oh, no, you don't!"
+
+"Indeed, I don't."
+
+"Yes, you're mighty nice and cooing when you got me where you want me,"
+he jeered. "Well, _I_ just as soon tell you where I get this car."
+
+"I'd just as soon you wouldn't, Walter," she said, hurriedly. "Please
+don't."
+
+But Walter meant to tell her. "Why, there's nothin' exactly CRIMINAL
+about it," he said. "It belongs to old J. A. Lamb himself. He keeps it
+for their coon chauffeur. I rent it from him."
+
+"From Mr. LAMB?"
+
+"No; from the coon chauffeur."
+
+"Walter!" she gasped.
+
+"Sure I do! I can get it any night when the coon isn't goin' to use it
+himself. He's drivin' their limousine to-night--that little Henrietta
+Lamb's goin' to the party, no matter if her father HAS only been dead
+less'n a year!" He paused, then inquired: "Well, how d'you like it?"
+
+She did not speak, and he began to be remorseful for having imparted
+so much information, though his way of expressing regret was his own.
+"Well, you WILL make the folks make me take you to parties!" he said. "I
+got to do it the best way I CAN, don't I?"
+
+Then as she made no response, "Oh, the car's CLEAN enough," he said.
+"This coon, he's as particular as any white man; you needn't worry about
+that." And as she still said nothing, he added gruffly, "I'd of had a
+better car if I could afforded it. You needn't get so upset about it."
+
+"I don't understand--" she said in a low voice--"I don't understand how
+you know such people."
+
+"Such people as who?"
+
+"As--coloured chauffeurs."
+
+"Oh, look here, now!" he protested, loudly. "Don't you know this is a
+democratic country?"
+
+"Not quite that democratic, is it, Walter?"
+
+"The trouble with you," he retorted, "you don't know there's anybody in
+town except just this silk-shirt crowd." He paused, seeming to await
+a refutation; but as none came, he expressed himself definitely: "They
+make me sick."
+
+They were coming near their destination, and the glow of the big,
+brightly lighted house was seen before them in the wet night. Other
+cars, not like theirs, were approaching this center of brilliance; long
+triangles of light near the ground swept through the fine drizzle; small
+red tail-lights gleamed again from the moist pavement of the street;
+and, through the myriads of little glistening leaves along the curving
+driveway, glimpses were caught of lively colours moving in a white glare
+as the limousines released their occupants under the shelter of the
+porte-cochere.
+
+Alice clutched Walter's arm in a panic; they were just at the driveway
+entrance. "Walter, we mustn't go in there."
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"Leave this awful car outside."
+
+"Why, I----"
+
+"Stop!" she insisted, vehemently. "You've got to! Go back!"
+
+"Oh, Glory!"
+
+The little car was between the entrance posts; but Walter backed it out,
+avoiding a collision with an impressive machine which swerved away
+from them and passed on toward the porte-cochere, showing a man's face
+grinning at the window as it went by. "Flivver runabout got the wrong
+number!" he said.
+
+"Did he SEE us?" Alice cried.
+
+"Did who see us?"
+
+"Harvey Malone--in that foreign coupe."
+
+"No; he couldn't tell who we were under this top," Walter assured her as
+he brought the little car to a standstill beside the curbstone, out in
+the street. "What's it matter if he did, the big fish?"
+
+Alice responded with a loud sigh, and sat still.
+
+"Well, want to go on back?" Walter inquired. "You bet I'm willing!"
+
+"No."
+
+"Well, then, what's the matter our drivin' on up to the porte-cochere?
+There's room for me to park just the other side of it."
+
+"No, NO!"
+
+"What you expect to do? Sit HERE all night?"
+
+"No, leave the car here."
+
+"_I_ don't care where we leave it," he said. "Sit still till I lock her,
+so none o' these millionaires around here'll run off with her." He got
+out with a padlock and chain; and, having put these in place, offered
+Alice his hand. "Come on, if you're ready."
+
+"Wait," she said, and, divesting herself of the raincoat, handed it to
+Walter. "Please leave this with your things in the men's dressing-room,
+as if it were an extra one of your own, Walter."
+
+He nodded; she jumped out; and they scurried through the drizzle.
+
+As they reached the porte-cochere she began to laugh airily, and spoke
+to the impassive man in livery who stood there. "Joke on us!" she
+said, hurrying by him toward the door of the house. "Our car broke down
+outside the gate."
+
+The man remained impassive, though he responded with a faint gleam
+as Walter, looking back at him, produced for his benefit a cynical
+distortion of countenance which offered little confirmation of Alice's
+account of things. Then the door was swiftly opened to the brother and
+sister; and they came into a marble-floored hall, where a dozen sleeked
+young men lounged, smoked cigarettes and fastened their gloves, as they
+waited for their ladies. Alice nodded to one or another of these, and
+went quickly on, her face uplifted and smiling; but Walter detained her
+at the door to which she hastened.
+
+"Listen here," he said. "I suppose you want me to dance the first dance
+with you----"
+
+"If you please, Walter," she said, meekly.
+
+"How long you goin' to hang around fixin' up in that dressin'-room?"
+
+"I'll be out before you're ready yourself," she promised him; and kept
+her word, she was so eager for her good time to begin. When he came
+for her, they went down the hall to a corridor opening upon three great
+rooms which had been thrown open together, with the furniture removed
+and the broad floors waxed. At one end of the corridor musicians sat in
+a green grove, and Walter, with some interest, turned toward these; but
+his sister, pressing his arm, impelled him in the opposite direction.
+
+"What's the matter now?" he asked. "That's Jazz Louie and his half-breed
+bunch--three white and four mulatto. Let's----?"
+
+"No, no," she whispered. "We must speak to Mildred and Mr. and Mrs.
+Palmer."
+
+"'Speak' to 'em? I haven't got a thing to say to THOSE berries!"
+
+"Walter, won't you PLEASE behave?"
+
+He seemed to consent, for the moment, at least, and suffered her to take
+him down the corridor toward a floral bower where the hostess stood with
+her father and mother. Other couples and groups were moving in the
+same direction, carrying with them a hubbub of laughter and fragmentary
+chatterings; and Alice, smiling all the time, greeted people on
+every side of her eagerly--a little more eagerly than most of them
+responded--while Walter nodded in a noncommittal manner to one or two,
+said nothing, and yawned audibly, the last resource of a person who
+finds himself nervous in a false situation. He repeated his yawn and
+was beginning another when a convulsive pressure upon his arm made him
+understand that he must abandon this method of reassuring himself. They
+were close upon the floral bower.
+
+Mildred was giving her hand to one and another of her guests as rapidly
+as she could, passing them on to her father and mother, and at the
+same time resisting the efforts of three or four detached bachelors who
+besought her to give over her duty in favour of the dance-music just
+beginning to blare.
+
+She was a large, fair girl, with a kindness of eye somewhat withheld by
+an expression of fastidiousness; at first sight of her it was clear that
+she would never in her life do anything "incorrect," or wear anything
+"incorrect." But her correctness was of the finer sort, and had no air
+of being studied or achieved; conduct would never offer her a problem to
+be settled from a book of rules, for the rules were so deep within her
+that she was unconscious of them. And behind this perfection there was
+an even ampler perfection of what Mrs. Adams called "background." The
+big, rich, simple house was part of it, and Mildred's father and mother
+were part of it. They stood beside her, large, serene people, murmuring
+graciously and gently inclining their handsome heads as they gave their
+hands to the guests; and even the youngest and most ebullient of these
+took on a hushed mannerliness with a closer approach to the bower.
+
+When the opportunity came for Alice and Walter to pass within this
+precinct, Alice, going first, leaned forward and whispered in Mildred's
+ear. "You DIDN'T wear the maize georgette! That's what I thought you
+were going to. But you look simply DARLING! And those pearls----"
+
+Others were crowding decorously forward, anxious to be done with
+ceremony and get to the dancing; and Mildred did not prolong the
+intimacy of Alice's enthusiastic whispering. With a faint accession of
+colour and a smile tending somewhat in the direction of rigidity, she
+carried Alice's hand immediately onward to Mrs. Palmer's. Alice's own
+colour showed a little heightening as she accepted the suggestion thus
+implied; nor was that emotional tint in any wise decreased, a moment
+later, by an impression that Walter, in concluding the brief exchange
+of courtesies between himself and the stately Mr. Palmer, had again
+reassured himself with a yawn.
+
+But she did not speak of it to Walter; she preferred not to confirm the
+impression and to leave in her mind a possible doubt that he had done
+it. He followed her out upon the waxed floor, said resignedly: "Well,
+come on," put his arm about her, and they began to dance.
+
+Alice danced gracefully and well, but not so well as Walter. Of all the
+steps and runs, of all the whimsical turns and twirlings, of all the
+rhythmic swayings and dips commanded that season by such blarings as
+were the barbaric product, loud and wild, of the Jazz Louies and their
+half-breed bunches, the thin and sallow youth was a master. Upon his
+face could be seen contempt of the easy marvels he performed as he
+moved in swift precision from one smooth agility to another; and if some
+too-dainty or jealous cavalier complained that to be so much a stylist
+in dancing was "not quite like a gentleman," at least Walter's style was
+what the music called for. No other dancer in the room could be thought
+comparable to him. Alice told him so.
+
+"It's wonderful!" she said. "And the mystery is, where you ever learned
+to DO it! You never went to dancing-school, but there isn't a man in the
+room who can dance half so well. I don't see why, when you dance like
+this, you always make such a fuss about coming to parties."
+
+He sounded his brief laugh, a jeering bark out of one side of the mouth,
+and swung her miraculously through a closing space between two other
+couples. "You know a lot about what goes on, don't you? You prob'ly
+think there's no other place to dance in this town except these
+frozen-face joints."
+
+"'Frozen face?'" she echoed, laughing. "Why, everybody's having a
+splendid time. Look at them."
+
+"Oh, they holler loud enough," he said. "They do it to make each other
+think they're havin' a good time. You don't call that Palmer family
+frozen-face berries, I s'pose. No?"
+
+"Certainly not. They're just dignified and----"
+
+"Yeuh!" said Walter. "They're dignified, 'specially when you tried to
+whisper to Mildred to show how IN with her you were, and she moved you
+on that way. SHE'S a hot friend, isn't she!"
+
+"She didn't mean anything by it. She----"
+
+"Ole Palmer's a hearty, slap you-on-the-back ole berry," Walter
+interrupted; adding in a casual tone, "All I'd like, I'd like to hit
+him."
+
+"Walter! By the way, you mustn't forget to ask Mildred for a dance
+before the evening is over."
+
+"Me?" He produced the lop-sided appearance of his laugh, but without
+making it vocal. "You watch me do it!"
+
+"She probably won't have one left, but you must ask her, anyway."
+
+"Why must I?"
+
+"Because, in the first place, you're supposed to, and, in the second
+place, she's my most intimate friend."
+
+"Yeuh? Is she? I've heard you pull that 'most-intimate-friend' stuff
+often enough about her. What's SHE ever do to show she is?"
+
+"Never mind. You really must ask her, Walter. I want you to; and I want
+you to ask several other girls afterwhile; I'll tell you who."
+
+"Keep on wanting; it'll do you good."
+
+"Oh, but you really----"
+
+"Listen!" he said. "I'm just as liable to dance with any of these
+fairies as I am to buy a bucket o' rusty tacks and eat 'em. Forget it!
+Soon as I get rid of you I'm goin' back to that room where I left my hat
+and overcoat and smoke myself to death."
+
+"Well," she said, a little ruefully, as the frenzy of Jazz Louie and his
+half-breeds was suddenly abated to silence, "you mustn't--you mustn't
+get rid of me TOO soon, Walter."
+
+They stood near one of the wide doorways, remaining where they had
+stopped. Other couples, everywhere, joined one another, forming
+vivacious clusters, but none of these groups adopted the brother and
+sister, nor did any one appear to be hurrying in Alice's direction to
+ask her for the next dance. She looked about her, still maintaining that
+jubilance of look and manner she felt so necessary--for it is to the
+girls who are "having a good time" that partners are attracted--and, in
+order to lend greater colour to her impersonation of a lively belle,
+she began to chatter loudly, bringing into play an accompaniment of
+frolicsome gesture. She brushed Walter's nose saucily with the bunch
+of violets in her hand, tapped him on the shoulder, shook her pretty
+forefinger in his face, flourished her arms, kept her shoulders moving,
+and laughed continuously as she spoke.
+
+"You NAUGHTY old Walter!" she cried. "AREN'T you ashamed to be such a
+wonderful dancer and then only dance with your own little sister! You
+could dance on the stage if you wanted to. Why, you could made your
+FORTUNE that way! Why don't you? Wouldn't it be just lovely to have all
+the rows and rows of people clapping their hands and shouting, 'Hurrah!
+Hurrah, for Walter Adams! Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!"
+
+He stood looking at her in stolid pity.
+
+"Cut it out," he said. "You better be givin' some of these berries the
+eye so they'll ask you to dance."
+
+She was not to be so easily checked, and laughed loudly, flourishing her
+violets in his face again. "You WOULD like it; you know you would; you
+needn't pretend! Just think! A whole big audience shouting, 'Hurrah!
+HURRAH! HUR----'"
+
+"The place'll be pulled if you get any noisier," he interrupted, not
+ungently. "Besides, I'm no muley cow."
+
+"A 'COW?'" she laughed. "What on earth----"
+
+"I can't eat dead violets," he explained. "So don't keep tryin' to make
+me do it."
+
+This had the effect he desired, and subdued her; she abandoned her
+unsisterly coquetries, and looked beamingly about her, but her smile was
+more mechanical than it had been at first.
+
+At home she had seemed beautiful; but here, where the other girls
+competed, things were not as they had been there, with only her mother
+and Miss Perry to give contrast. These crowds of other girls had all
+done their best, also, to look beautiful, though not one of them had
+worked so hard for such a consummation as Alice had. They did not need
+to; they did not need to get their mothers to make old dresses over;
+they did not need to hunt violets in the rain.
+
+At home her dress had seemed beautiful; but that was different,
+too, where there were dozens of brilliant fabrics, fashioned in new
+ways--some of these new ways startling, which only made the wearers
+centers of interest and shocked no one. And Alice remembered that she
+had heard a girl say, not long before, "Oh, ORGANDIE! Nobody wears
+organdie for evening gowns except in midsummer." Alice had thought
+little of this; but as she looked about her and saw no organdie except
+her own, she found greater difficulty in keeping her smile as arch and
+spontaneous as she wished it. In fact, it was beginning to make her face
+ache a little.
+
+Mildred came in from the corridor, heavily attended. She carried a great
+bouquet of violets laced with lilies of-the-valley; and the violets were
+lusty, big purple things, their stems wrapped in cloth of gold, with
+silken cords dependent, ending in long tassels. She and her convoy
+passed near the two young Adamses; and it appeared that one of the
+convoy besought his hostess to permit "cutting in"; they were "doing it
+other places" of late, he urged; but he was denied and told to console
+himself by holding the bouquet, at intervals, until his third of the
+sixteenth dance should come. Alice looked dubiously at her own bouquet.
+
+Suddenly she felt that the violets betrayed her; that any one who looked
+at them could see how rustic, how innocent of any florist's craft they
+were "I can't eat dead violets," Walter said. The little wild flowers,
+dying indeed in the warm air, were drooping in a forlorn mass; and it
+seemed to her that whoever noticed them would guess that she had picked
+them herself. She decided to get rid of them.
+
+Walter was becoming restive. "Look here!" he said. "Can't you flag one
+o' these long-tailed birds to take you on for the next dance? You came
+to have a good time; why don't you get busy and have it? I want to get
+out and smoke."
+
+"You MUSTN'T leave me, Walter," she whispered, hastily. "Somebody'll
+come for me before long, but until they do----"
+
+"Well, couldn't you sit somewhere?"
+
+"No, no! There isn't any one I could sit with."
+
+"Well, why not? Look at those ole dames in the corners. What's the
+matter your tyin' up with some o' them for a while?"
+
+"PLEASE, Walter; no!"
+
+In fact, that indomitable smile of hers was the more difficult to
+maintain because of these very elders to whom Walter referred. They
+were mothers of girls among the dancers, and they were there to fend and
+contrive for their offspring; to keep them in countenance through any
+trial; to lend them diplomacy in the carrying out of all enterprises;
+to be "background" for them; and in these essentially biological
+functionings to imitate their own matings and renew the excitement of
+their nuptial periods. Older men, husbands of these ladies and fathers
+of eligible girls, were also to be seen, most of them with Mr. Palmer
+in a billiard-room across the corridor. Mr. and Mrs. Adams had not been
+invited. "Of course papa and mama just barely know Mildred Palmer,"
+Alice thought, "and most of the other girls' fathers and mothers are old
+friends of Mr. and Mrs. Palmer, but I do think she might have ASKED papa
+and mama, anyway--she needn't have been afraid just to ask them;
+she knew they couldn't come." And her smiling lip twitched a little
+threateningly, as she concluded the silent monologue. "I suppose she
+thinks I ought to be glad enough she asked Walter!"
+
+Walter was, in fact, rather noticeable. He was not Mildred's only guest
+to wear a short coat and to appear without gloves; but he was singular
+(at least in his present surroundings) on account of a kind of
+coiffuring he favoured, his hair having been shaped after what seemed
+a Mongol inspiration. Only upon the top of the head was actual hair
+perceived, the rest appearing to be nudity. And even more than by any
+difference in mode he was set apart by his look and manner, in which
+there seemed to be a brooding, secretive and jeering superiority and
+this was most vividly expressed when he felt called upon for his loud,
+short, lop-sided laugh. Whenever he uttered it Alice laughed, too, as
+loudly as she could, to cover it.
+
+"Well," he said. "How long we goin' to stand here? My feet are sproutin'
+roots."
+
+Alice took his arm, and they began to walk aimlessly through the rooms,
+though she tried to look as if they had a definite destination, keeping
+her eyes eager and her lips parted;--people had called jovially to them
+from the distance, she meant to imply, and they were going to join these
+merry friends. She was still upon this ghostly errand when a furious
+outbreak of drums and saxophones sounded a prelude for the second dance.
+
+Walter danced with her again, but he gave her a warning. "I don't want
+to leave you high and dry," he told her, "but I can't stand it. I got to
+get somewhere I don't haf' to hurt my eyes with these berries; I'll go
+blind if I got to look at any more of 'em. I'm goin' out to smoke as
+soon as the music begins the next time, and you better get fixed for
+it."
+
+Alice tried to get fixed for it. As they danced she nodded sunnily to
+every man whose eye she caught, smiled her smile with the under
+lip caught between her teeth; but it was not until the end of the
+intermission after the dance that she saw help coming.
+
+Across the room sat the globular lady she had encountered that morning,
+and beside the globular lady sat a round-headed, round-bodied girl;
+her daughter, at first glance. The family contour was also as evident
+a characteristic of the short young man who stood in front of Mrs.
+Dowling, engaged with her in a discussion which was not without
+evidences of an earnestness almost impassioned. Like Walter, he was
+declining to dance a third time with sister; he wished to go elsewhere.
+
+Alice from a sidelong eye watched the controversy: she saw the globular
+young man glance toward her, over his shoulder; whereupon Mrs. Dowling,
+following this glance, gave Alice a look of open fury, became much more
+vehement in the argument, and even struck her knee with a round, fat
+fist for emphasis.
+
+"I'm on my way," said Walter. "There's the music startin' up again, and
+I told you----"
+
+She nodded gratefully. "It's all right--but come back before long,
+Walter."
+
+The globular young man, red with annoyance, had torn himself from
+his family and was hastening across the room to her. "C'n I have this
+dance?"
+
+"Why, you nice Frank Dowling!" Alice cried. "How lovely!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+They danced. Mr. Dowling should have found other forms of exercise and
+pastime.
+
+Nature has not designed everyone for dancing, though sometimes those
+she has denied are the last to discover her niggardliness. But the round
+young man was at least vigorous enough--too much so, when his knees
+collided with Alice's--and he was too sturdy to be thrown off his feet,
+himself, or to allow his partner to fall when he tripped her. He held
+her up valiantly, and continued to beat a path through the crowd of
+other dancers by main force.
+
+He paid no attention to anything suggested by the efforts of the
+musicians, and appeared to be unaware that there should have been some
+connection between what they were doing and what he was doing; but he
+may have listened to other music of his own, for his expression was of
+high content; he seemed to feel no doubt whatever that he was dancing.
+Alice kept as far away from him as under the circumstances she could;
+and when they stopped she glanced down, and found the execution of
+unseen manoeuvres, within the protection of her skirt, helpful to one of
+her insteps and to the toes of both of her slippers.
+
+Her cheery partner was paddling his rosy brows with a fine handkerchief.
+"That was great!" he said. "Let's go out and sit in the corridor;
+they've got some comfortable chairs out there."
+
+"Well--let's not," she returned. "I believe I'd rather stay in here and
+look at the crowd."
+
+"No; that isn't it," he said, chiding her with a waggish forefinger.
+"You think if you go out there you'll miss a chance of someone else
+asking you for the next dance, and so you'll have to give it to me."
+
+"How absurd!" Then, after a look about her that revealed nothing
+encouraging, she added graciously, "You can have the next if you want
+it."
+
+"Great!" he exclaimed, mechanically. "Now let's get out of here--out of
+THIS room, anyhow."
+
+"Why? What's the matter with----"
+
+"My mother," Mr. Dowling explained. "But don't look at her. She keeps
+motioning me to come and see after Ella, and I'm simply NOT going to do
+it, you see!"
+
+Alice laughed. "I don't believe it's so much that," she said, and
+consented to walk with him to a point in the next room from which Mrs.
+Dowling's continuous signalling could not be seen. "Your mother hates
+me."
+
+"Oh, no; I wouldn't say that. No, she don't," he protested, innocently.
+"She don't know you more than just to speak to, you see. So how could
+she?"
+
+"Well, she does. I can tell."
+
+A frown appeared upon his rounded brow. "No; I'll tell you the way she
+feels. It's like this: Ella isn't TOO popular, you know--it's hard to
+see why, because she's a right nice girl, in her way--and mother thinks
+I ought to look after her, you see. She thinks I ought to dance a whole
+lot with her myself, and stir up other fellows to dance with her--it's
+simply impossible to make mother understand you CAN'T do that, you see.
+And then about me, you see, if she had her way I wouldn't get to dance
+with anybody at all except girls like Mildred Palmer and Henrietta Lamb.
+Mother wants to run my whole programme for me, you understand, but the
+trouble of it is--about girls like that, you see well, I couldn't do
+what she wants, even if I wanted to myself, because you take those
+girls, and by the time I get Ella off my hands for a minute, why, their
+dances are always every last one taken, and where do I come in?"
+
+Alice nodded, her amiability undamaged. "I see. So that's why you dance
+with me."
+
+"No, I like to," he protested. "I rather dance with you than I do with
+those girls." And he added with a retrospective determination which
+showed that he had been through quite an experience with Mrs. Dowling in
+this matter. "I TOLD mother I would, too!"
+
+"Did it take all your courage, Frank?"
+
+He looked at her shrewdly. "Now you're trying to tease me," he said. "I
+don't care; I WOULD rather dance with you! In the first place, you're
+a perfectly beautiful dancer, you see, and in the second, a man feels a
+lot more comfortable with you than he does with them. Of course I know
+almost all the other fellows get along with those girls all right; but
+I don't waste any time on 'em I don't have to. _I_ like people that are
+always cordial to everybody, you see--the way you are."
+
+"Thank you," she said, thoughtfully.
+
+"Oh, I MEAN it," he insisted. "There goes the band again. Shall we?"
+
+"Suppose we sit it out?" she suggested. "I believe I'd like to go out in
+the corridor, after all--it's pretty warm in here."
+
+Assenting cheerfully, Dowling conducted her to a pair of easy-chairs
+within a secluding grove of box-trees, and when they came to this
+retreat they found Mildred Palmer just departing, under escort of a
+well-favoured gentleman about thirty. As these two walked slowly away,
+in the direction of the dancing-floor, they left it not to be doubted
+that they were on excellent terms with each other; Mildred was evidently
+willing to make their progress even slower, for she halted momentarily,
+once or twice; and her upward glances to her tall companion's face were
+of a gentle, almost blushing deference. Never before had Alice seen
+anything like this in her friend's manner.
+
+"How queer!" she murmured.
+
+"What's queer?" Dowling inquired as they sat down.
+
+"Who was that man?"
+
+"Haven't you met him?"
+
+"I never saw him before. Who is he?"
+
+"Why, it's this Arthur Russell."
+
+"What Arthur Russell? I never heard of him." Mr. Dowling was puzzled.
+"Why, THAT'S funny! Only the last time I saw you, you were telling me
+how awfully well you knew Mildred Palmer."
+
+"Why, certainly I do," Alice informed him. "She's my most intimate
+friend."
+
+"That's what makes it seem so funny you haven't heard anything about
+this Russell, because everybody says even if she isn't engaged to him
+right now, she most likely will be before very long. I must say it looks
+a good deal that way to me, myself."
+
+"What nonsense!" Alice exclaimed. "She's never even mentioned him to
+me."
+
+The young man glanced at her dubiously and passed a finger over the tiny
+prong that dashingly composed the whole substance of his moustache.
+
+"Well, you see, Mildred IS pretty reserved," he remarked. "This Russell
+is some kind of cousin of the Palmer family, I understand."
+
+"He is?"
+
+"Yes--second or third or something, the girls say. You see, my sister
+Ella hasn't got much to do at home, and don't read anything, or sew, or
+play solitaire, you see; and she hears about pretty much everything that
+goes on, you see. Well, Ella says a lot of the girls have been talking
+about Mildred and this Arthur Russell for quite a while back, you see.
+They were all wondering what he was going to look like, you see; because
+he only got here yesterday; and that proves she must have been talking
+to some of 'em, or else how----"
+
+Alice laughed airily, but the pretty sound ended abruptly with an
+audible intake of breath. "Of course, while Mildred IS my most intimate
+friend," she said, "I don't mean she tells me everything--and naturally
+she has other friends besides. What else did your sister say she told
+them about this Mr. Russell?"
+
+"Well, it seems he's VERY well off; at least Henrietta Lamb told Ella he
+was. Ella says----"
+
+Alice interrupted again, with an increased irritability. "Oh, never
+mind what Ella says! Let's find something better to talk about than Mr.
+Russell!"
+
+"Well, I'M willing," Mr. Dowling assented, ruefully. "What you want to
+talk about?"
+
+But this liberal offer found her unresponsive; she sat leaning back,
+silent, her arms along the arms of her chair, and her eyes, moist and
+bright, fixed upon a wide doorway where the dancers fluctuated. She was
+disquieted by more than Mildred's reserve, though reserve so marked had
+certainly the significance of a warning that Alice's definition, "my
+most intimate friend," lacked sanction. Indirect notice to this effect
+could not well have been more emphatic, but the sting of it was left
+for a later moment. Something else preoccupied Alice: she had just
+been surprised by an odd experience. At first sight of this Mr. Arthur
+Russell, she had said to herself instantly, in words as definite as if
+she spoke them aloud, though they seemed more like words spoken to her
+by some unknown person within her: "There! That's exactly the kind of
+looking man I'd like to marry!"
+
+In the eyes of the restless and the longing, Providence often appears to
+be worse than inscrutable: an unreliable Omnipotence given to haphazard
+whimsies in dealing with its own creatures, choosing at random some
+among them to be rent with tragic deprivations and others to be petted
+with blessing upon blessing.
+
+In Alice's eyes, Mildred had been blessed enough; something ought to
+be left over, by this time, for another girl. The final touch to the
+heaping perfection of Christmas-in-everything for Mildred was that this
+Mr. Arthur Russell, good-looking, kind-looking, graceful, the perfect
+fiance, should be also "VERY well off." Of course! These rich always
+married one another. And while the Mildreds danced with their Arthur
+Russells the best an outsider could do for herself was to sit with Frank
+Dowling--the one last course left her that was better than dancing with
+him.
+
+"Well, what DO you want to talk about?" he inquired.
+
+"Nothing," she said. "Suppose we just sit, Frank." But a moment later
+she remembered something, and, with a sudden animation, began to
+prattle. She pointed to the musicians down the corridor. "Oh, look at
+them! Look at the leader! Aren't they FUNNY? Someone told me they're
+called 'Jazz Louie and his half-breed bunch.' Isn't that just crazy?
+Don't you love it? Do watch them, Frank."
+
+She continued to chatter, and, while thus keeping his glance away from
+herself, she detached the forlorn bouquet of dead violets from her dress
+and laid it gently beside the one she had carried.
+
+The latter already reposed in the obscurity selected for it at the base
+of one of the box-trees.
+
+Then she was abruptly silent.
+
+"You certainly are a funny girl," Dowling remarked. "You say you don't
+want to talk about anything at all, and all of a sudden you break
+out and talk a blue streak; and just about the time I begin to get
+interested in what you're saying you shut off! What's the matter with
+girls, anyhow, when they do things like that?"
+
+"I don't know; we're just queer, I guess."
+
+"I say so! Well, what'll we do NOW? Talk, or just sit?"
+
+"Suppose we just sit some more."
+
+"Anything to oblige," he assented. "I'm willing to sit as long as you
+like."
+
+But even as he made his amiability clear in this matter, the peace was
+threatened--his mother came down the corridor like a rolling, ominous
+cloud. She was looking about her on all sides, in a fidget of annoyance,
+searching for him, and to his dismay she saw him. She immediately made a
+horrible face at his companion, beckoned to him imperiously with a dumpy
+arm, and shook her head reprovingly. The unfortunate young man tried to
+repulse her with an icy stare, but this effort having obtained little to
+encourage his feeble hope of driving her away, he shifted his chair
+so that his back was toward her discomfiting pantomime. He should
+have known better, the instant result was Mrs. Dowling in motion at an
+impetuous waddle.
+
+She entered the box-tree seclusion with the lower rotundities of her
+face hastily modelled into the resemblance of an over-benevolent smile
+a contortion which neglected to spread its intended geniality upward to
+the exasperated eyes and anxious forehead.
+
+"I think your mother wants to speak to you, Frank," Alice said, upon
+this advent.
+
+Mrs. Dowling nodded to her. "Good evening, Miss Adams," she said. "I
+just thought as you and Frank weren't dancing you wouldn't mind my
+disturbing you----"
+
+"Not at all," Alice murmured.
+
+Mr. Dowling seemed of a different mind. "Well, what DO you want?" he
+inquired, whereupon his mother struck him roguishly with her fan.
+
+"Bad fellow!" She turned to Alice. "I'm sure you won't mind excusing him
+to let him do something for his old mother, Miss Adams."
+
+"What DO you want?" the son repeated.
+
+"Two very nice things," Mrs. Dowling informed him. "Everybody is so
+anxious for Henrietta Lamb to have a pleasant evening, because it's the
+very first time she's been anywhere since her father's death, and of
+course her dear grandfather's an old friend of ours, and----"
+
+"Well, well!" her son interrupted. "Miss Adams isn't interested in all
+this, mother."
+
+"But Henrietta came to speak to Ella and me, and I told her you were so
+anxious to dance with her----"
+
+"Here!" he cried. "Look here! I'd rather do my own----"
+
+"Yes; that's just it," Mrs. Dowling explained. "I just thought it was
+such a good opportunity; and Henrietta said she had most of her dances
+taken, but she'd give you one if you asked her before they were all
+gone. So I thought you'd better see her as soon as possible."
+
+Dowling's face had become rosy. "I refuse to do anything of the kind."
+
+"Bad fellow!" said his mother, gaily. "I thought this would be the best
+time for you to see Henrietta, because it won't be long till all her
+dances are gone, and you've promised on your WORD to dance the next with
+Ella, and you mightn't have a chance to do it then. I'm sure Miss Adams
+won't mind if you----"
+
+"Not at all," Alice said.
+
+"Well, _I_ mind!" he said. "I wish you COULD understand that when I
+want to dance with any girl I don't need my mother to ask her for me. I
+really AM more than six years old!"
+
+He spoke with too much vehemence, and Mrs. Dowling at once saw how
+to have her way. As with husbands and wives, so with many fathers and
+daughters, and so with some sons and mothers: the man will himself be
+cross in public and think nothing of it, nor will he greatly mind a
+little crossness on the part of the woman; but let her show agitation
+before any spectator, he is instantly reduced to a coward's slavery.
+Women understand that ancient weakness, of course; for it is one of
+their most important means of defense, but can be used ignobly.
+
+Mrs. Dowling permitted a tremulousness to become audible in her voice.
+"It isn't very--very pleasant--to be talked to like that by your own
+son--before strangers!"
+
+"Oh, my! Look here!" the stricken Dowling protested. "_I_ didn't
+say anything, mother. I was just joking about how you never get over
+thinking I'm a little boy. I only----"
+
+Mrs. Dowling continued: "I just thought I was doing you a little favour.
+I didn't think it would make you so angry."
+
+"Mother, for goodness' sake! Miss Adams'll think----"
+
+"I suppose," Mrs. Dowling interrupted, piteously, "I suppose it doesn't
+matter what _I_ think!"
+
+"Oh, gracious!"
+
+Alice interfered; she perceived that the ruthless Mrs. Dowling meant to
+have her way. "I think you'd better go, Frank. Really."
+
+"There!" his mother cried. "Miss Adams says so, herself! What more do
+you want?"
+
+"Oh, gracious!" he lamented again, and, with a sick look over his
+shoulder at Alice, permitted his mother to take his arm and propel him
+away. Mrs. Dowling's spirits had strikingly recovered even before the
+pair passed from the corridor: she moved almost bouncingly beside her
+embittered son, and her eyes and all the convolutions of her abundant
+face were blithe.
+
+Alice went in search of Walter, but without much hope of finding him.
+What he did with himself at frozen-face dances was one of his most
+successful mysteries, and her present excursion gave her no clue leading
+to its solution. When the musicians again lowered their instruments
+for an interval she had returned, alone, to her former seat within the
+partial shelter of the box-trees.
+
+She had now to practice an art that affords but a limited variety of
+methods, even to the expert: the art of seeming to have an escort or
+partner when there is none. The practitioner must imply, merely by
+expression and attitude, that the supposed companion has left her for
+only a few moments, that she herself has sent him upon an errand; and,
+if possible, the minds of observers must be directed toward a conclusion
+that this errand of her devising is an amusing one; at all events, she
+is alone temporarily and of choice, not deserted. She awaits a devoted
+man who may return at any instant.
+
+Other people desired to sit in Alice's nook, but discovered her in
+occupancy. She had moved the vacant chair closer to her own, and she
+sat with her arm extended so that her hand, holding her lace kerchief,
+rested upon the back of this second chair, claiming it. Such
+a preemption, like that of a traveller's bag in the rack, was
+unquestionable; and, for additional evidence, sitting with her knees
+crossed, she kept one foot continuously moving a little, in cadence with
+the other, which tapped the floor. Moreover, she added a fine detail:
+her half-smile, with the under lip caught, seemed to struggle against
+repression, as if she found the service engaging her absent companion
+even more amusing than she would let him see when he returned: there was
+jovial intrigue of some sort afoot, evidently. Her eyes, beaming with
+secret fun, were averted from intruders, but sometimes, when couples
+approached, seeking possession of the nook, her thoughts about the
+absentee appeared to threaten her with outright laughter; and though
+one or two girls looked at her skeptically, as they turned away, their
+escorts felt no such doubts, and merely wondered what importantly funny
+affair Alice Adams was engaged in. She had learned to do it perfectly.
+
+She had learned it during the last two years; she was twenty when for
+the first time she had the shock of finding herself without an applicant
+for one of her dances. When she was sixteen "all the nice boys in town,"
+as her mother said, crowded the Adamses' small veranda and steps, or sat
+near by, cross-legged on the lawn, on summer evenings; and at eighteen
+she had replaced the boys with "the older men." By this time most of
+"the other girls," her contemporaries, were away at school or college,
+and when they came home to stay, they "came out"--that feeble revival
+of an ancient custom offering the maiden to the ceremonial inspection of
+the tribe. Alice neither went away nor "came out," and, in contrast with
+those who did, she may have seemed to lack freshness of lustre--jewels
+are richest when revealed all new in a white velvet box. And Alice may
+have been too eager to secure new retainers, too kind in her efforts to
+keep the old ones. She had been a belle too soon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+The device of the absentee partner has the defect that it cannot be
+employed for longer than ten or fifteen minutes at a time, and it may
+not be repeated more than twice in one evening: a single repetition,
+indeed, is weak, and may prove a betrayal. Alice knew that her present
+performance could be effective during only this interval between
+dances; and though her eyes were guarded, she anxiously counted over the
+partnerless young men who lounged together in the doorways within her
+view. Every one of them ought to have asked her for dances, she thought,
+and although she might have been put to it to give a reason why any of
+them "ought," her heart was hot with resentment against them.
+
+For a girl who has been a belle, it is harder to live through these bad
+times than it is for one who has never known anything better. Like a
+figure of painted and brightly varnished wood, Ella Dowling sat against
+the wall through dance after dance with glassy imperturbability; it was
+easier to be wooden, Alice thought, if you had your mother with you, as
+Ella had. You were left with at least the shred of a pretense that you
+came to sit with your mother as a spectator, and not to offer yourself
+to be danced with by men who looked you over and rejected you--not for
+the first time. "Not for the first time": there lay a sting! Why had you
+thought this time might be different from the other times? Why had you
+broken your back picking those hundreds of violets?
+
+Hating the fatuous young men in the doorways more bitterly for every
+instant that she had to maintain her tableau, the smiling Alice knew
+fierce impulses to spring to her feet and shout at them, "You IDIOTS!"
+Hands in pockets, they lounged against the pilasters, or faced one
+another, laughing vaguely, each one of them seeming to Alice no more
+than so much mean beef in clothes. She wanted to tell them they were no
+better than that; and it seemed a cruel thing of heaven to let them go
+on believing themselves young lords. They were doing nothing, killing
+time. Wasn't she at her lowest value at least a means of killing time?
+Evidently the mean beeves thought not. And when one of them finally
+lounged across the corridor and spoke to her, he was the very one to
+whom she preferred her loneliness.
+
+"Waiting for somebody, Lady Alicia?" he asked, negligently; and his easy
+burlesque of her name was like the familiarity of the rest of him. He
+was one of those full-bodied, grossly handsome men who are powerful and
+active, but never submit themselves to the rigour of becoming athletes,
+though they shoot and fish from expensive camps. Gloss is the most
+shining outward mark of the type. Nowadays these men no longer use
+brilliantine on their moustaches, but they have gloss bought from
+manicure-girls, from masseurs, and from automobile-makers; and their
+eyes, usually large, are glossy. None of this is allowed to interfere
+with business; these are "good business men," and often make large
+fortunes. They are men of imagination about two things--women and money,
+and, combining their imaginings about both, usually make a wise first
+marriage. Later, however, they are apt to imagine too much about some
+little woman without whom life seems duller than need be. They run away,
+leaving the first wife well enough dowered. They are never intentionally
+unkind to women, and in the end they usually make the mistake of
+thinking they have had their money's worth of life. Here was Mr. Harvey
+Malone, a young specimen in an earlier stage of development, trying to
+marry Henrietta Lamb, and now sauntering over to speak to Alice, as a
+time-killer before his next dance with Henrietta.
+
+Alice made no response to his question, and he dropped lazily into the
+vacant chair, from which she sharply withdrew her hand. "I might as well
+use his chair till he comes, don't you think? You don't MIND, do you,
+old girl?"
+
+"Oh, no," Alice said. "It doesn't matter one way or the other. Please
+don't call me that."
+
+"So that's how you feel?" Mr. Malone laughed indulgently, without much
+interest. "I've been meaning to come to see you for a long time honestly
+I have--because I wanted to have a good talk with you about old times. I
+know you think it was funny, after the way I used to come to your house
+two or three times a week, and sometimes oftener--well, I don't blame
+you for being hurt, the way I stopped without explaining or anything.
+The truth is there wasn't any reason: I just happened to have a lot of
+important things to do and couldn't find the time. But I AM going to
+call on you some evening--honestly I am. I don't wonder you think----"
+
+"You're mistaken," Alice said. "I've never thought anything about it at
+all."
+
+"Well, well!" he said, and looked at her languidly. "What's the use of
+being cross with this old man? He always means well." And, extending his
+arm, he would have given her a friendly pat upon the shoulder but she
+evaded it. "Well, well!" he said. "Seems to me you're getting awful
+tetchy! Don't you like your old friends any more?"
+
+"Not all of them."
+
+"Who's the new one?" he asked, teasingly. "Come on and tell us, Alice.
+Who is it you were holding this chair for?"
+
+"Never mind."
+
+"Well, all I've got to do is to sit here till he comes back; then I'll
+see who it is."
+
+"He may not come back before you have to go."
+
+"Guess you got me THAT time," Malone admitted, laughing as he rose.
+"They're tuning up, and I've got this dance. I AM coming around to
+see you some evening." He moved away, calling back over his shoulder,
+"Honestly, I am!"
+
+Alice did not look at him.
+
+She had held her tableau as long as she could; it was time for her to
+abandon the box-trees; and she stepped forth frowning, as if a little
+annoyed with the absentee for being such a time upon her errand;
+whereupon the two chairs were instantly seized by a coquetting pair
+who intended to "sit out" the dance. She walked quickly down the broad
+corridor, turned into the broader hall, and hurriedly entered the
+dressing-room where she had left her wraps.
+
+She stayed here as long as she could, pretending to arrange her hair
+at a mirror, then fidgeting with one of her slipper-buckles; but the
+intelligent elderly woman in charge of the room made an indefinite
+sojourn impracticable. "Perhaps I could help you with that buckle,
+Miss," she suggested, approaching. "Has it come loose?" Alice wrenched
+desperately; then it was loose. The competent woman, producing needle
+and thread, deftly made the buckle fast; and there was nothing for Alice
+to do but to express her gratitude and go.
+
+She went to the door of the cloak-room opposite, where a coloured man
+stood watchfully in the doorway. "I wonder if you know which of the
+gentlemen is my brother, Mr. Walter Adams," she said.
+
+"Yes'm; I know him."
+
+"Could you tell me where he is?"
+
+"No'm; I couldn't say."
+
+"Well, if you see him, would you please tell him that his sister, Miss
+Adams, is looking for him and very anxious to speak to him?"
+
+"Yes'm. Sho'ly, sho'ly!"
+
+As she went away he stared after her and seemed to swell with some
+bursting emotion. In fact, it was too much for him, and he suddenly
+retired within the room, releasing strangulated laughter.
+
+Walter remonstrated. Behind an excellent screen of coats and hats, in a
+remote part of the room, he was kneeling on the floor, engaged in a game
+of chance with a second coloured attendant; and the laughter became
+so vehement that it not only interfered with the pastime in hand, but
+threatened to attract frozen-face attention.
+
+"I cain' he'p it, man," the laughter explained. "I cain' he'p it! You
+sut'n'y the beatin'es' white boy 'n 'is city!"
+
+The dancers were swinging into an "encore" as Alice halted for an
+irresolute moment in a doorway. Across the room, a cluster of matrons
+sat chatting absently, their eyes on their dancing daughters; and Alice,
+finding a refugee's courage, dodged through the scurrying couples,
+seated herself in a chair on the outskirts of this colony of elders,
+and began to talk eagerly to the matron nearest her. The matron seemed
+unaccustomed to so much vivacity, and responded but dryly, whereupon
+Alice was more vivacious than ever; for she meant now to present the
+picture of a jolly girl too much interested in these wise older women to
+bother about every foolish young man who asked her for a dance.
+
+Her matron was constrained to go so far as to supply a tolerant nod, now
+and then, in complement to the girl's animation, and Alice was grateful
+for the nods. In this fashion she supplemented the exhausted resources
+of the dressing-room and the box-tree nook; and lived through two more
+dances, when again Mr. Frank Dowling presented himself as a partner.
+
+She needed no pretense to seek the dressing-room for repairs after that
+number; this time they were necessary and genuine. Dowling waited for
+her, and when she came out he explained for the fourth or fifth time how
+the accident had happened. "It was entirely those other people's fault,"
+he said. "They got me in a kind of a corner, because neither of those
+fellows knows the least thing about guiding; they just jam ahead and
+expect everybody to get out of their way. It was Charlotte Thom's
+diamond crescent pin that got caught on your dress in the back and made
+such a----"
+
+"Never mind," Alice said in a tired voice. "The maid fixed it so that
+she says it isn't very noticeable."
+
+"Well, it isn't," he returned. "You could hardly tell there'd been
+anything the matter. Where do you want to go? Mother's been interfering
+in my affairs some more and I've got the next taken."
+
+"I was sitting with Mrs. George Dresser. You might take me back there."
+
+He left her with the matron, and Alice returned to her picture-making,
+so that once more, while two numbers passed, whoever cared to look was
+offered the sketch of a jolly, clever girl preoccupied with her elders.
+Then she found her friend Mildred standing before her, presenting Mr.
+Arthur Russell, who asked her to dance with him.
+
+Alice looked uncertain, as though not sure what her engagements were;
+but her perplexity cleared; she nodded, and swung rhythmically away with
+the tall applicant. She was not grateful to her hostess for this alms.
+What a young hostess does with a fiance, Alice thought, is to make him
+dance with the unpopular girls. She supposed that Mr. Arthur Russell had
+already danced with Ella Dowling.
+
+The loan of a lover, under these circumstances, may be painful to the
+lessee, and Alice, smiling never more brightly, found nothing to say to
+Mr. Russell, though she thought he might have found something to say to
+her. "I wonder what Mildred told him," she thought. "Probably she said,
+'Dearest, there's one more girl you've got to help me out with. You
+wouldn't like her much, but she dances well enough and she's having a
+rotten time. Nobody ever goes near her any more.'"
+
+When the music stopped, Russell added his applause to the hand-clapping
+that encouraged the uproarious instruments to continue, and as they
+renewed the tumult, he said heartily, "That's splendid!"
+
+Alice gave him a glance, necessarily at short range, and found his eyes
+kindly and pleased. Here was a friendly soul, it appeared, who probably
+"liked everybody." No doubt he had applauded for an "encore" when he
+danced with Ella Dowling, gave Ella the same genial look, and said,
+"That's splendid!"
+
+When the "encore" was over, Alice spoke to him for the first time.
+
+"Mildred will be looking for you," she said. "I think you'd better take
+me back to where you found me."
+
+He looked surprised. "Oh, if you----"
+
+"I'm sure Mildred will be needing you," Alice said, and as she took his
+arm and they walked toward Mrs. Dresser, she thought it might be just
+possible to make a further use of the loan. "Oh, I wonder if you----"
+she began.
+
+"Yes?" he said, quickly.
+
+"You don't know my brother, Walter Adams," she said. "But he's somewhere
+I think possibly he's in a smoking-room or some place where girls aren't
+expected, and if you wouldn't think it too much trouble to inquire----"
+
+"I'll find him," Russell said, promptly. "Thank you so much for that
+dance. I'll bring your brother in a moment."
+
+It was to be a long moment, Alice decided, presently. Mrs. Dresser had
+grown restive; and her nods and vague responses to her young dependent's
+gaieties were as meager as they could well be. Evidently the matron had
+no intention of appearing to her world in the light of a chaperone for
+Alice Adams; and she finally made this clear. With a word or two of
+excuse, breaking into something Alice was saying, she rose and went to
+sit next to Mildred's mother, who had become the nucleus of the cluster.
+So Alice was left very much against the wall, with short stretches
+of vacant chairs on each side of her. She had come to the end of her
+picture-making, and could only pretend that there was something amusing
+the matter with the arm of her chair.
+
+She supposed that Mildred's Mr. Russell had forgotten Walter by this
+time. "I'm not even an intimate enough friend of Mildred's for him to
+have thought he ought to bother to tell me he couldn't find him," she
+thought. And then she saw Russell coming across the room toward her,
+with Walter beside him. She jumped up gaily.
+
+"Oh, thank you!" she cried. "I know this naughty boy must have been
+terribly hard to find. Mildred'll NEVER forgive me! I've put you to so
+much----"
+
+"Not at all," he said, amiably, and went away, leaving the brother and
+sister together.
+
+"Walter, let's dance just once more," Alice said, touching his arm
+placatively. "I thought--well, perhaps we might go home then."
+
+But Walter's expression was that of a person upon whom an outrage has
+just been perpetrated. "No," he said. "We've stayed THIS long, I'm goin'
+to wait and see what they got to eat. And you look here!" He turned upon
+her angrily. "Don't you ever do that again!"
+
+"Do what?"
+
+"Send somebody after me that pokes his nose into every corner of the
+house till he finds me! 'Are you Mr. Walter Adams?' he says. I guess he
+must asked everybody in the place if they were Mr. Walter Adams! Well,
+I'll bet a few iron men you wouldn't send anybody to hunt for me again
+if you knew where he found me!"
+
+"Where was it?"
+
+Walter decided that her fit punishment was to know. "I was shootin' dice
+with those coons in the cloak-room."
+
+"And he saw you?"
+
+"Unless he was blind!" said Walter. "Come on, I'll dance this one more
+dance with you. Supper comes after that, and THEN we'll go home."
+
+
+Mrs. Adams heard Alice's key turning in the front door and hurried down
+the stairs to meet her.
+
+"Did you get wet coming in, darling?" she asked. "Did you have a good
+time?"
+
+"Just lovely!" Alice said, cheerily, and after she had arranged the
+latch for Walter, who had gone to return the little car, she followed
+her mother upstairs and hummed a dance-tune on the way.
+
+"Oh, I'm so glad you had a nice time," Mrs. Adams said, as they reached
+the door of her daughter's room together. "You DESERVED to, and it's
+lovely to think----"
+
+But at this, without warning, Alice threw herself into her mother's
+arms, sobbing so loudly that in his room, close by, her father, half
+drowsing through the night, started to full wakefulness.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+On a morning, a week after this collapse of festal hopes, Mrs. Adams
+and her daughter were concluding a three-days' disturbance, the "Spring
+house-cleaning"--postponed until now by Adams's long illness--and Alice,
+on her knees before a chest of drawers, in her mother's room, paused
+thoughtfully after dusting a packet of letters wrapped in worn muslin.
+She called to her mother, who was scrubbing the floor of the hallway
+just beyond the open door,
+
+"These old letters you had in the bottom drawer, weren't they some papa
+wrote you before you were married?"
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed and said, "Yes. Just put 'em back where they were--or
+else up in the attic--anywhere you want to."
+
+"Do you mind if I read one, mama?"
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed again. "Oh, I guess you can if you want to. I expect
+they're pretty funny!"
+
+Alice laughed in response, and chose the topmost letter of the packet.
+"My dear, beautiful girl," it began; and she stared at these singular
+words. They gave her a shock like that caused by overhearing some
+bewildering impropriety; and, having read them over to herself several
+times, she went on to experience other shocks.
+
+
+MY DEAR, BEAUTIFUL GIRL:
+
+
+This time yesterday I had a mighty bad case of blues because I had not
+had a word from you in two whole long days and when I do not hear from
+you every day things look mighty down in the mouth to me. Now it is all
+so different because your letter has arrived and besides I have got a
+piece of news I believe you will think as fine as I do. Darling, you
+will be surprised, so get ready to hear about a big effect on our
+future. It is this way. I had sort of a suspicion the head of the firm
+kind of took a fancy to me from the first when I went in there, and
+liked the way I attended to my work and so when he took me on this
+business trip with him I felt pretty sure of it and now it turns out
+I was about right. In return I guess I have got about the best boss in
+this world and I believe you will think so too. Yes, sweetheart, after
+the talk I have just had with him if J. A. Lamb asked me to cut my hand
+off for him I guess I would come pretty near doing it because what he
+says means the end of our waiting to be together. From New Years on he
+is going to put me in entire charge of the sundries dept. and what do
+you think is going to be my salary? Eleven hundred cool dollars a year
+($1,100.00). That's all! Just only a cool eleven hundred per annum!
+Well, I guess that will show your mother whether I can take care of you
+or not. And oh how I would like to see your dear, beautiful, loving face
+when you get this news.
+
+I would like to go out on the public streets and just dance and shout
+and it is all I can do to help doing it, especially when I know we will
+be talking it all over together this time next week, and oh my darling,
+now that your folks have no excuse for putting it off any longer we
+might be in our own little home before Xmas.
+
+Would you be glad?
+
+Well, darling, this settles everything and makes our future just about
+as smooth for us as anybody could ask. I can hardly realize after all
+this waiting life's troubles are over for you and me and we have nothing
+to do but to enjoy the happiness granted us by this wonderful, beautiful
+thing we call life. I know I am not any poet and the one I tried to
+write about you the day of the picnic was fearful but the way I THINK
+about you is a poem.
+
+Write me what you think of the news. I know but write me anyhow.
+
+I'll get it before we start home and I can be reading it over all the
+time on the tram.
+
+
+Your always loving
+
+VIRGIL.
+
+
+
+The sound of her mother's diligent scrubbing in the hall came back
+slowly to Alice's hearing, as she restored the letter to the packet,
+wrapped the packet in its muslin covering, and returned it to the
+drawer. She had remained upon her knees while she read the letter; now
+she sank backward, sitting upon the floor with her hands behind her, an
+unconscious relaxing for better ease to think. Upon her face there had
+fallen a look of wonder.
+
+For the first time she was vaguely perceiving that life is everlasting
+movement. Youth really believes what is running water to be a permanent
+crystallization and sees time fixed to a point: some people have dark
+hair, some people have blond hair, some people have gray hair. Until
+this moment, Alice had no conviction that there was a universe before
+she came into it. She had always thought of it as the background of
+herself: the moon was something to make her prettier on a summer night.
+
+But this old letter, through which she saw still flickering an ancient
+starlight of young love, astounded her. Faintly before her it revealed
+the whole lives of her father and mother, who had been young, after
+all--they REALLY had--and their youth was now so utterly passed from
+them that the picture of it, in the letter, was like a burlesque of
+them. And so she, herself, must pass to such changes, too, and all that
+now seemed vital to her would be nothing.
+
+When her work was finished, that afternoon, she went into her father's
+room. His recovery had progressed well enough to permit the departure
+of Miss Perry; and Adams, wearing one of Mrs. Adams's wrappers over his
+night-gown, sat in a high-backed chair by a closed window. The weather
+was warm, but the closed window and the flannel wrapper had not sufficed
+him: round his shoulders he had an old crocheted scarf of Alice's; his
+legs were wrapped in a heavy comfort; and, with these swathings about
+him, and his eyes closed, his thin and grizzled head making but a slight
+indentation in the pillow supporting it, he looked old and little and
+queer.
+
+Alice would have gone out softly, but without opening his eyes, he spoke
+to her: "Don't go, dearie. Come sit with the old man a little while."
+
+She brought a chair near his. "I thought you were napping."
+
+"No. I don't hardly ever do that. I just drift a little sometimes."
+
+"How do you mean you drift, papa?"
+
+He looked at her vaguely. "Oh, I don't know. Kind of pictures. They get
+a little mixed up--old times with times still ahead, like planning what
+to do, you know. That's as near a nap as I get--when the pictures mix up
+some. I suppose it's sort of drowsing."
+
+She took one of his hands and stroked it. "What do you mean when you say
+you have pictures like 'planning what to do'?" she asked.
+
+"I mean planning what to do when I get out and able to go to work
+again."
+
+"But that doesn't need any planning," Alice said, quickly. "You're going
+back to your old place at Lamb's, of course."
+
+Adams closed his eyes again, sighing heavily, but made no other
+response.
+
+"Why, of COURSE you are!" she cried. "What are you talking about?"
+
+His head turned slowly toward her, revealing the eyes, open in a haggard
+stare. "I heard you the other night when you came from the party," he
+said. "I know what was the matter."
+
+"Indeed, you don't," she assured him. "You don't know anything about it,
+because there wasn't anything the matter at all."
+
+"Don't you suppose I heard you crying? What'd you cry for if there
+wasn't anything the matter?"
+
+"Just nerves, papa. It wasn't anything else in the world."
+
+"Never mind," he said. "Your mother told me."
+
+"She promised me not to!"
+
+At that Adams laughed mournfully. "It wouldn't be very likely I'd hear
+you so upset and not ask about it, even if she didn't come and tell me
+on her own hook. You needn't try to fool me; I tell you I know what was
+the matter."
+
+"The only matter was I had a silly fit," Alice protested. "It did me
+good, too."
+
+"How's that?"
+
+"Because I've decided to do something about it, papa."
+
+"That isn't the way your mother looks at it," Adams said, ruefully. "She
+thinks it's our place to do something about it. Well, I don't know--I
+don't know; everything seems so changed these days. You've always been
+a good daughter, Alice, and you ought to have as much as any of these
+girls you go with; she's convinced me she's right about THAT. The
+trouble is----" He faltered, apologetically, then went on, "I mean the
+question is--how to get it for you."
+
+"No!" she cried. "I had no business to make such a fuss just because a
+lot of idiots didn't break their necks to get dances with me and because
+I got mortified about Walter--Walter WAS pretty terrible----"
+
+"Oh, me, my!" Adams lamented. "I guess that's something we just have
+to leave work out itself. What you going to do with a boy nineteen or
+twenty years old that makes his own living? Can't whip him. Can't keep
+him locked up in the house. Just got to hope he'll learn better, I
+suppose."
+
+"Of course he didn't want to go to the Palmers'," Alice explained,
+tolerantly--"and as mama and I made him take me, and he thought that was
+pretty selfish in me, why, he felt he had a right to amuse himself any
+way he could. Of course it was awful that this--that this Mr. Russell
+should----" In spite of her, the recollection choked her.
+
+"Yes, it was awful," Adams agreed. "Just awful. Oh, me, my!"
+
+But Alice recovered herself at once, and showed him a cheerful face.
+"Well, just a few years from now I probably won't even remember it! I
+believe hardly anything amounts to as much as we think it does at the
+time."
+
+"Well--sometimes it don't."
+
+"What I've been thinking, papa: it seems to me I ought to DO something."
+
+"What like?"
+
+She looked dreamy, but was obviously serious as she told him: "Well,
+I mean I ought to be something besides just a kind of nobody. I ought
+to----" She paused.
+
+"What, dearie?"
+
+"Well--there's one thing I'd like to do. I'm sure I COULD do it, too."
+
+"What?"
+
+"I want to go on the stage: I know I could act." At this, her father
+abruptly gave utterance to a feeble cackling of laughter; and when
+Alice, surprised and a little offended, pressed him for his reason, he
+tried to evade, saying, "Nothing, dearie. I just thought of something."
+But she persisted until he had to explain.
+
+"It made me think of your mother's sister, your Aunt Flora, that died
+when you were little," he said. "She was always telling how she was
+going on the stage, and talking about how she was certain she'd make a
+great actress, and all so on; and one day your mother broke out and said
+she ought 'a' gone on the stage, herself, because she always knew she
+had the talent for it--and, well, they got into kind of a spat about
+which one'd make the best actress. I had to go out in the hall to
+laugh!"
+
+"Maybe you were wrong," Alice said, gravely. "If they both felt it, why
+wouldn't that look as if there was talent in the family? I've ALWAYS
+thought----"
+
+"No, dearie," he said, with a final chuckle. "Your mother and Flora
+weren't different from a good many others. I expect ninety per cent. of
+all the women I ever knew were just sure they'd be mighty fine actresses
+if they ever got the chance. Well, I guess it's a good thing; they enjoy
+thinking about it and it don't do anybody any harm."
+
+Alice was piqued. For several days she had thought almost continuously
+of a career to be won by her own genius. Not that she planned details,
+or concerned herself with first steps; her picturings overleaped all
+that. Principally, she saw her name great on all the bill-boards of that
+unkind city, and herself, unchanged in age but glamorous with fame and
+Paris clothes, returning in a private car. No doubt the pleasantest
+development of her vision was a dialogue with Mildred; and this became
+so real that, as she projected it, Alice assumed the proper expressions
+for both parties to it, formed words with her lips, and even spoke some
+of them aloud. "No, I haven't forgotten you, Mrs. Russell. I remember
+you quite pleasantly, in fact. You were a Miss Palmer, I recall, in
+those funny old days. Very kind of you, I'm shaw. I appreciate your
+eagerness to do something for me in your own little home. As you say, a
+reception WOULD renew my acquaintanceship with many old friends--but I'm
+shaw you won't mind my mentioning that I don't find much inspiration in
+these provincials. I really must ask you not to press me. An artist's
+time is not her own, though of course I could hardly expect you to
+understand----"
+
+Thus Alice illuminated the dull time; but she retired from the interview
+with her father still manfully displaying an outward cheerfulness, while
+depression grew heavier within, as if she had eaten soggy cake. Her
+father knew nothing whatever of the stage, and she was aware of his
+ignorance, yet for some reason his innocently skeptical amusement
+reduced her bright project almost to nothing. Something like this always
+happened, it seemed; she was continually making these illuminations, all
+gay with gildings and colourings; and then as soon as anybody else so
+much as glanced at them--even her father, who loved her--the pretty
+designs were stricken with a desolating pallor. "Is this LIFE?" Alice
+wondered, not doubting that the question was original and all her own.
+"Is it life to spend your time imagining things that aren't so, and
+never will be? Beautiful things happen to other people; why should I be
+the only one they never CAN happen to?"
+
+The mood lasted overnight; and was still upon her the next afternoon
+when an errand for her father took her down-town. Adams had decided
+to begin smoking again, and Alice felt rather degraded, as well as
+embarrassed, when she went into the large shop her father had named, and
+asked for the cheap tobacco he used in his pipe. She fell back upon an
+air of amused indulgence, hoping thus to suggest that her purchase
+was made for some faithful old retainer, now infirm; and although the
+calmness of the clerk who served her called for no such elaboration of
+her sketch, she ornamented it with a little laugh and with the remark,
+as she dropped the package into her coat-pocket, "I'm sure it'll please
+him; they tell me it's the kind he likes."
+
+Still playing Lady Bountiful, smiling to herself in anticipation of the
+joy she was bringing to the simple old negro or Irish follower of the
+family, she left the shop; but as she came out upon the crowded pavement
+her smile vanished quickly.
+
+Next to the door of the tobacco-shop, there was the open entrance to a
+stairway, and, above this rather bleak and dark aperture, a sign-board
+displayed in begrimed gilt letters the information that Frincke's
+Business College occupied the upper floors of the building. Furthermore,
+Frincke here publicly offered "personal instruction and training in
+practical mathematics, bookkeeping, and all branches of the business
+life, including stenography, typewriting, etc."
+
+Alice halted for a moment, frowning at this signboard as though it were
+something surprising and distasteful which she had never seen before.
+Yet it was conspicuous in a busy quarter; she almost always passed it
+when she came down-town, and never without noticing it. Nor was this the
+first time she had paused to lift toward it that same glance of vague
+misgiving.
+
+The building was not what the changeful city defined as a modern one,
+and the dusty wooden stairway, as seen from the pavement, disappeared
+upward into a smoky darkness. So would the footsteps of a girl ascending
+there lead to a hideous obscurity, Alice thought; an obscurity as dreary
+and as permanent as death. And like dry leaves falling about her she saw
+her wintry imaginings in the May air: pretty girls turning into
+withered creatures as they worked at typing-machines; old maids "taking
+dictation" from men with double chins; Alice saw old maids of a dozen
+different kinds "taking dictation." Her mind's eye was crowded with
+them, as it always was when she passed that stairway entrance; and
+though they were all different from one another, all of them looked a
+little like herself.
+
+She hated the place, and yet she seldom hurried by it or averted
+her eyes. It had an unpleasant fascination for her, and a mysterious
+reproach, which she did not seek to fathom. She walked on thoughtfully
+to-day; and when, at the next corner, she turned into the street that
+led toward home, she was given a surprise. Arthur Russell came rapidly
+from behind her, lifting his hat as she saw him.
+
+"Are you walking north, Miss Adams?" he asked. "Do you mind if I walk
+with you?"
+
+She was not delighted, but seemed so. "How charming!" she cried, giving
+him a little flourish of the shapely hands; and then, because she
+wondered if he had seen her coming out of the tobacco-shop, she laughed
+and added, "I've just been on the most ridiculous errand!"
+
+"What was that?"
+
+"To order some cigars for my father. He's been quite ill, poor man, and
+he's so particular--but what in the world do _I_ know about cigars?"
+
+Russell laughed. "Well, what DO you know about 'em? Did you select by
+the price?"
+
+"Mercy, no!" she exclaimed, and added, with an afterthought, "Of course
+he wrote down the name of the kind he wanted and I gave it to the
+shopman. I could never have pronounced it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+In her pocket as she spoke her hand rested upon the little sack of
+tobacco, which responded accusingly to the touch of her restless
+fingers; and she found time to wonder why she was building up this
+fiction for Mr. Arthur Russell. His discovery of Walter's device for
+whiling away the dull evening had shamed and distressed her; but she
+would have suffered no less if almost any other had been the discoverer.
+In this gentleman, after hearing that he was Mildred's Mr. Arthur
+Russell, Alice felt not the slightest "personal interest"; and there was
+yet to develop in her life such a thing as an interest not personal. At
+twenty-two this state of affairs is not unique.
+
+So far as Alice was concerned Russell might have worn a placard,
+"Engaged." She looked upon him as diners entering a restaurant look upon
+tables marked "Reserved": the glance, slightly discontented, passes on
+at once. Or so the eye of a prospector wanders querulously over staked
+and established claims on the mountainside, and seeks the virgin land
+beyond; unless, indeed, the prospector be dishonest. But Alice was no
+claim-jumper--so long as the notice of ownership was plainly posted.
+
+Though she was indifferent now, habit ruled her: and, at the very time
+she wondered why she created fictitious cigars for her father, she
+was also regretting that she had not boldly carried her Malacca stick
+down-town with her. Her vivacity increased automatically.
+
+"Perhaps the clerk thought you wanted the cigars for yourself," Russell
+suggested. "He may have taken you for a Spanish countess."
+
+"I'm sure he did!" Alice agreed, gaily; and she hummed a bar or two of
+"LaPaloma," snapping her fingers as castanets, and swaying her body a
+little, to suggest the accepted stencil of a "Spanish Dancer." "Would
+you have taken me for one, Mr. Russell?" she asked, as she concluded the
+impersonation.
+
+"I? Why, yes," he said. "I'D take you for anything you wanted me to."
+
+"Why, what a speech!" she cried, and, laughing, gave him a quick glance
+in which there glimmered some real surprise. He was looking at
+her quizzically, but with the liveliest appreciation. Her surprise
+increased; and she was glad that he had joined her.
+
+To be seen walking with such a companion added to her pleasure. She
+would have described him as "altogether quite stunning-looking"; and she
+liked his tall, dark thinness, his gray clothes, his soft hat, and his
+clean brown shoes; she liked his easy swing of the stick he carried.
+
+"Shouldn't I have said it?" he asked. "Would you rather not be taken for
+a Spanish countess?"
+
+"That isn't it," she explained. "You said----"
+
+"I said I'd take you for whatever you wanted me to. Isn't that all
+right?"
+
+"It would all depend, wouldn't it?"
+
+"Of course it would depend on what you wanted."
+
+"Oh, no!" she laughed. "It might depend on a lot of things."
+
+"Such as?"
+
+"Well----" She hesitated, having the mischievous impulse to say, "Such
+as Mildred!" But she decided to omit this reference, and became serious,
+remembering Russell's service to her at Mildred's house. "Speaking of
+what I want to be taken for," she said;--"I've been wondering ever since
+the other night what you did take me for! You must have taken me for the
+sister of a professional gambler, I'm afraid!"
+
+Russell's look of kindness was the truth about him, she was to discover;
+and he reassured her now by the promptness of his friendly chuckle.
+"Then your young brother told you where I found him, did he? I kept my
+face straight at the time, but I laughed afterward--to myself. It
+struck me as original, to say the least: his amusing himself with those
+darkies."
+
+"Walter IS original," Alice said; and, having adopted this new view of
+her brother's eccentricities, she impulsively went on to make it more
+plausible. "He's a very odd boy, and I was afraid you'd misunderstand.
+He tells wonderful 'darky stories,' and he'll do anything to draw
+coloured people out and make them talk; and that's what he was doing at
+Mildred's when you found him for me--he says he wins their confidence
+by playing dice with them. In the family we think he'll probably write
+about them some day. He's rather literary."
+
+"Are you?" Russell asked, smiling.
+
+"I? Oh----" She paused, lifting both hands in a charming gesture of
+helplessness. "Oh, I'm just--me!"
+
+His glance followed the lightly waved hands with keen approval, then
+rose to the lively and colourful face, with its hazel eyes, its small
+and pretty nose, and the lip-caught smile which seemed the climax of
+her decorative transition. Never had he seen a creature so plastic or so
+wistful.
+
+Here was a contrast to his cousin Mildred, who was not wistful, and
+controlled any impulses toward plasticity, if she had them. "By George!"
+he said. "But you ARE different!"
+
+With that, there leaped in her such an impulse of roguish gallantry
+as she could never resist. She turned her head, and, laughing and
+bright-eyed, looked him full in the face.
+
+"From whom?" she cried.
+
+"From--everybody!" he said. "Are you a mind-reader?"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"How did you know I was thinking you were different from my cousin,
+Mildred Palmer?"
+
+"What makes you think I DID know it?"
+
+"Nonsense!" he said. "You knew what I was thinking and I knew you knew."
+
+"Yes," she said with cool humour. "How intimate that seems to make us
+all at once!"
+
+Russell left no doubt that he was delighted with these gaieties of hers.
+"By George!" he exclaimed again. "I thought you were this sort of girl
+the first moment I saw you!"
+
+"What sort of girl? Didn't Mildred tell you what sort of girl I am when
+she asked you to dance with me?"
+
+"She didn't ask me to dance with you--I'd been looking at you. You were
+talking to some old ladies, and I asked Mildred who you were."
+
+"Oh, so Mildred DIDN'T----" Alice checked herself. "Who did she tell you
+I was?"
+
+"She just said you were a Miss Adams, so I----"
+
+"'A' Miss Adams?" Alice interrupted.
+
+"Yes. Then I said I'd like to meet you."
+
+"I see. You thought you'd save me from the old ladies."
+
+"No. I thought I'd save myself from some of the girls Mildred was
+getting me to dance with. There was a Miss Dowling----"
+
+"Poor man!" Alice said, gently, and her impulsive thought was that
+Mildred had taken few chances, and that as a matter of self-defense her
+carefulness might have been well founded. This Mr. Arthur Russell was a
+much more responsive person than one had supposed.
+
+"So, Mr. Russell, you don't know anything about me except what you
+thought when you first saw me?"
+
+"Yes, I know I was right when I thought it."
+
+"You haven't told me what you thought."
+
+"I thought you were like what you ARE like."
+
+"Not very definite, is it? I'm afraid you shed more light a minute or
+so ago, when you said how different from Mildred you thought I was. That
+WAS definite, unfortunately!"
+
+"I didn't say it," Russell explained. "I thought it, and you read my
+mind. That's the sort of girl I thought you were--one that could read a
+man's mind. Why do you say 'unfortunately' you're not like Mildred?"
+
+Alice's smooth gesture seemed to sketch Mildred. "Because she's
+perfect--why, she's PERFECTLY perfect! She never makes a mistake, and
+everybody looks up to her--oh, yes, we all fairly adore her! She's like
+some big, noble, cold statue--'way above the rest of us--and she hardly
+ever does anything mean or treacherous. Of all the girls I know I
+believe she's played the fewest really petty tricks. She's----"
+
+Russell interrupted; he looked perplexed. "You say she's perfectly
+perfect, but that she does play SOME----"
+
+Alice laughed, as if at his sweet innocence. "Men are so funny!" she
+informed him. "Of course girls ALL do mean things sometimes. My own
+career's just one long brazen smirch of 'em! What I mean is, Mildred's
+perfectly perfect compared to the rest of us."
+
+"I see," he said, and seemed to need a moment or two of thoughtfulness.
+Then he inquired, "What sort of treacherous things do YOU do?"
+
+"I? Oh, the very worst kind! Most people bore me particularly the men in
+this town--and I show it."
+
+"But I shouldn't call that treacherous, exactly."
+
+"Well, THEY do," Alice laughed. "It's made me a terribly unpopular
+character! I do a lot of things they hate. For instance, at a dance I'd
+a lot rather find some clever old woman and talk to her than dance with
+nine-tenths of these nonentities. I usually do it, too."
+
+"But you danced as if you liked it. You danced better than any other
+girl I----"
+
+"This flattery of yours doesn't quite turn my head, Mr. Russell," Alice
+interrupted. "Particularly since Mildred only gave you Ella Dowling to
+compare with me!"
+
+"Oh, no," he insisted. "There were others--and of course Mildred,
+herself."
+
+"Oh, of course, yes. I forgot that. Well----" She paused, then added, "I
+certainly OUGHT to dance well."
+
+"Why is it so much a duty?"
+
+"When I think of the dancing-teachers and the expense to papa! All sorts
+of fancy instructors--I suppose that's what daughters have fathers for,
+though, isn't it? To throw money away on them?"
+
+"You don't----" Russell began, and his look was one of alarm. "You
+haven't taken up----"
+
+She understood his apprehension and responded merrily, "Oh, murder, no!
+You mean you're afraid I break out sometimes in a piece of cheesecloth
+and run around a fountain thirty times, and then, for an encore, show
+how much like snakes I can make my arms look."
+
+"I SAID you were a mind-reader!" he exclaimed. "That's exactly what I
+was pretending to be afraid you might do."
+
+"'Pretending?' That's nicer of you. No; it's not my mania."
+
+"What is?"
+
+"Oh, nothing in particular that I know of just now. Of course I've had
+the usual one: the one that every girl goes through."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"Good heavens, Mr. Russell, you can't expect me to believe you're really
+a man of the world if you don't know that every girl has a time in her
+life when she's positive she's divinely talented for the stage! It's the
+only universal rule about women that hasn't got an exception. I don't
+mean we all want to go on the stage, but we all think we'd be wonderful
+if we did. Even Mildred. Oh, she wouldn't confess it to you: you'd have
+to know her a great deal better than any man can ever know her to find
+out."
+
+"I see," he said. "Girls are always telling us we can't know them. I
+wonder if you----"
+
+She took up his thought before he expressed it, and again he was
+fascinated by her quickness, which indeed seemed to him almost
+telepathic. "Oh, but DON'T we know one another, though!" she cried.
+
+"Such things we have to keep secret--things that go on right before YOUR
+eyes!"
+
+"Why don't some of you tell us?" he asked.
+
+"We can't tell you."
+
+"Too much honour?"
+
+"No. Not even too much honour among thieves, Mr. Russell. We don't tell
+you about our tricks against one another because we know it wouldn't
+make any impression on you. The tricks aren't played against you, and
+you have a soft side for cats with lovely manners!"
+
+"What about your tricks against us?"
+
+"Oh, those!" Alice laughed. "We think they're rather cute!"
+
+"Bravo!" he cried, and hammered the ferrule of his stick upon the
+pavement.
+
+"What's the applause for?"
+
+"For you. What you said was like running up the black flag to the
+masthead."
+
+"Oh, no. It was just a modest little sign in a pretty flower-bed:
+'Gentlemen, beware!'"
+
+"I see I must," he said, gallantly.
+
+"Thanks! But I mean, beware of the whole bloomin' garden!" Then, picking
+up a thread that had almost disappeared: "You needn't think you'll ever
+find out whether I'm right about Mildred's not being an exception by
+asking her," she said. "She won't tell you: she's not the sort that ever
+makes a confession."
+
+But Russell had not followed her shift to the former topic. "'Mildred's
+not being an exception?'" he said, vaguely. "I don't----"
+
+"An exception about thinking she could be a wonderful thing on the stage
+if she only cared to. If you asked her I'm pretty sure she'd say, 'What
+nonsense!' Mildred's the dearest, finest thing anywhere, but you won't
+find out many things about her by asking her."
+
+Russell's expression became more serious, as it did whenever his cousin
+was made their topic. "You think not?" he said. "You think she's----"
+
+"No. But it's not because she isn't sincere exactly. It's only because
+she has such a lot to live up to. She has to live up to being a girl
+on the grand style to herself, I mean, of course." And without pausing
+Alice rippled on, "You ought to have seen ME when I had the stage-fever!
+I used to play 'Juliet' all alone in my room.' She lifted her arms in
+graceful entreaty, pleading musically,
+
+ "O, swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon,
+ That monthly changes in her circled orb,
+ Lest thy love prove----"
+
+
+She broke off abruptly with a little flourish, snapping thumb and finger
+of each outstretched hand, then laughed and said, "Papa used to make
+such fun of me! Thank heaven, I was only fifteen; I was all over it by
+the next year."
+
+"No wonder you had the fever," Russell observed. "You do it beautifully.
+Why didn't you finish the line?"
+
+"Which one? 'Lest thy love prove likewise variable'? Juliet was saying
+it to a MAN, you know. She seems to have been ready to worry about his
+constancy pretty early in their affair!"
+
+Her companion was again thoughtful. "Yes," he said, seeming to be rather
+irksomely impressed with Alice's suggestion. "Yes; it does appear so."
+
+Alice glanced at his serious face, and yielded to an audacious
+temptation. "You mustn't take it so hard," she said, flippantly.
+
+"It isn't about you: it's only about Romeo and Juliet."
+
+"See here!" he exclaimed. "You aren't at your mind-reading again, are
+you? There are times when it won't do, you know!"
+
+She leaned toward him a little, as if companionably: they were walking
+slowly, and this geniality of hers brought her shoulder in light contact
+with his for a moment. "Do you dislike my mind-reading?" she asked, and,
+across their two just touching shoulders, gave him her sudden look of
+smiling wistfulness. "Do you hate it?"
+
+He shook his head. "No, I don't," he said, gravely. "It's quite
+pleasant. But I think it says, 'Gentlemen, beware!'"
+
+She instantly moved away from him, with the lawless and frank laugh of
+one who is delighted to be caught in a piece of hypocrisy. "How lovely!"
+she cried. Then she pointed ahead. "Our walk is nearly over. We're
+coming to the foolish little house where I live. It's a queer little
+place, but my father's so attached to it the family have about given up
+hope of getting him to build a real house farther out. He doesn't mind
+our being extravagant about anything else, but he won't let us alter one
+single thing about his precious little old house. Well!" She halted, and
+gave him her hand. "Adieu!"
+
+"I couldn't," he began; hesitated, then asked: "I couldn't come in with
+you for a little while?"
+
+"Not now," she said, quickly. "You can come----" She paused.
+
+"When?"
+
+"Almost any time." She turned and walked slowly up the path, but he
+waited. "You can come in the evening if you like," she called back to
+him over her shoulder.
+
+"Soon?"
+
+"As soon as you like!" She waved her hand; then ran indoors and watched
+him from a window as he went up the street. He walked rapidly, a fine,
+easy figure, swinging his stick in a way that suggested exhilaration.
+Alice, staring after him through the irregular apertures of a lace
+curtain, showed no similar buoyancy. Upon the instant she closed
+the door all sparkle left her: she had become at once the simple and
+sometimes troubled girl her family knew.
+
+"What is going on out there?" her mother asked, approaching from the
+dining-room.
+
+"Oh, nothing," Alice said, indifferently, as she turned away. "That Mr.
+Russell met me downtown and walked up with me."
+
+"Mr. Russell? Oh, the one that's engaged to Mildred?"
+
+"Well--I don't know for certain. He didn't seem so much like an engaged
+man to me." And she added, in the tone of thoughtful preoccupation:
+"Anyhow--not so terribly!"
+
+Then she ran upstairs, gave her father his tobacco, filled his pipe for
+him, and petted him as he lighted it.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+After that, she went to her room and sat down before her three-leaved
+mirror. There was where she nearly always sat when she came into her
+room, if she had nothing in mind to do. She went to that chair as
+naturally as a dog goes to his corner.
+
+She leaned forward, observing her profile; gravity seemed to be her
+mood. But after a long, almost motionless scrutiny, she began to produce
+dramatic sketches upon that ever-ready stage, her countenance: she
+showed gaiety, satire, doubt, gentleness, appreciation of a companion
+and love-in-hiding--all studied in profile first, then repeated for a
+"three-quarter view." Subsequently she ran through them, facing herself
+in full.
+
+In this manner she outlined a playful scenario for her next interview
+with Arthur Russell; but grew solemn again, thinking of the impression
+she had already sought to give him. She had no twinges for any
+underminings of her "most intimate friend"--in fact, she felt that her
+work on a new portrait of Mildred for Mr.
+
+Russell had been honest and accurate. But why had it been her instinct
+to show him an Alice Adams who didn't exist?
+
+Almost everything she had said to him was upon spontaneous impulse,
+springing to her lips on the instant; yet it all seemed to have been
+founded upon a careful design, as if some hidden self kept such designs
+in stock and handed them up to her, ready-made, to be used for its own
+purpose. What appeared to be the desired result was a false-coloured
+image in Russell's mind; but if he liked that image he wouldn't be
+liking Alice Adams; nor would anything he thought about the image be a
+thought about her.
+
+Nevertheless, she knew she would go on with her false, fancy colourings
+of this nothing as soon as she saw him again; she had just been
+practicing them. "What's the idea?" she wondered. "What makes me tell
+such lies? Why shouldn't I be just myself?" And then she thought, "But
+which one is myself?"
+
+Her eyes dwelt on the solemn eyes in the mirror; and her lips,
+disquieted by a deepening wonder, parted to whisper:
+
+"Who in the world are you?"
+
+The apparition before her had obeyed her like an alert slave, but now,
+as she subsided to a complete stillness, that aspect changed to the
+old mockery with which mirrors avenge their wrongs. The nucleus of some
+queer thing seemed to gather and shape itself behind the nothingness of
+the reflected eyes until it became almost an actual strange presence.
+If it could be identified, perhaps the presence was that of the hidden
+designer who handed up the false, ready-made pictures, and, for unknown
+purposes, made Alice exhibit them; but whatever it was, she suddenly
+found it monkey-like and terrifying. In a flutter she jumped up and went
+to another part of the room.
+
+A moment or two later she was whistling softly as she hung her light
+coat over a wooden triangle in her closet, and her musing now was
+quainter than the experience that led to it; for what she thought was
+this, "I certainly am a queer girl!" She took a little pride in so much
+originality, believing herself probably the only person in the world to
+have such thoughts as had been hers since she entered the room, and the
+first to be disturbed by a strange presence in the mirror. In fact, the
+effect of the tiny episode became apparent in that look of preoccupied
+complacency to be seen for a time upon any girl who has found reason to
+suspect that she is a being without counterpart.
+
+This slight glow, still faintly radiant, was observed across the
+dinner-table by Walter, but he misinterpreted it. "What YOU lookin' so
+self-satisfied about?" he inquired, and added in his knowing way, "I saw
+you, all right, cutie!"
+
+"Where'd you see me?"
+
+"Down-town."
+
+"This afternoon, you mean, Walter?"
+
+"Yes, 'this afternoon, I mean, Walter,'" he returned, burlesquing
+her voice at least happily enough to please himself; for he laughed
+applausively. "Oh, you never saw me! I passed you close enough to pull
+a tooth, but you were awful busy. I never did see anybody as busy as
+you get, Alice, when you're towin' a barge. My, but you keep your hands
+goin'! Looked like the air was full of 'em! That's why I'm onto why you
+look so tickled this evening; I saw you with that big fish."
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed benevolently; she was not displeased with this
+rallying. "Well, what of it, Walter?" she asked. "If you happen to see
+your sister on the street when some nice young man is being attentive to
+her----"
+
+Walter barked and then cackled. "Whoa, Sal!" he said. "You got the parts
+mixed. It's little Alice that was 'being attentive.' I know the big fish
+she was attentive to, all right, too."
+
+"Yes," his sister retorted, quietly. "I should think you might have
+recognized him, Walter."
+
+Walter looked annoyed. "Still harpin' on THAT!" he complained. "The kind
+of women I like, if they get sore they just hit you somewhere on the
+face and then they're through. By the way, I heard this Russell was
+supposed to be your dear, old, sweet friend Mildred's steady. What you
+doin' walkin' as close to him as all that?"
+
+Mrs. Adams addressed her son in gentle reproof, "Why Walter!"
+
+"Oh, never mind, mama," Alice said. "To the horrid all things are
+horrid."
+
+"Get out!" Walter protested, carelessly. "I heard all about this Russell
+down at the shop. Young Joe Lamb's such a talker I wonder he don't ruin
+his grandfather's business; he keeps all us cheap help standin' round
+listening to him nine-tenths of our time. Well, Joe told me this
+Russell's some kin or other to the Palmer family, and he's got some
+little money of his own, and he's puttin' it into ole Palmer's trust
+company and Palmer's goin' to make him a vice-president of the company.
+Sort of a keep-the-money-in-the-family arrangement, Joe Lamb says."
+
+Mrs. Adams looked thoughtful. "I don't see----" she began.
+
+"Why, this Russell's supposed to be tied up to Mildred," her son
+explained. "When ole Palmer dies this Russell will be his son-in-law,
+and all he'll haf' to do'll be to barely lift his feet and step into
+the ole man's shoes. It's certainly a mighty fat hand-me-out for this
+Russell! You better lay off o' there, Alice. Pick somebody that's got
+less to lose and you'll make better showing."
+
+Mrs. Adams's air of thoughtfulness had not departed. "But you say this
+Mr. Russell is well off on his own account, Walter."
+
+"Oh, Joe Lamb says he's got some little of his own. Didn't know how
+much."
+
+"Well, then----"
+
+Walter laughed his laugh. "Cut it out," he bade her. "Alice wouldn't run
+in fourth place."
+
+Alice had been looking at him in a detached way, as though estimating
+the value of a specimen in a collection not her own. "Yes," she said,
+indifferently. "You REALLY are vulgar, Walter."
+
+He had finished his meal; and, rising, he came round the table to her
+and patted her good-naturedly on the shoulder. "Good ole Allie!" he
+said. "HONEST, you wouldn't run in fourth place. If I was you I'd never
+even start in the class. That frozen-face gang will rule you off the
+track soon as they see your colours."
+
+"Walter!" his mother said again.
+
+"Well, ain't I her brother?" he returned, seeming to be entirely serious
+and direct, for the moment, at least. "_I_ like the ole girl all right.
+Fact is, sometimes I'm kind of sorry for her."
+
+"But what's it all ABOUT?" Alice cried. "Simply because you met me
+down-town with a man I never saw but once before and just barely know!
+Why all this palaver?"
+
+"'Why?'" he repeated, grinning. "Well, I've seen you start before, you
+know!" He went to the door, and paused. "I got no date to-night. Take
+you to the movies, you care to go."
+
+She declined crisply. "No, thanks!"
+
+"Come on," he said, as pleasantly as he knew how.
+
+"Give me a chance to show you a better time than we had up at that
+frozen-face joint. I'll get you some chop suey afterward."
+
+"No, thanks!"
+
+"All right," he responded and waved a flippant adieu. "As the barber
+says, 'The better the advice, the worse it's wasted!' Good-night!"
+
+Alice shrugged her shoulders; but a moment or two later, as the jar of
+the carelessly slammed front door went through the house, she shook her
+head, reconsidering. "Perhaps I ought to have gone with him. It might
+have kept him away from whatever dreadful people are his friends--at
+least for one night."
+
+"Oh, I'm sure Walter's a GOOD boy," Mrs. Adams said, soothingly; and
+this was what she almost always said when either her husband or Alice
+expressed such misgivings. "He's odd, and he's picked up right queer
+manners; but that's only because we haven't given him advantages like
+the other young men. But I'm sure he's a GOOD boy."
+
+She reverted to the subject a little later, while she washed the dishes
+and Alice wiped them. "Of course Walter could take his place with the
+other nice boys of the town even yet," she said. "I mean, if we could
+afford to help him financially. They all belong to the country clubs and
+have cars and----"
+
+"Let's don't go into that any more, mama," the daughter begged her.
+"What's the use?"
+
+"It COULD be of use," Mrs. Adams insisted. "It could if your father----"
+
+"But papa CAN'T."
+
+"Yes, he can."
+
+"But how can he? He told me a man of his age CAN'T give up a business
+he's been in practically all his life, and just go groping about for
+something that might never turn up at all. I think he's right about it,
+too, of course!"
+
+Mrs. Adams splashed among the plates with a new vigour heightened by an
+old bitterness. "Oh, yes," she said. "He talks that way; but he knows
+better."
+
+"How could he 'know better,' mama?"
+
+"HE knows how!"
+
+"But what does he know?"
+
+Mrs. Adams tossed her head. "You don't suppose I'm such a fool I'd
+be urging him to give up something for nothing, do you, Alice? Do you
+suppose I'd want him to just go 'groping around' like he was telling
+you? That would be crazy, of course. Little as his work at Lamb's brings
+in, I wouldn't be so silly as to ask him to give it up just on a CHANCE
+he could find something else. Good gracious, Alice, you must give me
+credit for a little intelligence once in a while!"
+
+Alice was puzzled. "But what else could there be except a chance? I
+don't see----"
+
+"Well, I do," her mother interrupted, decisively. "That man could make
+us all well off right now if he wanted to. We could have been rich long
+ago if he'd ever really felt as he ought to about his family."
+
+"What! Why, how could----"
+
+"You know how as well as I do," Mrs. Adams said, crossly. "I guess you
+haven't forgotten how he treated me about it the Sunday before he got
+sick."
+
+She went on with her work, putting into it a sudden violence inspired by
+the recollection; but Alice, enlightened, gave utterance to a laugh
+of lugubrious derision. "Oh, the GLUE factory again!" she cried. "How
+silly!" And she renewed her laughter.
+
+So often do the great projects of parents appear ignominious to their
+children. Mrs. Adams's conception of a glue factory as a fairy godmother
+of this family was an absurd old story which Alice had never taken
+seriously. She remembered that when she was about fifteen her mother
+began now and then to say something to Adams about a "glue factory,"
+rather timidly, and as a vague suggestion, but never without irritating
+him. Then, for years, the preposterous subject had not been mentioned;
+possibly because of some explosion on the part of Adams, when his
+daughter had not been present. But during the last year Mrs. Adams had
+quietly gone back to these old hints, reviving them at intervals and
+also reviving her husband's irritation. Alice's bored impression was
+that her mother wanted him to found, or buy, or do something, or
+other, about a glue factory; and that he considered the proposal so
+impracticable as to be insulting. The parental conversations took place
+when neither Alice nor Walter was at hand, but sometimes Alice had come
+in upon the conclusion of one, to find her father in a shouting mood,
+and shocking the air behind him with profane monosyllables as he
+departed. Mrs. Adams would be left quiet and troubled; and when Alice,
+sympathizing with the goaded man, inquired of her mother why these
+tiresome bickerings had been renewed, she always got the brooding and
+cryptic answer, "He COULD do it--if he wanted to." Alice failed to
+comprehend the desirability of a glue factory--to her mind a father
+engaged in a glue factory lacked impressiveness; had no advantage over
+a father employed by Lamb and Company; and she supposed that Adams knew
+better than her mother whether such an enterprise would be profitable
+or not. Emphatically, he thought it would not, for she had heard him
+shouting at the end of one of these painful interviews, "You can keep up
+your dang talk till YOU die and _I_ die, but I'll never make one God's
+cent that way!"
+
+There had been a culmination. Returning from church on the Sunday
+preceding the collapse with which Adams's illness had begun, Alice
+found her mother downstairs, weeping and intimidated, while her father's
+stamping footsteps were loudly audible as he strode up and down his room
+overhead. So were his endless repetitions of invective loudly audible:
+"That woman! Oh, that woman; Oh, that danged woman!"
+
+Mrs. Adams admitted to her daughter that it was "the old glue factory"
+and that her husband's wildness had frightened her into a "solemn
+promise" never to mention the subject again so long as she had breath.
+Alice laughed. The "glue factory" idea was not only a bore, but
+ridiculous, and her mother's evident seriousness about it one of those
+inexplicable vagaries we sometimes discover in the people we know best.
+But this Sunday rampage appeared to be the end of it, and when Adams
+came down to dinner, an hour later, he was unusually cheerful. Alice
+was glad he had gone wild enough to settle the glue factory once and for
+all; and she had ceased to think of the episode long before Friday of
+that week, when Adams was brought home in the middle of the afternoon by
+his old employer, the "great J. A. Lamb," in the latter's car.
+
+During the long illness the "glue factory" was completely forgotten, by
+Alice at least; and her laugh was rueful as well as derisive now, in the
+kitchen, when she realized that her mother's mind again dwelt upon this
+abandoned nuisance. "I thought you'd got over all that nonsense, mama,"
+she said.
+
+Mrs. Adams smiled, pathetically. "Of course you think it's nonsense,
+dearie. Young people think everything's nonsense that they don't know
+anything about."
+
+"Good gracious!" Alice cried. "I should think I used to hear enough
+about that horrible old glue factory to know something about it!"
+
+"No," her mother returned patiently. "You've never heard anything about
+it at all."
+
+"I haven't?"
+
+"No. Your father and I didn't discuss it before you children. All you
+ever heard was when he'd get in such a rage, after we'd been speaking of
+it, that he couldn't control himself when you came in. Wasn't _I_ always
+quiet? Did _I_ ever go on talking about it?"
+
+"No; perhaps not. But you're talking about it now, mama, after you
+promised never to mention it again."
+
+"I promised not to mention it to your father," said Mrs. Adams, gently.
+"I haven't mentioned it to him, have I?"
+
+"Ah, but if you mention it to me I'm afraid you WILL mention it to him.
+You always do speak of things that you have on your mind, and you
+might get papa all stirred up again about--" Alice paused, a light of
+divination flickering in her eyes. "Oh!" she cried. "I SEE!"
+
+"What do you see?"
+
+"You HAVE been at him about it!"
+
+"Not one single word!"
+
+"No!" Alice cried. "Not a WORD, but that's what you've meant all along!
+You haven't spoken the words to him, but all this urging him to change,
+to 'find something better to go into'--it's all been about nothing on
+earth but your foolish old glue factory that you know upsets him, and
+you gave your solemn word never to speak to him about again! You didn't
+say it, but you meant it--and he KNOWS that's what you meant! Oh, mama!"
+
+Mrs. Adams, with her hands still automatically at work in the flooded
+dishpan, turned to face her daughter. "Alice," she said, tremulously,
+"what do I ask for myself?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"I say, What do I ask for myself? Do you suppose _I_ want anything?
+Don't you know I'd be perfectly content on your father's present income
+if I were the only person to be considered? What do I care about any
+pleasure for myself? I'd be willing never to have a maid again; _I_
+don't mind doing the work. If we didn't have any children I'd be glad to
+do your father's cooking and the housework and the washing and ironing,
+too, for the rest of my life. I wouldn't care. I'm a poor cook and a
+poor housekeeper; I don't do anything well; but it would be good enough
+for just him and me. I wouldn't ever utter one word of com----"
+
+"Oh, goodness!" Alice lamented. "What IS it all about?"
+
+"It's about this," said Mrs. Adams, swallowing. "You and Walter are a
+new generation and you ought to have the same as the rest of the new
+generation get. Poor Walter--asking you to go to the movies and a
+Chinese restaurant: the best he had to offer! Don't you suppose _I_ see
+how the poor boy is deteriorating? Don't you suppose I know what YOU
+have to go through, Alice? And when I think of that man upstairs----"
+The agitated voice grew louder. "When I think of him and know that
+nothing in the world but his STUBBORNNESS keeps my children from having
+all they want and what they OUGHT to have, do you suppose I'm going to
+hold myself bound to keep to the absolute letter of a silly promise he
+got from me by behaving like a crazy man? I can't! I can't do it! No
+mother could sit by and see him lock up a horn of plenty like that in
+his closet when the children were starving!"
+
+"Oh, goodness, goodness me!" Alice protested. "We aren't precisely
+'starving,' are we?"
+
+Mrs. Adams began to weep. "It's just the same. Didn't I see how flushed
+and pretty you looked, this afternoon, after you'd been walking with
+this young man that's come here? Do you suppose he'd LOOK at a girl like
+Mildred Palmer if you had what you ought to have? Do you suppose he'd be
+going into business with her father if YOUR father----"
+
+"Good heavens, mama; you're worse than Walter: I just barely know the
+man! DON'T be so absurd!"
+
+"Yes, I'm always 'absurd,'" Mrs. Adams moaned. "All I can do is cry,
+while your father sits upstairs, and his horn of plenty----"
+
+But Alice interrupted with a peal of desperate laughter. "Oh, that
+'horn of plenty!' Do come down to earth, mama. How can you call a GLUE
+factory, that doesn't exist except in your mind, a 'horn of plenty'? Do
+let's be a little rational!"
+
+"It COULD be a horn of plenty," the tearful Mrs. Adams insisted. "It
+could! You don't understand a thing about it."
+
+"Well, I'm willing," Alice said, with tired skepticism. "Make me
+understand, then. Where'd you ever get the idea?"
+
+Mrs. Adams withdrew her hands from the water, dried them on a towel,
+and then wiped her eyes with a handkerchief. "Your father could make a
+fortune if he wanted to," she said, quietly. "At least, I don't say a
+fortune, but anyhow a great deal more than he does make."
+
+"Yes, I've heard that before, mama, and you think he could make it out
+of a glue factory. What I'm asking is: How?"
+
+"How? Why, by making glue and selling it. Don't you know how bad most
+glue is when you try to mend anything? A good glue is one of the rarest
+things there is; and it would just sell itself, once it got started.
+Well, your father knows how to make as good a glue as there is in the
+world."
+
+Alice was not interested. "What of it? I suppose probably anybody could
+make it if they wanted to."
+
+"I SAID you didn't know anything about it. Nobody else could make it.
+Your father knows a formula for making it."
+
+"What of that?"
+
+"It's a secret formula. It isn't even down on paper. It's worth any
+amount of money."
+
+"'Any amount?'" Alice said, remaining incredulous. "Why hasn't papa sold
+it then?"
+
+"Just because he's too stubborn to do anything with it at all!"
+
+"How did papa get it?"
+
+"He got it before you were born, just after we were married. I didn't
+think much about it then: it wasn't till you were growing up and I saw
+how much we needed money that I----"
+
+"Yes, but how did papa get it?" Alice began to feel a little more
+curious about this possible buried treasure. "Did he invent it?"
+
+"Partly," Mrs. Adams said, looking somewhat preoccupied. "He and another
+man invented it."
+
+"Then maybe the other man----"
+
+"He's dead."
+
+"Then his family----"
+
+"I don't think he left any family," Mrs. Adams said. "Anyhow, it belongs
+to your father. At least it belongs to him as much as it does to any one
+else. He's got an absolutely perfect right to do anything he wants to
+with it, and it would make us all comfortable if he'd do what I want him
+to--and he KNOWS it would, too!"
+
+Alice shook her head pityingly. "Poor mama!" she said. "Of course he
+knows it wouldn't do anything of the kind, or else he'd have done it
+long ago."
+
+"He would, you say?" her mother cried. "That only shows how little you
+know him!"
+
+"Poor mama!" Alice said again, soothingly. "If papa were like what you
+say he is, he'd be--why, he'd be crazy!"
+
+Mrs. Adams agreed with a vehemence near passion. "You're right about him
+for once: that's just what he is! He sits up there in his stubbornness
+and lets us slave here in the kitchen when if he wanted to--if he'd so
+much as lift his little finger----"
+
+"Oh, come, now!" Alice laughed. "You can't build even a glue factory
+with just one little finger."
+
+Mrs. Adams seemed about to reply that finding fault with a figure
+of speech was beside the point; but a ringing of the front door bell
+forestalled the retort. "Now, who do you suppose that is?" she wondered
+aloud, then her face brightened. "Ah--did Mr. Russell ask if he
+could----"
+
+"No, he wouldn't be coming this evening," Alice said. "Probably it's the
+great J. A. Lamb: he usually stops for a minute on Thursdays to ask how
+papa's getting along. I'll go."
+
+She tossed her apron off, and as she went through the house her
+expression was thoughtful. She was thinking vaguely about the glue
+factory and wondering if there might be "something in it" after all. If
+her mother was right about the rich possibilities of Adams's secret--but
+that was as far as Alice's speculations upon the matter went at this
+time: they were checked, partly by the thought that her father probably
+hadn't enough money for such an enterprise, and partly by the fact that
+she had arrived at the front door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+The fine old gentleman revealed when she opened the door was probably
+the last great merchant in America to wear the chin beard. White as
+white frost, it was trimmed short with exquisite precision, while his
+upper lip and the lower expanses of his cheeks were clean and rosy from
+fresh shaving. With this trim white chin beard, the white waistcoat,
+the white tie, the suit of fine gray cloth, the broad and brilliantly
+polished black shoes, and the wide-brimmed gray felt hat, here was a
+man who had found his style in the seventies of the last century, and
+thenceforth kept it. Files of old magazines of that period might show
+him, in woodcut, as, "Type of Boston Merchant"; Nast might have drawn
+him as an honest statesman. He was eighty, hale and sturdy, not aged;
+and his quick blue eyes, still unflecked, and as brisk as a boy's, saw
+everything.
+
+"Well, well, well!" he said, heartily. "You haven't lost any of your
+good looks since last week, I see, Miss Alice, so I guess I'm to take
+it you haven't been worrying over your daddy. The young feller's getting
+along all right, is he?"
+
+"He's much better; he's sitting up, Mr. Lamb. Won't you come in?"
+
+"Well, I don't know but I might." He turned to call toward twin disks of
+light at the curb, "Be out in a minute, Billy"; and the silhouette of a
+chauffeur standing beside a car could be seen to salute in response, as
+the old gentleman stepped into the hall. "You don't suppose your daddy's
+receiving callers yet, is he?"
+
+"He's a good deal stronger than he was when you were here last week, but
+I'm afraid he's not very presentable, though."
+
+"'Presentable?'" The old man echoed her jovially. "Pshaw! I've seen lots
+of sick folks. _I_ know what they look like and how they love to kind of
+nest in among a pile of old blankets and wrappers. Don't you worry about
+THAT, Miss Alice, if you think he'd like to see me."
+
+"Of course he would--if----" Alice hesitated; then said quickly, "Of
+course he'd love to see you and he's quite able to, if you care to come
+up."
+
+She ran up the stairs ahead of him, and had time to snatch the crocheted
+wrap from her father's shoulders. Swathed as usual, he was sitting
+beside a table, reading the evening paper; but when his employer
+appeared in the doorway he half rose as if to come forward in greeting.
+
+"Sit still!" the old gentleman shouted. "What do you mean? Don't you
+know you're weak as a cat? D'you think a man can be sick as long as you
+have and NOT be weak as a cat? What you trying to do the polite with ME
+for?"
+
+Adams gratefully protracted the handshake that accompanied these
+inquiries. "This is certainly mighty fine of you, Mr. Lamb," he said.
+"I guess Alice has told you how much our whole family appreciate your
+coming here so regularly to see how this old bag o' bones was getting
+along. Haven't you, Alice?"
+
+"Yes, papa," she said; and turned to go out, but Lamb checked her.
+
+"Stay right here, Miss Alice; I'm not even going to sit down. I know
+how it upsets sick folks when people outside the family come in for the
+first time."
+
+"You don't upset me," Adams said. "I'll feel a lot better for getting a
+glimpse of you, Mr. Lamb."
+
+The visitor's laugh was husky, but hearty and re-assuring, like his
+voice in speaking. "That's the way all my boys blarney me, Miss Alice,"
+he said. "They think I'll make the work lighter on 'em if they can
+get me kind of flattered up. You just tell your daddy it's no use; he
+doesn't get on MY soft side, pretending he likes to see me even when
+he's sick."
+
+"Oh, I'm not so sick any more," Adams said. "I expect to be back in my
+place ten days from now at the longest."
+
+"Well, now, don't hurry it, Virgil; don't hurry it. You take your time;
+take your time."
+
+This brought to Adams's lips a feeble smile not lacking in a kind of
+vanity, as feeble. "Why?" he asked. "I suppose you think my department
+runs itself down there, do you?"
+
+His employer's response was another husky laugh. "Well, well, well!" he
+cried, and patted Adams's shoulder with a strong pink hand. "Listen to
+this young feller, Miss Alice, will you! He thinks we can't get along
+without him a minute! Yes, sir, this daddy of yours believes the whole
+works 'll just take and run down if he isn't there to keep 'em wound up.
+I always suspected he thought a good deal of himself, and now I know he
+does!"
+
+Adams looked troubled. "Well, I don't like to feel that my salary's
+going on with me not earning it."
+
+"Listen to him, Miss Alice! Wouldn't you think, now, he'd let me be the
+one to worry about that? Why, on my word, if your daddy had his way, _I_
+wouldn't be anywhere. He'd take all my worrying and everything else off
+my shoulders and shove me right out of Lamb and Company! He would!"
+
+"It seems to me I've been soldiering on you a pretty long while, Mr.
+Lamb," the convalescent said, querulously. "I don't feel right about it;
+but I'll be back in ten days. You'll see."
+
+The old man took his hand in parting. "All right; we'll see, Virgil. Of
+course we do need you, seriously speaking; but we don't need you so bad
+we'll let you come down there before you're fully fit and able." He went
+to the door. "You hear, Miss Alice? That's what I wanted to make the old
+feller understand, and what I want you to kind of enforce on him. The
+old place is there waiting for him, and it'd wait ten years if it took
+him that long to get good and well. You see that he remembers it, Miss
+Alice!"
+
+She went down the stairs with him, and he continued to impress this upon
+her until he had gone out of the front door. And even after that, the
+husky voice called back from the darkness, as he went to his car, "Don't
+forget, Miss Alice; let him take his own time. We always want him, but
+we want him to get good and well first. Good-night, good-night, young
+lady!"
+
+When she closed the door her mother came from the farther end of the
+"living-room," where there was no light; and Alice turned to her.
+
+"I can't help liking that old man, mama," she said. "He always sounds
+so--well, so solid and honest and friendly! I do like him."
+
+But Mrs. Adams failed in sympathy upon this point. "He didn't say
+anything about raising your father's salary, did he?" she asked, dryly.
+
+"No."
+
+"No. I thought not."
+
+She would have said more, but Alice, indisposed to listen, began to
+whistle, ran up the stairs, and went to sit with her father. She found
+him bright-eyed with the excitement a first caller brings into a slow
+convalescence: his cheeks showed actual hints of colour; and he was
+smiling tremulously as he filled and lit his pipe. She brought the
+crocheted scarf and put it about his shoulders again, then took a chair
+near him.
+
+"I believe seeing Mr. Lamb did do you good, papa," she said. "I sort of
+thought it might, and that's why I let him come up. You really look a
+little like your old self again."
+
+Adams exhaled a breathy "Ha!" with the smoke from his pipe as he waved
+the match to extinguish it. "That's fine," he said. "The smoke I had
+before dinner didn't taste the way it used to, and I kind of wondered if
+I'd lost my liking for tobacco, but this one seems to be all right. You
+bet it did me good to see J. A. Lamb! He's the biggest man that's ever
+lived in this town or ever will live here; and you can take all the
+Governors and Senators or anything they've raised here, and put 'em in
+a pot with him, and they won't come out one-two-three alongside o' him!
+And to think as big a man as that, with all his interests and everything
+he's got on his mind--to think he'd never let anything prevent him from
+coming here once every week to ask how I was getting along, and then
+walk right upstairs and kind of CALL on me, as it were well, it makes
+me sort of feel as if I wasn't so much of a nobody, so to speak, as your
+mother seems to like to make out sometimes."
+
+"How foolish, papa! Of COURSE you're not 'a nobody.'"
+
+Adams chuckled faintly upon his pipe-stem, what vanity he had seeming to
+be further stimulated by his daughter's applause. "I guess there aren't
+a whole lot of people in this town that could claim J. A. showed that
+much interest in 'em," he said. "Of course I don't set up to believe
+it's all because of merit, or anything like that. He'd do the same for
+anybody else that'd been with the company as long as I have, but still
+it IS something to be with the company that long and have him show he
+appreciates it."
+
+"Yes, indeed, it is, papa."
+
+"Yes, sir," Adams said, reflectively. "Yes, sir, I guess that's so. And
+besides, it all goes to show the kind of a man he is. Simon pure, that's
+what that man is, Alice. Simon pure! There's never been anybody work
+for him that didn't respect him more than they did any other man in the
+world, I guess. And when you work for him you know he respects you,
+too. Right from the start you get the feeling that J. A. puts absolute
+confidence in you; and that's mighty stimulating: it makes you want to
+show him he hasn't misplaced it. There's great big moral values to the
+way a man like him gets you to feeling about your relations with the
+business: it ain't all just dollars and cents--not by any means!"
+
+He was silent for a time, then returned with increasing enthusiasm to
+this theme, and Alice was glad to see so much renewal of life in him; he
+had not spoken with a like cheerful vigour since before his illness. The
+visit of his idolized great man had indeed been good for him, putting
+new spirit into him; and liveliness of the body followed that of the
+spirit. His improvement carried over the night: he slept well and
+awoke late, declaring that he was "pretty near a well man and ready for
+business right now." Moreover, having slept again in the afternoon,
+he dressed and went down to dinner, leaning but lightly on Alice, who
+conducted him.
+
+"My! but you and your mother have been at it with your scrubbing and
+dusting!" he said, as they came through the "living-room." "I don't know
+I ever did see the house so spick and span before!" His glance fell upon
+a few carnations in a vase, and he chuckled admiringly. "Flowers, too!
+So THAT'S what you coaxed that dollar and a half out o 'me for, this
+morning!"
+
+Other embellishments brought forth his comment when he had taken his old
+seat at the head of the small dinner-table. "Why, I declare, Alice!" he
+exclaimed. "I been so busy looking at all the spick-and-spanishness
+after the house-cleaning, and the flowers out in the parlour--'living
+room' I suppose you want me to call it, if I just GOT to be
+fashionable--I been so busy studying over all this so-and-so, I declare
+I never noticed YOU till this minute! My, but you ARE all dressed up!
+What's goin' on? What's it about: you so all dressed up, and flowers in
+the parlour and everything?"
+
+"Don't you see, papa? It's in honour of your coming downstairs again, of
+course."
+
+"Oh, so that's it," he said. "I never would 'a' thought of that, I
+guess."
+
+But Walter looked sidelong at his father, and gave forth his sly and
+knowing laugh. "Neither would I!" he said.
+
+Adams lifted his eyebrows jocosely. "You're jealous, are you, sonny? You
+don't want the old man to think our young lady'd make so much fuss over
+him, do you?"
+
+"Go on thinkin' it's over you," Walter retorted, amused. "Go on and
+think it. It'll do you good."
+
+"Of course I'll think it," Adams said. "It isn't anybody's birthday.
+Certainly the decorations are on account of me coming downstairs. Didn't
+you hear Alice say so?"
+
+"Sure, I heard her say so."
+
+"Well, then----"
+
+Walter interrupted him with a little music. Looking shrewdly at Alice,
+he sang:
+
+ "I was walkin' out on Monday with my sweet thing.
+ She's my neat thing,
+ My sweet thing:
+ I'll go round on Tuesday night to see her.
+ Oh, how we'll spoon----"
+
+
+"Walter!" his mother cried. "WHERE do you learn such vulgar songs?"
+However, she seemed not greatly displeased with him, and laughed as she
+spoke.
+
+"So that's it, Alice!" said Adams. "Playing the hypocrite with your old
+man, are you? It's some new beau, is it?"
+
+"I only wish it were," she said, calmly. "No. It's just what I said:
+it's all for you, dear."
+
+"Don't let her con you," Walter advised his father. "She's got
+expectations. You hang around downstairs a while after dinner and you'll
+see."
+
+But the prophecy failed, though Adams went to his own room without
+waiting to test it. No one came.
+
+Alice stayed in the "living-room" until half-past nine, when she went
+slowly upstairs. Her mother, almost tearful, met her at the top, and
+whispered, "You mustn't mind, dearie."
+
+"Mustn't mind what?" Alice asked, and then, as she went on her way,
+laughed scornfully. "What utter nonsense!" she said.
+
+Next day she cut the stems of the rather scant show of carnations and
+refreshed them with new water. At dinner, her father, still in high
+spirits, observed that she had again "dressed up" in honour of his
+second descent of the stairs; and Walter repeated his fragment of
+objectionable song; but these jocularities were rendered pointless by
+the eventless evening that followed; and in the morning the carnations
+began to appear tarnished and flaccid.
+
+Alice gave them a long look, then threw them away; and neither Walter
+nor her father was inspired to any rallying by her plain costume for
+that evening. Mrs. Adams was visibly depressed.
+
+When Alice finished helping her mother with the dishes, she went
+outdoors and sat upon the steps of the little front veranda. The night,
+gentle with warm air from the south, surrounded her pleasantly, and the
+perpetual smoke was thinner. Now that the furnaces of dwelling-houses
+were no longer fired, life in that city had begun to be less like life
+in a railway tunnel; people were aware of summer in the air, and in
+the thickened foliage of the shade-trees, and in the sky. Stars were
+unveiled by the passing of the denser smoke fogs, and to-night they
+could be seen clearly; they looked warm and near. Other girls sat upon
+verandas and stoops in Alice's street, cheerful as young fishermen along
+the banks of a stream.
+
+Alice could hear them from time to time; thin sopranos persistent in
+laughter that fell dismally upon her ears. She had set no lines or nets
+herself, and what she had of "expectations," as Walter called them, were
+vanished. For Alice was experienced; and one of the conclusions she drew
+from her experience was that when a man says, "I'd take you for anything
+you wanted me to," he may mean it or, he may not; but, if he does, he
+will not postpone the first opportunity to say something more. Little
+affairs, once begun, must be warmed quickly; for if they cool they are
+dead.
+
+But Alice was not thinking of Arthur Russell. When she tossed away the
+carnations she likewise tossed away her thoughts of that young man. She
+had been like a boy who sees upon the street, some distance before him,
+a bit of something round and glittering, a possible dime. He hopes it is
+a dime, and, until he comes near enough to make sure, he plays that it
+is a dime. In his mind he has an adventure with it: he buys something
+delightful. If he picks it up, discovering only some tin-foil which has
+happened upon a round shape, he feels a sinking. A dulness falls upon
+him.
+
+So Alice was dull with the loss of an adventure; and when the laughter
+of other girls reached her, intermittently, she had not sprightliness
+enough left in her to be envious of their gaiety. Besides, these
+neighbours were ineligible even for her envy, being of another caste;
+they could never know a dance at the Palmers', except remotely, through
+a newspaper. Their laughter was for the encouragement of snappy young
+men of the stores and offices down-town, clerks, bookkeepers, what
+not--some of them probably graduates of Frincke's Business College.
+
+Then, as she recalled that dark portal, with its dusty stairway mounting
+between close walls to disappear in the upper shadows, her mind drew
+back as from a doorway to Purgatory. Nevertheless, it was a picture
+often in her reverie; and sometimes it came suddenly, without sequence,
+into the midst of her other thoughts, as if it leaped up among them from
+a lower darkness; and when it arrived it wanted to stay. So a traveller,
+still roaming the world afar, sometimes broods without apparent reason
+upon his family burial lot: "I wonder if I shall end there."
+
+The foreboding passed abruptly, with a jerk of her breath, as the
+street-lamp revealed a tall and easy figure approaching from the north,
+swinging a stick in time to its stride. She had given Russell up--and he
+came.
+
+"What luck for me!" he exclaimed. "To find you alone!"
+
+Alice gave him her hand for an instant, not otherwise moving. "I'm glad
+it happened so," she said. "Let's stay out here, shall we? Do you think
+it's too provincial to sit on a girl's front steps with her?"
+
+"'Provincial?' Why, it's the very best of our institutions," he
+returned, taking his place beside her. "At least, I think so to-night."
+
+"Thanks! Is that practice for other nights somewhere else?"
+
+"No," he laughed. "The practicing all led up to this. Did I come too
+soon?"
+
+"No," she replied, gravely. "Just in time!"
+
+"I'm glad to be so accurate; I've spent two evenings wanting to come,
+Miss Adams, instead of doing what I was doing."
+
+"What was that?"
+
+"Dinners. Large and long dinners. Your fellow-citizens are immensely
+hospitable to a newcomer."
+
+"Oh, no," Alice said. "We don't do it for everybody. Didn't you find
+yourself charmed?"
+
+"One was a men's dinner," he explained. "Mr. Palmer seemed to think I
+ought to be shown to the principal business men."
+
+"What was the other dinner?"
+
+"My cousin Mildred gave it."
+
+"Oh, DID she!" Alice said, sharply, but she recovered herself in the
+same instant, and laughed. "She wanted to show you to the principal
+business women, I suppose."
+
+"I don't know. At all events, I shouldn't give myself out to be so much
+feted by your 'fellow-citizens,' after all, seeing these were both done
+by my relatives, the Palmers. However, there are others to follow, I'm
+afraid. I was wondering--I hoped maybe you'd be coming to some of them.
+Aren't you?"
+
+"I rather doubt it," Alice said, slowly. "Mildred's dance was almost the
+only evening I've gone out since my father's illness began. He seemed
+better that day; so I went. He was better the other day when he wanted
+those cigars. He's very much up and down." She paused. "I'd almost
+forgotten that Mildred is your cousin."
+
+"Not a very near one," he explained. "Mr. Palmer's father was my
+great-uncle."
+
+"Still, of course you are related."
+
+"Yes; that distantly."
+
+Alice said placidly, "It's quite an advantage."
+
+He agreed. "Yes. It is."
+
+"No," she said, in the same placid tone. "I mean for Mildred."
+
+"I don't see----"
+
+She laughed. "No. You wouldn't. I mean it's an advantage over the rest
+of us who might like to compete for some of your time; and the worst of
+it is we can't accuse her of being unfair about it. We can't prove she
+showed any trickiness in having you for a cousin. Whatever else she
+might plan to do with you, she didn't plan that. So the rest of us must
+just bear it!"
+
+"The 'rest of you!'" he laughed. "It's going to mean a great deal of
+suffering!"
+
+Alice resumed her placid tone. "You're staying at the Palmers', aren't
+you?"
+
+"No, not now. I've taken an apartment. I'm going to live here; I'm
+permanent. Didn't I tell you?"
+
+"I think I'd heard somewhere that you were," she said. "Do you think
+you'll like living here?"
+
+"How can one tell?"
+
+"If I were in your place I think I should be able to tell, Mr. Russell."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Why, good gracious!" she cried. "Haven't you got the most perfect
+creature in town for your--your cousin? SHE expects to make you like
+living here, doesn't she? How could you keep from liking it, even if you
+tried not to, under the circumstances?"
+
+"Well, you see, there's such a lot of circumstances," he explained; "I'm
+not sure I'll like getting back into a business again. I suppose most
+of the men of my age in the country have been going through the same
+experience: the War left us with a considerable restlessness of spirit."
+
+"You were in the War?" she asked, quickly, and as quickly answered
+herself, "Of course you were!"
+
+"I was a left-over; they only let me out about four months ago," he
+said. "It's quite a shake-up trying to settle down again."
+
+"You were in France, then?"
+
+"Oh, yes; but I didn't get up to the front much--only two or three
+times, and then just for a day or so. I was in the transportation
+service."
+
+"You were an officer, of course."
+
+"Yes," he said. "They let me play I was a major."
+
+"I guessed a major," she said. "You'd always be pretty grand, of
+course."
+
+Russell was amused. "Well, you see," he informed her, "as it happened,
+we had at least several other majors in our army. Why would I always be
+something 'pretty grand?'"
+
+"You're related to the Palmers. Don't you notice they always affect the
+pretty grand?"
+
+"Then you think I'm only one of their affectations, I take it."
+
+"Yes, you seem to be the most successful one they've got!" Alice said,
+lightly. "You certainly do belong to them." And she laughed as if at
+something hidden from him. "Don't you?"
+
+"But you've just excused me for that," he protested. "You said nobody
+could be blamed for my being their third cousin. What a contradictory
+girl you are!"
+
+Alice shook her head. "Let's keep away from the kind of girl I am."
+
+"No," he said. "That's just what I came here to talk about."
+
+She shook her head again. "Let's keep first to the kind of man you are.
+I'm glad you were in the War."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know." She was quiet a moment, for she was thinking that
+here she spoke the truth: his service put about him a little glamour
+that helped to please her with him. She had been pleased with him during
+their walk; pleased with him on his own account; and now that pleasure
+was growing keener. She looked at him, and though the light in which
+she saw him was little more than starlight, she saw that he was looking
+steadily at her with a kindly and smiling seriousness. All at once it
+seemed to her that the night air was sweeter to breathe, as if a distant
+fragrance of new blossoms had been blown to her. She smiled back to him,
+and said, "Well, what kind of man are you?"
+
+"I don't know; I've often wondered," he replied. "What kind of girl are
+you?"
+
+"Don't you remember? I told you the other day. I'm just me!"
+
+"But who is that?"
+
+"You forget everything;" said Alice. "You told me what kind of a girl
+I am. You seemed to think you'd taken quite a fancy to me from the very
+first."
+
+"So I did," he agreed, heartily.
+
+"But how quickly you forgot it!"
+
+"Oh, no. I only want YOU to say what kind of a girl you are."
+
+She mocked him. "'I don't know; I've often wondered!' What kind of a
+girl does Mildred tell you I am? What has she said about me since she
+told you I was 'a Miss Adams?'"
+
+"I don't know; I haven't asked her."
+
+"Then DON'T ask her," Alice said, quickly.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because she's such a perfect creature and I'm such an imperfect one.
+Perfect creatures have the most perfect way of ruining the imperfect
+ones."
+
+"But then they wouldn't be perfect. Not if they----"
+
+"Oh, yes, they remain perfectly perfect," she assured him. "That's
+because they never go into details. They're not so vulgar as to come
+right out and TELL that you've been in jail for stealing chickens.
+They just look absent-minded and say in a low voice, 'Oh, very; but I
+scarcely think you'd like her particularly'; and then begin to talk of
+something else right away."
+
+His smile had disappeared. "Yes," he said, somewhat ruefully. "That
+does sound like Mildred. You certainly do seem to know her! Do you know
+everybody as well as that?"
+
+"Not myself," Alice said. "I don't know myself at all. I got to
+wondering about that--about who I was--the other day after you walked
+home with me."
+
+He uttered an exclamation, and added, explaining it, "You do give a man
+a chance to be fatuous, though! As if it were walking home with me that
+made you wonder about yourself!"
+
+"It was," Alice informed him, coolly. "I was wondering what I wanted to
+make you think of me, in case I should ever happen to see you again."
+
+This audacity appeared to take his breath. "By George!" he cried.
+
+"You mustn't be astonished," she said. "What I decided then was that I
+would probably never dare to be just myself with you--not if I cared
+to have you want to see me again--and yet here I am, just being myself
+after all!"
+
+"You ARE the cheeriest series of shocks," Russell exclaimed, whereupon
+Alice added to the series.
+
+"Tell me: Is it a good policy for me to follow with you?" she asked, and
+he found the mockery in her voice delightful. "Would you advise me to
+offer you shocks as a sort of vacation from suavity?"
+
+"Suavity" was yet another sketch of Mildred; a recognizable one, or it
+would not have been humorous. In Alice's hands, so dexterous in this
+work, her statuesque friend was becoming as ridiculous as a fine figure
+of wax left to the mercies of a satirist.
+
+But the lively young sculptress knew better than to overdo: what she did
+must appear to spring all from mirth; so she laughed as if unwillingly,
+and said, "I MUSTN'T laugh at Mildred! In the first place, she's
+your--your cousin. And in the second place, she's not meant to be funny;
+it isn't right to laugh at really splendid people who take themselves
+seriously. In the third place, you won't come again if I do."
+
+"Don't be sure of that," Russell said, "whatever you do."
+
+"'Whatever I do?'" she echoed. "That sounds as if you thought I COULD be
+terrific! Be careful; there's one thing I could do that would keep you
+away."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"I could tell you not to come," she said. "I wonder if I ought to."
+
+"Why do you wonder if you 'ought to?'"
+
+"Don't you guess?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then let's both be mysteries to each other," she suggested. "I mystify
+you because I wonder, and you mystify me because you don't guess why I
+wonder. We'll let it go at that, shall we?"
+
+"Very well; so long as it's certain that you DON'T tell me not to come
+again."
+
+"I'll not tell you that--yet," she said. "In fact----" She paused,
+reflecting, with her head to one side. "In fact, I won't tell you not
+to come, probably, until I see that's what you want me to tell you.
+I'll let you out easily--and I'll be sure to see it. Even before you do,
+perhaps."
+
+"That arrangement suits me," Russell returned, and his voice held no
+trace of jocularity: he had become serious. "It suits me better if
+you're enough in earnest to mean that I can come--oh, not whenever I
+want to; I don't expect so much!--but if you mean that I can see you
+pretty often."
+
+"Of course I'm in earnest," she said. "But before I say you can come
+'pretty often,' I'd like to know how much of my time you'd need if you
+did come 'whenever you want to'; and of course you wouldn't dare
+make any answer to that question except one. Wouldn't you let me have
+Thursdays out?"
+
+"No, no," he protested. "I want to know. Will you let me come pretty
+often?"
+
+"Lean toward me a little," Alice said. "I want you to understand." And
+as he obediently bent his head near hers, she inclined toward him as if
+to whisper; then, in a half-shout, she cried,
+
+"YES!"
+
+He clapped his hands. "By George!" he said. "What a girl you are!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, for the first reason, because you have such gaieties as that one.
+I should think your father would actually like being ill, just to be in
+the house with you all the time."
+
+"You mean by that," Alice inquired, "I keep my family cheerful with my
+amusing little ways?"
+
+"Yes. Don't you?"
+
+"There were only boys in your family, weren't there, Mr. Russell?"
+
+"I was an only child, unfortunately."
+
+"Yes," she said. "I see you hadn't any sisters."
+
+For a moment he puzzled over her meaning, then saw it, and was more
+delighted with her than ever. "I can answer a question of yours, now,
+that I couldn't a while ago."
+
+"Yes, I know," she returned, quietly.
+
+"But how could you know?"
+
+"It's the question I asked you about whether you were going to like
+living here," she said. "You're about to tell me that now you know you
+WILL like it."
+
+"More telepathy!" he exclaimed. "Yes, that was it, precisely. I suppose
+the same thing's been said to you so many times that you----"
+
+"No, it hasn't," Alice said, a little confused for the moment. "Not at
+all. I meant----" She paused, then asked in a gentle voice, "Would you
+really like to know?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, I was only afraid you didn't mean it."
+
+"See here," he said. "I did mean it. I told you it was being pretty
+difficult for me to settle down to things again. Well, it's more
+difficult than you know, but I think I can pull through in fair spirits
+if I can see a girl like you 'pretty often.'"
+
+"All right," she said, in a business-like tone. "I've told you that you
+can if you want to."
+
+"I do want to," he assured her. "I do, indeed!"
+
+"How often is 'pretty often,' Mr. Russell?"
+
+"Would you walk with me sometimes? To-morrow?"
+
+"Sometimes. Not to-morrow. The day after."
+
+"That's splendid!" he said. "You'll walk with me day after to-morrow,
+and the night after that I'll see you at Miss Lamb's dance, won't I?"
+
+But this fell rather chillingly upon Alice. "Miss Lamb's dance? Which
+Miss Lamb?" she asked.
+
+"I don't know--it's the one that's just coming out of mourning."
+
+"Oh, Henrietta--yes. Is her dance so soon? I'd forgotten."
+
+"You'll be there, won't you?" he asked. "Please say you're going."
+
+Alice did not respond at once, and he urged her again: "Please do
+promise you'll be there."
+
+"No, I can't promise anything," she said, slowly. "You see, for one
+thing, papa might not be well enough."
+
+"But if he is?" said Russell. "If he is you'll surely come, won't you?
+Or, perhaps----" He hesitated, then went on quickly, "I don't know the
+rules in this place yet, and different places have different rules; but
+do you have to have a chaperone, or don't girls just go to dances with
+the men sometimes? If they do, would you--would you let me take you?"
+
+Alice was startled. "Good gracious!"
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"Don't you think your relatives----Aren't you expected to go with
+Mildred--and Mrs. Palmer?"
+
+"Not necessarily. It doesn't matter what I might be expected to do," he
+said. "Will you go with me?"
+
+"I----No; I couldn't."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"I can't. I'm not going."
+
+"But why?"
+
+"Papa's not really any better," Alice said, huskily. "I'm too worried
+about him to go to a dance." Her voice sounded emotional, genuinely
+enough; there was something almost like a sob in it. "Let's talk of
+other things, please."
+
+He acquiesced gently; but Mrs. Adams, who had been listening to the
+conversation at the open window, just overhead, did not hear him. She
+had correctly interpreted the sob in Alice's voice, and, trembling
+with sudden anger, she rose from her knees, and went fiercely to her
+husband's room.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+He had not undressed, and he sat beside the table, smoking his pipe and
+reading his newspaper. Upon his forehead the lines in that old pattern,
+the historical map of his troubles, had grown a little vaguer lately;
+relaxed by the complacency of a man who not only finds his health
+restored, but sees the days before him promising once more a familiar
+routine that he has always liked to follow.
+
+As his wife came in, closing the door behind her, he looked up
+cheerfully, "Well, mother," he said, "what's the news downstairs?"
+
+"That's what I came to tell you," she informed him, grimly.
+
+Adams lowered his newspaper to his knee and peered over his spectacles
+at her. She had remained by the door, standing, and the great greenish
+shadow of the small lamp-shade upon his table revealed her but
+dubiously. "Isn't everything all right?" he asked. "What's the matter?"
+
+"Don't worry: I'm going to tell you," she said, her grimness not
+relaxed. "There's matter enough, Virgil Adams. Matter enough to make me
+sick of being alive!"
+
+With that, the markings on his brows began to emerge again in all their
+sharpness; the old pattern reappeared. "Oh, my, my!" he lamented. "I
+thought maybe we were all going to settle down to a little peace for a
+while. What's it about now?"
+
+"It's about Alice. Did you think it was about ME or anything for
+MYSELF?"
+
+Like some ready old machine, always in order, his irritability responded
+immediately and automatically to her emotion. "How in thunder could I
+think what it's about, or who it's for? SAY it, and get it over!"
+
+"Oh, I'll 'say' it," she promised, ominously. "What I've come to ask you
+is, How much longer do you expect me to put up with that old man and his
+doings?"
+
+"Whose doings? What old man?"
+
+She came at him, fiercely accusing. "You know well enough what old man,
+Virgil Adams! That old man who was here the other night."
+
+"Mr. Lamb?"
+
+"Yes; 'Mister Lamb!'" She mocked his voice. "What other old man would I
+be likely to mean except J. A. Lamb?"
+
+"What's he been doing now?" her husband inquired, satirically. "Where'd
+you get something new against him since the last time you----"
+
+"Just this!" she cried. "The other night when that man was here, if I'd
+known how he was going to make my child suffer, I'd never have let him
+set his foot in my house."
+
+Adams leaned back in his chair as though her absurdity had eased his
+mind. "Oh, I see," he said. "You've just gone plain crazy. That's the
+only explanation of such talk, and it suits the case."
+
+"Hasn't that man made us all suffer every day of our lives?" she
+demanded. "I'd like to know why it is that my life and my children's
+lives have to be sacrificed to him?"
+
+"How are they 'sacrificed' to him?"
+
+"Because you keep on working for him! Because you keep on letting him
+hand out whatever miserable little pittance he chooses to give you;
+that's why! It's as if he were some horrible old Juggernaut and I had to
+see my children's own father throwing them under the wheels to keep him
+satisfied."
+
+"I won't hear any more such stuff!" Lifting his paper, Adams affected to
+read.
+
+"You'd better listen to me," she admonished him. "You might be sorry
+you didn't, in case he ever tried to set foot in my house again! I might
+tell him to his face what I think of him."
+
+At this, Adams slapped the newspaper down upon his knee. "Oh, the devil!
+What's it matter what you think of him?"
+
+"It had better matter to you!" she cried. "Do you suppose I'm going
+to submit forever to him and his family and what they're doing to my
+child?"
+
+"What are he and his family doing to 'your child?'"
+
+Mrs. Adams came out with it. "That snippy little Henrietta Lamb has
+always snubbed Alice every time she's ever had the chance. She's
+followed the lead of the other girls; they've always all of 'em been
+jealous of Alice because she dared to try and be happy, and because
+she's showier and better-looking than they are, even though you do give
+her only about thirty-five cents a year to do it on! They've all done
+everything on earth they could to drive the young men away from her
+and belittle her to 'em; and this mean little Henrietta Lamb's been the
+worst of the whole crowd to Alice, every time she could see a chance."
+
+"What for?" Adams asked, incredulously. "Why should she or anybody else
+pick on Alice?"
+
+"'Why?' 'What for?'" his wife repeated with a greater vehemence. "Do YOU
+ask me such a thing as that? Do you really want to know?"
+
+"Yes; I'd want to know--I would if I believed it."
+
+"Then I'll tell you," she said in a cold fury. "It's on account of you,
+Virgil, and nothing else in the world."
+
+He hooted at her. "Oh, yes! These girls don't like ME, so they pick on
+Alice."
+
+"Quit your palavering and evading," she said. "A crowd of girls like
+that, when they get a pretty girl like Alice among them, they act just
+like wild beasts. They'll tear her to pieces, or else they'll chase
+her and run her out, because they know if she had half a chance she'd
+outshine 'em. They can't do that to a girl like Mildred Palmer because
+she's got money and family to back her. Now you listen to me, Virgil
+Adams: the way the world is now, money IS family. Alice would have just
+as much 'family' as any of 'em every single bit--if you hadn't fallen
+behind in the race."
+
+"How did I----"
+
+"Yes, you did!" she cried. "Twenty-five years ago when we were starting
+and this town was smaller, you and I could have gone with any of 'em
+if we'd tried hard enough. Look at the people we knew then that do hold
+their heads up alongside of anybody in this town! WHY can they? Because
+the men of those families made money and gave their children everything
+that makes life worth living! Why can't we hold our heads up? Because
+those men passed you in the race. They went up the ladder, and
+you--you're still a clerk down at that old hole!"
+
+"You leave that out, please," he said. "I thought you were going to tell
+me something Henrietta Lamb had done to our Alice."
+
+"You BET I'm going to tell you," she assured him, vehemently. "But first
+I'm telling WHY she does it. It's because you've never given Alice any
+backing nor any background, and they all know they can do anything they
+like to her with perfect impunity. If she had the hundredth part of what
+THEY have to fall back on she'd have made 'em sing a mighty different
+song long ago!"
+
+"How would she?"
+
+"Oh, my heavens, but you're slow!" Mrs. Adams moaned. "Look here! You
+remember how practically all the nicest boys in this town used to come
+here a few years ago. Why, they were all crazy over her; and the girls
+HAD to be nice to her then. Look at the difference now! There'll be a
+whole month go by and not a young man come to call on her, let alone
+send her candy or flowers, or ever think of TAKING her any place and
+yet she's prettier and brighter than she was when they used to come. It
+isn't the child's fault she couldn't hold 'em, is it? Poor thing, SHE
+tried hard enough! I suppose you'd say it was her fault, though."
+
+"No; I wouldn't."
+
+"Then whose fault is it?"
+
+"Oh, mine, mine," he said, wearily. "I drove the young men away, of
+course."
+
+"You might as well have driven 'em, Virgil. It amounts to just the same
+thing."
+
+"How does it?"
+
+"Because as they got older a good many of 'em began to think more about
+money; that's one thing. Money's at the bottom of it all, for that
+matter. Look at these country clubs and all such things: the other
+girls' families belong and we don't, and Alice don't; and she can't go
+unless somebody takes her, and nobody does any more. Look at the other
+girls' houses, and then look at our house, so shabby and old-fashioned
+she'd be pretty near ashamed to ask anybody to come in and sit down
+nowadays! Look at her clothes--oh, yes; you think you shelled out a lot
+for that little coat of hers and the hat and skirt she got last March;
+but it's nothing. Some of these girls nowadays spend more than your
+whole salary on their clothes. And what jewellery has she got? A plated
+watch and two or three little pins and rings of the kind people's maids
+wouldn't wear now. Good Lord, Virgil Adams, wake up! Don't sit there and
+tell me you don't know things like this mean SUFFERING for the child!"
+
+He had begun to rub his hands wretchedly back and forth over his bony
+knees, as if in that way he somewhat alleviated the tedium caused by her
+racking voice. "Oh, my, my!" he muttered. "OH, my, my!"
+
+"Yes, I should think you WOULD say 'Oh, my, my!'" she took him up,
+loudly. "That doesn't help things much! If you ever wanted to DO
+anything about it, the poor child might see some gleam of hope in her
+life. You don't CARE for her, that's the trouble; you don't care a
+single thing about her."
+
+"I don't?"
+
+"No; you don't. Why, even with your miserable little salary you could
+have given her more than you have. You're the closest man I ever knew:
+it's like pulling teeth to get a dollar out of you for her, now and
+then, and yet you hide some away, every month or so, in some wretched
+little investment or other. You----"
+
+"Look here, now," he interrupted, angrily. "You look here! If I didn't
+put a little by whenever I could, in a bond or something, where would
+you be if anything happened to me? The insurance doctors never passed
+me; YOU know that. Haven't we got to have SOMETHING to fall back on?"
+
+"Yes, we have!" she cried. "We ought to have something to go on with
+right now, too, when we need it. Do you suppose these snippets would
+treat Alice the way they do if she could afford to ENTERTAIN? They leave
+her out of their dinners and dances simply because they know she can't
+give any dinners and dances to leave them out of! They know she can't
+get EVEN, and that's the whole story! That's why Henrietta Lamb's done
+this thing to her now."
+
+Adams had gone back to his rubbing of his knees. "Oh, my, my!" he said.
+"WHAT thing?"
+
+She told him. "Your dear, grand, old Mister Lamb's Henrietta has sent
+out invitations for a large party--a LARGE one. Everybody that is
+anybody in this town is asked, you can be sure. There's a very fine
+young man, a Mr. Russell, has just come to town, and he's interested
+in Alice, and he's asked her to go to this dance with him. Well, Alice
+can't accept. She can't go with him, though she'd give anything in
+the world to do it. Do you understand? The reason she can't is because
+Henrietta Lamb hasn't invited her. Do you want to know why Henrietta
+hasn't invited her? It's because she knows Alice can't get even, and
+because she thinks Alice ought to be snubbed like this on account of
+only being the daughter of one of her grandfather's clerks. I HOPE you
+understand!"
+
+"Oh, my, my!" he said. "OH, my, my!"
+
+"That's your sweet old employer," his wife cried, tauntingly. "That's
+your dear, kind, grand old Mister Lamb! Alice has been left out of a
+good many smaller things, like big dinners and little dances, but this
+is just the same as serving her notice that she's out of everything! And
+it's all done by your dear, grand old----"
+
+"Look here!" Adams exclaimed. "I don't want to hear any more of that!
+You can't hold him responsible for everything his grandchildren do, I
+guess! He probably doesn't know a thing about it. You don't suppose he's
+troubling HIS head over----"
+
+But she burst out at him passionately. "Suppose you trouble YOUR head
+about it! You'd better, Virgil Adams! You'd better, unless you want to
+see your child just dry up into a miserable old maid! She's still young
+and she has a chance for happiness, if she had a father that didn't
+bring a millstone to hang around her neck, instead of what he ought to
+give her! You just wait till you die and God asks you what you had in
+your breast instead of a heart!"
+
+"Oh, my, my!" he groaned. "What's my heart got to do with it?"
+
+"Nothing! You haven't got one or you'd give her what she needed. Am I
+asking anything you CAN'T do? You know better; you know I'm not!"
+
+At this he sat suddenly rigid, his troubled hands ceasing to rub his
+knees; and he looked at her fixedly. "Now, tell me," he said, slowly.
+"Just what ARE you asking?"
+
+"You know!" she sobbed.
+
+"You mean you've broken your word never to speak of THAT to me again?"
+
+"What do _I_ care for my word?" she cried, and, sinking to the floor at
+his feet, rocked herself back and forth there. "Do you suppose I'll
+let my 'word' keep me from struggling for a little happiness for my
+children? It won't, I tell you; it won't! I'll struggle for that till I
+die! I will, till I die till I die!"
+
+He rubbed his head now instead of his knees, and, shaking all over, he
+got up and began with uncertain steps to pace the floor.
+
+"Hell, hell, hell!" he said. "I've got to go through THAT again!"
+
+"Yes, you have!" she sobbed. "Till I die."
+
+"Yes; that's what you been after all the time I was getting well."
+
+"Yes, I have, and I'll keep on till I die!"
+
+"A fine wife for a man," he said. "Beggin' a man to be a dirty dog!"
+
+"No! To be a MAN--and I'll keep on till I die!"
+
+Adams again fell back upon his last solace: he walked, half staggering,
+up and down the room, swearing in a rhythmic repetition.
+
+His wife had repetitions of her own, and she kept at them in a voice
+that rose to a higher and higher pitch, like the sound of an old
+well-pump. "Till I die! Till I die! Till I DIE!"
+
+She ended in a scream; and Alice, coming up the stairs, thanked heaven
+that Russell had gone. She ran to her father's door and went in.
+
+Adams looked at her, and gesticulated shakily at the convulsive figure
+on the floor. "Can you get her out of here?"
+
+Alice helped Mrs. Adams to her feet; and the stricken woman threw her
+arms passionately about her daughter.
+
+"Get her out!" Adams said, harshly; then cried, "Wait!"
+
+Alice, moving toward the door, halted, and looked at him blankly, over
+her mother's shoulder. "What is it, papa?"
+
+He stretched out his arm and pointed at her. "She says--she says you
+have a mean life, Alice."
+
+"No, papa."
+
+Mrs. Adams turned in her daughter's arms. "Do you hear her lie? Couldn't
+you be as brave as she is, Virgil?"
+
+"Are you lying, Alice?" he asked. "Do you have a mean time?"
+
+"No, papa."
+
+He came toward her. "Look at me!" he said. "Things like this dance
+now--is that so hard to bear?"
+
+Alice tried to say, "No, papa," again, but she couldn't. Suddenly and in
+spite of herself she began to cry.
+
+"Do you hear her?" his wife sobbed. "Now do you----"
+
+He waved at them fiercely. "Get out of here!" he said. "Both of you! Get
+out of here!"
+
+As they went, he dropped in his chair and bent far forward, so that his
+haggard face was concealed from them. Then, as Alice closed the door, he
+began to rub his knees again, muttering, "Oh, my, my! OH, my, my!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+There shone a jovial sun overhead on the appointed "day after
+to-morrow"; a day not cool yet of a temperature friendly to walkers; and
+the air, powdered with sunshine, had so much life in it that it seemed
+to sparkle. To Arthur Russell this was a day like a gay companion who
+pleased him well; but the gay companion at his side pleased him even
+better. She looked her prettiest, chattered her wittiest, smiled her
+wistfulest, and delighted him with all together.
+
+"You look so happy it's easy to see your father's taken a good turn," he
+told her.
+
+"Yes; he has this afternoon, at least," she said. "I might have other
+reasons for looking cheerful, though."
+
+"For instance?"
+
+"Exactly!" she said, giving him a sweet look just enough mocked by her
+laughter. "For instance!"
+
+"Well, go on," he begged.
+
+"Isn't it expected?" she asked.
+
+"Of you, you mean?"
+
+"No," she returned. "For you, I mean!"
+
+In this style, which uses a word for any meaning that quick look and
+colourful gesture care to endow it with, she was an expert; and she
+carried it merrily on, leaving him at liberty (one of the great values
+of the style) to choose as he would how much or how little she meant. He
+was content to supply mere cues, for although he had little coquetry of
+his own, he had lately begun to find that the only interesting moments
+in his life were those during which Alice Adams coquetted with him.
+Happily, these obliging moments extended themselves to cover all
+the time he spent with her. However serious she might seem, whatever
+appeared to be her topic, all was thou-and-I.
+
+He planned for more of it, seeing otherwise a dull evening ahead; and
+reverted, afterwhile, to a forbidden subject. "About that dance at Miss
+Lamb's--since your father's so much better----"
+
+She flushed a little. "Now, now!" she chided him. "We agreed not to say
+any more about that."
+
+"Yes, but since he IS better----"
+
+Alice shook her head. "He won't be better to-morrow. He always has a bad
+day after a good one especially after such a good one as this is."
+
+"But if this time it should be different," Russell persisted; "wouldn't
+you be willing to come if he's better by to-morrow evening? Why not wait
+and decide at the last minute?"
+
+She waved her hands airily. "What a pother!" she cried. "What does it
+matter whether poor little Alice Adams goes to a dance or not?"
+
+"Well, I thought I'd made it clear that it looks fairly bleak to me if
+you don't go."
+
+"Oh, yes!" she jeered.
+
+"It's the simple truth," he insisted. "I don't care a great deal about
+dances these days; and if you aren't going to be there----"
+
+"You could stay away," she suggested. "You wouldn't!"
+
+"Unfortunately, I can't. I'm afraid I'm supposed to be the excuse. Miss
+Lamb, in her capacity as a friend of my relatives----"
+
+"Oh, she's giving it for YOU! I see! On Mildred's account you mean?"
+
+At that his face showed an increase of colour. "I suppose just on
+account of my being a cousin of Mildred's and of----"
+
+"Of course! You'll have a beautiful time, too. Henrietta'll see that you
+have somebody to dance with besides Miss Dowling, poor man!"
+
+"But what I want somebody to see is that I dance with you! And perhaps
+your father----"
+
+"Wait!" she said, frowning as if she debated whether or not to tell him
+something of import; then, seeming to decide affirmatively, she asked:
+"Would you really like to know the truth about it?"
+
+"If it isn't too unflattering."
+
+"It hasn't anything to do with you at all," she said. "Of course I'd
+like to go with you and to dance with you--though you don't seem to
+realize that you wouldn't be permitted much time with me."
+
+"Oh, yes, I----"
+
+"Never mind!" she laughed. "Of course you wouldn't. But even if papa
+should be better to-morrow, I doubt if I'd go. In fact, I know I
+wouldn't. There's another reason besides papa."
+
+"Is there?"
+
+"Yes. The truth is, I don't get on with Henrietta Lamb. As a matter of
+fact, I dislike her, and of course that means she dislikes me. I should
+never think of asking her to anything I gave, and I really wonder she
+asks me to things SHE gives." This was a new inspiration; and Alice,
+beginning to see her way out of a perplexity, wished that she had
+thought of it earlier: she should have told him from the first that she
+and Henrietta had a feud, and consequently exchanged no invitations.
+Moreover, there was another thing to beset her with little anxieties:
+she might better not have told him from the first, as she had indeed
+told him by intimation, that she was the pampered daughter of an
+indulgent father, presumably able to indulge her; for now she must
+elaborately keep to the part. Veracity is usually simple; and its
+opposite, to be successful, should be as simple; but practitioners of
+the opposite are most often impulsive, like Alice; and, like her, they
+become enmeshed in elaborations.
+
+"It wouldn't be very nice for me to go to her house," Alice went on,
+"when I wouldn't want her in mine. I've never admired her. I've always
+thought she was lacking in some things most people are supposed to be
+equipped with--for instance, a certain feeling about the death of a
+father who was always pretty decent to his daughter. Henrietta's father
+died just, eleven months and twenty-seven days before your cousin's
+dance, but she couldn't stick out those few last days and make it a
+year; she was there."
+
+Alice stopped, then laughed ruefully, exclaiming, "But this is dreadful
+of me!"
+
+"Is it?"
+
+"Blackguarding her to you when she's giving a big party for you! Just
+the way Henrietta would blackguard me to you--heaven knows what she
+WOULDN'T say if she talked about me to you! It would be fair, of course,
+but--well, I'd rather she didn't!" And with that, Alice let her pretty
+hand, in its white glove, rest upon his arm for a moment; and he looked
+down at it, not unmoved to see it there. "I want to be unfair about
+just this," she said, letting a troubled laughter tremble through
+her appealing voice as she spoke. "I won't take advantage of her with
+anybody, except just--you! I'd a little rather you didn't hear anybody
+blackguard me, and, if you don't mind--could you promise not to give
+Henrietta the chance?"
+
+It was charmingly done, with a humorous, faint pathos altogether
+genuine; and Russell found himself suddenly wanting to shout at her,
+"Oh, you DEAR!" Nothing else seemed adequate; but he controlled the
+impulse in favour of something more conservative.
+
+"Imagine any one speaking unkindly of you--not praising you!"
+
+"Who HAS praised me to you?" she asked, quickly.
+
+"I haven't talked about you with any one; but if I did, I know
+they'd----"
+
+"No, no!" she cried, and went on, again accompanying her words with
+little tremulous runs of laughter. "You don't understand this town yet.
+You'll be surprised when you do; we're different. We talk about one
+another fearfully! Haven't I just proved it, the way I've been going for
+Henrietta? Of course I didn't say anything really very terrible about
+her, but that's only because I don't follow that practice the way most
+of the others do. They don't stop with the worst of the truth they can
+find: they make UP things--yes, they really do! And, oh, I'd RATHER they
+didn't make up things about me--to you!"
+
+"What difference would it make if they did?" he inquired, cheerfully.
+"I'd know they weren't true."
+
+"Even if you did know that, they'd make a difference," she said. "Oh,
+yes, they would! It's too bad, but we don't like anything quite so well
+that's had specks on it, even if we've wiped the specks off;--it's just
+that much spoiled, and some things are all spoiled the instant they're
+the least bit spoiled. What a man thinks about a girl, for instance. Do
+you want to have what you think about me spoiled, Mr. Russell?"
+
+"Oh, but that's already far beyond reach," he said, lightly.
+
+"But it can't be!" she protested.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because it never can be. Men don't change their minds about one another
+often: they make it quite an event when they do, and talk about it as
+if something important had happened. But a girl only has to go down-town
+with a shoe-string unfastened, and every man who sees her will change
+his mind about her. Don't you know that's true?"
+
+"Not of myself, I think."
+
+"There!" she cried. "That's precisely what every man in the world would
+say!"
+
+"So you wouldn't trust me?"
+
+"Well--I'll be awfully worried if you give 'em a chance to tell you that
+I'm too lazy to tie my shoe-strings!"
+
+He laughed delightedly. "Is that what they do say?" he asked.
+
+"Just about! Whatever they hope will get results." She shook her head
+wisely. "Oh, yes; we do that here!"
+
+"But I don't mind loose shoe-strings," he said. "Not if they're yours."
+
+"They'll find out what you do mind."
+
+"But suppose," he said, looking at her whimsically; "suppose I wouldn't
+mind anything--so long as it's yours?"
+
+She courtesied. "Oh, pretty enough! But a girl who's talked about has a
+weakness that's often a fatal one."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"It's this: when she's talked about she isn't THERE. That's how they
+kill her."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't follow you."
+
+"Don't you see? If Henrietta--or Mildred--or any of 'em--or some of
+their mothers--oh, we ALL do it! Well, if any of 'em told you I didn't
+tie my shoe-strings, and if I were there, so that you could see me,
+you'd know it wasn't true. Even if I were sitting so that you couldn't
+see my feet, and couldn't tell whether the strings were tied or not just
+then, still you could look at me, and see that I wasn't the sort of girl
+to neglect my shoe-strings. But that isn't the way it happens: they'll
+get at you when I'm nowhere around and can't remind you of the sort of
+girl I really am."
+
+"But you don't do that," he complained. "You don't remind me you don't
+even tell me--the sort of girl you really are! I'd like to know."
+
+"Let's be serious then," she said, and looked serious enough herself.
+"Would you honestly like to know?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, you must be careful."
+
+"'Careful?'" The word amused him.
+
+"I mean careful not to get me mixed up," she said. "Careful not to mix
+up the girl you might hear somebody talking about with the me I honestly
+try to make you see. If you do get those two mixed up--well, the whole
+show'll be spoiled!"
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"Because it's----" She checked herself, having begun to speak too
+impulsively; and she was disturbed, realizing in what tricky stuff she
+dealt. What had been on her lips to say was, "Because it's
+happened before!" She changed to, "Because it's so easy to spoil
+anything--easiest of all to spoil anything that's pleasant."
+
+"That might depend."
+
+"No; it's so. And if you care at all about--about knowing a girl who'd
+like someone to know her----"
+
+"Just 'someone?' That's disappointing."
+
+"Well--you," she said.
+
+"Tell me how 'careful' you want me to be, then!"
+
+"Well, don't you think it would be nice if you didn't give anybody the
+chance to talk about me the way--the way I've just been talking about
+Henrietta Lamb?"
+
+With that they laughed together, and he said, "You may be cutting me off
+from a great deal of information, you know."
+
+"Yes," Alice admitted. "Somebody might begin to praise me to you, too;
+so it's dangerous to ask you to change the subject if I ever happen to
+be mentioned. But after all----" She paused.
+
+"'After all' isn't the end of a thought, is it?"
+
+"Sometimes it is of a girl's thought; I suppose men are neater about
+their thoughts, and always finish 'em. It isn't the end of the thought I
+had then, though."
+
+"What is the end of it?"
+
+She looked at him impulsively. "Oh, it's foolish," she said, and she
+laughed as laughs one who proposes something probably impossible. "But,
+WOULDN'T it be pleasant if two people could ever just keep themselves
+TO themselves, so far as they two were concerned? I mean, if they could
+just manage to be friends without people talking about it, or talking to
+THEM about it?"
+
+"I suppose that might be rather difficult," he said, more amused than
+impressed by her idea.
+
+"I don't know: it might be done," she returned, hopefully. "Especially
+in a town of this size; it's grown so it's quite a huge place these
+days. People can keep themselves to themselves in a big place better,
+you know. For instance, nobody knows that you and I are taking a walk
+together today."
+
+"How absurd, when here we are on exhibition!"
+
+"No; we aren't."
+
+"We aren't?"
+
+"Not a bit of it!" she laughed. "We were the other day, when you walked
+home with me, but anybody could tell that had just happened by chance,
+on account of your overtaking me; people can always see things like
+that. But we're not on exhibition now. Look where I've led you!"
+
+Amused and a little bewildered, he looked up and down the street,
+which was one of gaunt-faced apartment-houses, old, sooty, frame
+boarding-houses, small groceries and drug-stores, laundries and one-room
+plumbers' shops, with the sign of a clairvoyant here and there.
+
+"You see?" she said. "I've been leading you without your knowing it. Of
+course that's because you're new to the town, and you give yourself up
+to the guidance of an old citizen."
+
+"I'm not so sure, Miss Adams. It might mean that I don't care where I
+follow so long as I follow you."
+
+"Very well," she said. "I'd like you to keep on following me at least
+long enough for me to show you that there's something nicer ahead of us
+than this dingy street."
+
+"Is that figurative?" he asked.
+
+"Might be!" she returned, gaily. "There's a pretty little park at the
+end, but it's very proletarian, and nobody you and I know will be more
+likely to see us there than on this street."
+
+"What an imagination you have!" he exclaimed. "You turn our proper
+little walk into a Parisian adventure."
+
+She looked at him in what seemed to be a momentary grave puzzlement.
+"Perhaps you feel that a Parisian adventure mightn't please your--your
+relatives?"
+
+"Why, no," he returned. "You seem to think of them oftener than I do."
+
+This appeared to amuse Alice, or at least to please her, for she
+laughed. "Then I can afford to quit thinking of them, I suppose. It's
+only that I used to be quite a friend of Mildred's--but there! we
+needn't to go into that. I've never been a friend of Henrietta Lamb's,
+though, and I almost wish she weren't taking such pains to be a friend
+of yours."
+
+"Oh, but she's not. It's all on account of----"
+
+"On Mildred's account," Alice finished this for him, coolly. "Yes, of
+course."
+
+"It's on account of the two families," he was at pains to explain, a
+little awkwardly. "It's because I'm a relative of the Palmers, and the
+Palmers and the Lambs seem to be old family friends."
+
+"Something the Adamses certainly are not," Alice said. "Not with either
+of 'em; particularly not with the Lambs!" And here, scarce aware of what
+impelled her, she returned to her former elaborations and colourings.
+"You see, the differences between Henrietta and me aren't entirely
+personal: I couldn't go to her house even if I liked her. The Lambs and
+Adamses don't get on with each other, and we've just about come to the
+breaking-point as it happens."
+
+"I hope it's nothing to bother you."
+
+"Why? A lot of things bother me."
+
+"I'm sorry they do," he said, and seemed simply to mean it.
+
+She nodded gratefully. "That's nice of you, Mr. Russell. It helps. The
+break between the Adamses and the Lambs is a pretty bothersome thing.
+It's been coming on a long time." She sighed deeply, and the sigh
+was half genuine; this half being for her father, but the other half
+probably belonged to her instinctive rendering of Juliet Capulet,
+daughter to a warring house. "I hate it all so!" she added.
+
+"Of course you must."
+
+"I suppose most quarrels between families are on account of business,"
+she said. "That's why they're so sordid. Certainly the Lambs seem a
+sordid lot to me, though of course I'm biased." And with that she began
+to sketch a history of the commercial antagonism that had risen between
+the Adamses and the Lambs.
+
+The sketching was spontaneous and dramatic. Mathematics had no part in
+it; nor was there accurate definition of Mr. Adams's relation to the
+institution of Lamb and Company. The point was clouded, in fact; though
+that might easily be set down to the general haziness of young ladies
+confronted with the mysteries of trade or commerce. Mr. Adams either had
+been a vague sort of junior member of the firm, it appeared, or else
+he should have been made some such thing; at all events, he was an old
+mainstay of the business; and he, as much as any Lamb, had helped to
+build up the prosperity of the company. But at last, tired of providing
+so much intelligence and energy for which other people took profit
+greater than his own, he had decided to leave the company and found a
+business entirely for himself. The Lambs were going to be enraged when
+they learned what was afoot.
+
+Such was the impression, a little misted, wrought by Alice's quick
+narrative. But there was dolorous fact behind it: Adams had succumbed.
+
+His wife, grave and nervous, rather than triumphant, in success, had
+told their daughter that the great J. A. would be furious and possibly
+vindictive. Adams was afraid of him, she said.
+
+"But what for, mama?" Alice asked, since this seemed a turn of affairs
+out of reason. "What in the world has Mr. Lamb to do with papa's leaving
+the company to set up for himself? What right has he to be angry about
+it? If he's such a friend as he claims to be, I should think he'd be
+glad--that is, if the glue factory turns out well. What will he be angry
+for?"
+
+Mrs. Adams gave Alice an uneasy glance, hesitated, and then explained
+that a resignation from Lamb's had always been looked upon, especially
+by "that old man," as treachery. You were supposed to die in the
+service, she said bitterly, and her daughter, a little mystified,
+accepted this explanation. Adams had not spoken to her of his surrender;
+he seemed not inclined to speak to her at all, or to any one.
+
+Alice was not serious too long, and she began to laugh as she came
+to the end of her decorative sketch. "After all, the whole thing is
+perfectly ridiculous," she said. "In fact, it's FUNNY! That's on account
+of what papa's going to throw over the Lamb business FOR! To save your
+life you couldn't imagine what he's going to do!"
+
+"I won't try, then," Russell assented.
+
+"It takes all the romance out of ME," she laughed. "You'll never go for
+a Parisian walk with me again, after I tell you what I'll be heiress
+to." They had come to the entrance of the little park; and, as Alice had
+said, it was a pretty place, especially on a day so radiant. Trees of
+the oldest forest stood there, hale and serene over the trim, bright
+grass; and the proletarians had not come from their factories at this
+hour; only a few mothers and their babies were to be seen, here and
+there, in the shade. "I think I'll postpone telling you about it till we
+get nearly home again," Alice said, as they began to saunter down one of
+the gravelled paths. "There's a bench beside a spring farther on; we
+can sit there and talk about a lot of things--things not so sticky as my
+dowry's going to be."
+
+"'Sticky?'" he echoed. "What in the world----" She laughed despairingly.
+
+"A glue factory!"
+
+Then he laughed, too, as much from friendliness as from amusement; and
+she remembered to tell him that the project of a glue factory was still
+"an Adams secret." It would be known soon, however, she added; and the
+whole Lamb connection would probably begin saying all sorts of things,
+heaven knew what!
+
+Thus Alice built her walls of flimsy, working always gaily, or with at
+least the air of gaiety; and even as she rattled on, there was somewhere
+in her mind a constant little wonder. Everything she said seemed to be
+necessary to support something else she had said. How had it happened?
+She found herself telling him that since her father had decided on
+making so great a change in his ways, she and her mother hoped at last
+to persuade him to give up that "foolish little house" he had been so
+obstinate about; and she checked herself abruptly on this declivity just
+as she was about to slide into a remark concerning her own preference
+for a "country place." Discretion caught her in time; and something
+else, in company with discretion, caught her, for she stopped short in
+her talk and blushed.
+
+They had taken possession of the bench beside the spring, by this time;
+and Russell, his elbow on the back of the bench and his chin on his
+hand, the better to look at her, had no guess at the cause of the blush,
+but was content to find it lovely. At his first sight of Alice she had
+seemed pretty in the particular way of being pretty that he happened
+to like best; and, with every moment he spent with her, this prettiness
+appeared to increase. He felt that he could not look at her enough: his
+gaze followed the fluttering of the graceful hands in almost continual
+gesture as she talked; then lifted happily to the vivacious face again.
+She charmed him.
+
+After her abrupt pause, she sighed, then looked at him with her eyebrows
+lifted in a comedy appeal. "You haven't said you wouldn't give Henrietta
+the chance," she said, in the softest voice that can still have a little
+laugh running in it.
+
+He was puzzled. "Give Henrietta the chance?"
+
+"YOU know! You'll let me keep on being unfair, won't you? Not give the
+other girls a chance to get even?"
+
+He promised, heartily.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+Alice had said that no one who knew either Russell or herself would be
+likely to see them in the park or upon the dingy street; but although
+they returned by that same ungenteel thoroughfare they were seen by
+a person who knew them both. Also, with some surprise on the part of
+Russell, and something more poignant than surprise for Alice, they saw
+this person.
+
+All of the dingy street was ugly, but the greater part of it appeared to
+be honest. The two pedestrians came upon a block or two, however, where
+it offered suggestions of a less upright character, like a steady enough
+workingman with a naughty book sticking out of his pocket. Three or four
+dim shops, a single story in height, exhibited foul signboards, yet fair
+enough so far as the wording went; one proclaiming a tobacconist, one
+a junk-dealer, one a dispenser of "soft drinks and cigars." The most
+credulous would have doubted these signboards; for the craft of the
+modern tradesman is exerted to lure indoors the passing glance, since if
+the glance is pleased the feet may follow; but this alleged tobacconist
+and his neighbours had long been fond of dust on their windows,
+evidently, and shades were pulled far down on the glass of their doors.
+Thus the public eye, small of pupil in the light of the open street, was
+intentionally not invited to the dusky interiors. Something different
+from mere lack of enterprise was apparent; and the signboards might have
+been omitted; they were pains thrown away, since it was plain to the
+world that the business parts of these shops were the brighter back
+rooms implied by the dark front rooms; and that the commerce there was
+in perilous new liquors and in dice and rough girls.
+
+Nothing could have been more innocent than the serenity with which these
+wicked little places revealed themselves for what they were; and, bound
+by this final tie of guilelessness, they stood together in a row which
+ended with a companionable barbershop, much like them. Beyond was a
+series of soot-harried frame two-story houses, once part of a cheerful
+neighbourhood when the town was middle-aged and settled, and not old and
+growing. These houses, all carrying the label. "Rooms," had the worried
+look of vacancy that houses have when they are too full of everybody
+without being anybody's home; and there was, too, a surreptitious
+air about them, as if, like the false little shops, they advertised
+something by concealing it.
+
+One of them--the one next to the barber-shop--had across its front an
+ample, jig-sawed veranda, where aforetime, no doubt, the father of a
+family had fanned himself with a palm-leaf fan on Sunday afternoons,
+watching the surreys go by, and where his daughter listened to mandolins
+and badinage on starlit evenings; but, although youth still held the
+veranda, both the youth and the veranda were in decay. The four or five
+young men who lounged there this afternoon were of a type known to shady
+pool-parlours. Hats found no favour with them; all of them wore caps;
+and their tight clothes, apparently from a common source, showed
+a vivacious fancy for oblique pockets, false belts, and Easter-egg
+colourings. Another thing common to the group was the expression of
+eye and mouth; and Alice, in the midst of her other thoughts, had a
+distasteful thought about this.
+
+The veranda was within a dozen feet of the sidewalk, and as she and her
+escort came nearer, she took note of the young men, her face hardening
+a little, even before she suspected there might be a resemblance between
+them and any one she knew. Then she observed that each of these loungers
+wore not for the occasion, but as of habit, a look of furtively
+amused contempt; the mouth smiled to one side as if not to dislodge a
+cigarette, while the eyes kept languidly superior. All at once Alice was
+reminded of Walter; and the slight frown caused by this idea had just
+begun to darken her forehead when Walter himself stepped out of the open
+door of the house and appeared upon the veranda. Upon his head was a new
+straw hat, and in his hand was a Malacca stick with an ivory top, for
+Alice had finally decided against it for herself and had given it to
+him. His mood was lively: he twirled the stick through his fingers like
+a drum-major's baton, and whistled loudly.
+
+Moreover, he was indeed accompanied. With him was a thin girl who had
+made a violent black-and-white poster of herself: black dress, black
+flimsy boa, black stockings, white slippers, great black hat down upon
+the black eyes; and beneath the hat a curve of cheek and chin made white
+as whitewash, and in strong bilateral motion with gum.
+
+The loungers on the veranda were familiars of the pair; hailed them with
+cacklings; and one began to sing, in a voice all tin:
+
+ "Then my skirt, Sal, and me did go
+ Right straight to the moving-pitcher show.
+ OH, you bashful vamp!"
+
+
+The girl laughed airily. "God, but you guys are wise!" she said.
+
+"Come on, Wallie."
+
+Walter stared at his sister; then grinned faintly, and nodded at Russell
+as the latter lifted his hat in salutation. Alice uttered an incoherent
+syllable of exclamation, and, as she began to walk faster, she bit her
+lip hard, not in order to look wistful, this time, but to help her keep
+tears of anger from her eyes.
+
+Russell laughed cheerfully. "Your brother certainly seems to have found
+the place for 'colour' today," he said. "That girl's talk must be full
+of it."
+
+But Alice had forgotten the colour she herself had used in accounting
+for Walter's peculiarities, and she did not understand. "What?" she
+said, huskily.
+
+"Don't you remember telling me about him? How he was going to write,
+probably, and would go anywhere to pick up types and get them to talk?"
+
+She kept her eyes ahead, and said sharply, "I think his literary tastes
+scarcely cover this case!"
+
+"Don't be too sure. He didn't look at all disconcerted. He didn't seem
+to mind your seeing him."
+
+"That's all the worse, isn't it?"
+
+"Why, no," her friend said, genially. "It means he didn't consider
+that he was engaged in anything out of the way. You can't expect to
+understand everything boys do at his age; they do all sorts of queer
+things, and outgrow them. Your brother evidently has a taste for queer
+people, and very likely he's been at least half sincere when he's made
+you believe he had a literary motive behind it. We all go through----"
+
+"Thanks, Mr. Russell," she interrupted. "Let's don't say any more."
+
+He looked at her flushed face and enlarged eyes; and he liked her all
+the better for her indignation: this was how good sisters ought to feel,
+he thought, failing to understand that most of what she felt was not
+about Walter. He ventured only a word more. "Try not to mind it so much;
+it really doesn't amount to anything."
+
+She shook her head, and they went on in silence; she did not look at him
+again until they stopped before her own house. Then she gave him only
+one glimpse of her eyes before she looked down. "It's spoiled, isn't
+it?" she said, in a low voice.
+
+"What's 'spoiled?'"
+
+"Our walk--well, everything. Somehow it always--is."
+
+"'Always is' what?" he asked.
+
+"Spoiled," she said.
+
+He laughed at that; but without looking at him she suddenly offered him
+her hand, and, as he took it, he felt a hurried, violent pressure upon
+his fingers, as if she meant to thank him almost passionately for being
+kind. She was gone before he could speak to her again.
+
+
+In her room, with the door locked, she did not go to her mirror, but to
+her bed, flinging herself face down, not caring how far the pillows
+put her hat awry. Sheer grief had followed her anger; grief for
+the calamitous end of her bright afternoon, grief for the "end of
+everything," as she thought then. Nevertheless, she gradually grew more
+composed, and, when her mother tapped on the door presently, let her in.
+Mrs. Adams looked at her with quick apprehension.
+
+"Oh, poor child! Wasn't he----"
+
+Alice told her. "You see how it--how it made me look, mama," she
+quavered, having concluded her narrative. "I'd tried to cover up
+Walter's awfulness at the dance with that story about his being
+'literary,' but no story was big enough to cover this up--and oh! it
+must make him think I tell stories about other things!"
+
+"No, no, no!" Mrs. Adams protested. "Don't you see? At the worst, all HE
+could think is that Walter told stories to you about why he likes to be
+with such dreadful people, and you believed them. That's all HE'D think;
+don't you see?"
+
+Alice's wet eyes began to show a little hopefulness. "You honestly think
+it might be that way, mama?"
+
+"Why, from what you've told me he said, I KNOW it's that way. Didn't he
+say he wanted to come again?"
+
+"N-no," Alice said, uncertainly. "But I think he will. At least I begin
+to think so now. He----" She stopped.
+
+"From all you tell me, he seems to be a very desirable young man," Mrs.
+Adams said, primly.
+
+Her daughter was silent for several moments; then new tears gathered
+upon her downcast lashes. "He's just--dear!" she faltered.
+
+Mrs. Adams nodded. "He's told you he isn't engaged, hasn't he?"
+
+"No. But I know he isn't. Maybe when he first came here he was near it,
+but I know he's not."
+
+"I guess Mildred Palmer would LIKE him to be, all right!" Mrs. Adams
+was frank enough to say, rather triumphantly; and Alice, with a lowered
+head, murmured:
+
+"Anybody--would."
+
+The words were all but inaudible.
+
+"Don't you worry," her mother said, and patted her on the shoulder.
+"Everything will come out all right; don't you fear, Alice. Can't you
+see that beside any other girl in town you're just a perfect QUEEN? Do
+you think any young man that wasn't prejudiced, or something, would need
+more than just one look to----"
+
+But Alice moved away from the caressing hand. "Never mind, mama. I
+wonder he looks at me at all. And if he does again, after seeing my
+brother with those horrible people----"
+
+"Now, now!" Mrs. Adams interrupted, expostulating mournfully. "I'm sure
+Walter's a GOOD boy----"
+
+"You are?" Alice cried, with a sudden vigour. "You ARE?"
+
+"I'm sure he's GOOD, yes--and if he isn't, it's not his fault. It's
+mine."
+
+"What nonsense!"
+
+"No, it's true," Mrs. Adams lamented. "I tried to bring him up to be
+good, God knows; and when he was little he was the best boy I ever saw.
+When he came from Sunday-school he'd always run to me and we'd go over
+the lesson together; and he let me come in his room at night to hear his
+prayers almost until he was sixteen. Most boys won't do that with
+their mothers--not nearly that long. I tried so hard to bring him up
+right--but if anything's gone wrong it's my fault."
+
+"How could it be? You've just said----"
+
+"It's because I didn't make your father this--this new step earlier.
+Then Walter might have had all the advantages that other----"
+
+"Oh, mama, PLEASE!" Alice begged her. "Let's don't go over all that
+again. Isn't it more important to think what's to be done about him? Is
+he going to be allowed to go on disgracing us as he does?"
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed profoundly. "I don't know what to do," she confessed,
+unhappily. "Your father's so upset about--about this new step he's
+taking--I don't feel as if we ought to----"
+
+"No, no!" Alice cried. "Papa mustn't be distressed with this, on top of
+everything else. But SOMETHING'S got to be done about Walter."
+
+"What can be?" her mother asked, helplessly. "What can be?"
+
+Alice admitted that she didn't know.
+
+
+At dinner, an hour later, Walter's habitually veiled glance lifted,
+now and then, to touch her furtively;--he was waiting, as he would have
+said, for her to "spring it"; and he had prepared a brief and sincere
+defense to the effect that he made his own living, and would like
+to inquire whose business it was to offer intrusive comment upon his
+private conduct. But she said nothing, while his father and mother were
+as silent as she. Walter concluded that there was to be no attack, but
+changed his mind when his father, who ate only a little, and broodingly
+at that, rose to leave the table and spoke to him.
+
+"Walter," he said, "when you've finished I wish you'd come up to my
+room. I got something I want to say to you."
+
+Walter shot a hard look at his apathetic sister, then turned to his
+father. "Make it to-morrow," he said. "This is Satad'y night and I got a
+date."
+
+"No," Adams said, frowning. "You come up before you go out. It's
+important."
+
+"All right; I've had all I want to eat," Walter returned. "I got a few
+minutes. Make it quick."
+
+He followed his father upstairs, and when they were in the room together
+Adams shut the door, sat down, and began to rub his knees.
+
+"Rheumatism?" the boy inquired, slyly. "That what you want to talk to me
+about?"
+
+"No." But Adams did not go on; he seemed to be in difficulties for
+words, and Walter decided to help him.
+
+"Hop ahead and spring it," he said. "Get it off your mind: I'll tell the
+world _I_ should worry! You aren't goin' to bother ME any, so why bother
+yourself? Alice hopped home and told you she saw me playin' around with
+some pretty gay-lookin' berries and you----"
+
+"Alice?" his father said, obviously surprised. "It's nothing about
+Alice."
+
+"Didn't she tell you----"
+
+"I haven't talked with her all day."
+
+"Oh, I see," Walter said. "She told mother and mother told you."
+
+"No, neither of 'em have told me anything. What was there to tell?"
+
+Walter laughed. "Oh, it's nothin'," he said. "I was just startin' out
+to buy a girl friend o' mine a rhinestone buckle I lost to her on a bet,
+this afternoon, and Alice came along with that big Russell fish; and I
+thought she looked sore. She expects me to like the kind she likes, and
+I don't like 'em. I thought she'd prob'ly got you all stirred up about
+it."
+
+"No, no," his father said, peevishly. "I don't know anything about it,
+and I don't care to know anything about it. I want to talk to you about
+something important."
+
+Then, as he was again silent, Walter said, "Well, TALK about it; I'm
+listening."
+
+"It's this," Adams began, heavily. "It's about me going into this glue
+business. Your mother's told you, hasn't she?"
+
+"She said you were goin' to leave the old place down-town and start a
+glue factory. That's all I know about it; I got my own affairs to 'tend
+to."
+
+"Well, this is your affair," his father said, frowning. "You can't stay
+with Lamb and Company."
+
+Walter looked a little startled. "What you mean, I can't? Why not?"
+
+"You've got to help me," Adams explained slowly; and he frowned more
+deeply, as if the interview were growing increasingly laborious for him.
+"It's going to be a big pull to get this business on its feet."
+
+"Yes!" Walter exclaimed with a sharp skepticism. "I should say it was!"
+He stared at his father incredulously. "Look here; aren't you just a
+little bit sudden, the way you're goin' about things? You've let mother
+shove you a little too fast, haven't you? Do you know anything about
+what it means to set up a new business these days?"
+
+"Yes, I know all about it," Adams said. "About this business, I do."
+
+"How do you?"
+
+"Because I made a long study of it. I'm not afraid of going about it the
+wrong way; but it's a hard job and you'll have to put in all whatever
+sense and strength you've got."
+
+Walter began to breathe quickly, and his lips were agitated; then he set
+them obstinately. "Oh; I will," he said.
+
+"Yes, you will," Adams returned, not noticing that his son's inflection
+was satiric. "It's going to take every bit of energy in your body, and
+all the energy I got left in mine, and every cent of the little I've
+saved, besides something I'll have to raise on this house. I'm going
+right at it, now I've got to; and you'll have to quit Lamb's by the end
+of next week."
+
+"Oh, I will?" Walter's voice grew louder, and there was a shrillness
+in it. "I got to quit Lamb's the end of next week, have I?" He stepped
+forward, angrily. "Listen!" he said. "I'm not walkin' out o' Lamb's,
+see? I'm not quittin' down there: I stay with 'em, see?"
+
+Adams looked up at him, astonished. "You'll leave there next Saturday,"
+he said. "I've got to have you."
+
+"You don't anything o' the kind," Walter told him, sharply. "Do you
+expect to pay me anything?"
+
+"I'd pay you about what you been getting down there."
+
+"Then pay somebody else; _I_ don't know anything about glue. You get
+somebody else."
+
+"No. You've got to---"
+
+Walter cut him off with the utmost vehemence. "Don't tell me what I got
+to do! I know what I got to do better'n you, I guess! I stay at Lamb's,
+see?"
+
+Adams rose angrily. "You'll do what I tell you. You can't stay down
+there."
+
+"Why can't I?"
+
+"Because I won't let you."
+
+"Listen! Keep on not lettin' me: I'll be there just the same."
+
+At that his father broke into a sour laughter. "THEY won't let you,
+Walter! They won't have you down there after they find out I'm going."
+
+"Why won't they? You don't think they're goin' to be all shot to pieces
+over losin' YOU, do you?"
+
+"I tell you they won't let you stay," his father insisted, loudly.
+
+"Why, what do they care whether you go or not?"
+
+"They'll care enough to fire YOU, my boy!"
+
+"Look here, then; show me why."
+
+"They'll do it!"
+
+"Yes," Walter jeered; "you keep sayin' they will, but when I ask you to
+show me why, you keep sayin' they will! That makes little headway with
+ME, I can tell you!"
+
+Adams groaned, and, rubbing his head, began to pace the floor. Walter's
+refusal was something he had not anticipated; and he felt the weakness
+of his own attempt to meet it: he seemed powerless to do anything but
+utter angry words, which, as Walter said, made little headway. "Oh, my,
+my!" he muttered, "OH, my, my!"
+
+Walter, usually sallow, had grown pale: he watched his father narrowly,
+and now took a sudden resolution. "Look here," he said. "When you say
+Lamb's is likely to fire me because you're goin' to quit, you talk like
+the people that have to be locked up. I don't know where you get such
+things in your head; Lamb and Company won't know you're gone. Listen: I
+can stay there long as I want to. But I'll tell you what I'll do: make
+it worth my while and I'll hook up with your old glue factory, after
+all."
+
+Adams stopped his pacing abruptly, and stared at him. "'Make it worth
+your while?' What you mean?"
+
+"I got a good use for three hundred dollars right now," Walter said.
+"Let me have it and I'll quit Lamb's to work for you. Don't let me have
+it and I SWEAR I won't!"
+
+"Are you crazy?"
+
+"Is everybody crazy that needs three hundred dollars?"
+
+"Yes," Adams said. "They are if they ask ME for it, when I got to
+stretch every cent I can lay my hands on to make it look like a dollar!"
+
+"You won't do it?"
+
+Adams burst out at him. "You little fool! If I had three hundred dollars
+to throw away, besides the pay I expected to give you, haven't you got
+sense enough to see I could hire a man worth three hundred dollars
+more to me than you'd be? It's a FINE time to ask me for three hundred
+dollars, isn't it! What FOR? Rhinestone buckles to throw around on your
+'girl friends?' Shame on you! Ask me to BRIBE you to help yourself and
+your own family!"
+
+"I'll give you a last chance," Walter said. "Either you do what I want,
+or I won't do what you want. Don't ask me again after this, because----"
+
+Adams interrupted him fiercely. "'Ask you again!' Don't worry about
+that, my boy! All I ask you is to get out o' my room."
+
+"Look here," Walter said, quietly; and his lopsided smile distorted his
+livid cheek. "Look here: I expect YOU wouldn't give me three hundred
+dollars to save my life, would you?"
+
+"You make me sick," Adams said, in his bitterness. "Get out of here."
+
+Walter went out, whistling; and Adams drooped into his old chair again
+as the door closed. "OH, my, my!" he groaned. "Oh, Lordy, Lordy! The way
+of the transgressor----"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+He meant his own transgression and his own way; for Walter's stubborn
+refusal appeared to Adams just then as one of the inexplicable but
+righteous besettings he must encounter in following that way. "Oh,
+Lordy, Lord!" he groaned, and then, as resentment moved him--"That dang
+boy! Dang idiot!" Yet he knew himself for a greater idiot because he had
+not been able to tell Walter the truth. He could not bring himself to do
+it, nor even to state his case in its best terms; and that was because
+he felt that even in its best terms the case was a bad one.
+
+Of all his regrets the greatest was that in a moment of vanity and
+tenderness, twenty-five years ago, he had told his young wife a business
+secret. He had wanted to show how important her husband was becoming,
+and how much the head of the universe, J. A. Lamb, trusted to his
+integrity and ability. The great man had an idea: he thought of
+"branching out a little," he told Adams confidentially, and there were
+possibilities of profit in glue.
+
+What he wanted was a liquid glue to be put into little bottles and sold
+cheaply. "The kind of thing that sells itself," he said; "the kind of
+thing that pays its own small way as it goes along, until it has profits
+enough to begin advertising it right. Everybody has to use glue, and if
+I make mine convenient and cheap, everybody'll buy mine. But it's got
+to be glue that'll STICK; it's got to be the best; and if we find how
+to make it we've got to keep it a big secret, of course, or anybody can
+steal it from us. There was a man here last month; he knew a formula
+he wanted to sell me, 'sight unseen'; but he was in such a hurry I got
+suspicious, and I found he'd managed to steal it, working for the big
+packers in their glue-works. We've got to find a better glue than that,
+anyhow. I'm going to set you and Campbell at it. You're a practical,
+wide-awake young feller, and Campbell's a mighty good chemist; I guess
+you two boys ought to make something happen."
+
+His guess was shrewd enough. Working in a shed a little way outside the
+town, where their cheery employer visited them sometimes to study their
+malodorous stews, the two young men found what Lamb had set them to
+find. But Campbell was thoughtful over the discovery. "Look here," he
+said. "Why ain't this just about yours and mine? After all, it may be
+Lamb's money that's paid for the stuff we've used, but it hasn't cost
+much."
+
+"But he pays US," Adams remonstrated, horrified by his companion's idea.
+"He paid us to do it. It belongs absolutely to him."
+
+"Oh, I know he THINKS it does," Campbell admitted, plaintively. "I
+suppose we've got to let him take it. It's not patentable, and he'll
+have to do pretty well by us when he starts his factory, because he's
+got to depend on us to run the making of the stuff so that the workmen
+can't get onto the process. You better ask him the same salary I do, and
+mine's going to be high."
+
+But the high salary, thus pleasantly imagined, was never paid. Campbell
+died of typhoid fever, that summer, leaving Adams and his employer the
+only possessors of the formula, an unwritten one; and Adams, pleased to
+think himself more important to the great man than ever, told his wife
+that there could be little doubt of his being put in sole charge of
+the prospective glue-works. Unfortunately, the enterprise remained
+prospective.
+
+Its projector had already become "inveigled into another side-line,"
+as he told Adams. One of his sons had persuaded him to take up a
+"cough-lozenge," to be called the "Jalamb Balm Trochee"; and the lozenge
+did well enough to amuse Mr. Lamb and occupy his spare time, which was
+really about all he had asked of the glue project. He had "all the MONEY
+anybody ought to want," he said, when Adams urged him; and he could
+"start up this little glue side-line" at any time; the formula was safe
+in their two heads.
+
+At intervals Adams would seek opportunity to speak of "the little glue
+side-line" to his patron, and to suggest that the years were passing;
+but Lamb, petting other hobbies, had lost interest. "Oh, I'll start it
+up some day, maybe. If I don't, I may turn it over to my heirs: it's
+always an asset, worth something or other, of course. We'll probably
+take it up some day, though, you and I."
+
+The sun persistently declined to rise on that day, and, as time went
+on, Adams saw that his rather timid urgings bored his employer, and he
+ceased to bring up the subject. Lamb apparently forgot all about glue,
+but Adams discovered that unfortunately there was someone else who
+remembered it.
+
+"It's really YOURS," she argued, that painful day when for the first
+time she suggested his using his knowledge for the benefit of himself
+and his family. "Mr. Campbell might have had a right to part of it, but
+he died and didn't leave any kin, so it belongs to you."
+
+"Suppose J. A. Lamb hired me to saw some wood," Adams said. "Would the
+sticks belong to me?"
+
+"He hasn't got any right to take your invention and bury it," she
+protested. "What good is it doing him if he doesn't DO anything with it?
+What good is it doing ANYBODY? None in the world! And what harm would
+it do him if you went ahead and did this for yourself and for your
+children? None in the world! And what could he do to you if he WAS old
+pig enough to get angry with you for doing it? He couldn't do a single
+thing, and you've admitted he couldn't, yourself. So what's your reason
+for depriving your children and your wife of the benefits you know you
+could give 'em?"
+
+"Nothing but decency," he answered; and she had her reply ready for
+that. It seemed to him that, strive as he would, he could not reach her
+mind with even the plainest language; while everything that she said to
+him, with such vehemence, sounded like so much obstinate gibberish.
+Over and over he pressed her with the same illustration, on the point of
+ownership, though he thought he was varying it.
+
+"Suppose he hired me to build him a house: would that be MY house?"
+
+"He didn't hire you to build him a house. You and Campbell invented----"
+
+"Look here: suppose you give a cook a soup-bone and some vegetables, and
+pay her to make you a soup: has she got a right to take and sell it? You
+know better!"
+
+"I know ONE thing: if that old man tried to keep your own invention from
+you he's no better than a robber!"
+
+They never found any point of contact in all their passionate
+discussions of this ethical question; and the question was no more
+settled between them, now that Adams had succumbed, than it had ever
+been. But at least the wrangling about it was over: they were grave
+together, almost silent, and an uneasiness prevailed with her as much as
+with him.
+
+He had already been out of the house, to walk about the small green
+yard; and on Monday afternoon he sent for a taxicab and went down-town,
+but kept a long way from the "wholesale section," where stood the
+formidable old oblong pile of Lamb and Company. He arranged for the
+sale of the bonds he had laid away, and for placing a mortgage upon his
+house; and on his way home, after five o'clock, he went to see an old
+friend, a man whose term of service with Lamb and Company was even a
+little longer than his own.
+
+This veteran, returned from the day's work, was sitting in front of the
+apartment house where he lived, but when the cab stopped at the curb he
+rose and came forward, offering a jocular greeting. "Well, well, Virgil
+Adams! I always thought you had a sporty streak in you. Travel in
+your own hired private automobile nowadays, do you? Pamperin' yourself
+because you're still layin' off sick, I expect."
+
+"Oh, I'm well enough again, Charley Lohr," Adams said, as he got out and
+shook hands. Then, telling the driver to wait, he took his friend's arm,
+walked to the bench with him, and sat down. "I been practically well for
+some time," he said. "I'm fixin' to get into harness again."
+
+"Bein' sick has certainly produced a change of heart in you," his
+friend laughed. "You're the last man I ever expected to see blowin'
+yourself--or anybody else to a taxicab! For that matter, I never heard
+of you bein' in ANY kind of a cab, 'less'n it might be when you been
+pall-bearer for somebody. What's come over you?"
+
+"Well, I got to turn over a new leaf, and that's a fact," Adams said. "I
+got a lot to do, and the only way to accomplish it, it's got to be done
+soon, or I won't have anything to live on while I'm doing it."
+
+"What you talkin' about? What you got to do except to get strong enough
+to come back to the old place?"
+
+"Well----" Adams paused, then coughed, and said slowly, "Fact is,
+Charley Lohr, I been thinking likely I wouldn't come back."
+
+"What! What you talkin' about?"
+
+"No," said Adams. "I been thinking I might likely kind of branch out on
+my own account."
+
+"Well, I'll be doggoned!" Old Charley Lohr was amazed; he ruffled up
+his gray moustache with thumb and forefinger, leaving his mouth open
+beneath, like a dark cave under a tangled wintry thicket. "Why, that's
+the doggonedest thing I ever heard!" he said. "I already am the oldest
+inhabitant down there, but if you go, there won't be anybody else of the
+old generation at all. What on earth you thinkin' of goin' into?"
+
+"Well," said Adams, "I rather you didn't mention it till I get started
+of course anybody'll know what it is by then--but I HAVE been kind of
+planning to put a liquid glue on the market."
+
+His friend, still ruffling the gray moustache upward, stared at him in
+frowning perplexity. "Glue?" he said. "GLUE!"
+
+"Yes. I been sort of milling over the idea of taking up something like
+that."
+
+"Handlin' it for some firm, you mean?"
+
+"No. Making it. Sort of a glue-works likely."
+
+Lohr continued to frown. "Let me think," he said. "Didn't the ole man
+have some such idea once, himself?"
+
+Adams leaned forward, rubbing his knees; and he coughed again before he
+spoke. "Well, yes. Fact is, he did. That is to say, a mighty long while
+ago he did."
+
+"I remember," said Lohr. "He never said anything about it that I know
+of; but seems to me I recollect we had sort of a rumour around the place
+how you and that man--le's see, wasn't his name Campbell, that died of
+typhoid fever? Yes, that was it, Campbell. Didn't the ole man have you
+and Campbell workin' sort of private on some glue proposition or other?"
+
+"Yes, he did." Adams nodded. "I found out a good deal about glue then,
+too."
+
+"Been workin' on it since, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes. Kept it in my mind and studied out new things about it."
+
+Lohr looked serious. "Well, but see here," he said. "I hope it ain't
+anything the ole man'll think might infringe on whatever he had you
+doin' for HIM. You know how he is: broad-minded, liberal, free-handed
+man as walks this earth, and if he thought he owed you a cent he'd sell
+his right hand for a pork-chop to pay it, if that was the only way; but
+if he got the idea anybody was tryin' to get the better of him, he'd
+sell BOTH his hands, if he had to, to keep 'em from doin' it. Yes, at
+eighty, he would! Not that I mean I think you might be tryin' to get the
+better of him, Virg. You're a mighty close ole codger, but such a thing
+ain't in you. What I mean: I hope there ain't any chance for the ole man
+to THINK you might be----"
+
+"Oh, no," Adams interrupted. "As a matter of fact, I don't believe he'll
+ever think about it at all, and if he did he wouldn't have any real
+right to feel offended at me: the process I'm going to use is one I
+expect to change and improve a lot different from the one Campbell and I
+worked on for him."
+
+"Well, that's good," said Lohr. "Of course you know what you're up to:
+you're old enough, God knows!" He laughed ruefully. "My, but it will
+seem funny to me--down there with you gone! I expect you and I both
+been gettin' to be pretty much dead-wood in the place, the way the young
+fellows look at it, and the only one that'd miss either of us would be
+the other one! Have you told the ole man yet?"
+
+"Well----" Adams spoke laboriously. "No. No, I haven't. I thought--well,
+that's what I wanted to see you about."
+
+"What can I do?"
+
+"I thought I'd write him a letter and get you to hand it to him for me."
+
+"My soul!" his friend exclaimed. "Why on earth don't you just go down
+there and tell him?"
+
+Adams became pitiably embarrassed. He stammered, coughed, stammered
+again, wrinkling his face so deeply he seemed about to weep; but finally
+he contrived to utter an apologetic laugh. "I ought to do that, of
+course; but in some way or other I just don't seem to be able to--to
+manage it."
+
+"Why in the world not?" the mystified Lohr inquired.
+
+"I could hardly tell you--'less'n it is to say that when you been with
+one boss all your life it's so--so kind of embarrassing--to quit him, I
+just can't make up my mind to go and speak to him about it. No; I got it
+in my head a letter's the only satisfactory way to do it, and I thought
+I'd ask you to hand it to him."
+
+"Well, of course I don't mind doin' that for you," Lohr said, mildly.
+"But why in the world don't you just mail it to him?"
+
+"Well, I'll tell you," Adams returned. "You know, like that, it'd have
+to go through a clerk and that secretary of his, and I don't know who
+all. There's a couple of kind of delicate points I want to put in it:
+for instance, I want to explain to him how much improvement and so on
+I'm going to introduce on the old process I helped to work out with
+Campbell when we were working for him, so't he'll understand it's a
+different article and no infringement at all. Then there's another
+thing: you see all during while I was sick he had my salary paid to
+me it amounts to considerable, I was on my back so long. Under the
+circumstances, because I'm quitting, I don't feel as if I ought to
+accept it, and so I'll have a check for him in the letter to cover it,
+and I want to be sure he knows it, and gets it personally. If it had to
+go through a lot of other people, the way it would if I put it in the
+mail, why, you can't tell. So what I thought: if you'd hand it to him
+for me, and maybe if he happened to read it right then, or anything,
+it might be you'd notice whatever he'd happen to say about it--and you
+could tell me afterward."
+
+"All right," Lohr said. "Certainly if you'd rather do it that way, I'll
+hand it to him and tell you what he says; that is, if he says anything
+and I hear him. Got it written?"
+
+"No; I'll send it around to you last of the week." Adams moved
+toward his taxicab. "Don't say anything to anybody about it, Charley,
+especially till after that."
+
+"All right."
+
+"And, Charley, I'll be mighty obliged to you," Adams said, and came back
+to shake hands in farewell. "There's one thing more you might do--if
+you'd ever happen to feel like it." He kept his eyes rather vaguely
+fixed on a point above his friend's head as he spoke, and his voice was
+not well controlled. "I been--I been down there a good many years and
+I may not 'a' been so much use lately as I was at first, but I always
+tried to do my best for the old firm. If anything turned out so's they
+DID kind of take offense with me, down there, why, just say a good word
+for me--if you'd happen to feel like it, maybe."
+
+Old Charley Lohr assured him that he would speak a good word if
+opportunity became available; then, after the cab had driven away,
+he went up to his small apartment on the third floor and muttered
+ruminatively until his wife inquired what he was talking to himself
+about.
+
+"Ole Virg Adams," he told her. "He's out again after his long spell of
+sickness, and the way it looks to me he'd better stayed in bed."
+
+"You mean he still looks too bad to be out?"
+
+"Oh, I expect he's gettin' his HEALTH back," Lohr said, frowning.
+
+"Then what's the matter with him? You mean he's lost his mind?"
+
+"My goodness, but women do jump at conclusions!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Well," said Mrs. Lohr, "what other conclusion did you leave me to jump
+at?"
+
+Her husband explained with a little heat: "People can have a sickness
+that AFFECTS their mind, can't they? Their mind can get some affected
+without bein' LOST, can't it?"
+
+"Then you mean the poor man's mind does seem affected?"
+
+"Why, no; I'd scarcely go as far as that," Lohr said, inconsistently,
+and declined to be more definite.
+
+
+Adams devoted the latter part of that evening to the composition of his
+letter--a disquieting task not completed when, at eleven o'clock, he
+heard his daughter coming up the stairs. She was singing to herself in a
+low, sweet voice, and Adams paused to listen incredulously, with his
+pen lifted and his mouth open, as if he heard the strangest sound in the
+world. Then he set down the pen upon a blotter, went to his door, and
+opened it, looking out at her as she came.
+
+"Well, dearie, you seem to be feeling pretty good," he said. "What you
+been doing?"
+
+"Just sitting out on the front steps, papa."
+
+"All alone, I suppose."
+
+"No. Mr. Russell called."
+
+"Oh, he did?" Adams pretended to be surprised. "What all could you and
+he find to talk about till this hour o' the night?"
+
+She laughed gaily. "You don't know me, papa!"
+
+"How's that?"
+
+"You've never found out that I always do all the talking."
+
+"Didn't you let him get a word in all evening?"
+
+"Oh, yes; every now and then."
+
+Adams took her hand and petted it. "Well, what did he say?"
+
+Alice gave him a radiant look and kissed him. "Not what you think!" she
+laughed; then slapped his cheek with saucy affection, pirouetted across
+the narrow hall and into her own room, and curtsied to him as she closed
+her door.
+
+Adams went back to his writing with a lighter heart; for since Alice
+was born she had been to him the apple of his eye, his own phrase in
+thinking of her; and what he was doing now was for her.
+
+He smiled as he picked up his pen to begin a new draft of the painful
+letter; but presently he looked puzzled. After all, she could be happy
+just as things were, it seemed. Then why had he taken what his wife
+called "this new step," which he had so long resisted?
+
+He could only sigh and wonder. "Life works out pretty peculiarly," he
+thought; for he couldn't go back now, though the reason he couldn't was
+not clearly apparent. He had to go ahead.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+He was out in his taxicab again the next morning, and by noon he had
+secured what he wanted.
+
+It was curiously significant that he worked so quickly. All the years
+during which his wife had pressed him toward his present shift he had
+sworn to himself, as well as to her, that he would never yield; and yet
+when he did yield he had no plans to make, because he found them
+already prepared and worked out in detail in his mind; as if he had long
+contemplated the "step" he believed himself incapable of taking.
+
+Sometimes he had thought of improving his income by exchanging his
+little collection of bonds for a "small rental property," if he could
+find "a good buy"; and he had spent many of his spare hours rambling
+over the enormously spreading city and its purlieus, looking for the
+ideal "buy." It remained unattainable, so far as he was concerned; but
+he found other things.
+
+Not twice a crow's mile from his own house there was a dismal and
+slummish quarter, a decayed "industrial district" of earlier days. Most
+of the industries were small; some of them died, perishing of bankruptcy
+or fire; and a few had moved, leaving their shells. Of the relics, the
+best was a brick building which had been the largest and most important
+factory in the quarter: it had been injured by a long vacancy almost
+as serious as a fire, in effect, and Adams had often guessed at the sum
+needed to put it in repair.
+
+When he passed it, he would look at it with an interest which he
+supposed detached and idly speculative. "That'd be just the thing," he
+thought. "If a fellow had money enough, and took a notion to set up some
+new business on a big scale, this would be a pretty good place--to make
+glue, for instance, if that wasn't out of the question, of course.
+It would take a lot of money, though; a great deal too much for me to
+expect to handle--even if I'd ever dream of doing such a thing."
+
+Opposite the dismantled factory was a muddy, open lot of two acres
+or so, and near the middle of the lot, a long brick shed stood in
+a desolate abandonment, not happily decorated by old coatings of
+theatrical and medicinal advertisements. But the brick shed had two
+wooden ells, and, though both shed and ells were of a single story, here
+was empty space enough for a modest enterprise--"space enough for almost
+anything, to start with," Adams thought, as he walked through the low
+buildings, one day, when he was prospecting in that section. "Yes, I
+suppose I COULD swing this," he thought. "If the process belonged to
+me, say, instead of being out of the question because it isn't my
+property--or if I was the kind of man to do such a thing anyhow, here
+would be something I could probably get hold of pretty cheap. They'd
+want a lot of money for a lease on that big building over the way--but
+this, why, I should think it'd be practically nothing at all."
+
+Then, by chance, meeting an agent he knew, he made inquiries--merely to
+satisfy a casual curiosity, he thought--and he found matters much as he
+had supposed, except that the owners of the big building did not wish
+to let, but to sell it, and this at a price so exorbitant that Adams
+laughed. But the long brick shed in the great muddy lot was for sale or
+to let, or "pretty near to be given away," he learned, if anybody would
+take it.
+
+Adams took it now, though without seeing that he had been destined
+to take it, and that some dreary wizard in the back of his head had
+foreseen all along that he would take it, and planned to be ready. He
+drove in his taxicab to look the place over again, then down-town to
+arrange for a lease; and came home to lunch with his wife and daughter.
+Things were "moving," he told them.
+
+He boasted a little of having acted so decisively, and said that since
+the dang thing had to be done, it was "going to be done RIGHT!" He was
+almost cheerful, in a feverish way, and when the cab came for him again,
+soon after lunch, he explained that he intended not only to get things
+done right, but also to "get 'em done quick!" Alice, following him to
+the front door, looked at him anxiously and asked if she couldn't help.
+He laughed at her grimly.
+
+"Then let me go along with you in the cab," she begged. "You don't look
+able to start in so hard, papa, just when you're barely beginning to get
+your strength back. Do let me go with you and see if I can't help--or at
+least take care of you if you should get to feeling badly."
+
+He declined, but upon pressure let her put a tiny bottle of spirits of
+ammonia in his pocket, and promised to make use of it if he "felt faint
+or anything." Then he was off again; and the next morning had men at
+work in his sheds, though the wages he had to pay frightened him.
+
+He directed the workmen in every detail, hurrying them by example and
+exhortations, and receiving, in consequence, several declarations of
+independence, as well as one resignation, which took effect immediately.
+"Yous capitalusts seem to think a man's got nothin' to do but break his
+back p'doosin' wealth fer yous to squander," the resigning person loudly
+complained. "You look out: the toiler's day is a-comin', and it ain't so
+fur off, neither!" But the capitalist was already out of hearing, gone
+to find a man to take this orator's place.
+
+By the end of the week, Adams felt that he had moved satisfactorily
+forward in his preparations for the simple equipment he needed; but
+he hated the pause of Sunday. He didn't WANT any rest, he told Alice
+impatiently, when she suggested that the idle day might be good for him.
+
+Late that afternoon he walked over to the apartment house where old
+Charley Lohr lived, and gave his friend the letter he wanted the head
+of Lamb and Company to receive "personally." "I'll take it as a mighty
+great favour in you to hand it to him personally, Charley," he said, in
+parting. "And you won't forget, in case he says anything about it--and
+remember if you ever do get a chance to put in a good word for me later,
+you know----"
+
+Old Charley promised to remember, and, when Mrs. Lohr came out of the
+"kitchenette," after the door closed, he said thoughtfully, "Just skin
+and bones."
+
+"You mean Mr. Adams is?" Mrs. Lohr inquired.
+
+"Who'd you think I meant?" he returned. "One o' these partridges in the
+wall-paper?"
+
+"Did he look so badly?"
+
+"Looked kind of distracted to me," her husband replied. "These little
+thin fellers can stand a heap sometimes, though. He'll be over here
+again Monday."
+
+"Did he say he would?"
+
+"No," said Lohr. "But he will. You'll see. He'll be over to find out
+what the big boss says when I give him this letter. Expect I'd be kind
+of anxious, myself, if I was him."
+
+"Why would you? What's Mr. Adams doing to be so anxious about?"
+
+Lohr's expression became one of reserve, the look of a man who has
+found that when he speaks his inner thoughts his wife jumps too far to
+conclusions. "Oh, nothing," he said. "Of course any man starting up a
+new business is bound to be pretty nervous a while. He'll be over here
+to-morrow evening, all right; you'll see."
+
+The prediction was fulfilled: Adams arrived just after Mrs. Lohr had
+removed the dinner dishes to her "kitchenette"; but Lohr had little
+information to give his caller.
+
+"He didn't say a word, Virgil; nary a word. I took it into his office
+and handed it to him, and he just sat and read it; that's all. I kind of
+stood around as long as I could, but he was sittin' at his desk with his
+side to me, and he never turned around full toward me, as it were, so I
+couldn't hardly even tell anything. All I know: he just read it."
+
+"Well, but see here," Adams began, nervously. "Well----"
+
+"Well what, Virg?"
+
+"Well, but what did he say when he DID speak?"
+
+"He didn't speak. Not so long I was in there, anyhow. He just sat there
+and read it. Read kind of slow. Then, when he came to the end, he turned
+back and started to read it all over again. By that time there was three
+or four other men standin' around in the office waitin' to speak to him,
+and I had to go."
+
+Adams sighed, and stared at the floor, irresolute. "Well, I'll be
+getting along back home then, I guess, Charley. So you're sure you
+couldn't tell anything what he might have thought about it, then?"
+
+"Not a thing in the world. I've told you all I know, Virg."
+
+"I guess so, I guess so," Adams said, mournfully. "I feel mighty
+obliged to you, Charley Lohr; mighty obliged. Good-night to you." And he
+departed, sighing in perplexity.
+
+On his way home, preoccupied with many thoughts, he walked so slowly
+that once or twice he stopped and stood motionless for a few moments,
+without being aware of it; and when he reached the juncture of the
+sidewalk with the short brick path that led to his own front door, he
+stopped again, and stood for more than a minute. "Ah, I wish I knew," he
+whispered, plaintively. "I do wish I knew what he thought about it."
+
+He was roused by a laugh that came lightly from the little veranda near
+by. "Papa!" Alice called gaily. "What are you standing there muttering
+to yourself about?"
+
+"Oh, are you there, dearie?" he said, and came up the path. A tall
+figure rose from a chair on the veranda.
+
+"Papa, this is Mr. Russell."
+
+The two men shook hands, Adams saying, "Pleased to make your
+acquaintance," as they looked at each other in the faint light diffused
+through the opaque glass in the upper part of the door. Adams's
+impression was of a strong and tall young man, fashionable but gentle;
+and Russell's was of a dried, little old business man with a grizzled
+moustache, worried bright eyes, shapeless dark clothes, and a homely
+manner.
+
+"Nice evening," Adams said further, as their hands parted. "Nice time o'
+year it is, but we don't always have as good weather as this; that's
+the trouble of it. Well----" He went to the door. "Well--I bid you good
+evening," he said, and retired within the house.
+
+Alice laughed. "He's the old-fashionedest man in town, I suppose and
+frightfully impressed with you, I could see!"
+
+"What nonsense!" said Russell. "How could anybody be impressed with me?"
+
+"Why not? Because you're quiet? Good gracious! Don't you know that
+you're the most impressive sort? We chatterers spend all our time
+playing to you quiet people."
+
+"Yes; we're only the audience."
+
+"'Only!'" she echoed. "Why, we live for you, and we can't live without
+you."
+
+"I wish you couldn't," said Russell. "That would be a new experience for
+both of us, wouldn't it?"
+
+"It might be a rather bleak one for me," she answered, lightly. "I'm
+afraid I'll miss these summer evenings with you when they're over. I'll
+miss them enough, thanks!"
+
+"Do they have to be over some time?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, everything's over some time, isn't it?"
+
+Russell laughed at her. "Don't let's look so far ahead as that," he
+said. "We don't need to be already thinking of the cemetery, do we?"
+
+"I didn't," she said, shaking her head. "Our summer evenings will be
+over before then, Mr. Russell."
+
+"Why?" he asked.
+
+"Good heavens!" she said. "THERE'S laconic eloquence: almost a proposal
+in a single word! Never mind, I shan't hold you to it. But to answer
+you: well, I'm always looking ahead, and somehow I usually see about how
+things are coming out."
+
+"Yes," he said. "I suppose most of us do; at least it seems as if we
+did, because we so seldom feel surprised by the way they do come out.
+But maybe that's only because life isn't like a play in a theatre, and
+most things come about so gradually we get used to them."
+
+"No, I'm sure I can see quite a long way ahead," she insisted, gravely.
+"And it doesn't seem to me as if our summer evenings could last very
+long. Something'll interfere--somebody will, I mean--they'll SAY
+something----"
+
+"What if they do?"
+
+She moved her shoulders in a little apprehensive shiver. "It'll change
+you," she said. "I'm just sure something spiteful's going to happen to
+me. You'll feel differently about--things."
+
+"Now, isn't that an idea!" he exclaimed.
+
+"It will," she insisted. "I know something spiteful's going to happen!"
+
+"You seem possessed by a notion not a bit flattering to me," he
+remarked.
+
+"Oh, but isn't it? That's just what it is! Why isn't it?"
+
+"Because it implies that I'm made of such soft material the slightest
+breeze will mess me all up. I'm not so like that as I evidently appear;
+and if it's true that we're afraid other people will do the things we'd
+be most likely to do ourselves, it seems to me that I ought to be the
+one to be afraid. I ought to be afraid that somebody may say something
+about me to you that will make you believe I'm a professional forger."
+
+"No. We both know they won't," she said. "We both know you're the sort
+of person everybody in the world says nice things about." She lifted
+her hand to silence him as he laughed at this. "Oh, of course you are! I
+think perhaps you're a little flirtatious--most quiet men have that one
+sly way with 'em--oh, yes, they do! But you happen to be the kind of
+man everybody loves to praise. And if you weren't, _I_ shouldn't hear
+anything terrible about you. I told you I was unpopular: I don't see
+anybody at all any more. The only man except you who's been to see me in
+a month is that fearful little fat Frank Dowling, and I sent word to HIM
+I wasn't home. Nobody'd tell me of your wickedness, you see."
+
+"Then let me break some news to you," Russell said. "Nobody would tell
+me of yours, either. Nobody's even mentioned you to me."
+
+She burlesqued a cry of anguish. "That IS obscurity! I suppose I'm
+too apt to forget that they say the population's about half a million
+nowadays. There ARE other people to talk about, you feel, then?"
+
+"None that I want to," he said. "But I should think the size of the
+place might relieve your mind of what seems to insist on burdening it.
+Besides, I'd rather you thought me a better man than you do."
+
+"What kind of a man do I think you are?"
+
+"The kind affected by what's said about people instead of by what they
+do themselves."
+
+"Aren't you?"
+
+"No, I'm not," he said. "If you want our summer evenings to be over
+you'll have to drive me away yourself."
+
+"Nobody else could?"
+
+"No."
+
+She was silent, leaning forward, with her elbows on her knees and her
+clasped hands against her lips. Then, not moving, she said softly:
+
+"Well--I won't!"
+
+She was silent again, and he said nothing, but looked at her, seeming
+to be content with looking. Her attitude was one only a graceful person
+should assume, but she was graceful; and, in the wan light, which made
+a prettily shaped mist of her, she had beauty. Perhaps it was beauty of
+the hour, and of the love scene almost made into form by what they had
+both just said, but she had it; and though beauty of the hour passes, he
+who sees it will long remember it and the hour when it came.
+
+"What are you thinking of?" he asked.
+
+She leaned back in her chair and did not answer at once. Then she said:
+
+"I don't know; I doubt if I was thinking of anything. It seems to me I
+wasn't. I think I was just being sort of sadly happy just then."
+
+"Were you? Was it 'sadly,' too?"
+
+"Don't you know?" she said. "It seems to me that only little children
+can be just happily happy. I think when we get older our happiest
+moments are like the one I had just then: it's as if we heard strains of
+minor music running through them--oh, so sweet, but oh, so sad!"
+
+"But what makes it sad for YOU?"
+
+"I don't know," she said, in a lighter tone. "Perhaps it's a kind of
+useless foreboding I seem to have pretty often. It may be that--or it
+may be poor papa."
+
+"You ARE a funny, delightful girl, though!" Russell laughed. "When your
+father's so well again that he goes out walking in the evenings!"
+
+"He does too much walking," Alice said. "Too much altogether, over at
+his new plant. But there isn't any stopping him." She laughed and shook
+her head. "When a man gets an ambition to be a multi-millionaire his
+family don't appear to have much weight with him. He'll walk all he
+wants to, in spite of them."
+
+"I suppose so," Russell said, absently; then he leaned forward. "I wish
+I could understand better why you were 'sadly' happy."
+
+Meanwhile, as Alice shed what further light she could on this point, the
+man ambitious to be a "multi-millionaire" was indeed walking too much
+for his own good. He had gone to bed, hoping to sleep well and rise
+early for a long day's work, but he could not rest, and now, in his
+nightgown and slippers, he was pacing the floor of his room.
+
+"I wish I DID know," he thought, over and over. "I DO wish I knew how he
+feels about it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+That was a thought almost continuously in his mind, even when he was
+hardest at work; and, as the days went on and he could not free himself,
+he became querulous about it. "I guess I'm the biggest dang fool alive,"
+he told his wife as they sat together one evening. "I got plenty else
+to bother me, without worrying my head off about what HE thinks. I
+can't help what he thinks; it's too late for that. So why should I keep
+pestering myself about it?"
+
+"It'll wear off, Virgil," Mrs. Adams said, reassuringly. She was gentle
+and sympathetic with him, and for the first time in many years he would
+come to sit with her and talk, when he had finished his day's work. He
+had told her, evading her eye, "Oh, I don't blame you. You didn't get
+after me to do this on your own account; you couldn't help it."
+
+"Yes; but it don't wear off," he complained. "This afternoon I was
+showing the men how I wanted my vats to go, and I caught my fool self
+standing there saying to my fool self, 'It's funny I don't hear how he
+feels about it from SOMEbody.' I was saying it aloud, almost--and it IS
+funny I don't hear anything!"
+
+"Well, you see what it means, don't you, Virgil? It only means he hasn't
+said anything to anybody about it. Don't you think you're getting kind
+of morbid over it?"
+
+"Maybe, maybe," he muttered.
+
+"Why, yes," she said, briskly. "You don't realize what a little bit of
+a thing all this is to him. It's been a long, long while since the
+last time you even mentioned glue to him, and he's probably forgotten
+everything about it."
+
+"You're off your base; it isn't like him to forget things," Adams
+returned, peevishly. "He may seem to forget 'em, but he don't."
+
+"But he's not thinking about this, or you'd have heard from him before
+now."
+
+Her husband shook his head. "Ah, that's just it!" he said. "Why HAVEN'T
+I heard from him?"
+
+"It's all your morbidness, Virgil. Look at Walter: if Mr. Lamb held this
+up against you, would he still let Walter stay there? Wouldn't he have
+discharged Walter if he felt angry with you?"
+
+"That dang boy!" Adams said. "If he WANTED to come with me now, I
+wouldn't hardly let him, What do you suppose makes him so bull-headed?"
+
+"But hasn't he a right to choose for himself?" she asked. "I suppose
+he feels he ought to stick to what he thinks is sure pay. As soon as he
+sees that you're going to succeed with the glue-works he'll want to be
+with you quick enough."
+
+"Well, he better get a little sense in his head," Adams returned,
+crossly. "He wanted me to pay him a three-hundred-dollar bonus in
+advance, when anybody with a grain of common sense knows I need every
+penny I can lay my hands on!"
+
+"Never mind," she said. "He'll come around later and be glad of the
+chance."
+
+"He'll have to beg for it then! _I_ won't ask him again."
+
+"Oh, Walter will come out all right; you needn't worry. And don't you
+see that Mr. Lamb's not discharging him means there's no hard feeling
+against you, Virgil?"
+
+"I can't make it out at all," he said, frowning. "The only thing I can
+THINK it means is that J. A. Lamb is so fair-minded--and of course he
+IS one of the fair-mindedest men alive I suppose that's the reason he
+hasn't fired Walter. He may know," Adams concluded, morosely--"he may
+know that's just another thing to make me feel all the meaner: keeping
+my boy there on a salary after I've done him an injury."
+
+"Now, now!" she said, trying to comfort him. "You couldn't do anybody an
+injury to save your life, and everybody knows it."
+
+"Well, anybody ought to know I wouldn't WANT to do an injury, but
+this world isn't built so't we can do just what we want." He paused,
+reflecting. "Of course there may be one explanation of why Walter's
+still there: J. A. maybe hasn't noticed that he IS there. There's so
+many I expect he hardly knows him by sight."
+
+"Well, just do quit thinking about it," she urged him. "It only bothers
+you without doing any good. Don't you know that?"
+
+"Don't I, though!" he laughed, feebly. "I know it better'n anybody! How
+funny that is: when you know thinking about a thing only pesters you
+without helping anything at all, and yet you keep right on pestering
+yourself with it!"
+
+"But WHY?" she said. "What's the use when you know you haven't done
+anything wrong, Virgil? You said yourself you were going to improve the
+process so much it would be different from the old one, and you'd REALLY
+have a right to it."
+
+Adams had persuaded himself of this when he yielded; he had found it
+necessary to persuade himself of it--though there was a part of him, of
+course, that remained unpersuaded; and this discomfiting part of him was
+what made his present trouble. "Yes, I know," he said. "That's true, but
+I can't quite seem to get away from the fact that the principle of the
+process is a good deal the same--well, it's more'n that; it's just about
+the same as the one he hired Campbell and me to work out for him. Truth
+is, nobody could tell the difference, and I don't know as there IS
+any difference except in these improvements I'm making. Of course, the
+improvements do give me pretty near a perfect right to it, as a person
+might say; and that's one of the things I thought of putting in my
+letter to him; but I was afraid he'd just think I was trying to make up
+excuses, so I left it out. I kind of worried all the time I was writing
+that letter, because if he thought I WAS just making up excuses, why, it
+might set him just so much more against me."
+
+Ever since Mrs. Adams had found that she was to have her way, the depths
+of her eyes had been troubled by a continuous uneasiness; and, although
+she knew it was there, and sometimes veiled it by keeping the revealing
+eyes averted from her husband and children, she could not always cover
+it under that assumption of absent-mindedness. The uneasy look became
+vivid, and her voice was slightly tremulous now, as she said, "But
+what if he SHOULD be against you--although I don't believe he is, of
+course--you told me he couldn't DO anything to you, Virgil."
+
+"No," he said, slowly. "I can't see how he could do anything. It was
+just a secret, not a patent; the thing ain't patentable. I've tried to
+think what he could do--supposing he was to want to--but I can't figure
+out anything at all that would be any harm to me. There isn't any way in
+the world it could be made a question of law. Only thing he could do'd
+be to TELL people his side of it, and set 'em against me. I been kind of
+waiting for that to happen, all along."
+
+She looked somewhat relieved. "So did I expect it," she said. "I was
+dreading it most on Alice's account: it might have--well, young men are
+so easily influenced and all. But so far as the business is concerned,
+what if Mr. Lamb did talk? That wouldn't amount to much. It wouldn't
+affect the business; not to hurt. And, besides, he isn't even doing
+that."
+
+"No; anyhow not yet, it seems." And Adams sighed again, wistfully. "But
+I WOULD give a good deal to know what he thinks!"
+
+Before his surrender he had always supposed that if he did such an
+unthinkable thing as to seize upon the glue process for himself, what he
+would feel must be an overpowering shame. But shame is the rarest thing
+in the world: what he felt was this unremittent curiosity about his old
+employer's thoughts. It was an obsession, yet he did not want to hear
+what Lamb "thought" from Lamb himself, for Adams had a second obsession,
+and this was his dread of meeting the old man face to face. Such an
+encounter could happen only by chance and unexpectedly; since Adams
+would have avoided any deliberate meeting, so long as his legs had
+strength to carry him, even if Lamb came to the house to see him.
+
+But people do meet unexpectedly; and when Adams had to be down-town he
+kept away from the "wholesale district." One day he did see Lamb, as the
+latter went by in his car, impassive, going home to lunch; and Adams,
+in the crowd at a corner, knew that the old man had not seen him.
+Nevertheless, in a street car, on the way back to his sheds, an hour
+later, he was still subject to little shivering seizures of horror.
+
+He worked unceasingly, seeming to keep at it even in his sleep, for he
+always woke in the midst of a planning and estimating that must have
+been going on in his mind before consciousness of himself returned.
+Moreover, the work, thus urged, went rapidly, in spite of the high wages
+he had to pay his labourers for their short hours. "It eats money," he
+complained, and, in fact, by the time his vats and boilers were in
+place it had eaten almost all he could supply; but in addition to his
+equipment he now owned a stock of "raw material," raw indeed; and when
+operations should be a little further along he was confident his banker
+would be willing to "carry" him.
+
+Six weeks from the day he had obtained his lease he began his
+glue-making. The terrible smells came out of the sheds and went writhing
+like snakes all through that quarter of the town. A smiling man,
+strolling and breathing the air with satisfaction, would turn a corner
+and smile no more, but hurry. However, coloured people had almost all
+the dwellings of this old section to themselves; and although even they
+were troubled, there was recompense for them. Being philosophic about
+what appeared to them as in the order of nature, they sought neither
+escape nor redress, and soon learned to bear what the wind brought them.
+They even made use of it to enrich those figures of speech with which
+the native impulses of coloured people decorate their communications:
+they flavoured metaphor, simile, and invective with it; and thus may be
+said to have enjoyed it. But the man who produced it took a hot bath
+as soon as he reached his home the evening of that first day when his
+manufacturing began. Then he put on fresh clothes; but after dinner he
+seemed to be haunted, and asked his wife if she "noticed anything."
+
+She laughed and inquired what he meant.
+
+"Seems to me as if that glue-works smell hadn't quit hanging to me," he
+explained. "Don't you notice it?"
+
+"No! What an idea!"
+
+He laughed, too, but uneasily; and told her he was sure "the dang glue
+smell" was somehow sticking to him. Later, he went outdoors and walked
+up and down the small yard in the dusk; but now and then he stood still,
+with his head lifted, and sniffed the air suspiciously. "Can YOU smell
+it?" he called to Alice, who sat upon the veranda, prettily dressed and
+waiting in a reverie.
+
+"Smell what, papa?"
+
+"That dang glue-works."
+
+She did the same thing her mother had done: laughed, and said, "No! How
+foolish! Why, papa, it's over two miles from here!"
+
+"You don't get it at all?" he insisted.
+
+"The idea! The air is lovely to-night, papa."
+
+The air did not seem lovely to him, for he was positive that he detected
+the taint. He wondered how far it carried, and if J. A. Lamb would smell
+it, too, out on his own lawn a mile to the north; and if he did, would
+he guess what it was? Then Adams laughed at himself for such nonsense;
+but could not rid his nostrils of their disgust. To him the whole town
+seemed to smell of his glue-works.
+
+Nevertheless, the glue was making, and his sheds were busy. "Guess
+we're stirrin' up this ole neighbourhood with more than the smell," his
+foreman remarked one morning.
+
+"How's that?" Adams inquired.
+
+"That great big, enormous ole dead butterine factory across the street
+from our lot," the man said. "Nothin' like settin' an example to bring
+real estate to life. That place is full o' carpenters startin' in to
+make a regular buildin' of it again. Guess you ought to have the
+credit of it, because you was the first man in ten years to see any
+possibilities in this neighbourhood."
+
+Adams was pleased, and, going out to see for himself, heard a great
+hammering and sawing from within the building; while carpenters were
+just emerging gingerly upon the dangerous roof. He walked out over the
+dried mud of his deep lot, crossed the street, and spoke genially to
+a workman who was removing the broken glass of a window on the ground
+floor.
+
+"Here! What's all this howdy-do over here?"
+
+"Goin' to fix her all up, I guess," the workman said. "Big job it is,
+too."
+
+"Sh' think it would be."
+
+"Yes, sir; a pretty big job--a pretty big job. Got men at it on all four
+floors and on the roof. They're doin' it RIGHT."
+
+"Who's doing it?"
+
+"Lord! I d' know. Some o' these here big manufacturing corporations, I
+guess."
+
+"What's it going to be?"
+
+"They tell ME," the workman answered--"they tell ME she's goin' to be a
+butterine factory again. Anyways, I hope she won't be anything to smell
+like that glue-works you got over there not while I'm workin' around
+her, anyways!"
+
+"That smell's all right," Adams said. "You soon get used to it."
+
+"You do?" The man appeared incredulous. "Listen! I was over in France:
+it's a good thing them Dutchmen never thought of it; we'd of had to
+quit!"
+
+Adams laughed, and went back to his sheds. "I guess my foreman was
+right," he told his wife, that evening, with a little satisfaction.
+"As soon as one man shows enterprise enough to found an industry in a
+broken-down neighbourhood, somebody else is sure to follow. I kind of
+like the look of it: it'll help make our place seem sort of more busy
+and prosperous when it comes to getting a loan from the bank--and I got
+to get one mighty soon, too. I did think some that if things go as well
+as there's every reason to think they OUGHT to, I might want to spread
+out and maybe get hold of that old factory myself; but I hardly expected
+to be able to handle a proposition of that size before two or three
+years from now, and anyhow there's room enough on the lot I got, if we
+need more buildings some day. Things are going about as fine as I could
+ask: I hired some girls to-day to do the bottling--coloured girls along
+about sixteen to twenty years old. Afterwhile, I expect to get a machine
+to put the stuff in the little bottles, when we begin to get good
+returns; but half a dozen of these coloured girls can do it all right
+now, by hand. We're getting to have really quite a little plant over
+there: yes, sir, quite a regular little plant!"
+
+He chuckled, and at this cheerful sound, of a kind his wife had almost
+forgotten he was capable of producing, she ventured to put her hand upon
+his arm. They had gone outdoors, after dinner, taking two chairs with
+them, and were sitting through the late twilight together, keeping well
+away from the "front porch," which was not yet occupied, however Alice
+was in her room changing her dress.
+
+"Well, honey," Mrs. Adams said, taking confidence not only to put her
+hand upon his arm, but to revive this disused endearment;--"it's grand
+to have you so optimistic. Maybe some time you'll admit I was right,
+after all. Everything's going so well, it seems a pity you didn't take
+this--this step--long ago. Don't you think maybe so, Virgil?"
+
+"Well--if I was ever going to, I don't know but I might as well of.
+I got to admit the proposition begins to look pretty good: I know the
+stuff'll sell, and I can't see a thing in the world to stop it. It does
+look good, and if--if----" He paused.
+
+"If what?" she said, suddenly anxious.
+
+He laughed plaintively, as if confessing a superstition. "It's
+funny--well, it's mighty funny about that smell. I've got so used to it
+at the plant I never seem to notice it at all over there. It's only when
+I get away. Honestly, can't you notice----?"
+
+"Virgil!" She lifted her hand to strike his arm chidingly. "Do quit
+harping on that nonsense!"
+
+"Oh, of course it don't amount to anything," he said. "A person can
+stand a good deal of just smell. It don't WORRY me any."
+
+"I should think not especially as there isn't any."
+
+"Well," he said, "I feel pretty fair over the whole thing--a lot
+better'n I ever expected to, anyhow. I don't know as there's any reason
+I shouldn't tell you so."
+
+She was deeply pleased with this acknowledgment, and her voice had
+tenderness in it as she responded: "There, honey! Didn't I always say
+you'd be glad if you did it?"
+
+Embarrassed, he coughed loudly, then filled his pipe and lit it. "Well,"
+he said, slowly, "it's a puzzle. Yes, sir, it's a puzzle."
+
+"What is?"
+
+"Pretty much everything, I guess."
+
+As he spoke, a song came to them from a lighted window over their heads.
+Then the window darkened abruptly, but the song continued as Alice went
+down through the house to wait on the little veranda. "Mi chiamo Mimi,"
+she sang, and in her voice throbbed something almost startling in its
+sweetness. Her father and mother listened, not speaking until the song
+stopped with the click of the wire screen at the front door as Alice
+came out.
+
+"My!" said her father. "How sweet she does sing! I don't know as I ever
+heard her voice sound nicer than it did just then."
+
+"There's something that makes it sound that way," his wife told him.
+
+"I suppose so," he said, sighing. "I suppose so. You think----"
+
+"She's just terribly in love with him!"
+
+"I expect that's the way it ought to be," he said, then drew upon
+his pipe for reflection, and became murmurous with the symptoms of
+melancholy laughter. "It don't make things less of a puzzle, though,
+does it?"
+
+"In what way, Virgil?"
+
+"Why, here," he said--"here we go through all this muck and moil to help
+fix things nicer for her at home, and what's it all amount to? Seems
+like she's just gone ahead the way she'd 'a' gone anyhow; and now, I
+suppose, getting ready to up and leave us! Ain't that a puzzle to you?
+It is to me."
+
+"Oh, but things haven't gone that far yet."
+
+"Why, you just said----"
+
+She gave a little cry of protest. "Oh, they aren't ENGAGED yet. Of
+course they WILL be; he's just as much interested in her as she is in
+him, but----"
+
+"Well, what's the trouble then?"
+
+"You ARE a simple old fellow!" his wife exclaimed, and then rose from
+her chair. "That reminds me," she said.
+
+"What of?" he asked. "What's my being simple remind you of?"
+
+"Nothing!" she laughed. "It wasn't you that reminded me. It was just
+something that's been on my mind. I don't believe he's actually ever
+been inside our house!"
+
+"Hasn't he?"
+
+"I actually don't believe he ever has," she said. "Of course we
+must----" She paused, debating.
+
+"We must what?"
+
+"I guess I better talk to Alice about it right now," she said. "He don't
+usually come for about half an hour yet; I guess I've got time." And
+with that she walked away, leaving him to his puzzles.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+Alice was softly crooning to herself as her mother turned the corner of
+the house and approached through the dusk.
+
+"Isn't it the most BEAUTIFUL evening!" the daughter said. "WHY can't
+summer last all year? Did you ever know a lovelier twilight than this,
+mama?"
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed, and answered, "Not since I was your age, I expect."
+
+Alice was wistful at once. "Don't they stay beautiful after my age?"
+
+"Well, it's not the same thing."
+
+"Isn't it? Not ever?"
+
+"You may have a different kind from mine," the mother said, a little
+sadly. "I think you will, Alice. You deserve----"
+
+"No, I don't. I don't deserve anything, and I know it. But I'm getting
+a great deal these days--more than I ever dreamed COULD come to me.
+I'm--I'm pretty happy, mama!"
+
+"Dearie!" Her mother would have kissed her, but Alice drew away.
+
+"Oh, I don't mean----" She laughed nervously. "I wasn't meaning to
+tell you I'm ENGAGED, mama. We're not. I mean--oh! things seem pretty
+beautiful in spite of all I've done to spoil 'em."
+
+"You?" Mrs. Adams cried, incredulously. "What have you done to spoil
+anything?"
+
+"Little things," Alice said. "A thousand little silly--oh, what's
+the use? He's so honestly what he is--just simple and good and
+intelligent--I feel a tricky mess beside him! I don't see why he likes
+me; and sometimes I'm afraid he wouldn't if he knew me."
+
+"He'd just worship you," said the fond mother. "And the more he knew
+you, the more he'd worship you."
+
+Alice shook her head. "He's not the worshiping kind. Not like that at
+all. He's more----"
+
+But Mrs. Adams was not interested in this analysis, and she interrupted
+briskly, "Of course it's time your father and I showed some interest in
+him. I was just saying I actually don't believe he's ever been inside
+the house."
+
+"No," Alice said, musingly; "that's true: I don't believe he has. Except
+when we've walked in the evening we've always sat out here, even those
+two times when it was drizzly. It's so much nicer."
+
+"We'll have to do SOMETHING or other, of course," her mother said.
+
+"What like?"
+
+"I was thinking----" Mrs. Adams paused. "Well, of course we could hardly
+put off asking him to dinner, or something, much longer."
+
+Alice was not enthusiastic; so far from it, indeed, that there was a
+melancholy alarm in her voice. "Oh, mama, must we? Do you think so?"
+
+"Yes, I do. I really do."
+
+"Couldn't we--well, couldn't we wait?"
+
+"It looks queer," Mrs. Adams said. "It isn't the thing at all for a
+young man to come as much as he does, and never more than just barely
+meet your father and mother. No. We ought to do something."
+
+"But a dinner!" Alice objected. "In the first place, there isn't anybody
+I want to ask. There isn't anybody I WOULD ask."
+
+"I didn't mean trying to give a big dinner," her mother explained. "I
+just mean having him to dinner. That mulatto woman, Malena Burns, goes
+out by the day, and she could bring a waitress. We can get some flowers
+for the table and some to put in the living-room. We might just as well
+go ahead and do it to-morrow as any other time; because your father's in
+a fine mood, and I saw Malena this afternoon and told her I might want
+her soon. She said she didn't have any engagements this week, and I can
+let her know to-night. Suppose when he comes you ask him for to-morrow,
+Alice. Everything'll be very nice, I'm sure. Don't worry about it."
+
+"Well--but----" Alice was uncertain.
+
+"But don't you see, it looks so queer, not to do SOMETHING?" her mother
+urged. "It looks so kind of poverty-stricken. We really oughtn't to wait
+any longer."
+
+Alice assented, though not with a good heart. "Very well, I'll ask him,
+if you think we've got to."
+
+"That matter's settled then," Mrs. Adams said. "I'll go telephone
+Malena, and then I'll tell your father about it."
+
+But when she went back to her husband, she found him in an excited
+state of mind, and Walter standing before him in the darkness. Adams was
+almost shouting, so great was his vehemence.
+
+"Hush, hush!" his wife implored, as she came near them. "They'll hear
+you out on the front porch!"
+
+"I don't care who hears me," Adams said, harshly, though he tempered his
+loudness. "Do you want to know what this boy's asking me for? I thought
+he'd maybe come to tell me he'd got a little sense in his head at last,
+and a little decency about what's due his family! I thought he was
+going to ask me to take him into my plant. No, ma'am; THAT'S not what he
+wants!"
+
+"No, it isn't," Walter said. In the darkness his face could not be seen;
+he stood motionless, in what seemed an apathetic attitude; and he spoke
+quietly, "No," he repeated. "That isn't what I want."
+
+"You stay down at that place," Adams went on, hotly, "instead of trying
+to be a little use to your family; and the only reason you're ALLOWED to
+stay there is because Mr. Lamb's never happened to notice you ARE still
+there! You just wait----"
+
+"You're off," Walter said, in the same quiet way. "He knows I'm there.
+He spoke to me yesterday: he asked me how I was getting along with my
+work."
+
+"He did?" Adams said, seeming not to believe him.
+
+"Yes. He did."
+
+"What else did he say, Walter?" Mrs. Adams asked quickly.
+
+"Nothin'. Just walked on."
+
+"I don't believe he knew who you were," Adams declared.
+
+"Think not? He called me 'Walter Adams.'"
+
+At this Adams was silent; and Walter, after waiting a moment, said:
+
+"Well, are you going to do anything about me? About what I told you I
+got to have?"
+
+"What is it, Walter?" his mother asked, since Adams did not speak.
+
+Walter cleared his throat, and replied in a tone as quiet as that he
+had used before, though with a slight huskiness, "I got to have three
+hundred and fifty dollars. You better get him to give it to me if you
+can."
+
+Adams found his voice. "Yes," he said, bitterly. "That's all he asks!
+He won't do anything I ask HIM to, and in return he asks me for three
+hundred and fifty dollars! That's all!"
+
+"What in the world!" Mrs. Adams exclaimed. "What FOR, Walter?"
+
+"I got to have it," Walter said.
+
+"But what FOR?"
+
+His quiet huskiness did not alter. "I got to have it."
+
+"But can't you tell us----"
+
+"I got to have it."
+
+"That's all you can get out of him," Adams said. "He seems to think
+it'll bring him in three hundred and fifty dollars!"
+
+A faint tremulousness became evident in the husky voice. "Haven't you
+got it?"
+
+"NO, I haven't got it!" his father answered. "And I've got to go to a
+bank for more than my pay-roll next week. Do you think I'm a mint?"
+
+"I don't understand what you mean, Walter," Mrs. Adams interposed,
+perplexed and distressed. "If your father had the money, of course
+he'd need every cent of it, especially just now, and, anyhow, you could
+scarcely expect him to give it to you, unless you told us what you want
+with it. But he hasn't got it."
+
+"All right," Walter said; and after standing a moment more, in silence,
+he added, impersonally, "I don't see as you ever did anything much for
+me, anyhow either of you."
+
+Then, as if this were his valedictory, he turned his back upon them,
+walked away quickly, and was at once lost to their sight in the
+darkness.
+
+"There's a fine boy to've had the trouble of raising!" Adams grumbled.
+"Just crazy, that's all."
+
+"What in the world do you suppose he wants all that money for?" his
+wife said, wonderingly. "I can't imagine what he could DO with it. I
+wonder----" She paused. "I wonder if he----"
+
+"If he what?" Adams prompted her irritably.
+
+"If he COULD have bad--associates."
+
+"God knows!" said Adams. "_I_ don't! It just looks to me like he had
+something in him I don't understand. You can't keep your eye on a boy
+all the time in a city this size, not a boy Walter's age. You got a girl
+pretty much in the house, but a boy'll follow his nature. _I_ don't know
+what to do with him!"
+
+Mrs. Adams brightened a little. "He'll come out all right," she said.
+"I'm sure he will. I'm sure he'd never be anything really bad: and he'll
+come around all right about the glue-works, too; you'll see. Of course
+every young man wants money--it doesn't prove he's doing anything wrong
+just because he asks you for it."
+
+"No. All it proves to me is that he hasn't got good sense asking me for
+three hundred and fifty dollars, when he knows as well as you do the
+position I'm in! If I wanted to, I couldn't hardly let him have three
+hundred and fifty cents, let alone dollars!"
+
+"I'm afraid you'll have to let ME have that much--and maybe a little
+more," she ventured, timidly; and she told him of her plans for the
+morrow. He objected vehemently.
+
+"Oh, but Alice has probably asked him by this time," Mrs. Adams said.
+"It really must be done, Virgil: you don't want him to think she's
+ashamed of us, do you?"
+
+"Well, go ahead, but just let me stay away," he begged. "Of course I
+expect to undergo a kind of talk with him, when he gets ready to say
+something to us about Alice, but I do hate to have to sit through a
+fashionable dinner."
+
+"Why, it isn't going to bother you," she said; "just one young man as a
+guest."
+
+"Yes, I know; but you want to have all this fancy cookin'; and I see
+well enough you're going to get that old dress suit out of the cedar
+chest in the attic, and try to make me put it on me."
+
+"I do think you better, Virgil."
+
+"I hope the moths have got in it," he said. "Last time I wore it was to
+the banquet, and it was pretty old then. Of course I didn't mind wearing
+it to the banquet so much, because that was what you might call quite an
+occasion." He spoke with some reminiscent complacency; "the banquet,"
+an affair now five years past, having provided the one time in his
+life when he had been so distinguished among his fellow-citizens as to
+receive an invitation to be present, with some seven hundred others, at
+the annual eating and speech-making of the city's Chamber of Commerce.
+"Anyhow, as you say, I think it would look foolish of me to wear a dress
+suit for just one young man," he went on protesting, feebly. "What's the
+use of all so much howdy-do, anyway? You don't expect him to believe we
+put on all that style every night, do you? Is that what you're after?"
+
+"Well, we want him to think we live nicely," she admitted.
+
+"So that's it!" he said, querulously. "You want him to think that's our
+regular gait, do you? Well, he'll know better about me, no matter how
+you fix me up, because he saw me in my regular suit the evening she
+introduced me to him, and he could tell anyway I'm not one of these
+moving-picture sporting-men that's always got a dress suit on. Besides,
+you and Alice certainly have some idea he'll come AGAIN, haven't you?
+If they get things settled between 'em he'll be around the house and to
+meals most any time, won't he? You don't hardly expect to put on style
+all the time, I guess. Well, he'll see then that this kind of thing was
+all show-off, and bluff, won't he? What about it?"
+
+"Oh, well, by THAT time----" She left the sentence unfinished, as if
+absently. "You could let us have a little money for to-morrow, couldn't
+you, honey?"
+
+"Oh, I reckon, I reckon," he mumbled. "A girl like Alice is some
+comfort: she don't come around acting as if she'd commit suicide if she
+didn't get three hundred and fifty dollars in the next five minutes. I
+expect I can spare five or six dollars for your show-off if I got to."
+
+However, she finally obtained fifteen before his bedtime; and the next
+morning "went to market" after breakfast, leaving Alice to make the
+beds. Walter had not yet come downstairs. "You had better call him,"
+Mrs. Adams said, as she departed with a big basket on her arm. "I expect
+he's pretty sleepy; he was out so late last night I didn't hear him come
+in, though I kept awake till after midnight, listening for him. Tell him
+he'll be late to work if he doesn't hurry; and see that he drinks his
+coffee, even if he hasn't time for anything else. And when Malena comes,
+get her started in the kitchen: show her where everything is." She
+waved her hand, as she set out for a corner where the cars stopped.
+"Everything'll be lovely. Don't forget about Walter."
+
+Nevertheless, Alice forgot about Walter for a few minutes. She closed
+the door, went into the "living-room" absently, and stared vaguely at
+one of the old brown-plush rocking-chairs there. Upon her forehead
+were the little shadows of an apprehensive reverie, and her thoughts
+overlapped one another in a fretful jumble. "What will he think? These
+old chairs--they're hideous. I'll scrub those soot-streaks on
+the columns: it won't do any good, though. That long crack in the
+column--nothing can help it. What will he think of papa? I hope
+mama won't talk too much. When he thinks of Mildred's house, or of
+Henrietta's, or any of 'em, beside this--She said she'd buy plenty
+of roses; that ought to help some. Nothing could be done about these
+horrible chairs: can't take 'em up in the attic--a room's got to have
+chairs! Might have rented some. No; if he ever comes again he'd see they
+weren't here. 'If he ever comes again'--oh, it won't be THAT bad! But
+it won't be what he expects. I'm responsible for what he expects: he
+expects just what the airs I've put on have made him expect. What did I
+want to pose so to him for--as if papa were a wealthy man and all that?
+What WILL he think? The photograph of the Colosseum's a rather good
+thing, though. It helps some--as if we'd bought it in Rome perhaps. I
+hope he'll think so; he believes I've been abroad, of course. The
+other night he said, 'You remember the feeling you get in the
+Sainte-Chapelle'.--There's another lie of mine, not saying I didn't
+remember because I'd never been there. What makes me do it? Papa MUST
+wear his evening clothes. But Walter----"
+
+With that she recalled her mother's admonition, and went upstairs to
+Walter's door. She tapped upon it with her fingers.
+
+"Time to get up, Walter. The rest of us had breakfast over half an hour
+ago, and it's nearly eight o'clock. You'll be late. Hurry down and I'll
+have some coffee and toast ready for you." There came no sound from
+within the room, so she rapped louder.
+
+"Wake up, Walter!"
+
+She called and rapped again, without getting any response, and then,
+finding that the door yielded to her, opened it and went in. Walter was
+not there.
+
+He had been there, however; had slept upon the bed, though not inside
+the covers; and Alice supposed he must have come home so late that he
+had been too sleepy to take off his clothes. Near the foot of the bed
+was a shallow closet where he kept his "other suit" and his evening
+clothes; and the door stood open, showing a bare wall. Nothing whatever
+was in the closet, and Alice was rather surprised at this for a moment.
+"That's queer," she murmured; and then she decided that when he woke he
+found the clothes he had slept in "so mussy" he had put on his "other
+suit," and had gone out before breakfast with the mussed clothes to have
+them pressed, taking his evening things with them. Satisfied with this
+explanation, and failing to observe that it did not account for the
+absence of shoes from the closet floor, she nodded absently, "Yes, that
+must be it"; and, when her mother returned, told her that Walter had
+probably breakfasted down-town. They did not delay over this; the
+coloured woman had arrived, and the basket's disclosures were important.
+
+"I stopped at Worlig's on the way back," said Mrs. Adams, flushed with
+hurry and excitement. "I bought a can of caviar there. I thought we'd
+have little sandwiches brought into the 'living-room' before dinner, the
+way you said they did when you went to that dinner at the----"
+
+"But I think that was to go with cocktails, mama, and of course we
+haven't----"
+
+"No," Mrs. Adams said. "Still, I think it would be nice. We can make
+them look very dainty, on a tray, and the waitress can bring them in. I
+thought we'd have the soup already on the table; and we can walk right
+out as soon as we have the sandwiches, so it won't get cold. Then, after
+the soup, Malena says she can make sweetbread pates with mushrooms: and
+for the meat course we'll have larded fillet. Malena's really a
+fancy cook, you know, and she says she can do anything like that to
+perfection. We'll have peas with the fillet, and potato balls and
+Brussels sprouts. Brussels sprouts are fashionable now, they told me
+at market. Then will come the chicken salad, and after that the
+ice-cream--she's going to make an angel-food cake to go with it--and
+then coffee and crackers and a new kind of cheese I got at Worlig's, he
+says is very fine."
+
+Alice was alarmed. "Don't you think perhaps it's too much, mama?"
+
+"It's better to have too much than too little," her mother said,
+cheerfully. "We don't want him to think we're the kind that skimp. Lord
+knows we have to enough, though, most of the time! Get the flowers in
+water, child. I bought 'em at market because they're so much cheaper
+there, but they'll keep fresh and nice. You fix 'em any way you want.
+Hurry! It's got to be a busy day."
+
+She had bought three dozen little roses. Alice took them and began to
+arrange them in vases, keeping the stems separated as far as possible so
+that the clumps would look larger. She put half a dozen in each of three
+vases in the "living-room," placing one vase on the table in the center
+of the room, and one at each end of the mantelpiece. Then she took the
+rest of the roses to the dining-room; but she postponed the arrangement
+of them until the table should be set, just before dinner. She was
+thoughtful; planning to dry the stems and lay them on the tablecloth
+like a vine of roses running in a delicate design, if she found that the
+dozen and a half she had left were enough for that. If they weren't she
+would arrange them in a vase.
+
+She looked a long time at the little roses in the basin of water, where
+she had put them; then she sighed, and went away to heavier tasks,
+while her mother worked in the kitchen with Malena. Alice dusted the
+"living-room" and the dining-room vigorously, though all the time with a
+look that grew more and more pensive; and having dusted everything, she
+wiped the furniture; rubbed it hard. After that, she washed the floors
+and the woodwork.
+
+Emerging from the kitchen at noon, Mrs. Adams found her daughter on
+hands and knees, scrubbing the bases of the columns between the hall and
+the "living-room."
+
+"Now, dearie," she said, "you mustn't tire yourself out, and you'd
+better come and eat something. Your father said he'd get a bite
+down-town to-day--he was going down to the bank--and Walter eats
+down-town all the time lately, so I thought we wouldn't bother to set
+the table for lunch. Come on and we'll have something in the kitchen."
+
+"No," Alice said, dully, as she went on with the work. "I don't want
+anything."
+
+Her mother came closer to her. "Why, what's the matter?" she asked,
+briskly. "You seem kind of pale, to me; and you don't look--you don't
+look HAPPY."
+
+"Well----" Alice began, uncertainly, but said no more.
+
+"See here!" Mrs. Adams exclaimed. "This is all just for you! You ought
+to be ENJOYING it. Why, it's the first time we've--we've entertained
+in I don't know how long! I guess it's almost since we had that little
+party when you were eighteen. What's the matter with you?"
+
+"Nothing. I don't know."
+
+"But, dearie, aren't you looking FORWARD to this evening?"
+
+The girl looked up, showing a pallid and solemn face. "Oh, yes, of
+course," she said, and tried to smile. "Of course we had to do it--I do
+think it'll be nice. Of course I'm looking forward to it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+She was indeed "looking forward" to that evening, but in a cloud of
+apprehension; and, although she could never have guessed it, this was
+the simultaneous condition of another person--none other than the guest
+for whose pleasure so much cooking and scrubbing seemed to be necessary.
+Moreover, Mr. Arthur Russell's premonitions were no product of mere
+coincidence; neither had any magical sympathy produced them. His state
+of mind was rather the result of rougher undercurrents which had all the
+time been running beneath the surface of a romantic friendship.
+
+Never shrewder than when she analyzed the gentlemen, Alice did not
+libel him when she said he was one of those quiet men who are a bit
+flirtatious, by which she meant that he was a bit "susceptible," the
+same thing--and he had proved himself susceptible to Alice upon his
+first sight of her. "There!" he said to himself. "Who's that?" And in
+the crowd of girls at his cousin's dance, all strangers to him, she was
+the one he wanted to know.
+
+Since then, his summer evenings with her had been as secluded as if, for
+three hours after the falling of dusk, they two had drawn apart from
+the world to some dear bower of their own. The little veranda was that
+glamorous nook, with a faint golden light falling through the glass of
+the closed door upon Alice, and darkness elsewhere, except for the one
+round globe of the street lamp at the corner. The people who passed
+along the sidewalk, now and then, were only shadows with voices, moving
+vaguely under the maple trees that loomed in obscure contours against
+the stars. So, as the two sat together, the back of the world was the
+wall and closed door behind them; and Russell, when he was away from
+Alice, always thought of her as sitting there before the closed door. A
+glamour was about her thus, and a spell upon him; but he had a formless
+anxiety never put into words: all the pictures of her in his mind
+stopped at the closed door.
+
+He had another anxiety; and, for the greater part, this was of her own
+creating. She had too often asked him (no matter how gaily) what he
+heard about her, too often begged him not to hear anything. Then, hoping
+to forestall whatever he might hear, she had been at too great pains to
+account for it, to discredit and mock it; and, though he laughed at her
+for this, telling her truthfully he did not even hear her mentioned, the
+everlasting irony that deals with all such human forefendings prevailed.
+
+Lately, he had half confessed to her what a nervousness she had
+produced. "You make me dread the day when I'll hear somebody speaking of
+you. You're getting me so upset about it that if I ever hear anybody so
+much as say the name 'Alice Adams,' I'll run!" The confession was but
+half of one because he laughed; and she took it for an assurance of
+loyalty in the form of burlesque.
+
+She misunderstood: he laughed, but his nervousness was genuine.
+
+After any stroke of events, whether a happy one or a catastrophe, we
+see that the materials for it were a long time gathering, and the only
+marvel is that the stroke was not prophesied. What bore the air of fatal
+coincidence may remain fatal indeed, to this later view; but, with the
+haphazard aspect dispelled, there is left for scrutiny the same ancient
+hint from the Infinite to the effect that since events have never yet
+failed to be law-abiding, perhaps it were well for us to deduce that
+they will continue to be so until further notice.
+
+. . . On the day that was to open the closed door in the background of
+his pictures of Alice, Russell lunched with his relatives. There were
+but the four people, Russell and Mildred and her mother and father, in
+the great, cool dining-room. Arched French windows, shaded by awnings,
+admitted a mellow light and looked out upon a green lawn ending in a
+long conservatory, which revealed through its glass panes a carnival of
+plants in luxuriant blossom. From his seat at the table, Russell
+glanced out at this pretty display, and informed his cousins that he
+was surprised. "You have such a glorious spread of flowers all over the
+house," he said, "I didn't suppose you'd have any left out yonder. In
+fact, I didn't know there were so many splendid flowers in the world."
+
+Mrs. Palmer, large, calm, fair, like her daughter, responded with a mild
+reproach: "That's because you haven't been cousinly enough to get used
+to them, Arthur. You've almost taught us to forget what you look like."
+
+In defense Russell waved a hand toward her husband. "You see, he's begun
+to keep me so hard at work----"
+
+But Mr. Palmer declined the responsibility. "Up to four or five in the
+afternoon, perhaps," he said. "After that, the young gentleman is as
+much a stranger to me as he is to my family. I've been wondering who she
+could be."
+
+"When a man's preoccupied there must be a lady then?" Russell inquired.
+
+"That seems to be the view of your sex," Mrs. Palmer suggested. "It was
+my husband who said it, not Mildred or I."
+
+Mildred smiled faintly. "Papa may be singular in his ideas; they may
+come entirely from his own experience, and have nothing to do with
+Arthur."
+
+"Thank you, Mildred," her cousin said, bowing to her gratefully. "You
+seem to understand my character--and your father's quite as well!"
+
+However, Mildred remained grave in the face of this customary
+pleasantry, not because the old jest, worn round, like what preceded it,
+rolled in an old groove, but because of some preoccupation of her own.
+Her faint smile had disappeared, and, as her cousin's glance met hers,
+she looked down; yet not before he had seen in her eyes the flicker of
+something like a question--a question both poignant and dismayed. He may
+have understood it; for his own smile vanished at once in favour of a
+reciprocal solemnity.
+
+"You see, Arthur," Mrs. Palmer said, "Mildred is always a good cousin.
+She and I stand by you, even if you do stay away from us for weeks and
+weeks." Then, observing that he appeared to be so occupied with a bunch
+of iced grapes upon his plate that he had not heard her, she began to
+talk to her husband, asking him what was "going on down-town."
+
+Arthur continued to eat his grapes, but he ventured to look again at
+Mildred after a few moments. She, also, appeared to be occupied with
+a bunch of grapes though she ate none, and only pulled them from their
+stems. She sat straight, her features as composed and pure as those of
+a new marble saint in a cathedral niche; yet her downcast eyes seemed to
+conceal many thoughts; and her cousin, against his will, was more aware
+of what these thoughts might be than of the leisurely conversation
+between her father and mother. All at once, however, he heard something
+that startled him, and he listened--and here was the effect of all
+Alice's forefendings; he listened from the first with a sinking heart.
+
+Mr. Palmer, mildly amused by what he was telling his wife, had just
+spoken the words, "this Virgil Adams." What he had said was, "this
+Virgil Adams--that's the man's name. Queer case."
+
+"Who told you?" Mrs. Palmer inquired, not much interested.
+
+"Alfred Lamb," her husband answered. "He was laughing about his father,
+at the club. You see the old gentleman takes a great pride in his
+judgment of men, and always boasted to his sons that he'd never in his
+life made a mistake in trusting the wrong man. Now Alfred and James
+Albert, Junior, think they have a great joke on him; and they've twitted
+him so much about it he'll scarcely speak to them. From the first,
+Alfred says, the old chap's only repartee was, 'You wait and you'll
+see!' And they've asked him so often to show them what they're going to
+see that he won't say anything at all!"
+
+"He's a funny old fellow," Mrs. Palmer observed. "But he's so shrewd I
+can't imagine his being deceived for such a long time. Twenty years, you
+said?"
+
+"Yes, longer than that, I understand. It appears when this man--this
+Adams--was a young clerk, the old gentleman trusted him with one of his
+business secrets, a glue process that Mr. Lamb had spent some money to
+get hold of. The old chap thought this Adams was going to have quite
+a future with the Lamb concern, and of course never dreamed he was
+dishonest. Alfred says this Adams hasn't been of any real use for years,
+and they should have let him go as dead wood, but the old gentleman
+wouldn't hear of it, and insisted on his being kept on the payroll; so
+they just decided to look on it as a sort of pension. Well, one morning
+last March the man had an attack of some sort down there, and Mr. Lamb
+got his own car out and went home with him, himself, and worried about
+him and went to see him no end, all the time he was ill."
+
+"He would," Mrs. Palmer said, approvingly. "He's a kind-hearted
+creature, that old man."
+
+Her husband laughed. "Alfred says he thinks his kind-heartedness
+is about cured! It seems that as soon as the man got well again he
+deliberately walked off with the old gentleman's glue secret. Just
+calmly stole it! Alfred says he believes that if he had a stroke in the
+office now, himself, his father wouldn't lift a finger to help him!"
+
+Mrs. Palmer repeated the name to herself thoughtfully. "'Adams'--'Virgil
+Adams.' You said his name was Virgil Adams?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+She looked at her daughter. "Why, you know who that is, Mildred," she
+said, casually. "It's that Alice Adams's father, isn't it? Wasn't his
+name Virgil Adams?"
+
+"I think it is," Mildred said.
+
+Mrs. Palmer turned toward her husband. "You've seen this Alice Adams
+here. Mr. Lamb's pet swindler must be her father."
+
+Mr. Palmer passed a smooth hand over his neat gray hair, which was not
+disturbed by this effort to stimulate recollection. "Oh, yes," he said.
+"Of course--certainly. Quite a good-looking girl--one of Mildred's
+friends. How queer!"
+
+Mildred looked up, as if in a little alarm, but did not speak. Her
+mother set matters straight. "Fathers ARE amusing," she said smilingly
+to Russell, who was looking at her, though how fixedly she did not
+notice; for she turned from him at once to enlighten her husband. "Every
+girl who meets Mildred, and tries to push the acquaintance by coming
+here until the poor child has to hide, isn't a FRIEND of hers, my dear!"
+
+Mildred's eyes were downcast again, and a faint colour rose in her
+cheeks. "Oh, I shouldn't put it quite that way about Alice Adams," she
+said, in a low voice. "I saw something of her for a time. She's not
+unattractive in a way."
+
+Mrs. Palmer settled the whole case of Alice carelessly. "A pushing sort
+of girl," she said. "A very pushing little person."
+
+"I----" Mildred began; and, after hesitating, concluded, "I rather
+dropped her."
+
+"Fortunate you've done so," her father remarked, cheerfully. "Especially
+since various members of the Lamb connection are here frequently. They
+mightn't think you'd show great tact in having her about the place." He
+laughed, and turned to his cousin. "All this isn't very interesting to
+poor Arthur. How terrible people are with a newcomer in a town; they
+talk as if he knew all about everybody!"
+
+"But we don't know anything about these queer people, ourselves," said
+Mrs. Palmer. "We know something about the girl, of course--she used to
+be a bit too conspicuous, in fact! However, as you say, we might find a
+subject more interesting for Arthur."
+
+She smiled whimsically upon the young man. "Tell the truth," she said.
+"Don't you fairly detest going into business with that tyrant yonder?"
+
+"What? Yes--I beg your pardon!" he stammered.
+
+"You were right," Mrs. Palmer said to her husband. "You've bored him so,
+talking about thievish clerks, he can't even answer an honest question."
+
+But Russell was beginning to recover his outward composure. "Try me
+again," he said. "I'm afraid I was thinking of something else."
+
+This was the best he found to say. There was a part of him that wanted
+to protest and deny, but he had not heat enough, in the chill that had
+come upon him. Here was the first "mention" of Alice, and with it the
+reason why it was the first: Mr. Palmer had difficulty in recalling her,
+and she happened to be spoken of, only because her father's betrayal of
+a benefactor's trust had been so peculiarly atrocious that, in the view
+of the benefactor's family, it contained enough of the element of humour
+to warrant a mild laugh at a club. There was the deadliness of the
+story: its lack of malice, even of resentment. Deadlier still were
+Mrs. Palmer's phrases: "a pushing sort of girl," "a very pushing little
+person," and "used to be a bit TOO conspicuous, in fact." But she spoke
+placidly and by chance; being as obviously without unkindly motive as
+Mr. Palmer was when he related the cause of Alfred Lamb's amusement.
+Her opinion of the obscure young lady momentarily her topic had been
+expressed, moreover, to her husband, and at her own table. She sat
+there, large, kind, serene--a protest might astonish but could
+not change her; and Russell, crumpling in his strained fingers the
+lace-edged little web of a napkin on his knee, found heart enough to
+grow red, but not enough to challenge her.
+
+She noticed his colour, and attributed it to the embarrassment of a
+scrupulously gallant gentleman caught in a lapse of attention to a lady.
+"Don't be disturbed," she said, benevolently. "People aren't expected to
+listen all the time to their relatives. A high colour's very becoming
+to you, Arthur; but it really isn't necessary between cousins. You can
+always be informal enough with us to listen only when you care to."
+
+His complexion continued to be ruddier than usual, however, throughout
+the meal, and was still somewhat tinted when Mrs. Palmer rose. "The
+man's bringing you cigarettes here," she said, nodding to the two
+gentlemen. "We'll give you a chance to do the sordid kind of talking we
+know you really like. Afterwhile, Mildred will show you what's in bloom
+in the hothouse, if you wish, Arthur."
+
+Mildred followed her, and, when they were alone in another of the
+spacious rooms, went to a window and looked out, while her mother seated
+herself near the center of the room in a gilt armchair, mellowed with
+old Aubusson tapestry. Mrs. Palmer looked thoughtfully at her daughter's
+back, but did not speak to her until coffee had been brought for them.
+
+"Thanks," Mildred said, not turning, "I don't care for any coffee, I
+believe."
+
+"No?" Mrs. Palmer said, gently. "I'm afraid our good-looking cousin
+won't think you're very talkative, Mildred. You spoke only about twice
+at lunch. I shouldn't care for him to get the idea you're piqued because
+he's come here so little lately, should you?"
+
+"No, I shouldn't," Mildred answered in a low voice, and with that she
+turned quickly, and came to sit near her mother. "But it's what I am
+afraid of! Mama, did you notice how red he got?"
+
+"You mean when he was caught not listening to a question of mine? Yes;
+it's very becoming to him."
+
+"Mama, I don't think that was the reason. I don't think it was because
+he wasn't listening, I mean."
+
+"No?"
+
+"I think his colour and his not listening came from the same reason,"
+Mildred said, and although she had come to sit near her mother, she
+did not look at her. "I think it happened because you and papa----" She
+stopped.
+
+"Yes?" Mrs. Palmer said, good-naturedly, to prompt her. "Your father and
+I did something embarrassing?"
+
+"Mama, it was because of those things that came out about Alice Adams."
+
+"How could that bother Arthur? Does he know her?"
+
+"Don't you remember?" the daughter asked. "The day after my dance I
+mentioned how odd I thought it was in him--I was a little disappointed
+in him. I'd been seeing that he met everybody, of course, but she was
+the only girl HE asked to meet; and he did it as soon as he noticed her.
+I hadn't meant to have him meet her--in fact, I was rather sorry I'd
+felt I had to ask her, because she oh, well, she's the sort that 'tries
+for the new man,' if she has half a chance; and sometimes they seem
+quite fascinated--for a time, that is. I thought Arthur was above
+all that; or at the very least I gave him credit for being too
+sophisticated."
+
+"I see," Mrs. Palmer said, thoughtfully. "I remember now that you spoke
+of it. You said it seemed a little peculiar, but of course it really
+wasn't: a 'new man' has nothing to go by, except his own first
+impressions. You can't blame poor Arthur--she's quite a piquant looking
+little person. You think he's seen something of her since then?"
+
+Mildred nodded slowly. "I never dreamed such a thing till yesterday,
+and even then I rather doubted it--till he got so red, just now! I was
+surprised when he asked to meet her, but he just danced with her once
+and didn't mention her afterward; I forgot all about it--in fact, I
+virtually forgot all about HER. I'd seen quite a little of her----"
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Palmer. "She did keep coming here!"
+
+"But I'd just about decided that it really wouldn't do," Mildred went
+on. "She isn't--well, I didn't admire her."
+
+"No," her mother assented, and evidently followed a direct connection
+of thought in a speech apparently irrelevant. "I understand the young
+Malone wants to marry Henrietta. I hope she won't; he seems rather a
+gross type of person."
+
+"Oh, he's just one," Mildred said. "I don't know that he and Alice Adams
+were ever engaged--she never told me so. She may not have been engaged
+to any of them; she was just enough among the other girls to get talked
+about--and one of the reasons I felt a little inclined to be nice to
+her was that they seemed to be rather edging her out of the circle. It
+wasn't long before I saw they were right, though. I happened to mention
+I was going to give a dance and she pretended to take it as a matter
+of course that I meant to invite her brother--at least, I thought she
+pretended; she may have really believed it. At any rate, I had to send
+him a card; but I didn't intend to be let in for that sort of thing
+again, of course. She's what you said, 'pushing'; though I'm awfully
+sorry you said it."
+
+"Why shouldn't I have said it, my dear?"
+
+"Of course I didn't say 'shouldn't.'" Mildred explained, gravely. "I
+meant only that I'm sorry it happened."
+
+"Yes; but why?"
+
+"Mama"--Mildred turned to her, leaning forward and speaking in a lowered
+voice--"Mama, at first the change was so little it seemed as if Arthur
+hardly knew it himself. He'd been lovely to me always, and he was still
+lovely to me but--oh, well, you've understood--after my dance it was
+more as if it was just his nature and his training to be lovely to me,
+as he would be to everyone a kind of politeness. He'd never said he
+CARED for me, but after that I could see he didn't. It was clear--after
+that. I didn't know what had happened; I couldn't think of anything I'd
+done. Mama--it was Alice Adams."
+
+Mrs. Palmer set her little coffee-cup upon the table beside her, calmly
+following her own motion with her eyes, and not seeming to realize with
+what serious entreaty her daughter's gaze was fixed upon her. Mildred
+repeated the last sentence of her revelation, and introduced a stress of
+insistence.
+
+"Mama, it WAS Alice Adams!"
+
+But Mrs. Palmer declined to be greatly impressed, so far as her
+appearance went, at least; and to emphasize her refusal, she smiled
+indulgently. "What makes you think so?"
+
+"Henrietta told me yesterday."
+
+At this Mrs. Palmer permitted herself to laugh softly aloud. "Good
+heavens! Is Henrietta a soothsayer? Or is she Arthur's particular
+confidante?"
+
+"No. Ella Dowling told her."
+
+Mrs. Palmer's laughter continued. "Now we have it!" she exclaimed. "It's
+a game of gossip: Arthur tells Ella, Ella tells Henrietta, and Henrietta
+tells----"
+
+"Don't laugh, please, mama," Mildred begged. "Of course Arthur didn't
+tell anybody. It's roundabout enough, but it's true. I know it! I
+hadn't quite believed it, but I knew it was true when he got so red. He
+looked--oh, for a second or so he looked--stricken! He thought I didn't
+notice it. Mama, he's been to see her almost every evening lately. They
+take long walks together. That's why he hasn't been here."
+
+Of Mrs. Palmer's laughter there was left only her indulgent smile, which
+she had not allowed to vanish. "Well, what of it?" she said.
+
+"Mama!"
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Palmer. "What of it?"
+
+"But don't you see?" Mildred's well-tutored voice, though modulated and
+repressed even in her present emotion, nevertheless had a tendency to
+quaver. "It's true. Frank Dowling was going to see her one evening and
+he saw Arthur sitting on the stoop with her, and didn't go in. And Ella
+used to go to school with a girl who lives across the street from here.
+She told Ella----"
+
+"Oh, I understand," Mrs. Palmer interrupted. "Suppose he does go there.
+My dear, I said, 'What of it?'"
+
+"I don't see what you mean, mama. I'm so afraid he might think we knew
+about it, and that you and papa said those things about her and her
+father on that account--as if we abused them because he goes there
+instead of coming here."
+
+"Nonsense!" Mrs. Palmer rose, went to a window, and, turning there,
+stood with her back to it, facing her daughter and looking at her
+cheerfully. "Nonsense, my dear! It was perfectly clear that she was
+mentioned by accident, and so was her father. What an extraordinary man!
+If Arthur makes friends with people like that, he certainly knows better
+than to expect to hear favourable opinions of them. Besides, it's only a
+little passing thing with him."
+
+"Mama! When he goes there almost every----"
+
+"Yes," Mrs. Palmer said, dryly. "It seems to me I've heard somewhere
+that other young men have gone there 'almost every!' She doesn't
+last, apparently. Arthur's gallant, and he's impressionable--but
+he's fastidious, and fastidiousness is always the check on
+impressionableness. A girl belongs to her family, too--and this one does
+especially, it strikes me! Arthur's very sensible; he sees more than
+you'd think."
+
+Mildred looked at her hopefully. "Then you don't believe he's likely to
+imagine we said those things of her in any meaning way?"
+
+At this, Mrs. Palmer laughed again. "There's one thing you seem not to
+have noticed, Mildred."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"It seems to have escaped your attention that he never said a word."
+
+"Mightn't that mean----?" Mildred began, but she stopped.
+
+"No, it mightn't," her mother replied, comprehending easily. "On the
+contrary, it might mean that instead of his feeling it too deeply to
+speak, he was getting a little illumination."
+
+Mildred rose and came to her. "WHY do you suppose he never told us he
+went there? Do you think he's--do you think he's pleased with her, and
+yet ashamed of it? WHY do you suppose he's never spoken of it?"
+
+"Ah, that," Mrs. Palmer said,--"that might possibly be her own doing.
+If it is, she's well paid by what your father and I said, because we
+wouldn't have said it if we'd known that Arthur----" She checked herself
+quickly. Looking over her daughter's shoulder, she saw the two gentlemen
+coming from the corridor toward the wide doorway of the room; and she
+greeted them cheerfully. "If you've finished with each other for a
+while," she added, "Arthur may find it a relief to put his thoughts on
+something prettier than a trust company--and more fragrant."
+
+Arthur came to Mildred.
+
+"Your mother said at lunch that perhaps you'd----"
+
+"I didn't say 'perhaps,' Arthur," Mrs. Palmer interrupted, to correct
+him. "I said she would. If you care to see and smell those lovely things
+out yonder, she'll show them to you. Run along, children!"
+
+
+Half an hour later, glancing from a window, she saw them come from
+the hothouses and slowly cross the lawn. Arthur had a fine rose in his
+buttonhole and looked profoundly thoughtful.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+That morning and noon had been warm, though the stirrings of a feeble
+breeze made weather not flagrantly intemperate; but at about three
+o'clock in the afternoon there came out of the southwest a heat like an
+affliction sent upon an accursed people, and the air was soon dead of
+it. Dripping negro ditch-diggers whooped with satires praising hell and
+hot weather, as the tossing shovels flickered up to the street level,
+where sluggish male pedestrians carried coats upon hot arms, and
+fanned themselves with straw hats, or, remaining covered, wore soaked
+handkerchiefs between scalp and straw. Clerks drooped in silent, big
+department stores, stenographers in offices kept as close to electric
+fans as the intervening bulk of their employers would let them; guests
+in hotels left the lobbies and went to lie unclad upon their beds; while
+in hospitals the patients murmured querulously against the heat, and
+perhaps against some noisy motorist who strove to feel the air by
+splitting it, not troubled by any foreboding that he, too, that hour
+next week, might need quiet near a hospital. The "hot spell" was a
+true spell, one upon men's spirits; for it was so hot that, in suburban
+outskirts, golfers crept slowly back over the low undulations of their
+club lands, abandoning their matches and returning to shelter.
+
+Even on such a day, sizzling work had to be done, as in winter. There
+were glowing furnaces to be stoked, liquid metals to be poured; but such
+tasks found seasoned men standing to them; and in all the city probably
+no brave soul challenged the heat more gamely than Mrs. Adams did, when,
+in a corner of her small and fiery kitchen, where all day long her
+hired African immune cooked fiercely, she pressed her husband's evening
+clothes with a hot iron. No doubt she risked her life, but she risked
+it cheerfully in so good and necessary a service for him. She would have
+given her life for him at any time, and both his and her own for her
+children.
+
+Unconscious of her own heroism, she was surprised to find herself rather
+faint when she finished her ironing. However, she took heart to believe
+that the clothes looked better, in spite of one or two scorched places;
+and she carried them upstairs to her husband's room before increasing
+blindness forced her to grope for the nearest chair. Then, trying to
+rise and walk, without having sufficiently recovered, she had to sit
+down again; but after a little while she was able to get upon her feet;
+and, keeping her hand against the wall, moved successfully to the door
+of her own room. Here she wavered; might have gone down, had she not
+been stimulated by the thought of how much depended upon her;--she made
+a final great effort, and floundered across the room to her bureau,
+where she kept some simple restoratives. They served her need, or her
+faith in them did; and she returned to her work.
+
+She went down the stairs, keeping a still tremulous hand upon the rail;
+but she smiled brightly when Alice looked up from below, where the
+woodwork was again being tormented with superfluous attentions.
+
+"Alice, DON'T!" her mother said, commiseratingly. "You did all that this
+morning and it looks lovely. What's the use of wearing yourself out on
+it? You ought to be lying down, so's to look fresh for to-night."
+
+"Hadn't you better lie down yourself?" the daughter returned. "Are you
+ill, mama?"
+
+"Certainly not. What in the world makes you think so?"
+
+"You look pretty pale," Alice said, and sighed heavily. "It makes me
+ashamed, having you work so hard--for me."
+
+"How foolish! I think it's fun, getting ready to entertain a little
+again, like this. I only wish it hadn't turned so hot: I'm afraid your
+poor father'll suffer--his things are pretty heavy, I noticed. Well,
+it'll do him good to bear something for style's sake this once, anyhow!"
+She laughed, and coming to Alice, bent down and kissed her. "Dearie,"
+she said, tenderly, "wouldn't you please slip upstairs now and take just
+a little teeny nap to please your mother?"
+
+But Alice responded only by moving her head slowly, in token of refusal.
+
+"Do!" Mrs. Adams urged. "You don't want to look worn out, do you?"
+
+"I'll LOOK all right," Alice said, huskily. "Do you like the way I've
+arranged the furniture now? I've tried all the different ways it'll go."
+
+"It's lovely," her mother said, admiringly. "I thought the last way you
+had it was pretty, too. But you know best; I never knew anybody with so
+much taste. If you'd only just quit now, and take a little rest----"
+
+"There'd hardly be time, even if I wanted to; it's after five but I
+couldn't; really, I couldn't. How do you think we can manage about
+Walter--to see that he wears his evening things, I mean?"
+
+Mrs. Adams pondered. "I'm afraid he'll make a lot of objections, on
+account of the weather and everything. I wish we'd had a chance to
+tell him last night or this morning. I'd have telephoned to him this
+afternoon except--well, I scarcely like to call him up at that place,
+since your father----"
+
+"No, of course not, mama."
+
+"If Walter gets home late," Mrs. Adams went on, "I'll just slip out and
+speak to him, in case Mr. Russell's here before he comes. I'll just tell
+him he's got to hurry and get his things on."
+
+"Maybe he won't come home to dinner," Alice suggested, rather hopefully.
+"Sometimes he doesn't."
+
+"No; I think he'll be here. When he doesn't come he usually telephones
+by this time to say not to wait for him; he's very thoughtful about
+that. Well, it really is getting late: I must go and tell her she ought
+to be preparing her fillet. Dearie, DO rest a little."
+
+"You'd much better do that yourself," Alice called after her, but Mrs.
+Adams shook her head cheerily, not pausing on her way to the fiery
+kitchen.
+
+Alice continued her useless labours for a time; then carried her bucket
+to the head of the cellar stairway, where she left it upon the top step;
+and, closing the door, returned to the "living-room;" Again she changed
+the positions of the old plush rocking-chairs, moving them into the
+corners where she thought they might be least noticeable; and while
+thus engaged she was startled by a loud ringing of the door-bell. For
+a moment her face was panic-stricken, and she stood staring, then
+she realized that Russell would not arrive for another hour, at the
+earliest, and recovering her equipoise, went to the door.
+
+Waiting there, in a languid attitude, was a young coloured woman, with
+a small bundle under her arm and something malleable in her mouth.
+"Listen," she said. "You folks expectin' a coloured lady?"
+
+"No," said Alice. "Especially not at the front door."
+
+"Listen," the coloured woman said again. "Listen. Say, listen. Ain't
+they another coloured lady awready here by the day? Listen. Ain't Miz
+Malena Burns here by the day this evenin'? Say, listen. This the number
+house she give ME."
+
+"Are you the waitress?" Alice asked, dismally.
+
+"Yes'm, if Malena here."
+
+"Malena is here," Alice said, and hesitated; but she decided not to
+send the waitress to the back door; it might be a risk. She let her in.
+"What's your name?"
+
+"Me? I'm name' Gertrude. Miss Gertrude Collamus."
+
+"Did you bring a cap and apron?"
+
+Gertrude took the little bundle from under her arm. "Yes'm. I'm all
+fix'."
+
+"I've already set the table," Alice said. "I'll show you what we want
+done."
+
+She led the way to the dining-room, and, after offering some instruction
+there, received by Gertrude with languor and a slowly moving jaw, she
+took her into the kitchen, where the cap and apron were put on. The
+effect was not fortunate; Gertrude's eyes were noticeably bloodshot,
+an affliction made more apparent by the white cap; and Alice drew her
+mother apart, whispering anxiously,
+
+"Do you suppose it's too late to get someone else?"
+
+"I'm afraid it is," Mrs. Adams said. "Malena says it was hard enough to
+get HER! You have to pay them so much that they only work when they feel
+like it."
+
+"Mama, could you ask her to wear her cap straighter? Every time she
+moves her head she gets it on one side, and her skirt's too long behind
+and too short in front--and oh, I've NEVER seen such FEET!" Alice
+laughed desolately. "And she MUST quit that terrible chewing!"
+
+"Never mind; I'll get to work with her. I'll straighten her out all I
+can, dearie; don't worry." Mrs. Adams patted her daughter's shoulder
+encouragingly. "Now YOU can't do another thing, and if you don't run and
+begin dressing you won't be ready. It'll only take me a minute to dress,
+myself, and I'll be down long before you will. Run, darling! I'll look
+after everything."
+
+Alice nodded vaguely, went up to her room, and, after only a moment with
+her mirror, brought from her closet the dress of white organdie she
+had worn the night when she met Russell for the first time. She laid it
+carefully upon her bed, and began to make ready to put it on. Her mother
+came in, half an hour later, to "fasten" her.
+
+"I'M all dressed," Mrs. Adams said, briskly. "Of course it doesn't
+matter. He won't know what the rest of us even look like: How could he?
+I know I'm an old SIGHT, but all I want is to look respectable. Do I?"
+
+"You look like the best woman in the world; that's all!" Alice said,
+with a little gulp.
+
+Her mother laughed and gave her a final scrutiny. "You might use just
+a tiny bit more colour, dearie--I'm afraid the excitement's made you a
+little pale. And you MUST brighten up! There's sort of a look in your
+eyes as if you'd got in a trance and couldn't get out. You've had it all
+day. I must run: your father wants me to help him with his studs. Walter
+hasn't come yet, but I'll look after him; don't worry, And you better
+HURRY, dearie, if you're going to take any time fixing the flowers on
+the table."
+
+She departed, while Alice sat at the mirror again, to follow her advice
+concerning a "tiny bit more colour." Before she had finished, her father
+knocked at the door, and, when she responded, came in. He was dressed
+in the clothes his wife had pressed; but he had lost substantially in
+weight since they were made for him; no one would have thought that they
+had been pressed. They hung from him voluminously, seeming to be the
+clothes of a larger man.
+
+"Your mother's gone downstairs," he said, in a voice of distress.
+
+"One of the buttonholes in my shirt is too large and I can't keep the
+dang thing fastened. _I_ don't know what to do about it! I only got one
+other white shirt, and it's kind of ruined: I tried it before I did this
+one. Do you s'pose you could do anything?"
+
+"I'll see," she said.
+
+"My collar's got a frayed edge," he complained, as she examined his
+troublesome shirt. "It's a good deal like wearing a saw; but I expect
+it'll wilt down flat pretty soon, and not bother me long. I'm liable to
+wilt down flat, myself, I expect; I don't know as I remember any such
+hot night in the last ten or twelve years." He lifted his head and
+sniffed the flaccid air, which was laden with a heavy odour. "My, but
+that smell is pretty strong!" he said.
+
+"Stand still, please, papa," Alice begged him. "I can't see what's the
+matter if you move around. How absurd you are about your old glue smell,
+papa! There isn't a vestige of it, of course."
+
+"I didn't mean glue," he informed her. "I mean cabbage. Is that
+fashionable now, to have cabbage when there's company for dinner?"
+
+"That isn't cabbage, papa. It's Brussels sprouts."
+
+"Oh, is it? I don't mind it much, because it keeps that glue smell off
+me, but it's fairly strong. I expect you don't notice it so much because
+you been in the house with it all along, and got used to it while it was
+growing."
+
+"It is pretty dreadful," Alice said. "Are all the windows open
+downstairs?"
+
+"I'll go down and see, if you'll just fix that hole up for me."
+
+"I'm afraid I can't," she said. "Not unless you take your shirt off and
+bring it to me. I'll have to sew the hole smaller."
+
+"Oh, well, I'll go ask your mother to----"
+
+"No," said Alice. "She's got everything on her hands. Run and take it
+off. Hurry, papa; I've got to arrange the flowers on the table before he
+comes."
+
+He went away, and came back presently, half undressed, bringing the
+shirt. "There's ONE comfort," he remarked, pensively, as she worked.
+"I've got that collar off--for a while, anyway. I wish I could go to
+table like this; I could stand it a good deal better. Do you seem to be
+making any headway with the dang thing?"
+
+"I think probably I can----"
+
+Downstairs the door-bell rang, and Alice's arms jerked with the shock.
+
+"Golly!" her father said. "Did you stick your finger with that fool
+needle?"
+
+She gave him a blank stare. "He's come!"
+
+She was not mistaken, for, upon the little veranda, Russell stood facing
+the closed door at last. However, it remained closed for a considerable
+time after he rang. Inside the house the warning summons of the bell was
+immediately followed by another sound, audible to Alice and her father
+as a crash preceding a series of muffled falls. Then came a distant
+voice, bitter in complaint.
+
+"Oh, Lord!" said Adams. "What's that?"
+
+Alice went to the top of the front stairs, and her mother appeared in
+the hall below.
+
+"Mama!"
+
+Mrs. Adams looked up. "It's all right," she said, in a loud whisper.
+"Gertrude fell down the cellar stairs. Somebody left a bucket there,
+and----" She was interrupted by a gasp from Alice, and hastened to
+reassure her. "Don't worry, dearie. She may limp a little, but----"
+
+Adams leaned over the banisters. "Did she break anything?" he asked.
+
+"Hush!" his wife whispered. "No. She seems upset and angry about it,
+more than anything else; but she's rubbing herself, and she'll be all
+right in time to bring in the little sandwiches. Alice! Those flowers!"
+
+"I know, mama. But----"
+
+"Hurry!" Mrs. Adams warned her. "Both of you hurry! I MUST let him in!"
+
+She turned to the door, smiling cordially, even before she opened it.
+"Do come right in, Mr. Russell," she said, loudly, lifting her voice
+for additional warning to those above. "I'm SO glad to receive you
+informally, this way, in our own little home. There's a hat-rack here
+under the stairway," she continued, as Russell, murmuring some response,
+came into the hall. "I'm afraid you'll think it's almost TOO informal,
+my coming to the door, but unfortunately our housemaid's just had a
+little accident--oh, nothing to mention! I just thought we better
+not keep you waiting any longer. Will you step into our living-room,
+please?"
+
+She led the way between the two small columns, and seated herself in one
+of the plush rocking-chairs, selecting it because Alice had once pointed
+out that the chairs, themselves, were less noticeable when they had
+people sitting in them. "Do sit down, Mr. Russell; it's so very warm
+it's really quite a trial just to stand up!"
+
+"Thank you," he said, as he took a seat. "Yes. It is quite warm." And
+this seemed to be the extent of his responsiveness for the moment.
+He was grave, rather pale; and Mrs. Adams's impression of him, as
+she formed it then, was of "a distinguished-looking young man, really
+elegant in the best sense of the word, but timid and formal when he
+first meets you." She beamed upon him, and used with everything she said
+a continuous accompaniment of laughter, meaningless except that it was
+meant to convey cordiality. "Of course we DO have a great deal of warm
+weather," she informed him. "I'm glad it's so much cooler in the house
+than it is outdoors."
+
+"Yes," he said. "It is pleasanter indoors." And, stopping with this
+single untruth, he permitted himself the briefest glance about the room;
+then his eyes returned to his smiling hostess.
+
+"Most people make a great fuss about hot weather," she said. "The only
+person I know who doesn't mind the heat the way other people do is
+Alice. She always seems as cool as if we had a breeze blowing, no matter
+how hot it is. But then she's so amiable she never minds anything. It's
+just her character. She's always been that way since she was a little
+child; always the same to everybody, high and low. I think character's
+the most important thing in the world, after all, don't you, Mr.
+Russell?"
+
+"Yes," he said, solemnly; and touched his bedewed white forehead with a
+handkerchief.
+
+"Indeed it is," she agreed with herself, never failing to continue her
+murmur of laughter. "That's what I've always told Alice; but she never
+sees anything good in herself, and she just laughs at me when I praise
+her. She sees good in everybody ELSE in the world, no matter how
+unworthy they are, or how they behave toward HER; but she always
+underestimates herself. From the time she was a little child she was
+always that way. When some other little girl would behave selfishly or
+meanly toward her, do you think she'd come and tell me? Never a word
+to anybody! The little thing was too proud! She was the same way about
+school. The teachers had to tell me when she took a prize; she'd bring
+it home and keep it in her room without a word about it to her father
+and mother. Now, Walter was just the other way. Walter would----" But
+here Mrs. Adams checked herself, though she increased the volume of
+her laughter. "How silly of me!" she exclaimed. "I expect you know how
+mothers ARE, though, Mr. Russell. Give us a chance and we'll talk about
+our children forever! Alice would feel terribly if she knew how I've
+been going on about her to you."
+
+In this Mrs. Adams was right, though she did not herself suspect it,
+and upon an almost inaudible word or two from him she went on with her
+topic. "Of course my excuse is that few mothers have a daughter like
+Alice. I suppose we all think the same way about our children, but SOME
+of us must be right when we feel we've got the best. Don't you think
+so?"
+
+"Yes. Yes, indeed."
+
+"I'm sure _I_ am!" she laughed. "I'll let the others speak for
+themselves." She paused reflectively. "No; I think a mother knows
+when she's got a treasure in her family. If she HASN'T got one, she'll
+pretend she has, maybe; but if she has, she knows it. I certainly
+know _I_ have. She's always been what people call 'the joy of the
+household'--always cheerful, no matter what went wrong, and always ready
+to smooth things over with some bright, witty saying. You must be sure
+not to TELL we've had this little chat about her--she'd just be furious
+with me--but she IS such a dear child! You won't tell her, will you?"
+
+"No," he said, and again applied the handkerchief to his forehead for an
+instant. "No, I'll----" He paused, and finished lamely: "I'll--not tell
+her."
+
+Thus reassured, Mrs. Adams set before him some details of her daughter's
+popularity at sixteen, dwelling upon Alice's impartiality among her
+young suitors: "She never could BEAR to hurt their feelings, and always
+treated all of them just alike. About half a dozen of them were just
+BOUND to marry her! Naturally, her father and I considered any such idea
+ridiculous; she was too young, of course."
+
+Thus the mother went on with her biographical sketches, while the pale
+young man sat facing her under the hard overhead light of a white globe,
+set to the ceiling; and listened without interrupting. She was glad to
+have the chance to tell him a few things about Alice he might not
+have guessed for himself, and, indeed, she had planned to find such an
+opportunity, if she could; but this was getting to be altogether too
+much of one, she felt. As time passed, she was like an actor who must
+improvise to keep the audience from perceiving that his fellow-players
+have missed their cues; but her anxiety was not betrayed to the still
+listener; she had a valiant soul.
+
+Alice, meanwhile, had arranged her little roses on the table in as many
+ways, probably, as there were blossoms; and she was still at it when
+her father arrived in the dining-room by way of the back stairs and the
+kitchen.
+
+"It's pulled out again," he said. "But I guess there's no help for it
+now; it's too late, and anyway it lets some air into me when it bulges.
+I can sit so's it won't be noticed much, I expect. Isn't it time you
+quit bothering about the looks of the table? Your mother's been talking
+to him about half an hour now, and I had the idea he came on your
+account, not hers. Hadn't you better go and----"
+
+"Just a minute." Alice said, piteously. "Do YOU think it looks all
+right?"
+
+"The flowers? Fine! Hadn't you better leave 'em the way they are,
+though?"
+
+"Just a minute," she begged again. "Just ONE minute, papa!" And she
+exchanged a rose in front of Russell's plate for one that seemed to her
+a little larger.
+
+"You better come on," Adams said, moving to the door.
+
+"Just ONE more second, papa." She shook her head, lamenting. "Oh, I wish
+we'd rented some silver!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because so much of the plating has rubbed off a lot of it. JUST a
+second, papa." And as she spoke she hastily went round the table,
+gathering the knives and forks and spoons that she thought had their
+plating best preserved, and exchanging them for more damaged pieces at
+Russell's place. "There!" she sighed, finally.
+
+"Now I'll come." But at the door she paused to look back dubiously, over
+her shoulder.
+
+"What's the matter now?"
+
+"The roses. I believe after all I shouldn't have tried that vine effect;
+I ought to have kept them in water, in the vase. It's so hot, they
+already begin to look a little wilted, out on the dry tablecloth like
+that. I believe I'll----"
+
+"Why, look here, Alice!" he remonstrated, as she seemed disposed to turn
+back. "Everything'll burn up on the stove if you keep on----"
+
+"Oh, well," she said, "the vase was terribly ugly; I can't do any
+better. We'll go in." But with her hand on the door-knob she paused.
+"No, papa. We mustn't go in by this door. It might look as if----"
+
+"As if what?"
+
+"Never mind," she said. "Let's go the other way."
+
+"I don't see what difference it makes," he grumbled, but nevertheless
+followed her through the kitchen, and up the back stairs then through
+the upper hallway. At the top of the front stairs she paused for a
+moment, drawing a deep breath; and then, before her father's puzzled
+eyes, a transformation came upon her.
+
+Her shoulders, like her eyelids, had been drooping, but now she threw
+her head back: the shoulders straightened, and the lashes lifted over
+sparkling eyes; vivacity came to her whole body in a flash; and she
+tripped down the steps, with her pretty hands rising in time to the
+lilting little tune she had begun to hum.
+
+At the foot of the stairs, one of those pretty hands extended itself at
+full arm's length toward Russell, and continued to be extended until it
+reached his own hand as he came to meet her. "How terrible of me!" she
+exclaimed. "To be so late coming down! And papa, too--I think you know
+each other."
+
+Her father was advancing toward the young man, expecting to shake hands
+with him, but Alice stood between them, and Russell, a little flushed,
+bowed to him gravely over her shoulder, without looking at him;
+whereupon Adams, slightly disconcerted, put his hands in his pockets and
+turned to his wife.
+
+"I guess dinner's more'n ready," he said. "We better go sit down."
+
+But she shook her head at him fiercely, "Wait!" she whispered.
+
+"What for? For Walter?"
+
+"No; he can't be coming," she returned, hurriedly, and again warned him
+by a shake of her head. "Be quiet!"
+
+"Oh, well----" he muttered.
+
+"Sit down!"
+
+He was thoroughly mystified, but obeyed her gesture and went to the
+rocking-chair in the opposite corner, where he sat down, and, with an
+expression of meek inquiry, awaited events.
+
+Meanwhile, Alice prattled on: "It's really not a fault of mine,
+being tardy. The shameful truth is I was trying to hurry papa. He's
+incorrigible: he stays so late at his terrible old factory--terrible new
+factory, I should say. I hope you don't HATE us for making you dine with
+us in such fearful weather! I'm nearly dying of the heat, myself, so you
+have a fellow-sufferer, if that pleases you. Why is it we always bear
+things better if we think other people have to stand them, too?" And she
+added, with an excited laugh: "SILLY of us, don't you think?"
+
+Gertrude had just made her entrance from the dining-room, bearing a
+tray. She came slowly, with an air of resentment; and her skirt still
+needed adjusting, while her lower jaw moved at intervals, though not
+now upon any substance, but reminiscently, of habit. She halted before
+Adams, facing him.
+
+He looked plaintive. "What you want o' me?" he asked.
+
+For response, she extended the tray toward him with a gesture of
+indifference; but he still appeared to be puzzled. "What in the
+world----?" he began, then caught his wife's eye, and had presence of
+mind enough to take a damp and plastic sandwich from the tray. "Well,
+I'll TRY one," he said, but a moment later, as he fulfilled this
+promise, an expression of intense dislike came upon his features, and
+he would have returned the sandwich to Gertrude. However, as she
+had crossed the room to Mrs. Adams he checked the gesture, and sat
+helplessly, with the sandwich in his hand. He made another effort to
+get rid of it as the waitress passed him, on her way back to the
+dining-room, but she appeared not to observe him, and he continued to be
+troubled by it.
+
+Alice was a loyal daughter. "These are delicious, mama," she said; and
+turning to Russell, "You missed it; you should have taken one. Too
+bad we couldn't have offered you what ought to go with it, of course,
+but----"
+
+She was interrupted by the second entrance of Gertrude, who announced,
+"Dinner serve'," and retired from view.
+
+"Well, well!" Adams said, rising from his chair, with relief. "That's
+good! Let's go see if we can eat it." And as the little group moved
+toward the open door of the dining-room he disposed of his sandwich by
+dropping it in the empty fireplace.
+
+Alice, glancing back over her shoulder, was the only one who saw him,
+and she shuddered in spite of herself. Then, seeing that he looked at
+her entreatingly, as if he wanted to explain that he was doing the best
+he could, she smiled upon him sunnily, and began to chatter to Russell
+again.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+Alice kept her sprightly chatter going when they sat down, though the
+temperature of the room and the sight of hot soup might have discouraged
+a less determined gayety. Moreover, there were details as unpropitious
+as the heat: the expiring roses expressed not beauty but pathos, and
+what faint odour they exhaled was no rival to the lusty emanations of
+the Brussels sprouts; at the head of the table, Adams, sitting low in
+his chair, appeared to be unable to flatten the uprising wave of
+his starched bosom; and Gertrude's manner and expression were of a
+recognizable hostility during the long period of vain waiting for the
+cups of soup to be emptied. Only Mrs. Adams made any progress in this
+direction; the others merely feinting, now and then lifting their spoons
+as if they intended to do something with them.
+
+Alice's talk was little more than cheerful sound, but, to fill a
+desolate interval, served its purpose; and her mother supported her
+with ever-faithful cooings of applausive laughter. "What a funny thing
+weather is!" the girl ran on. "Yesterday it was cool--angels had charge
+of it--and to-day they had an engagement somewhere else, so the devil
+saw his chance and started to move the equator to the North Pole; but by
+the time he got half-way, he thought of something else he wanted to do,
+and went off; and left the equator here, right on top of US! I wish he'd
+come back and get it!"
+
+"Why, Alice dear!" her mother cried, fondly. "What an imagination! Not
+a very pious one, I'm afraid Mr. Russell might think, though!" Here she
+gave Gertrude a hidden signal to remove the soup; but, as there was
+no response, she had to make the signal more conspicuous. Gertrude was
+leaning against the wall, her chin moving like a slow pendulum, her
+streaked eyes fixed mutinously upon Russell. Mrs. Adams nodded several
+times, increasing the emphasis of her gesture, while Alice talked
+briskly; but the brooding waitress continued to brood. A faint snap of
+the fingers failed to disturb her; nor was a covert hissing whisper of
+avail, and Mrs. Adams was beginning to show signs of strain when her
+daughter relieved her.
+
+"Imagine our trying to eat anything so hot as soup on a night like
+this!" Alice laughed. "What COULD have been in the cook's mind not to
+give us something iced and jellied instead? Of course it's because she's
+equatorial, herself, originally, and only feels at home when Mr. Satan
+moves it north." She looked round at Gertrude, who stood behind her. "Do
+take this dreadful soup away!"
+
+Thus directly addressed, Gertrude yielded her attention, though
+unwillingly, and as if she decided only by a hair's weight not to
+revolt, instead. However, she finally set herself in slow motion; but
+overlooked the supposed head of the table, seeming to be unaware of
+the sweltering little man who sat there. As she disappeared toward
+the kitchen with but three of the cups upon her tray he turned to look
+plaintively after her, and ventured an attempt to recall her.
+
+"Here!" he said, in a low voice. "Here, you!"
+
+"What is it, Virgil?" his wife asked.
+
+"What's her name?"
+
+Mrs. Adams gave him a glance of sudden panic, and, seeing that the
+guest of the evening was not looking at her, but down at the white cloth
+before him, she frowned hard, and shook her head.
+
+Unfortunately Alice was not observing her mother, and asked, innocently:
+"What's whose name, papa?"
+
+"Why, this young darky woman," he explained. "She left mine."
+
+"Never mind," Alice laughed. "There's hope for you, papa. She hasn't
+gone forever!"
+
+"I don't know about that," he said, not content with this impulsive
+assurance. "She LOOKED like she is." And his remark, considered as a
+prediction, had begun to seem warranted before Gertrude's return with
+china preliminary to the next stage of the banquet.
+
+Alice proved herself equal to the long gap, and rattled on through it
+with a spirit richly justifying her mother's praise of her as "always
+ready to smooth things over"; for here was more than long delay to be
+smoothed over. She smoothed over her father and mother for Russell; and
+she smoothed over him for them, though he did not know it, and remained
+unaware of what he owed her. With all this, throughout her prattlings,
+the girl's bright eyes kept seeking his with an eager gayety, which but
+little veiled both interrogation and entreaty--as if she asked: "Is it
+too much for you? Can't you bear it? Won't you PLEASE bear it? I would
+for you. Won't you give me a sign that it's all right?"
+
+He looked at her but fleetingly, and seemed to suffer from the heat, in
+spite of every manly effort not to wipe his brow too often. His colour,
+after rising when he greeted Alice and her father, had departed, leaving
+him again moistly pallid; a condition arising from discomfort, no doubt,
+but, considered as a decoration, almost poetically becoming to him.
+Not less becoming was the faint, kindly smile, which showed his wish to
+express amusement and approval; and yet it was a smile rather strained
+and plaintive, as if he, like Adams, could only do the best he could.
+
+He pleased Adams, who thought him a fine young man, and decidedly
+the quietest that Alice had ever shown to her family. In her father's
+opinion this was no small merit; and it was to Russell's credit, too,
+that he showed embarrassment upon this first intimate presentation; here
+was an applicant with both reserve and modesty. "So far, he seems to be
+first rate a mighty fine young man," Adams thought; and, prompted by no
+wish to part from Alice but by reminiscences of apparent candidates less
+pleasing, he added, "At last!"
+
+Alice's liveliness never flagged. Her smoothing over of things was an
+almost continuous performance, and had to be. Yet, while she chattered
+through the hot and heavy courses, the questions she asked herself
+were as continuous as the performance, and as poignant as what her eyes
+seemed to be asking Russell. Why had she not prevailed over her mother's
+fear of being "skimpy?" Had she been, indeed, as her mother said she
+looked, "in a trance?" But above all: What was the matter with HIM? What
+had happened? For she told herself with painful humour that something
+even worse than this dinner must be "the matter with him."
+
+The small room, suffocated with the odour of boiled sprouts, grew hotter
+and hotter as more and more food appeared, slowly borne in, between
+deathly long waits, by the resentful, loud-breathing Gertrude. And while
+Alice still sought Russell's glance, and read the look upon his face
+a dozen different ways, fearing all of them; and while the straggling
+little flowers died upon the stained cloth, she felt her heart grow as
+heavy as the food, and wondered that it did not die like the roses.
+
+With the arrival of coffee, the host bestirred himself to make known a
+hospitable regret, "By George!" he said. "I meant to buy some cigars."
+He addressed himself apologetically to the guest. "I don't know what I
+was thinking about, to forget to bring some home with me. I don't use
+'em myself--unless somebody hands me one, you might say. I've always
+been a pipe-smoker, pure and simple, but I ought to remembered for kind
+of an occasion like this."
+
+"Not at all," Russell said. "I'm not smoking at all lately; but when I
+do, I'm like you, and smoke a pipe."
+
+Alice started, remembering what she had told him when he overtook her on
+her way from the tobacconist's; but, after a moment, looking at him,
+she decided that he must have forgotten it. If he had remembered, she
+thought, he could not have helped glancing at her. On the contrary, he
+seemed more at ease, just then, than he had since they sat down, for he
+was favouring her father with a thoughtful attention as Adams responded
+to the introduction of a man's topic into the conversation at last.
+"Well, Mr. Russell, I guess you're right, at that. I don't say but what
+cigars may be all right for a man that can afford 'em, if he likes 'em
+better than a pipe, but you take a good old pipe now----"
+
+He continued, and was getting well into the eulogium customarily
+provoked by this theme, when there came an interruption: the door-bell
+rang, and he paused inquiringly, rather surprised.
+
+Mrs. Adams spoke to Gertrude in an undertone:
+
+"Just say, 'Not at home.'"
+
+"What?"
+
+"If it's callers, just say we're not at home."
+
+Gertrude spoke out freely: "You mean you astin' me to 'tend you' front
+do' fer you?"
+
+She seemed both incredulous and affronted, but Mrs. Adams persisted,
+though somewhat apprehensively. "Yes. Hurry--uh--please. Just say we're
+not at home if you please."
+
+Again Gertrude obviously hesitated between compliance and revolt, and
+again the meeker course fortunately prevailed with her. She gave Mrs.
+Adams a stare, grimly derisive, then departed. When she came back she
+said:
+
+"He say he wait."
+
+"But I told you to tell anybody we were not at home," Mrs Adams
+returned. "Who is it?"
+
+"Say he name Mr. Law."
+
+"We don't know any Mr. Law."
+
+"Yes'm; he know you. Say he anxious to speak Mr. Adams. Say he wait."
+
+"Tell him Mr. Adams is engaged."
+
+"Hold on a minute," Adams intervened. "Law? No. I don't know any Mr.
+Law. You sure you got the name right?"
+
+"Say he name Law," Gertrude replied, looking at the ceiling to express
+her fatigue. "Law. 'S all he tell me; 's all I know."
+
+Adams frowned. "Law," he said. "Wasn't it maybe 'Lohr?'"
+
+"Law," Gertrude repeated. "'S all he tell me; 's all I know."
+
+"What's he look like?"
+
+"He ain't much," she said. "'Bout you' age; got brustly white moustache,
+nice eye-glasses."
+
+"It's Charley Lohr!" Adams exclaimed. "I'll go see what he wants."
+
+"But, Virgil," his wife remonstrated, "do finish your coffee; he might
+stay all evening. Maybe he's come to call."
+
+Adams laughed. "He isn't much of a caller, I expect. Don't worry: I'll
+take him up to my room." And turning toward Russell, "Ah--if you'll just
+excuse me," he said; and went out to his visitor.
+
+When he had gone, Mrs. Adams finished her coffee, and, having glanced
+intelligently from her guest to her daughter, she rose. "I think perhaps
+I ought to go and shake hands with Mr. Lohr, myself," she said, adding
+in explanation to Russell, as she reached the door, "He's an old friend
+of my husband's and it's a very long time since he's been here."
+
+Alice nodded and smiled to her brightly, but upon the closing of the
+door, the smile vanished; all her liveliness disappeared; and with this
+change of expression her complexion itself appeared to change, so that
+her rouge became obvious, for she was pale beneath it. However, Russell
+did not see the alteration, for he did not look at her; and it was but
+a momentary lapse the vacation of a tired girl, who for ten seconds lets
+herself look as she feels. Then she shot her vivacity back into place as
+by some powerful spring.
+
+"Penny for your thoughts!" she cried, and tossed one of the wilted
+roses at him, across the table. "I'll bid more than a penny; I'll bid
+tuppence--no, a poor little dead rose a rose for your thoughts, Mr.
+Arthur Russell! What are they?"
+
+He shook his head. "I'm afraid I haven't any."
+
+"No, of course not," she said. "Who could have thoughts in weather like
+this? Will you EVER forgive us?"
+
+"What for?"
+
+"Making you eat such a heavy dinner--I mean LOOK at such a heavy dinner,
+because you certainly didn't do more than look at it--on such a night!
+But the crime draws to a close, and you can begin to cheer up!" She
+laughed gaily, and, rising, moved to the door. "Let's go in the other
+room; your fearful duty is almost done, and you can run home as soon as
+you want to. That's what you're dying to do."
+
+"Not at all," he said in a voice so feeble that she laughed aloud.
+
+"Good gracious!" she cried. "I hadn't realized it was THAT bad!"
+
+For this, though he contrived to laugh, he seemed to have no verbal
+retort whatever; but followed her into the "living-room," where she
+stopped and turned, facing him.
+
+"Has it really been so frightful?" she asked.
+
+"Why, of course not. Not at all."
+
+"Of course yes, though, you mean!"
+
+"Not at all. It's been most kind of your mother and father and you."
+
+"Do you know," she said, "you've never once looked at me for more than a
+second at a time the whole evening? And it seemed to me I looked rather
+nice to-night, too!"
+
+"You always do," he murmured.
+
+"I don't see how you know," she returned; and then stepping closer
+to him, spoke with gentle solicitude: "Tell me: you're really feeling
+wretchedly, aren't you? I know you've got a fearful headache, or
+something. Tell me!"
+
+"Not at all."
+
+"You are ill--I'm sure of it."
+
+"Not at all."
+
+"On your word?"
+
+"I'm really quite all right."
+
+"But if you are----" she began; and then, looking at him with a
+desperate sweetness, as if this were her last resource to rouse him,
+"What's the matter, little boy?" she said with lisping tenderness. "Tell
+auntie!"
+
+It was a mistake, for he seemed to flinch, and to lean backward,
+however, slightly. She turned away instantly, with a flippant lift and
+drop of both hands. "Oh, my dear!" she laughed. "I won't eat you!"
+
+And as the discomfited young man watched her, seeming able to lift
+his eyes, now that her back was turned, she went to the front door and
+pushed open the screen. "Let's go out on the porch," she said. "Where we
+belong!"
+
+Then, when he had followed her out, and they were seated, "Isn't this
+better?" she asked. "Don't you feel more like yourself out here?"
+
+He began a murmur: "Not at----"
+
+But she cut him off sharply: "Please don't say 'Not at all' again!"
+
+"I'm sorry."
+
+"You do seem sorry about something," she said. "What is it? Isn't it
+time you were telling me what's the matter?"
+
+"Nothing. Indeed nothing's the matter. Of course one IS rather affected
+by such weather as this. It may make one a little quieter than usual, of
+course."
+
+She sighed, and let the tired muscles of her face rest. Under the hard
+lights, indoors, they had served her until they ached, and it was a
+luxury to feel that in the darkness no grimacings need call upon them.
+
+"Of course, if you won't tell me----" she said.
+
+"I can only assure you there's nothing to tell."
+
+"I know what an ugly little house it is," she said. "Maybe it was the
+furniture--or mama's vases that upset you. Or was it mama herself--or
+papa?"
+
+"Nothing 'upset' me."
+
+At that she uttered a monosyllable of doubting laughter. "I wonder why
+you say that."
+
+"Because it's so."
+
+"No. It's because you're too kind, or too conscientious, or too
+embarrassed--anyhow too something--to tell me." She leaned forward,
+elbows on knees and chin in hands, in the reflective attitude she knew
+how to make graceful. "I have a feeling that you're not going to tell
+me," she said, slowly. "Yes--even that you're never going to tell me. I
+wonder--I wonder----"
+
+"Yes? What do you wonder?"
+
+"I was just thinking--I wonder if they haven't done it, after all."
+
+"I don't understand."
+
+"I wonder," she went on, still slowly, and in a voice of reflection, "I
+wonder who HAS been talking about me to you, after all? Isn't that it?"
+
+"Not at----" he began, but checked himself and substituted another form
+of denial. "Nothing is 'it.'"
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Why, yes."
+
+"How curious!" she said.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because all evening you've been so utterly different."
+
+"But in this weather----"
+
+"No. That wouldn't make you afraid to look at me all evening!"
+
+"But I did look at you. Often."
+
+"No. Not really a LOOK."
+
+"But I'm looking at you now."
+
+"Yes--in the dark!" she said. "No--the weather might make you even
+quieter than usual, but it wouldn't strike you so nearly dumb. No--and
+it wouldn't make you seem to be under such a strain--as if you thought
+only of escape!"
+
+"But I haven't----"
+
+"You shouldn't," she interrupted, gently. "There's nothing you have to
+escape from, you know. You aren't committed to--to this friendship."
+
+"I'm sorry you think----" he began, but did not complete the fragment.
+
+She took it up. "You're sorry I think you're so different, you mean to
+say, don't you? Never mind: that's what you did mean to say, but you
+couldn't finish it because you're not good at deceiving."
+
+"Oh, no," he protested, feebly. "I'm not deceiving. I'm----"
+
+"Never mind," she said again. "You're sorry I think you're so
+different--and all in one day--since last night. Yes, your voice SOUNDS
+sorry, too. It sounds sorrier than it would just because of my thinking
+something you could change my mind about in a minute so it means you're
+sorry you ARE different."
+
+"No--I----"
+
+But disregarding the faint denial, "Never mind," she said. "Do you
+remember one night when you told me that nothing anybody else could do
+would ever keep you from coming here? That if you--if you left me it
+would be because I drove you away myself?"
+
+"Yes," he said, huskily. "It was true."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Indeed I am," he answered in a low voice, but with conviction.
+
+"Then----" She paused. "Well--but I haven't driven you away."
+
+"No."
+
+"And yet you've gone," she said, quietly.
+
+"Do I seem so stupid as all that?"
+
+"You know what I mean." She leaned back in her chair again, and her
+hands, inactive for once, lay motionless in her lap. When she spoke it
+was in a rueful whisper:
+
+"I wonder if I HAVE driven you away?"
+
+"You've done nothing--nothing at all," he said.
+
+"I wonder----" she said once more, but she stopped. In her mind she was
+going back over their time together since the first meeting--fragments
+of talk, moments of silence, little things of no importance, little
+things that might be important; moonshine, sunshine, starlight; and her
+thoughts zigzagged among the jumbling memories; but, as if she made for
+herself a picture of all these fragments, throwing them upon the canvas
+haphazard, she saw them all just touched with the one tainting quality
+that gave them coherence, the faint, false haze she had put over this
+friendship by her own pretendings. And, if this terrible dinner, or
+anything, or everything, had shown that saffron tint in its true colour
+to the man at her side, last night almost a lover, then she had indeed
+of herself driven him away, and might well feel that she was lost.
+
+"Do you know?" she said, suddenly, in a clear, loud voice. "I have the
+strangest feeling. I feel as if I were going to be with you only about
+five minutes more in all the rest of my life!"
+
+"Why, no," he said. "Of course I'm coming to see you--often. I----"
+
+"No," she interrupted. "I've never had a feeling like this before.
+It's--it's just SO; that's all! You're GOING--why, you're never coming
+here again!" She stood up, abruptly, beginning to tremble all over.
+"Why, it's FINISHED, isn't it?" she said, and her trembling was manifest
+now in her voice. "Why, it's all OVER, isn't it? Why, yes!"
+
+He had risen as she did. "I'm afraid you're awfully tired and nervous,"
+he said. "I really ought to be going."
+
+"Yes, of COURSE you ought," she cried, despairingly. "There's nothing
+else for you to do. When anything's spoiled, people CAN'T do anything
+but run away from it. So good-bye!"
+
+"At least," he returned, huskily, "we'll only--only say good-night."
+
+Then, as moving to go, he stumbled upon the veranda steps, "Your HAT!"
+she cried. "I'd like to keep it for a souvenir, but I'm afraid you need
+it!"
+
+She ran into the hall and brought his straw hat from the chair where he
+had left it. "You poor thing!" she said, with quavering laughter. "Don't
+you know you can't go without your hat?"
+
+Then, as they faced each other for the short moment which both of them
+knew would be the last of all their veranda moments, Alice's broken
+laughter grew louder. "What a thing to say!" she cried. "What a romantic
+parting--talking about HATS!"
+
+Her laughter continued as he turned away, but other sounds came from
+within the house, clearly audible with the opening of a door upstairs--a
+long and wailing cry of lamentation in the voice of Mrs. Adams. Russell
+paused at the steps, uncertain, but Alice waved to him to go on.
+
+"Oh, don't bother," she said. "We have lots of that in this funny little
+old house! Good-bye!"
+
+And as he went down the steps, she ran back into the house and closed
+the door heavily behind her.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+Her mother's wailing could still be heard from overhead, though more
+faintly; and old Charley Lohr was coming down the stairs alone.
+
+He looked at Alice compassionately. "I was just comin' to suggest maybe
+you'd excuse yourself from your company," he said. "Your mother was
+bound not to disturb you, and tried her best to keep you from hearin'
+how she's takin' on, but I thought probably you better see to her."
+
+"Yes, I'll come. What's the matter?"
+
+"Well," he said, "_I_ only stepped over to offer my sympathy and
+services, as it were. _I_ thought of course you folks knew all about it.
+Fact is, it was in the evening paper--just a little bit of an item on
+the back page, of course."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+He coughed. "Well, it ain't anything so terrible," he said. "Fact is,
+your brother Walter's got in a little trouble--well, I suppose you might
+call it quite a good deal of trouble. Fact is, he's quite considerable
+short in his accounts down at Lamb and Company."
+
+Alice ran up the stairs and into her father's room, where Mrs. Adams
+threw herself into her daughter's arms. "Is he gone?" she sobbed. "He
+didn't hear me, did he? I tried so hard----"
+
+Alice patted the heaving shoulders her arms enclosed. "No, no," she
+said. "He didn't hear you--it wouldn't have mattered--he doesn't matter
+anyway."
+
+"Oh, POOR Walter!" The mother cried. "Oh, the POOR boy! Poor, poor
+Walter! Poor, poor, poor, POOR----"
+
+"Hush, dear, hush!" Alice tried to soothe her, but the lament could
+not be abated, and from the other side of the room a repetition in
+a different spirit was as continuous. Adams paced furiously there,
+pounding his fist into his left palm as he strode. "The dang boy!" he
+said. "Dang little fool! Dang idiot! Dang fool! Whyn't he TELL me, the
+dang little fool?"
+
+"He DID!" Mrs. Adams sobbed. "He DID tell you, and you wouldn't GIVE it
+to him."
+
+"He DID, did he?" Adams shouted at her. "What he begged me for was money
+to run away with! He never dreamed of putting back what he took. What
+the dangnation you talking about--accusing me!"
+
+"He NEEDED it," she said. "He needed it to run away with! How could he
+expect to LIVE, after he got away, if he didn't have a little money? Oh,
+poor, poor, POOR Walter! Poor, poor, poor----"
+
+She went back to this repetition; and Adams went back to his own, then
+paused, seeing his old friend standing in the hallway outside the open
+door.
+
+"Ah--I'll just be goin', I guess, Virgil," Lohr said. "I don't see as
+there's any use my tryin' to say any more. I'll do anything you want me
+to, you understand."
+
+"Wait a minute," Adams said, and, groaning, came and went down the
+stairs with him. "You say you didn't see the old man at all?"
+
+"No, I don't know a thing about what he's going to do," Lohr said, as
+they reached the lower floor. "Not a thing. But look here, Virgil,
+I don't see as this calls for you and your wife to take on so hard
+about--anyhow not as hard as the way you've started."
+
+"No," Adams gulped. "It always seems that way to the other party that's
+only looking on!"
+
+"Oh, well, I know that, of course," old Charley returned, soothingly.
+"But look here, Virgil: they may not catch the boy; they didn't even
+seem to be sure what train he made, and if they do get him, why, the ole
+man might decide not to prosecute if----"
+
+"HIM?" Adams cried, interrupting. "Him not prosecute? Why, that's what
+he's been waiting for, all along! He thinks my boy and me both cheated
+him! Why, he was just letting Walter walk into a trap! Didn't you say
+they'd been suspecting him for some time back? Didn't you say they'd
+been watching him and were just about fixing to arrest him?"
+
+"Yes, I know," said Lohr; "but you can't tell, especially if you raise
+the money and pay it back."
+
+"Every cent!" Adams vociferated. "Every last penny! I can raise it--I
+GOT to raise it! I'm going to put a loan on my factory to-morrow. Oh,
+I'll get it for him, you tell him! Every last penny!"
+
+"Well, ole feller, you just try and get quieted down some now." Charley
+held out his hand in parting. "You and your wife just quiet down some.
+You AIN'T the healthiest man in the world, you know, and you already
+been under quite some strain before this happened. You want to take
+care of yourself for the sake of your wife and that sweet little girl
+upstairs, you know. Now, good-night," he finished, stepping out upon the
+veranda. "You send for me if there's anything I can do."
+
+"Do?" Adams echoed. "There ain't anything ANYBODY can do!" And then, as
+his old friend went down the path to the sidewalk, he called after him,
+"You tell him I'll pay him every last cent! Every last, dang, dirty
+PENNY!"
+
+He slammed the door and went rapidly up the stairs, talking loudly to
+himself. "Every dang, last, dirty penny! Thinks EVERYBODY in this family
+wants to steal from him, does he? Thinks we're ALL yellow, does he?
+I'll show him!" And he came into his own room vociferating, "Every last,
+dang, dirty penny!"
+
+Mrs. Adams had collapsed, and Alice had put her upon his bed, where she
+lay tossing convulsively and sobbing, "Oh, POOR Walter!" over and
+over, but after a time she varied the sorry tune. "Oh, poor Alice!" she
+moaned, clinging to her daughter's hand. "Oh, poor, POOR Alice to have
+THIS come on the night of your dinner--just when everything seemed to be
+going so well--at last--oh, poor, poor, POOR----"
+
+"Hush!" Alice said, sharply. "Don't say 'poor Alice!' I'm all right."
+
+"You MUST be!" her mother cried, clutching her. "You've just GOT to be!
+ONE of us has got to be all right--surely God wouldn't mind just ONE of
+us being all right--that wouldn't hurt Him----"
+
+"Hush, hush, mother! Hush!"
+
+But Mrs. Adams only clutched her the more tightly. "He seemed SUCH a
+nice young man, dearie! He may not see this in the paper--Mr. Lohr said
+it was just a little bit of an item--he MAY not see it, dearie----"
+
+Then her anguish went back to Walter again; and to his needs as a
+fugitive--she had meant to repair his underwear, but had postponed doing
+so, and her neglect now appeared to be a detail as lamentable as the
+calamity itself. She could neither be stilled upon it, nor herself
+exhaust its urgings to self-reproach, though she finally took up another
+theme temporarily. Upon an unusually violent outbreak of her husband's,
+in denunciation of the runaway, she cried out faintly that he was cruel;
+and further wearied her broken voice with details of Walter's beauty as
+a baby, and of his bedtime pieties throughout his infancy.
+
+So the hot night wore on. Three had struck before Mrs. Adams was got to
+bed; and Alice, returning to her own room, could hear her father's bare
+feet thudding back and forth after that. "Poor papa!" she whispered in
+helpless imitation of her mother. "Poor papa! Poor mama! Poor Walter!
+Poor all of us!"
+
+She fell asleep, after a time, while from across the hall the bare
+feet still thudded over their changeless route; and she woke at seven,
+hearing Adams pass her door, shod. In her wrapper she ran out into the
+hallway and found him descending the stairs.
+
+"Papa!"
+
+"Hush," he said, and looked up at her with reddened eyes. "Don't wake
+your mother."
+
+"I won't," she whispered. "How about you? You haven't slept any at all!"
+
+"Yes, I did. I got some sleep. I'm going over to the works now. I got
+to throw some figures together to show the bank. Don't worry: I'll get
+things fixed up. You go back to bed. Good-bye."
+
+"Wait!" she bade him sharply.
+
+"What for?"
+
+"You've got to have some breakfast."
+
+"Don't want 'ny."
+
+"You wait!" she said, imperiously, and disappeared to return almost at
+once. "I can cook in my bedroom slippers," she explained, "but I don't
+believe I could in my bare feet!"
+
+Descending softly, she made him wait in the dining-room until she
+brought him toast and eggs and coffee. "Eat!" she said. "And I'm going
+to telephone for a taxicab to take you, if you think you've really got
+to go."
+
+"No, I'm going to walk--I WANT to walk."
+
+She shook her head anxiously. "You don't look able. You've walked all
+night."
+
+"No, I didn't," he returned. "I tell you I got some sleep. I got all I
+wanted anyhow."
+
+"But, papa----"
+
+"Here!" he interrupted, looking up at her suddenly and setting down his
+cup of coffee. "Look here! What about this Mr. Russell? I forgot all
+about him. What about him?"
+
+Her lip trembled a little, but she controlled it before she spoke.
+"Well, what about him, papa?" she asked, calmly enough.
+
+"Well, we could hardly----" Adams paused, frowning heavily. "We could
+hardly expect he wouldn't hear something about all this."
+
+"Yes; of course he'll hear it, papa."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Well, what?" she asked, gently.
+
+"You don't think he'd be the--the cheap kind it'd make a difference
+with, of course."
+
+"Oh, no; he isn't cheap. It won't make any difference with him."
+
+Adams suffered a profound sigh to escape him. "Well--I'm glad of that,
+anyway."
+
+"The difference," she explained--"the difference was made without his
+hearing anything about Walter. He doesn't know about THAT yet."
+
+"Well, what does he know about?"
+
+"Only," she said, "about me."
+
+"What you mean by that, Alice?" he asked, helplessly.
+
+"Never mind," she said. "It's nothing beside the real trouble we're
+in--I'll tell you some time. You eat your eggs and toast; you can't keep
+going on just coffee."
+
+"I can't eat any eggs and toast," he objected, rising. "I can't."
+
+"Then wait till I can bring you something else."
+
+"No," he said, irritably. "I won't do it! I don't want any dang food!
+And look here"--he spoke sharply to stop her, as she went toward the
+telephone--"I don't want any dang taxi, either! You look after your
+mother when she wakes up. I got to be at WORK!"
+
+And though she followed him to the front door, entreating, he could not
+be stayed or hindered. He went through the quiet morning streets at
+a rickety, rapid gait, swinging his old straw hat in his hands, and
+whispering angrily to himself as he went. His grizzled hair, not trimmed
+for a month, blew back from his damp forehead in the warm breeze; his
+reddened eyes stared hard at nothing from under blinking lids; and one
+side of his face twitched startlingly from time to time;--children might
+have run from him, or mocked him.
+
+When he had come into that fallen quarter his industry had partly
+revived and wholly made odorous, a negro woman, leaning upon her
+whitewashed gate, gazed after him and chuckled for the benefit of a
+gossiping friend in the next tiny yard. "Oh, good Satan! Wha'ssa matter
+that ole glue man?"
+
+"Who? Him?" the neighbour inquired. "What he do now?"
+
+"Talkin' to his ole se'f!" the first explained, joyously. "Look like
+gone distracted--ole glue man!"
+
+Adams's legs had grown more uncertain with his hard walk, and he
+stumbled heavily as he crossed the baked mud of his broad lot, but cared
+little for that, was almost unaware of it, in fact. Thus his eyes saw
+as little as his body felt, and so he failed to observe something that
+would have given him additional light upon an old phrase that already
+meant quite enough for him.
+
+There are in the wide world people who have never learned its meaning;
+but most are either young or beautifully unobservant who remain
+wholly unaware of the inner poignancies the words convey: "a rain of
+misfortunes." It is a boiling rain, seemingly whimsical in its choice of
+spots whereon to fall; and, so far as mortal eye can tell, neither the
+just nor the unjust may hope to avoid it, or need worry themselves by
+expecting it. It had selected the Adams family for its scaldings; no
+question.
+
+The glue-works foreman, standing in the doorway of the brick shed,
+observed his employer's eccentric approach, and doubtfully stroked a
+whiskered chin.
+
+"Well, they ain't no putticular use gettin' so upset over it," he said,
+as Adams came up. "When a thing happens, why, it happens, and that's all
+there is to it. When a thing's so, why, it's so. All you can do about it
+is think if there's anything you CAN do; and that's what you better be
+doin' with this case."
+
+Adams halted, and seemed to gape at him. "What--case?" he said, with
+difficulty. "Was it in the morning papers, too?"
+
+"No, it ain't in no morning papers. My land! It don't need to be in no
+papers; look at the SIZE of it!"
+
+"The size of what?"
+
+"Why, great God!" the foreman exclaimed. "He ain't even seen it. Look!
+Look yonder!"
+
+Adams stared vaguely at the man's outstretched hand and pointing
+forefinger, then turned and saw a great sign upon the facade of the big
+factory building across the street. The letters were large enough to be
+read two blocks away.
+
+ "AFTER THE FIFTEENTH OF NEXT MONTH
+ THIS BUILDING WILL BE OCCUPIED BY
+ THE J. A. LAMB LIQUID GLUE CO. INC."
+
+
+A gray touring-car had just come to rest before the principal entrance
+of the building, and J. A. Lamb himself descended from it. He glanced
+over toward the humble rival of his projected great industry, saw his
+old clerk, and immediately walked across the street and the lot to speak
+to him.
+
+"Well, Adams," he said, in his husky, cheerful voice, "how's your
+glue-works?"
+
+Adams uttered an inarticulate sound, and lifted the hand that held his
+hat as if to make a protective gesture, but failed to carry it out; and
+his arm sank limp at his side. The foreman, however, seemed to feel that
+something ought to be said.
+
+"Our glue-works, hell!" he remarked. "I guess we won't HAVE no
+glue-works over here not very long, if we got to compete with the sized
+thing you got over there!"
+
+Lamb chuckled. "I kind of had some such notion," he said. "You see,
+Virgil, I couldn't exactly let you walk off with it like swallering a
+pat o' butter, now, could I? It didn't look exactly reasonable to expect
+me to let go like that, now, did it?"
+
+Adams found a half-choked voice somewhere in his throat. "Do you--would
+you step into my office a minute, Mr. Lamb?"
+
+"Why, certainly I'm willing to have a little talk with you," the old
+gentleman said, as he followed his former employee indoors, and he
+added, "I feel a lot more like it than I did before I got THAT up, over
+yonder, Virgil!"
+
+Adams threw open the door of the rough room he called his office, having
+as justification for this title little more than the fact that he had a
+telephone there and a deal table that served as a desk. "Just step into
+the office, please," he said.
+
+Lamb glanced at the desk, at the kitchen chair before it, at the
+telephone, and at the partition walls built of old boards, some covered
+with ancient paint and some merely weatherbeaten, the salvage of a
+house-wrecker; and he smiled broadly. "So these are your offices, are
+they?" he asked. "You expect to do quite a business here, I guess, don't
+you, Virgil?"
+
+Adams turned upon him a stricken and tortured face. "Have you seen
+Charley Lohr since last night, Mr. Lamb?"
+
+"No; I haven't seen Charley."
+
+"Well, I told him to tell you," Adams began;--"I told him I'd pay
+you----"
+
+"Pay me what you expect to make out o' glue, you mean, Virgil?"
+
+"No," Adams said, swallowing. "I mean what my boy owes you. That's what
+I told Charley to tell you. I told him to tell you I'd pay you every
+last----"
+
+"Well, well!" the old gentleman interrupted, testily. "I don't know
+anything about that."
+
+"I'm expecting to pay you," Adams went on, swallowing again, painfully.
+"I was expecting to do it out of a loan I thought I could get on my
+glue-works."
+
+The old gentleman lifted his frosted eyebrows. "Oh, out o' the
+GLUE-works? You expected to raise money on the glue-works, did you?"
+
+At that, Adams's agitation increased prodigiously. "How'd you THINK I
+expected to pay you?" he said. "Did you think I expected to get money on
+my own old bones?" He slapped himself harshly upon the chest and legs.
+"Do you think a bank'll lend money on a man's ribs and his broken-down
+old knee-bones? They won't do it! You got to have some BUSINESS
+prospects to show 'em, if you haven't got any property nor securities;
+and what business prospects have I got now, with that sign of yours up
+over yonder? Why, you don't need to make an OUNCE o' glue; your sign's
+fixed ME without your doing another lick! THAT'S all you had to do; just
+put your sign up! You needn't to----"
+
+"Just let me tell you something, Virgil Adams," the old man interrupted,
+harshly. "I got just one right important thing to tell you before we
+talk any further business; and that's this: there's some few men in this
+town made their money in off-colour ways, but there aren't many; and
+those there are have had to be a darn sight slicker than you know how to
+be, or ever WILL know how to be! Yes, sir, and they none of them had the
+little gumption to try to make it out of a man that had the spirit not
+to let 'em, and the STRENGTH not to let 'em! I know what you thought.
+'Here,' you said to yourself, 'here's this ole fool J. A. Lamb; he's
+kind of worn out and in his second childhood like; I can put it over on
+him, without his ever----'"
+
+"I did not!" Adams shouted. "A great deal YOU know about my feelings
+and all what I said to myself! There's one thing I want to tell YOU,
+and that's what I'm saying to myself NOW, and what my feelings are this
+MINUTE!"
+
+He struck the table a great blow with his thin fist, and shook the
+damaged knuckles in the air. "I just want to tell you, whatever I did
+feel, I don't feel MEAN any more; not to-day, I don't. There's a meaner
+man in this world than _I_ am, Mr. Lamb!"
+
+"Oh, so you feel better about yourself to-day, do you, Virgil?"
+
+"You bet I do! You worked till you got me where you want me; and
+I wouldn't do that to another man, no matter what he did to me! I
+wouldn't----"
+
+"What you talkin' about! How've I 'got you where I want you?'"
+
+"Ain't it plain enough?" Adams cried. "You even got me where I can't
+raise the money to pay back what my boy owes you! Do you suppose
+anybody's fool enough to let me have a cent on this business after one
+look at what you got over there across the road?"
+
+"No, I don't."
+
+"No, you don't," Adams echoed, hoarsely. "What's more, you knew my house
+was mortgaged, and my----"
+
+"I did not," Lamb interrupted, angrily. "What do _I_ care about your
+house?"
+
+"What's the use your talking like that?" Adams cried. "You got me where
+I can't even raise the money to pay what my boy owes the company, so't
+I can't show any reason to stop the prosecution and keep him out the
+penitentiary. That's where you worked till you got ME!"
+
+"What!" Lamb shouted. "You accuse me of----"
+
+"'Accuse you?' What am I telling you? Do you think I got no EYES?" And
+Adams hammered the table again. "Why, you knew the boy was weak----"
+
+"I did not!"
+
+"Listen: you kept him there after you got mad at my leaving the way
+I did. You kept him there after you suspected him; and you had him
+watched; you let him go on; just waited to catch him and ruin him!"
+
+"You're crazy!" the old man bellowed. "I didn't know there was anything
+against the boy till last night. You're CRAZY, I say!"
+
+Adams looked it. With his hair disordered over his haggard forehead and
+bloodshot eyes; with his bruised hands pounding the table and flying in
+a hundred wild and absurd gestures, while his feet shuffled constantly
+to preserve his balance upon staggering legs, he was the picture of a
+man with a mind gone to rags.
+
+"Maybe I AM crazy!" he cried, his voice breaking and quavering. "Maybe
+I am, but I wouldn't stand there and taunt a man with it if I'd done to
+him what you've done to me! Just look at me: I worked all my life for
+you, and what I did when I quit never harmed you--it didn't make two
+cents' worth o' difference in your life and it looked like it'd mean all
+the difference in the world to my family--and now look what you've DONE
+to me for it! I tell you, Mr. Lamb, there never was a man looked up to
+another man the way I looked up to you the whole o' my life, but I don't
+look up to you any more! You think you got a fine day of it now, riding
+up in your automobile to look at that sign--and then over here at my
+poor little works that you've ruined. But listen to me just this
+one last time!" The cracking voice broke into falsetto, and the
+gesticulating hands fluttered uncontrollably. "Just you listen!" he
+panted. "You think I did you a bad turn, and now you got me ruined for
+it, and you got my works ruined, and my family ruined; and if anybody'd
+'a' told me this time last year I'd ever say such a thing to you I'd
+called him a dang liar, but I DO say it: I say you've acted toward me
+like--like a--a doggone mean--man!"
+
+His voice, exhausted, like his body, was just able to do him this final
+service; then he sank, crumpled, into the chair by the table, his chin
+down hard upon his chest.
+
+"I tell you, you're crazy!" Lamb said again. "I never in the world----"
+But he checked himself, staring in sudden perplexity at his accuser.
+"Look here!" he said. "What's the matter of you? Have you got another of
+those----?" He put his hand upon Adams's shoulder, which jerked feebly
+under the touch.
+
+The old man went to the door and called to the foreman.
+
+"Here!" he said. "Run and tell my chauffeur to bring my car over here.
+Tell him to drive right up over the sidewalk and across the lot. Tell
+him to hurry!"
+
+So, it happened, the great J. A. Lamb a second time brought his former
+clerk home, stricken and almost inanimate.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+About five o'clock that afternoon, the old gentleman came back to
+Adams's house; and when Alice opened the door, he nodded, walked
+into the "living-room" without speaking; then stood frowning as if he
+hesitated to decide some perplexing question.
+
+"Well, how is he now?" he asked, finally.
+
+"The doctor was here again a little while ago; he thinks papa's coming
+through it. He's pretty sure he will."
+
+"Something like the way it was last spring?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Not a bit of sense to it!" Lamb said, gruffly. "When he was getting
+well the other time the doctor told me it wasn't a regular stroke, so to
+speak--this 'cerebral effusion' thing. Said there wasn't any particular
+reason for your father to expect he'd ever have another attack, if he'd
+take a little care of himself. Said he could consider himself well as
+anybody else long as he did that."
+
+"Yes. But he didn't do it!"
+
+Lamb nodded, sighed aloud, and crossed the room to a chair. "I
+guess not," he said, as he sat down. "Bustin' his health up over his
+glue-works, I expect."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I guess so; I guess so." Then he looked up at her with a glimmer of
+anxiety in his eyes. "Has he came to yet?"
+
+"Yes. He's talked a little. His mind's clear; he spoke to mama and me
+and to Miss Perry." Alice laughed sadly. "We were lucky enough to get
+her back, but papa didn't seem to think it was lucky. When he recognized
+her he said, 'Oh, my goodness, 'tisn't YOU, is it!'"
+
+"Well, that's a good sign, if he's getting a little cross. Did he--did
+he happen to say anything--for instance, about me?"
+
+This question, awkwardly delivered, had the effect of removing the
+girl's pallor; rosy tints came quickly upon her cheeks. "He--yes, he
+did," she said. "Naturally, he's troubled about--about----" She stopped.
+
+"About your brother, maybe?"
+
+"Yes, about making up the----"
+
+"Here, now," Lamb said, uncomfortably, as she stopped again. "Listen,
+young lady; let's don't talk about that just yet. I want to ask you: you
+understand all about this glue business, I expect, don't you?"
+
+"I'm not sure. I only know----"
+
+"Let me tell you," he interrupted, impatiently. "I'll tell you all about
+it in two words. The process belonged to me, and your father up and
+walked off with it; there's no getting around THAT much, anyhow."
+
+"Isn't there?" Alice stared at him. "I think you're mistaken, Mr. Lamb.
+Didn't papa improve it so that it virtually belonged to him?"
+
+There was a spark in the old blue eyes at this. "What?" he cried. "Is
+that the way he got around it? Why, in all my life I never heard of such
+a----" But he left the sentence unfinished; the testiness went out of
+his husky voice and the anger out of his eyes. "Well, I expect maybe
+that was the way of it," he said. "Anyhow, it's right for you to stand
+up for your father; and if you think he had a right to it----"
+
+"But he did!" she cried.
+
+"I expect so," the old man returned, pacifically. "I expect so,
+probably. Anyhow, it's a question that's neither here nor there, right
+now. What I was thinking of saying--well, did your father happen to let
+out that he and I had words this morning?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Well, we did." He sighed and shook his head. "Your father--well, he
+used some pretty hard expressions toward me, young lady. They weren't
+SO, I'm glad to say, but he used 'em to me, and the worst of it was he
+believed 'em. Well, I been thinking it over, and I thought I'd just have
+a kind of little talk with you to set matters straight, so to speak."
+
+"Yes, Mr. Lamb."
+
+"For instance," he said, "it's like this. Now, I hope you won't think I
+mean any indelicacy, but you take your brother's case, since we got to
+mention it, why, your father had the whole thing worked out in his mind
+about as wrong as anybody ever got anything. If I'd acted the way your
+father thought I did about that, why, somebody just ought to take me out
+and shoot me! Do YOU know what that man thought?"
+
+"I'm not sure."
+
+He frowned at her, and asked, "Well, what do you think about it?"
+
+"I don't know," she said. "I don't believe I think anything at all about
+anything to-day."
+
+"Well, well," he returned; "I expect not; I expect not. You kind of look
+to me as if you ought to be in bed yourself, young lady."
+
+"Oh, no."
+
+"I guess you mean 'Oh, yes'; and I won't keep you long, but there's
+something we got to get fixed up, and I'd rather talk to you than I
+would to your mother, because you're a smart girl and always friendly;
+and I want to be sure I'm understood. Now, listen."
+
+"I will," Alice promised, smiling faintly.
+
+"I never even hardly noticed your brother was still working for me," he
+explained, earnestly. "I never thought anything about it. My sons sort
+of tried to tease me about the way your father--about his taking up this
+glue business, so to speak--and one day Albert, Junior, asked me if I
+felt all right about your brother's staying there after that, and I told
+him--well, I just asked him to shut up. If the boy wanted to stay there,
+I didn't consider it my business to send him away on account of
+any feeling I had toward his father; not as long as he did his work
+right--and the report showed he did. Well, as it happens, it looks now
+as if he stayed because he HAD to; he couldn't quit because he'd 'a'
+been found out if he did. Well, he'd been covering up his shortage for a
+considerable time--and do you know what your father practically charged
+me with about that?"
+
+"No, Mr. Lamb."
+
+In his resentment, the old gentleman's ruddy face became ruddier and his
+husky voice huskier. "Thinks I kept the boy there because I suspected
+him! Thinks I did it to get even with HIM! Do I look to YOU like a man
+that'd do such a thing?"
+
+"No," she said, gently. "I don't think you would."
+
+"No!" he exclaimed. "Nor HE wouldn't think so if he was himself; he's
+known me too long. But he must been sort of brooding over this whole
+business--I mean before Walter's trouble he must been taking it to heart
+pretty hard for some time back. He thought I didn't think much of
+him any more--and I expect he maybe wondered some what I was going
+to DO--and there's nothing worse'n that state of mind to make a man
+suspicious of all kinds of meanness. Well, he practically stood up there
+and accused me to my face of fixing things so't he couldn't ever raise
+the money to settle for Walter and ask us not to prosecute. That's the
+state of mind your father's brooding got him into, young lady--charging
+me with a trick like that!"
+
+"I'm sorry," she said. "I know you'd never----"
+
+The old man slapped his sturdy knee, angrily. "Why, that dang fool of a
+Virgil Adams!" he exclaimed. "He wouldn't even give me a chance to talk;
+and he got me so mad I couldn't hardly talk, anyway! He might 'a' known
+from the first I wasn't going to let him walk in and beat me out of my
+own--that is, he might 'a' known I wouldn't let him get ahead of me in
+a business matter--not with my boys twitting me about it every few
+minutes! But to talk to me the way he did this morning--well, he was out
+of his head; that's all! Now, wait just a minute," he interposed, as she
+seemed about to speak. "In the first place, we aren't going to push this
+case against your brother. I believe in the law, all right, and
+business men got to protect themselves; but in a case like this, where
+restitution's made by the family, why, I expect it's just as well
+sometimes to use a little influence and let matters drop. Of course your
+brother'll have to keep out o' this state; that's all."
+
+"But--you said----" she faltered.
+
+"Yes. What'd I say?"
+
+"You said, 'where restitution's made by the family.' That's what seemed
+to trouble papa so terribly, because--because restitution couldn't----"
+
+"Why, yes, it could. That's what I'm here to talk to you about."
+
+"I don't see----"
+
+"I'm going to TELL you, ain't I?" he said, gruffly. "Just hold your
+horses a minute, please." He coughed, rose from his chair, walked up and
+down the room, then halted before her. "It's like this," he said. "After
+I brought your father home, this morning, there was one of the things he
+told me, when he was going for me, over yonder--it kind of stuck in
+my craw. It was something about all this glue controversy not meaning
+anything to me in particular, and meaning a whole heap to him and his
+family. Well, he was wrong about that two ways. The first one was,
+it did mean a good deal to me to have him go back on me after so many
+years. I don't need to say any more about it, except just to tell you it
+meant quite a little more to me than you'd think, maybe. The other way
+he was wrong is, that how much a thing means to one man and how little
+it means to another ain't the right way to look at a business matter."
+
+"I suppose it isn't, Mr. Lamb."
+
+"No," he said. "It isn't. It's not the right way to look at anything.
+Yes, and your father knows it as well as I do, when he's in his right
+mind; and I expect that's one of the reasons he got so mad at me--but
+anyhow, I couldn't help thinking about how much all this thing HAD maybe
+meant to him;--as I say, it kind of stuck in my craw. I want you to tell
+him something from me, and I want you to go and tell him right off, if
+he's able and willing to listen. You tell him I got kind of a notion
+he was pushed into this thing by circumstances, and tell him I've lived
+long enough to know that circumstances can beat the best of us--you tell
+him I said 'the BEST of us.' Tell him I haven't got a bit of feeling
+against him--not any more--and tell him I came here to ask him not to
+have any against me."
+
+"Yes, Mr. Lamb."
+
+"Tell him I said----" The old man paused abruptly and Alice was
+surprised, in a dull and tired way, when she saw that his lips had begun
+to twitch and his eyelids to blink; but he recovered himself almost
+at once, and continued: "I want him to remember, 'Forgive us our
+transgressions, as we forgive those that transgress against us'; and if
+he and I been transgressing against each other, why, tell him I think
+it's time we QUIT such foolishness!"
+
+He coughed again, smiled heartily upon her, and walked toward the door;
+then turned back to her with an exclamation: "Well, if I ain't an old
+fool!"
+
+"What is it?" she asked.
+
+"Why, I forgot what we were just talking about! Your father wants to
+settle for Walter's deficit. Tell him we'll be glad to accept it; but
+of course we don't expect him to clean the matter up until he's able to
+talk business again."
+
+Alice stared at him blankly enough for him to perceive that further
+explanations were necessary. "It's like this," he said. "You see, if
+your father decided to keep his works going over yonder, I don't say but
+he might give us some little competition for a time, 'specially as he's
+got the start on us and about ready for the market. Then I was figuring
+we could use his plant--it's small, but it'd be to our benefit to have
+the use of it--and he's got a lease on that big lot; it may come in
+handy for us if we want to expand some. Well, I'd prefer to make a deal
+with him as quietly as possible---no good in every Tom, Dick and Harry
+hearing about things like this--but I figured he could sell out to me
+for a little something more'n enough to cover the mortgage he put on
+this house, and Walter's deficit, too--THAT don't amount to much
+in dollars and cents. The way I figure it, I could offer him about
+ninety-three hundred dollars as a total--or say ninety-three hundred and
+fifty--and if he feels like accepting, why, I'll send a confidential man
+up here with the papers soon's your father's able to look 'em over. You
+tell him, will you, and ask him if he sees his way to accepting that
+figure?"
+
+"Yes," Alice said; and now her own lips twitched, while her eyes filled
+so that she saw but a blurred image of the old man, who held out his
+hand in parting. "I'll tell him. Thank you."
+
+He shook her hand hastily. "Well, let's just keep it kind of quiet,"
+he said, at the door. "No good in every Tom, Dick and Harry knowing all
+what goes on in town! You telephone me when your papa's ready to go over
+the papers--and call me up at my house to-night, will you? Let me hear
+how he's feeling?"
+
+"I will," she said, and through her grateful tears gave him a smile
+almost radiant. "He'll be better, Mr. Lamb. We all will."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+One morning, that autumn, Mrs. Adams came into Alice's room, and found
+her completing a sober toilet for the street; moreover, the expression
+revealed in her mirror was harmonious with the business-like severity
+of her attire. "What makes you look so cross, dearie?" the mother asked.
+"Couldn't you find anything nicer to wear than that plain old dark
+dress?"
+
+"I don't believe I'm cross," the girl said, absently. "I believe I'm
+just thinking. Isn't it about time?"
+
+"Time for what?"
+
+"Time for thinking--for me, I mean?"
+
+Disregarding this, Mrs. Adams looked her over thoughtfully. "I can't see
+why you don't wear more colour," she said. "At your age it's becoming
+and proper, too. Anyhow, when you're going on the street, I think you
+ought to look just as gay and lively as you can manage. You want to show
+'em you've got some spunk!"
+
+"How do you mean, mama?"
+
+"I mean about Walter's running away and the mess your father made of his
+business. It would help to show 'em you're holding up your head just the
+same."
+
+"Show whom!"
+
+"All these other girls that----"
+
+"Not I!" Alice laughed shortly, shaking her head. "I've quit dressing at
+them, and if they saw me they wouldn't think what you want 'em to. It's
+funny; but we don't often make people think what we want 'em to, mama.
+You do thus and so; and you tell yourself, 'Now, seeing me do thus and
+so, people will naturally think this and that'; but they don't. They
+think something else--usually just what you DON'T want 'em to. I suppose
+about the only good in pretending is the fun we get out of fooling
+ourselves that we fool somebody."
+
+"Well, but it wouldn't be pretending. You ought to let people see you're
+still holding your head up because you ARE. You wouldn't want that
+Mildred Palmer to think you're cast down about--well, you know you
+wouldn't want HER not to think you're holding your head up, would you?"
+
+"She wouldn't know whether I am or not, mama." Alice bit her lip, then
+smiled faintly as she said:
+
+"Anyhow, I'm not thinking about my head in that way--not this morning,
+I'm not."
+
+Mrs. Adams dropped the subject casually. "Are you going down-town?" she
+inquired.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What for?"
+
+"Just something I want to see about. I'll tell you when I come back.
+Anything you want me to do?"
+
+"No; I guess not to-day. I thought you might look for a rug, but I'd
+rather go with you to select it. We'll have to get a new rug for your
+father's room, I expect."
+
+"I'm glad you think so, mama. I don't suppose he's ever even noticed it,
+but that old rug of his--well, really!"
+
+"I didn't mean for him," her mother explained, thoughtfully. "No; he
+don't mind it, and he'd likely make a fuss if we changed it on his
+account. No; what I meant--we'll have to put your father in Walter's
+room. He won't mind, I don't expect--not much."
+
+"No, I suppose not," Alice agreed, rather sadly. "I heard the bell
+awhile ago. Was it somebody about that?"
+
+"Yes; just before I came upstairs. Mrs. Lohr gave him a note to me, and
+he was really a very pleasant-looking young man. A VERY pleasant-looking
+young man," Mrs. Adams repeated with increased animation and a
+thoughtful glance at her daughter. "He's a Mr. Will Dickson; he has a
+first-rate position with the gas works, Mrs. Lohr says, and he's fully
+able to afford a nice room. So if you and I double up in here, then
+with that young married couple in my room, and this Mr. Dickson in your
+father's, we'll just about have things settled. I thought maybe I could
+make one more place at table, too, so that with the other people from
+outside we'd be serving eleven altogether. You see if I have to pay this
+cook twelve dollars a week--it can't be helped, I guess--well, one more
+would certainly help toward a profit. Of course it's a terribly worrying
+thing to see how we WILL come out. Don't you suppose we could squeeze in
+one more?"
+
+"I suppose it COULD be managed; yes."
+
+Mrs. Adams brightened. "I'm sure it'll be pleasant having that young
+married couple in the house and especially this Mr. Will Dickson. He
+seemed very much of a gentleman, and anxious to get settled in good
+surroundings. I was very favourably impressed with him in every way; and
+he explained to me about his name; it seems it isn't William, it's just
+'Will'; his parents had him christened that way. It's curious." She
+paused, and then, with an effort to seem casual, which veiled nothing
+from her daughter: "It's QUITE curious," she said again. "But it's
+rather attractive and different, don't you think?"
+
+"Poor mama!" Alice laughed compassionately. "Poor mama!"
+
+"He is, though," Mrs. Adams maintained. "He's very much of a gentleman,
+unless I'm no judge of appearances; and it'll really be nice to have him
+in the house."
+
+"No doubt," Alice said, as she opened her door to depart. "I don't
+suppose we'll mind having any of 'em as much as we thought we would.
+Good-bye."
+
+But her mother detained her, catching her by the arm. "Alice, you do
+hate it, don't you!"
+
+"No," the girl said, quickly. "There wasn't anything else to do."
+
+Mrs. Adams became emotional at once: her face cried tragedy, and her
+voice misfortune. "There MIGHT have been something else to do! Oh,
+Alice, you gave your father bad advice when you upheld him in taking a
+miserable little ninety-three hundred and fifty from that old wretch! If
+your father'd just had the gumption to hold out, they'd have had to pay
+him anything he asked. If he'd just had the gumption and a little manly
+COURAGE----"
+
+"Hush!" Alice whispered, for her mother's voice grew louder. "Hush!
+He'll hear you, mama."
+
+"Could he hear me too often?" the embittered lady asked. "If he'd
+listened to me at the right time, would we have to be taking in boarders
+and sinking DOWN in the scale at the end of our lives, instead of going
+UP? You were both wrong; we didn't need to be so panicky--that was just
+what that old man wanted: to scare us and buy us out for nothing! If
+your father'd just listened to me then, or if for once in his life he'd
+just been half a MAN----"
+
+Alice put her hand over her mother's mouth. "You mustn't! He WILL hear
+you!"
+
+But from the other side of Adams's closed door his voice came
+querulously. "Oh, I HEAR her, all right!"
+
+"You see, mama?" Alice said, and, as Mrs. Adams turned away, weeping,
+the daughter sighed; then went in to speak to her father.
+
+He was in his old chair by the table, with a pillow behind his head,
+but the crocheted scarf and Mrs. Adams's wrapper swathed him no more;
+he wore a dressing-gown his wife had bought for him, and was smoking his
+pipe. "The old story, is it?" he said, as Alice came in. "The same, same
+old story! Well, well! Has she gone?"
+
+"Yes, papa."
+
+"Got your hat on," he said. "Where you going?"
+
+"I'm going down-town on an errand of my own. Is there anything you want,
+papa?"
+
+"Yes, there is." He smiled at her. "I wish you'd sit down a while and
+talk to me unless your errand----"
+
+"No," she said, taking a chair near him. "I was just going down to see
+about some arrangements I was making for myself. There's no hurry."
+
+"What arrangements for yourself, dearie?"
+
+"I'll tell you afterwards--after I find out something about 'em myself."
+
+"All right," he said, indulgently. "Keep your secrets; keep your
+secrets." He paused, drew musingly upon his pipe, and shook his head.
+"Funny--the way your mother looks at things! For the matter o' that,
+everything's pretty funny, I expect, if you stop to think about it. For
+instance, let her say all she likes, but we were pushed right spang to
+the wall, if J. A. Lamb hadn't taken it into his head to make that
+offer for the works; and there's one of the things I been thinking about
+lately, Alice: thinking about how funny they work out."
+
+"What did you think about it, papa!"
+
+"Well, I've seen it happen in other people's lives, time and time again;
+and now it's happened in ours. You think you're going to be pushed right
+up against the wall; you can't see any way out, or any hope at all; you
+think you're GONE--and then something you never counted on turns up;
+and, while maybe you never do get back to where you used to be, yet
+somehow you kind of squirm out of being right SPANG against the wall.
+You keep on going--maybe you can't go much, but you do go a little. See
+what I mean?"
+
+"Yes. I understand, dear."
+
+"Yes, I'm afraid you do," he said. "Too bad! You oughtn't to understand
+it at your age. It seems to me a good deal as if the Lord really meant
+for the young people to have the good times, and for the old to have
+the troubles; and when anybody as young as you has trouble there's a big
+mistake somewhere."
+
+"Oh, no!" she protested.
+
+But he persisted whimsically in this view of divine error: "Yes, it
+does look a good deal that way. But of course we can't tell; we're never
+certain about anything--not about anything at all. Sometimes I look at
+it another way, though. Sometimes it looks to me as if a body's troubles
+came on him mainly because he hadn't had sense enough to know how not to
+have any--as if his troubles were kind of like a boy's getting kept in
+after school by the teacher, to give him discipline, or something or
+other. But, my, my! We don't learn easy!" He chuckled mournfully. "Not
+to learn how to live till we're about ready to die, it certainly seems
+to me dang tough!"
+
+"Then I wouldn't brood on such a notion, papa," she said.
+
+"'Brood?' No!" he returned. "I just kind o' mull it over." He chuckled
+again, sighed, and then, not looking at her, he said, "That Mr.
+Russell--your mother tells me he hasn't been here again--not since----"
+
+"No," she said, quietly, as Adams paused. "He never came again."
+
+"Well, but maybe----"
+
+"No," she said. "There isn't any 'maybe.' I told him good-bye that
+night, papa. It was before he knew about Walter--I told you."
+
+"Well, well," Adams said. "Young people are entitled to their own
+privacy; I don't want to pry." He emptied his pipe into a chipped saucer
+on the table beside him, laid the pipe aside, and reverted to a former
+topic. "Speaking of dying----"
+
+"Well, but we weren't!" Alice protested.
+
+"Yes, about not knowing how to live till you're through living--and THEN
+maybe not!" he said, chuckling at his own determined pessimism. "I see
+I'm pretty old because I talk this way--I remember my grandmother saying
+things a good deal like all what I'm saying now; I used to hear her
+at it when I was a young fellow--she was a right gloomy old lady, I
+remember. Well, anyhow, it reminds me: I want to get on my feet again as
+soon as I can; I got to look around and find something to go into."
+
+Alice shook her head gently. "But, papa, he told you----"
+
+"Never mind throwing that dang doctor up at me!" Adams interrupted,
+peevishly. "He said I'd be good for SOME kind of light job--if I could
+find just the right thing. 'Where there wouldn't be either any physical
+or mental strain,' he said. Well, I got to find something like that.
+Anyway, I'll feel better if I can just get out LOOKING for it."
+
+"But, papa, I'm afraid you won't find it, and you'll be disappointed."
+
+"Well, I want to hunt around and SEE, anyhow."
+
+Alice patted his hand. "You must just be contented, papa. Everything's
+going to be all right, and you mustn't get to worrying about doing
+anything. We own this house; it's all clear--and you've taken care of
+mama and me all our lives; now it's our turn."
+
+"No, sir!" he said, querulously. "I don't like the idea of being the
+landlady's husband around a boarding-house; it goes against my gizzard.
+_I_ know: makes out the bills for his wife Sunday mornings--works with
+a screw-driver on somebody's bureau drawer sometimes--'tends the furnace
+maybe--one the boarders gives him a cigar now and then. That's a FINE
+life to look forward to! No, sir; I don't want to finish as a landlady's
+husband!"
+
+Alice looked grave; for she knew the sketch was but too accurately
+prophetic in every probability. "But, papa," she said, to console him,
+"don't you think maybe there isn't such a thing as a 'finish,' after
+all! You say perhaps we don't learn to live till we die but maybe that's
+how it is AFTER we die, too--just learning some more, the way we do
+here, and maybe through trouble again, even after that."
+
+"Oh, it might be," he sighed. "I expect so."
+
+"Well, then," she said, "what's the use of talking about a 'finish?' We
+do keep looking ahead to things as if they'd finish something, but when
+we get TO them, they don't finish anything. They're just part of going
+on. I'll tell you--I looked ahead all summer to something I was afraid
+of, and I said to myself, 'Well, if that happens, I'm finished!' But it
+wasn't so, papa. It did happen, and nothing's finished; I'm going on,
+just the same only----" She stopped and blushed.
+
+"Only what?" he asked.
+
+"Well----" She blushed more deeply, then jumped up, and, standing before
+him, caught both his hands in hers. "Well, don't you think, since we do
+have to go on, we ought at least to have learned some sense about how to
+do it?"
+
+He looked up at her adoringly.
+
+"What _I_ think," he said, and his voice trembled;--"I think you're
+the smartest girl in the world! I wouldn't trade you for the whole
+kit-and-boodle of 'em!"
+
+But as this folly of his threatened to make her tearful, she kissed him
+hastily, and went forth upon her errand.
+
+Since the night of the tragic-comic dinner she had not seen Russell, nor
+caught even the remotest chance glimpse of him; and it was curious that
+she should encounter him as she went upon such an errand as now engaged
+her. At a corner, not far from that tobacconist's shop she had just left
+when he overtook her and walked with her for the first time, she met him
+to-day. He turned the corner, coming toward her, and they were face to
+face; whereupon that engaging face of Russell's was instantly reddened,
+but Alice's remained serene.
+
+She stopped short, though; and so did he; then she smiled brightly as
+she put out her hand.
+
+"Why, Mr. Russell!"
+
+"I'm so--I'm so glad to have this--this chance," he stammered. "I've
+wanted to tell you--it's just that going into a new undertaking--this
+business life--one doesn't get to do a great many things he'd like to. I
+hope you'll let me call again some time, if I can."
+
+"Yes, do!" she said, cordially, and then, with a quick nod, went briskly
+on.
+
+She breathed more rapidly, but knew that he could not have detected it,
+and she took some pride in herself for the way she had met this little
+crisis. But to have met it with such easy courage meant to her something
+more reassuring than a momentary pride in the serenity she had shown.
+For she found that what she had resolved in her inmost heart was now
+really true: she was "through with all that!"
+
+She walked on, but more slowly, for the tobacconist's shop was not far
+from her now--and, beyond it, that portal of doom, Frincke's Business
+College. Already Alice could read the begrimed gilt letters of the
+sign; and although they had spelled destiny never with a more painful
+imminence than just then, an old habit of dramatizing herself still
+prevailed with her.
+
+There came into her mind a whimsical comparison of her fate with that
+of the heroine in a French romance she had read long ago and remembered
+well, for she had cried over it. The story ended with the heroine's
+taking the veil after a death blow to love; and the final scene again
+became vivid to Alice, for a moment. Again, as when she had read
+and wept, she seemed herself to stand among the great shadows in the
+cathedral nave; smelled the smoky incense on the enclosed air, and heard
+the solemn pulses of the organ. She remembered how the novice's father
+knelt, trembling, beside a pillar of gray stone; how the faithless lover
+watched and shivered behind the statue of a saint; how stifled sobs and
+outcries were heard when the novice came to the altar; and how a shaft
+of light struck through the rose-window, enveloping her in an amber
+glow.
+
+It was the vision of a moment only, and for no longer than a moment did
+Alice tell herself that the romance provided a prettier way of taking
+the veil than she had chosen, and that a faithless lover, shaking with
+remorse behind a saint's statue, was a greater solace than one left on a
+street corner protesting that he'd like to call some time--if he could!
+Her pity for herself vanished more reluctantly; but she shook it off and
+tried to smile at it, and at her romantic recollections--at all of them.
+She had something important to think of.
+
+She passed the tobacconist's, and before her was that dark entrance to
+the wooden stairway leading up to Frincke's Business College--the very
+doorway she had always looked upon as the end of youth and the end of
+hope.
+
+How often she had gone by here, hating the dreary obscurity of that
+stairway; how often she had thought of this obscurity as something lying
+in wait to obliterate the footsteps of any girl who should ascend into
+the smoky darkness above! Never had she passed without those ominous
+imaginings of hers: pretty girls turning into old maids "taking
+dictation"--old maids of a dozen different types, yet all looking a
+little like herself.
+
+Well, she was here at last! She looked up and down the street quickly,
+and then, with a little heave of the shoulders, she went bravely in,
+under the sign, and began to climb the wooden steps. Half-way up the
+shadows were heaviest, but after that the place began to seem brighter.
+There was an open window overhead somewhere, she found; and the steps at
+the top were gay with sunshine.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALICE ADAMS ***
+
+***** This file should be named 980.txt or 980.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/9/8/980/
+
+Produced by Charles Keller
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/980.zip b/980.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2ad9c6e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/980.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..56f8207
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #980 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/980)
diff --git a/old/aladm10.txt b/old/aladm10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dd0d6a7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/aladm10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11298 @@
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+#4 in our series by Booth Tarkington
+
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
+the copyright laws for your country before posting these files!!
+
+Please take a look at the important information in this header.
+We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
+electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
+
+Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
+further information is included below. We need your donations.
+
+
+
+Alice Adams
+
+by Booth Tarkington
+
+July, 1997 [Etext #980]
+[Date last updated: May 30, 2004]
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+******This file should be named aladm10.txt or aladm10.zip******
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, aladm11.txt.
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, aladm10a.txt.
+
+
+Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington Scanned by Charles Keller with
+OmniPage Professional OCR software
+
+
+We are now trying to release all our books one month in advance
+of the official release dates, for time for better editing.
+
+Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an
+up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes
+in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has
+a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a
+look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a
+new copy has at least one byte more or less.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+fifty hours is one conservative estimate for how long it we take
+to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour this year as we release thirty-two text
+files per month: or 400 more Etexts in 1996 for a total of 800.
+If these reach just 10% of the computerized population, then the
+total should reach 80 billion Etexts.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
+Files by the December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000=Trillion]
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only 10% of the present number of computer users. 2001
+should have at least twice as many computer users as that, so it
+will require us reaching less than 5% of the users in 2001.
+
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+
+All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/CMU": and are
+tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. (CMU = Carnegie-
+Mellon University).
+
+For these and other matters, please mail to:
+
+Project Gutenberg
+P. O. Box 2782
+Champaign, IL 61825
+
+When all other email fails try our Executive Director:
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+We would prefer to send you this information by email
+(Internet, Bitnet, Compuserve, ATTMAIL or MCImail).
+
+******
+If you have an FTP program (or emulator), please
+FTP directly to the Project Gutenberg archives:
+[Mac users, do NOT point and click. . .type]
+
+ftp uiarchive.cso.uiuc.edu
+login: anonymous
+password: your@login
+cd etext/etext90 through /etext96
+or cd etext/articles [get suggest gut for more information]
+dir [to see files]
+get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
+GET INDEX?00.GUT
+for a list of books
+and
+GET NEW GUT for general information
+and
+MGET GUT* for newsletters.
+
+**Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor**
+(Three Pages)
+
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-
+tm etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor
+Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association at
+Carnegie-Mellon University (the "Project"). Among other
+things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
+under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this
+etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors,
+officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost
+and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or
+indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause:
+[1] distribution of this etext, [2] alteration, modification,
+or addition to the etext, or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word pro-
+ cessing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the etext (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Project of 20% of the
+ net profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Association/Carnegie-Mellon
+ University" within the 60 days following each
+ date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare)
+ your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time,
+scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty
+free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution
+you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg
+Association / Carnegie-Mellon University".
+
+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington Scanned by Charles Keller with
+OmniPage Professional OCR software
+
+
+
+
+
+ALICE ADAMS by BOOTH TARKINGTON
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+The patient, an old-fashioned man, thought the nurse made a
+mistake in keeping both of the windows open, and her sprightly
+disregard of his protests added something to his hatred of her.
+Every evening he told her that anybody with ordinary gumption
+ought to realize that night air was bad for the human frame.
+"The human frame won't stand everything, Miss Perry," he warned
+her, resentfully. "Even a child, if it had just ordinary
+gumption, ought to know enough not to let the night air blow on
+sick people yes, nor well people, either! 'Keep out of the night
+air, no matter how well you feel.' That's what my mother used to
+tell me when I was a boy. 'Keep out of the night air, Virgil,'
+she'd say. 'Keep out of the night air.'"
+
+"I expect probably her mother told her the same thing," the nurse
+suggested.
+
+"Of course she did. My grandmother----"
+
+"Oh, I guess your GRANDmother thought so, Mr. Adams! That was
+when all this flat central country was swampish and hadn't been
+drained off yet. I guess the truth must been the swamp
+mosquitoes bit people and gave 'em malaria, especially before
+they began to put screens in their windows. Well, we got screens
+in these windows, and no mosquitoes are goin' to bite us; so just
+you be a good boy and rest your mind and go to sleep like you
+need to."
+
+"Sleep?" he said. "Likely!"
+
+He thought the night air worst of all in April; he hadn't a doubt
+it would kill him, he declared. "It's miraculous what the human
+frame WILL survive," he admitted on the last evening of that
+month. "But you and the doctor ought to both be taught it won't
+stand too dang much! You poison a man and poison and poison him
+with this April night air----"
+
+"Can't poison you with much more of it," Miss Perry interrupted
+him, indulgently. "To-morrow it'll be May night air, and I
+expect that'll be a lot better for you, don't you? Now let's
+just sober down and be a good boy and get some nice sound sleep."
+
+She gave him his medicine, and, having set the glass upon the
+center table, returned to her cot, where, after a still interval,
+she snored faintly. Upon this, his expression became that of a
+man goaded out of overpowering weariness into irony.
+
+"Sleep? Oh, CERTAINLY, thank you!"
+
+However, he did sleep intermittently, drowsed between times, and
+even dreamed; but, forgetting his dreams before he opened his
+eyes, and having some part of him all the while aware of his
+discomfort, he believed, as usual, that he lay awake the whole
+night long. He was conscious of the city as of some single great
+creature resting fitfully in the dark outside his windows. It
+lay all round about, in the damp cover of its night cloud of
+smoke, and tried to keep quiet for a few hours after midnight,
+but was too powerful a growing thing ever to lie altogether
+still. Even while it strove to sleep it muttered with digestions
+of the day before, and these already merged with rumblings of the
+morrow. "Owl" cars, bringing in last passengers over distant
+trolley-lines, now and then howled on a curve; faraway metallic
+stirrings could be heard from factories in the sooty suburbs on
+the plain outside the city; east, west, and south, switch-engines
+chugged and snorted on sidings; and everywhere in the air there
+seemed to be a faint, voluminous hum as of innumerable wires
+trembling overhead to vibration of machinery underground.
+
+In his youth Adams might have been less resentful of sounds such
+as these when they interfered with his night's sleep: even during
+an illness he might have taken some pride in them as proof of his
+citizenship in a "live town"; but at fifty-five he merely hated
+them because they kept him awake. They "pressed on his nerves,"
+as he put it; and so did almost everything else, for that matter.
+
+He heard the milk-wagon drive into the cross-street beneath his
+windows and stop at each house. The milkman carried his jars
+round to the "back porch," while the horse moved slowly ahead to
+the gate of the next customer and waited there. "He's gone into
+Pollocks'," Adams thought, following this progress. "I hope
+it'll sour on 'em before breakfast. Delivered the Andersons'.
+Now he's getting out ours. Listen to the darn brute! What's HE
+care who wants to sleep!" His complaint was of the horse, who
+casually shifted weight with a clink of steel shoes on the worn
+brick pavement of the street, and then heartily shook himself in
+his harness, perhaps to dislodge a fly far ahead of its season.
+Light had just filmed the windows; and with that the first
+sparrow woke, chirped instantly, and roused neighbours in the
+trees of the small yard, including a loud-voiced robin.
+Vociferations began irregularly, but were soon unanimous.
+
+"Sleep? Dang likely now, ain't it!"
+
+Night sounds were becoming day sounds; the far-away hooting of
+freight-engines seemed brisker than an hour ago in the dark. A
+cheerful whistler passed the house, even more careless of
+sleepers than the milkman's horse had been; then a group of
+coloured workmen came by, and although it was impossible to be
+sure whether they were homeward bound from night-work or on their
+way to day- work, at least it was certain that they were jocose.
+Loose, aboriginal laughter preceded them afar, and beat on the
+air long after they had gone by.
+
+The sick-room night-light, shielded from his eyes by a newspaper
+propped against a water-pitcher, still showed a thin glimmering
+that had grown offensive to Adams. In his wandering and
+enfeebled thoughts, which were much more often imaginings than
+reasonings, the attempt of the night-light to resist the dawn
+reminded him of something unpleasant, though he could not
+discover just what the unpleasant thing was. Here was a puzzle
+that irritated him the more because he could not solve it, yet
+always seemed just on the point of a solution. However, he may
+have lost nothing cheerful by remaining in the dark upon the
+matter; for if he had been a little sharper in this introspection
+he might have concluded that the squalor of the night-light, in
+its seeming effort to show against the forerunning of the sun
+itself, had stimulated some half-buried perception within him to
+sketch the painful little synopsis of an autobiography.
+
+In spite of noises without, he drowsed again, not knowing that he
+did; and when he opened his eyes the nurse was just rising from
+her cot. He took no pleasure in the sight, it may be said. She
+exhibited to him a face mismodelled by sleep, and set like a clay
+face left on its cheek in a hot and dry studio. She was still
+only in part awake, however, and by the time she had extinguished
+the night-light and given her patient his tonic, she had
+recovered enough plasticity. "Well, isn't that grand! We've had
+another good night," she said as she departed to dress in the
+bathroom.
+
+"Yes, you had another!" he retorted, though not until after she
+had closed the door.
+
+Presently he heard his daughter moving about in her room across
+the narrow hall, and so knew that she had risen. He hoped she
+would come in to see him soon, for she was the one thing that
+didn't press on his nerves, he felt; though the thought of her
+hurt him, as, indeed, every thought hurt him. But it was his
+wife who came first.
+
+She wore a lank cotton wrapper, and a crescent of gray hair
+escaped to one temple from beneath the handkerchief she had worn
+upon her head for the night and still retained; but she did
+everything possible to make her expression cheering.
+
+"Oh, you're better again! I can see that, as soon as I look at
+you," she said. "Miss Perry tells me you've had another splendid
+night."
+
+He made a sound of irony, which seemed to dispose unfavourably of
+Miss Perry, and then, in order to be more certainly intelligible,
+he added, "She slept well, as usual!"
+
+But his wife's smile persisted. "It's a good sign to be cross;
+it means you're practically convalescent right now."
+
+"Oh, I am, am I?"
+
+"No doubt in the world!" she exclaimed. "Why, you're practically
+a well man, Virgil--all except getting your strength back, of
+course, and that isn't going to take long. You'll be right on
+your feet in a couple of weeks from now."
+
+"Oh, I will?"
+
+"Of course you will!" She laughed briskly, and, going to the
+table in the center of the room, moved his glass of medicine an
+inch or two, turned a book over so that it lay upon its other
+side, and for a few moments occupied herself with similar
+futilities, having taken on the air of a person who makes things
+neat, though she produced no such actual effect upon them. "Of
+course you will," she repeated, absently. "You'll be as strong
+as you ever were; maybe stronger." She paused for a moment, not
+looking at him, then added, cheerfully, "So that you can fly
+around and find something really good to get into."
+
+Something important between them came near the surface here, for
+though she spoke with what seemed but a casual cheerfulness,
+there was a little betraying break in her voice, a trembling just
+perceptible in the utterance of the final word. And she still
+kept up the affectation of being helpfully preoccupied with the
+table, and did not look at her husband--perhaps because they had
+been married so many years that without looking she knew just
+what his expression would be, and preferred to avoid the actual
+sight of it as long as possible. Meanwhile, he stared hard at
+her, his lips beginning to move with little distortions not
+lacking in the pathos of a sick man's agitation.
+
+"So that's it," he said. "That's what you're hinting at."
+
+"'Hinting?'" Mrs. Adams looked surprised and indulgent. "Why,
+I'm not doing any hinting, Virgil."
+
+"What did you say about my finding 'something good to get into?'"
+he asked, sharply. "Don't you call that hinting?"
+
+Mrs. Adams turned toward him now; she came to the bedside and
+would have taken his hand, but he quickly moved it away from her.
+
+"You mustn't let yourself get nervous," she said. "But of course
+when you get well there's only one thing to do. You mustn't go
+back to that old hole again."
+
+"'Old hole?' That's what you call it, is it?" In spite of his
+weakness, anger made his voice strident, and upon this
+stimulation she spoke more urgently.
+
+"You just mustn't go back to it, Virgil. It's not fair to any of
+us, and you know it isn't."
+
+"Don't tell me what I know, please!"
+
+She clasped her hands, suddenly carrying her urgency to plaintive
+entreaty. "Virgil, you WON'T go back to that hole?"
+
+"That's a nice word to use to me!" he said. "Call a man's
+business a hole!"
+
+"Virgil, if you don't owe it to me to look for something
+different, don't you owe it to your children? Don't tell me you
+won't do what we all want you to, and what you know in your heart
+you ought to! And if you HAVE got into one of your stubborn fits
+and are bound to go back there for no other reason except to have
+your own way, don't tell me so, for I can't bear it!"
+
+He looked up at her fiercely. "You've got a fine way to cure a
+sick man!" he said; but she had concluded her appeal--for that
+time--and instead of making any more words in the matter, let him
+see that there were tears in her eyes, shook her head, and left
+the room.
+
+Alone, he lay breathing rapidly, his emaciated chest proving
+itself equal to the demands his emotion put upon it. "Fine!" he
+repeated, with husky indignation. "Fine way to cure a sick man!
+Fine!" Then, after a silence, he gave forth whispering sounds as
+of laughter, his expression the while remaining sore and far from
+humour.
+
+"And give us our daily bread!" he added, meaning that his wife's
+little performance was no novelty.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+In fact, the agitation of Mrs. Adams was genuine, but so well
+under her control that its traces vanished during the three short
+steps she took to cross the narrow hall between her husband's
+door and the one opposite. Her expression was matter-of-course,
+rather than pathetic, as she entered the pretty room where her
+daughter, half dressed, sat before a dressing-table and played
+with the reflections of a three-leafed mirror framed in blue
+enamel. That is, just before the moment of her mother's
+entrance, Alice had been playing with the mirror's
+reflections--posturing her arms and her expressions, clasping her
+hands behind her neck, and tilting back her head to foreshorten
+the face in a tableau conceived to represent sauciness, then one
+of smiling weariness, then one of scornful toleration, and all
+very piquant; but as the door opened she hurriedly resumed the
+practical, and occupied her hands in the arrangement of her
+plentiful brownish hair.
+
+They were pretty hands, of a shapeliness delicate and fine. "The
+best things she's got!" a cold-blooded girl friend said of them,
+and meant to include Alice's mind and character in the implied
+list of possessions surpassed by the notable hands. However that
+may have been, the rest of her was well enough. She was often
+called "a right pretty girl"--temperate praise meaning a girl
+rather pretty than otherwise, and this she deserved, to say the
+least. Even in repose she deserved it, though repose was
+anything but her habit, being seldom seen upon her except at
+home. On exhibition she led a life of gestures, the unkind said
+to make her lovely hands more memorable; but all of her usually
+accompanied the gestures of the hands, the shoulders ever giving
+them their impulses first, and even her feet being called upon,
+at the same time, for eloquence.
+
+So much liveliness took proper place as only accessory to that of
+the face, where her vivacity reached its climax; and it was
+unfortunate that an ungifted young man, new in the town, should
+have attempted to define the effect upon him of all this
+generosity of emphasis. He said that "the way she used her cute
+hazel eyes and the wonderful glow of her facial expression gave
+her a mighty spiritual quality." His actual rendition of the
+word was "spirichul"; but it was not his pronunciation that
+embalmed this outburst in the perennial laughter of Alice's girl
+friends; they made the misfortune far less his than hers.
+
+Her mother comforted her too heartily, insisting that Alice had
+"plenty enough spiritual qualities," certainly more than
+possessed by the other girls who flung the phrase at her, wooden
+things, jealous of everything they were incapable of themselves;
+and then Alice, getting more championship than she sought, grew
+uneasy lest Mrs. Adams should repeat such defenses "outside the
+family"; and Mrs. Adams ended by weeping because the daughter so
+distrusted her intelligence. Alice frequently thought it
+necessary to instruct her mother.
+
+Her morning greeting was an instruction to-day; or, rather, it
+was an admonition in the style of an entreaty, the more petulant
+as Alice thought that Mrs. Adams might have had a glimpse of the
+posturings to the mirror. This was a needless worry; the mother
+had caught a thousand such glimpses, with Alice unaware, and she
+thought nothing of the one just flitted.
+
+"For heaven's sake, mama, come clear inside the room and shut the
+door! PLEASE don't leave it open for everybody to look at me!"
+
+"There isn't anybody to see you," Mrs. Adams explained, obeying.
+"Miss Perry's gone downstairs, and----"
+
+"Mama, I heard you in papa's room," Alice said, not dropping the
+note of complaint. "I could hear both of you, and I don't think
+you ought to get poor old papa so upset--not in his present
+condition, anyhow."
+
+Mrs. Adams seated herself on the edge of the bed. "He's better
+all the time," she said, not disturbed. "He's almost well. The
+doctor says so and Miss Perry says so; and if we don't get him
+into the right frame of mind now we never will. The first day
+he's outdoors he'll go back to that old hole--you'll see! And if
+he once does that, he'll settle down there and it'll be too late
+and we'll never get him out."
+
+"Well, anyhow, I think you could use a little more tact with
+him."
+
+"I do try to," the mother sighed. "It never was much use with
+him. I don't think you understand him as well as I do, Alice."
+
+"There's one thing I don't understand about either of you," Alice
+returned, crisply. "Before people get married they can do
+anything they want to with each other. Why can't they do the
+same thing after they're married? When you and papa were young
+people and engaged, he'd have done anything you wanted him to.
+That must have been because you knew how to manage him then. Why
+can't you go at him the same way now?"
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed again, and laughed a little, making no other
+response; but Alice persisted. "Well, WHY can't you? Why can't
+you ask him to do things the way you used to ask him when you
+were just in love with each other? Why don't you anyhow try it,
+mama, instead of ding-donging at him?"
+
+"'Ding-donging at him,' Alice?" Mrs. Adams said, with a pathos
+somewhat emphasized. "Is that how my trying to do what I can for
+you strikes you?"
+
+"Never mind that; it's nothing to hurt your feelings." Alice
+disposed of the pathos briskly. "Why don't you answer my
+question? What's the matter with using a little more tact on
+papa? Why can't you treat him the way you probably did when you
+were young people, before you were married? I never have
+understood why people can't do that."
+
+"Perhaps you WILL understand some day," her mother said, gently.
+"Maybe you will when you've been married twenty-five years."
+
+"You keep evading. Why don't you answer my question right
+straight out?"
+
+"There are questions you can't answer to young people, Alice."
+
+"You mean because we're too young to understand the answer? I
+don't see that at all. At twenty-two a girl's supposed to have
+some intelligence, isn't she? And intelligence is the ability to
+understand, isn't it? Why do I have to wait till I've lived with
+a man twenty-five years to understand why you can't be tactful
+with papa?"
+
+"You may understand some things before that," Mrs. Adams said,
+tremulously. "You may understand how you hurt me sometimes.
+Youth can't know everything by being intelligent, and by the time
+you could understand the answer you're asking for you'd know it,
+and wouldn't need to ask. You don't understand your father,
+Alice; you don't know what it takes to change him when he's made
+up his mind to be stubborn."
+
+Alice rose and began to get herself into a skirt. "Well, I don't
+think making scenes ever changes anybody," she grumbled. "I
+think a little jolly persuasion goes twice as far, myself."
+
+"'A little jolly persuasion!'" Her mother turned the echo of
+this phrase into an ironic lament. "Yes, there was a time when I
+thought that, too! It didn't work; that's all."
+
+"Perhaps you left the 'jolly' part of it out, mama."
+
+For the second time that morning--it was now a little after seven
+o'clock--tears seemed about to offer their solace to Mrs. Adams.
+"I might have expected you to say that, Alice; you never do miss
+a chance," she said, gently. "It seems queer you don't some time
+miss just ONE chance!"
+
+But Alice, progressing with her toilet, appeared to be little
+concerned. "Oh, well, I think there are better ways of managing
+a man than just hammering at him."
+
+Mrs. Adams uttered a little cry of pain. "'Hammering,' Alice?"
+
+"If you'd left it entirely to me," her daughter went on, briskly,
+"I believe papa'd already be willing to do anything we want him
+to."
+
+"That's it; tell me I spoil everything. Well, I won't interfere
+from now on, you can be sure of it."
+
+"Please don't talk like that," Alice said, quickly. "I'm old
+enough to realize that papa may need pressure of all sorts; I
+only think it makes him more obstinate to get him cross. You
+probably do understand him better, but that's one thing I've
+found out and you haven't. There!" She gave her mother a
+friendly tap on the shoulder and went to the door. "I'll hop in
+and say hello to him now."
+
+As she went, she continued the fastening of her blouse, and
+appeared in her father's room with one hand still thus engaged,
+but she patted his forehead with the other.
+
+"Poor old papa-daddy!" she said, gaily. "Every time he's better
+somebody talks him into getting so mad he has a relapse. It's a
+shame!"
+
+Her father's eyes, beneath their melancholy brows, looked up at
+her wistfully. "I suppose you heard your mother going for me,"
+he said.
+
+"I heard you going for her, too!" Alice laughed. "What was it
+all about?"
+
+"Oh, the same danged old story!"
+
+"You mean she wants you to try something new when you get well?"
+Alice asked, with cheerful innocence. "So we could all have a
+lot more money?"
+
+At this his sorrowful forehead was more sorrowful than ever. The
+deep horizontal lines moved upward to a pattern of suffering so
+familiar to his daughter that it meant nothing to her; but he
+spoke quietly. "Yes; so we wouldn't have any money at all, most
+likely."
+
+"Oh, no!" she laughed, and, finishing with her blouse, patted his
+cheeks with both hands. "Just think how many grand openings
+there must be for a man that knows as much as you do! I always
+did believe you could get rich if you only cared to, papa."
+
+But upon his forehead the painful pattern still deepened. "Don't
+you think we've always had enough, the way things are, Alice?"
+
+"Not the way things ARE!" She patted his cheeks again; laughed
+again. "It used to be enough, maybe anyway we did skimp along on
+it--but the way things are now I expect mama's really pretty
+practical in her ideas, though, I think it's a shame for her to
+bother you about it while you're so weak. Don't you worry about
+it, though; just think about other things till you get strong."
+
+"You know," he said; "you know it isn't exactly the easiest thing
+in the world for a man of my age to find these grand openings you
+speak of. And when you've passed half-way from fifty to sixty
+you're apt to see some risk in giving up what you know how to do
+and trying something new."
+
+"My, what a frown!" she cried, blithely. "Didn't I tell you to
+stop thinking about it till you get ALL well?" She bent over him,
+giving him a gay little kiss on the bridge of his nose. "There!
+I must run to breakfast. Cheer up now! Au 'voir!" And with her
+pretty hand she waved further encouragement from the closing door
+as she departed.
+
+Lightsomely descending the narrow stairway, she whistled as she
+went, her fingers drumming time on the rail; and, still
+whistling, she came into the dining-room, where her mother and
+her brother were already at the table. The brother, a thin and
+sallow boy of twenty, greeted her without much approval as she
+took her place.
+
+"Nothing seems to trouble you!" he said.
+
+"No; nothing much," she made airy response. "What's troubling
+yourself, Walter?"
+
+"Don't let that worry you!" he returned, seeming to consider this
+to be repartee of an effective sort; for he furnished a short
+laugh to go with it, and turned to his coffee with the manner of
+one who has satisfactorily closed an episode.
+
+"Walter always seems to have so many secrets!" Alice said,
+studying him shrewdly, but with a friendly enough amusement in
+her scrutiny. "Everything he does or says seems to be acted for
+the benefit of some mysterious audience inside himself, and he
+always gets its applause. Take what he said just now: he seems
+to think it means something, but if it does, why, that's just
+another secret between him and the secret audience inside of him!
+We don't really know anything about Walter at all, do we, mama?"
+
+Walter laughed again, in a manner that sustained her theory well
+enough; then after finishing his coffee, he took from his pocket
+a flattened packet in glazed blue paper; extracted with stained
+fingers a bent and wrinkled little cigarette, lighted it, hitched
+up his belted trousers with the air of a person who turns from
+trifles to things better worth his attention, and left the room.
+
+Alice laughed as the door closed. "He's ALL secrets," she said.
+"Don't you think you really ought to know more about him, mama?"
+
+"I'm sure he's a good boy," Mrs. Adams returned, thoughtfully.
+"He's been very brave about not being able to have the advantages
+that are enjoyed by the boys he's grown up with. I've never
+heard a word of complaint from him."
+
+"About his not being sent to college?" Alice cried. "I should
+think you wouldn't! He didn't even have enough ambition to
+finish high school!"
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed. "It seemed to me Walter lost his ambition
+when nearly all the boys he'd grown up with went to Eastern
+schools to prepare for college, and we couldn't afford to send
+him. If only your father would have listened----"
+
+Alice interrupted: "What nonsense! Walter hated books and
+studying, and athletics, too, for that matter. He doesn't care
+for anything nice that I ever heard of. What do you suppose he
+does like, mama? He must like something or other somewhere, but
+what do you suppose it is? What does he do with his time?"
+
+"Why, the poor boy's at Lamb and Company's all day. He doesn't
+get through until five in the afternoon; he doesn't HAVE much
+time."
+
+"Well, we never have dinner until about seven, and he's always
+late for dinner, and goes out, heaven knows where, right
+afterward!" Alice shook her head. "He used to go with our
+friends' boys, but I don't think he does now."
+
+"Why, how could he?" Mrs. Adams protested. "That isn't his
+fault, poor child! The boys he knew when he was younger are
+nearly all away at college."
+
+"Yes, but he doesn't see anything of 'em when they're here at
+holiday-time or vacation. None of 'em come to the house any
+more."
+
+"I suppose he's made other friends. It's natural for him to want
+companions, at his age."
+
+"Yes," Alice said, with disapproving emphasis. "But who are
+they? I've got an idea he plays pool at some rough place
+down-town."
+
+"Oh, no; I'm sure he's a steady boy," Mrs. Adams protested, but
+her tone was not that of thoroughgoing conviction, and she added,
+"Life might be a very different thing for him if only your father
+can be brought to see----"
+
+"Never mind, mama! It isn't me that has to be convinced, you
+know; and we can do a lot more with papa if we just let him alone
+about it for a day or two. Promise me you won't say any more to
+him until--well, until he's able to come downstairs to table.
+Will you?"
+
+Mrs. Adams bit her lip, which had begun to tremble. "I think
+you can trust me to know a FEW things, Alice," she said. "I'm a
+little older than you, you know."
+
+"That's a good girl!" Alice jumped up, laughing. "Don't forget
+it's the same as a promise, and do just cheer him up a little.
+I'll say good-bye to him before I go out."
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"Oh, I've got lots to do. I thought I'd run out to Mildred's to
+see what she's going to wear to-night, and then I want to go down
+and buy a yard of chiffon and some narrow ribbon to make new bows
+for my slippers--you'll have to give me some money----"
+
+"If he'll give it to me!" her mother lamented, as they went
+toward the front stairs together; but an hour later she came into
+Alice's room with a bill in her hand.
+
+"He has some money in his bureau drawer," she said. "He finally
+told me where it was."
+
+There were traces of emotion in her voice, and Alice, looking
+shrewdly at her, saw moisture in her eyes.
+
+"Mama!" she cried. "You didn't do what you promised me you
+wouldn't, did you--NOT before Miss Perry!"
+
+"Miss Perry's getting him some broth," Mrs. Adams returned,
+calmly. "Besides, you're mistaken in saying I promised you
+anything; I said I thought you could trust me to know what is
+right."
+
+"So you did bring it up again!" And Alice swung away from her,
+strode to her father's door, flung it open, went to him, and put
+a light hand soothingly over his unrelaxed forehead.
+
+"Poor old papa!" she said. "It's a shame how everybody wants to
+trouble him. He shan't be bothered any more at all! He doesn't
+need to have everybody telling him how to get away from that old
+hole he's worked in so long and begin to make us all nice and
+rich. HE knows how!"
+
+Thereupon she kissed him a consoling good-bye, and made another
+gay departure, the charming hand again fluttering like a white
+butterfly in the shadow of the closing door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Mrs. Adams had remained in Alice's room, but her mood seemed to
+have changed, during her daughter's little more than momentary
+absence.
+
+"What did he SAY?" she asked, quickly, and her tone was hopeful.
+
+"'Say?'" Alice repeated, impatiently. "Why, nothing. I didn't
+let him. Really, mama, I think the best thing for you to do
+would be to just keep out of his room, because I don't believe
+you can go in there and not talk to him about it, and if you do
+talk we'll never get him to do the right thing. Never!"
+
+The mother's response was a grieving silence; she turned from her
+daughter and walked to the door.
+
+"Now, for goodness' sake!" Alice cried. "Don't go making tragedy
+out of my offering you a little practical advice!"
+
+"I'm not," Mrs. Adams gulped, halting. "I'm just--just going to
+dust the downstairs, Alice." And with her face still averted,
+she went out into the little hallway, closing the door behind
+her. A moment later she could be heard descending the stairs,
+the sound of her footsteps carrying somehow an effect of
+resignation.
+
+Alice listened, sighed, and, breathing the words, "Oh, murder!"
+turned to cheerier matters. She put on a little apple-green
+turban with a dim gold band round it, and then, having shrouded
+the turban in a white veil, which she kept pushed up above her
+forehead, she got herself into a tan coat of soft cloth fashioned
+with rakish severity. After that, having studied herself gravely
+in a long glass, she took from one of the drawers of her
+dressing-table a black leather card-case cornered in silver
+filigree, but found it empty.
+
+She opened another drawer wherein were two white pasteboard boxes
+of cards, the one set showing simply "Miss Adams," the other
+engraved in Gothic characters, "Miss Alys Tuttle Adams." The
+latter belonged to Alice's "Alys" period--most girls go through
+it; and Alice must have felt that she had graduated, for, after
+frowning thoughtfully at the exhibit this morning, she took the
+box with its contents, and let the white shower fall from her
+fingers into the waste-basket beside her small desk. She
+replenished the card-case from the "Miss Adams" box; then, having
+found a pair of fresh white gloves, she tucked an ivory-topped
+Malacca walking-stick under her arm and set forth.
+
+She went down the stairs, buttoning her gloves and still wearing
+the frown with which she had put "Alys" finally out of her life.
+She descended slowly, and paused on the lowest step, looking
+about her with an expression that needed but a slight deepening
+to betoken bitterness. Its connection with her dropping "Alys"
+forever was slight, however.
+
+The small frame house, about fifteen years old, was already
+inclining to become a new Colonial relic. The Adamses had built
+it, moving into it from the "Queen Anne" house they had rented
+until they took this step in fashion. But fifteen years is a
+long time to stand still in the midland country, even for a
+house, and this one was lightly made, though the Adamses had not
+realized how flimsily until they had lived in it for some time.
+"Solid, compact, and convenient" were the instructions to the
+architect, and he had made it compact successfully. Alice,
+pausing at the foot of the stairway, was at the same time fairly
+in the "living-room," for the only separation between the "living
+room" and the hall was a demarcation suggested to willing
+imaginations by a pair of wooden columns painted white. These
+columns, pine under the paint, were bruised and chipped at the
+base; one of them showed a crack that threatened to become a
+split; the "hard-wood" floor had become uneven; and in a corner
+the walls apparently failed of solidity, where the wall-paper had
+declined to accompany some staggerings of the plaster beneath it.
+
+The furniture was in great part an accumulation begun with the
+wedding gifts; though some of it was older, two large patent
+rocking-chairs and a footstool having belonged to Mrs. Adams's
+mother in the days of hard brown plush and veneer. For
+decoration there were pictures and vases. Mrs. Adams had always
+been fond of vases, she said, and every year her husband's
+Christmas present to her was a vase of one sort or
+another--whatever the clerk showed him, marked at about twelve or
+fourteen dollars. The pictures were some of them etchings framed
+in gilt: Rheims, Canterbury, schooners grouped against a wharf;
+and Alice could remember how, in her childhood, her father
+sometimes pointed out the watery reflections in this last as very
+fine. But it was a long time since he had shown interest in such
+things--"or in anything much," as she thought.
+
+Other pictures were two water-colours in baroque frames; one
+being the Amalfi monk on a pergola wall, while the second was a
+yard-wide display of iris blossoms, painted by Alice herself at
+fourteen, as a birthday gift to her mother. Alice's glance
+paused upon it now with no great pride, but showed more approval
+of an enormous photograph of the Colosseum. This she thought of
+as "the only good thing in the room"; it possessed and bestowed
+distinction, she felt; and she did not regret having won her
+struggle to get it hung in its conspicuous place of honour over
+the mantelpiece. Formerly that place had been held for years by
+a steel-engraving, an accurate representation of the Suspension
+Bridge at Niagara Falls. It was almost as large as its
+successor, the "Colosseum," and it had been presented to Mr.
+Adams by colleagues in his department at Lamb and Company's.
+Adams had shown some feeling when Alice began to urge its removal
+to obscurity in the "upstairs hall"; he even resisted for several
+days after she had the "Colosseum" charged to him, framed in oak,
+and sent to the house. She cheered him up, of course, when he
+gave way; and her heart never misgave her that there might be a
+doubt which of the two pictures was the more dismaying.
+
+Over the pictures, the vases, the old brown plush rocking-chairs
+and the stool, over the three gilt chairs, over the new
+chintz-covered easy chair and the gray velure sofa--over
+everything everywhere, was the familiar coating of smoke grime.
+It had worked into every fibre of the lace curtains, dingying
+them to an unpleasant gray; it lay on the window-sills and it
+dimmed the glass panes; it covered the walls, covered the
+ceiling, and was smeared darker and thicker in all corners. Yet
+here was no fault of housewifery; the curse could not be lifted,
+as the ingrained smudges permanent on the once white woodwork
+proved. The grime was perpetually renewed; scrubbing only ground
+it in.
+
+This particular ugliness was small part of Alice's discontent,
+for though the coating grew a little deeper each year she was
+used to it. Moreover, she knew that she was not likely to find
+anything better in a thousand miles, so long as she kept to
+cities, and that none of her friends, however opulent, had any
+advantage of her here. Indeed, throughout all the great
+soft-coal country, people who consider themselves comparatively
+poor may find this consolation: cleanliness has been added to the
+virtues and beatitudes that money can not buy.
+
+Alice brightened a little as she went forward to the front door,
+and she brightened more when the spring breeze met her there.
+Then all depression left her as she walked down the short brick
+path to the sidewalk, looked up and down the street, and saw how
+bravely the maple shade-trees, in spite of the black powder they
+breathed, were flinging out their thousands of young green
+particles overhead.
+
+She turned north, treading the new little shadows on the pavement
+briskly, and, having finished buttoning her gloves, swung down
+her Malacca stick from under her arm to let it tap a more
+leisurely accompaniment to her quick, short step. She had to
+step quickly if she was to get anywhere; for the closeness of her
+skirt, in spite of its little length, permitted no natural
+stride; but she was pleased to be impeded, these brevities
+forming part of her show of fashion.
+
+Other pedestrians found them not without charm, though approval
+may have been lacking here and there, and at the first crossing
+Alice suffered what she might have accounted an actual injury,
+had she allowed herself to be so sensitive. An elderly woman in
+fussy black silk stood there, waiting for a streetcar; she was
+all of a globular modelling, with a face patterned like a
+frost-bitten peach; and that the approaching gracefulness was
+uncongenial she naively made too evident. Her round, wan eyes
+seemed roused to bitter life as they rose from the curved high
+heels of the buckled slippers to the tight little skirt, and
+thence with startled ferocity to the Malacca cane, which plainly
+appeared to her as a decoration not more astounding than it was
+insulting.
+
+Perceiving that the girl was bowing to her, the globular lady
+hurriedly made shift to alter her injurious expression. "Good
+morning, Mrs. Dowling," Alice said, gravely. Mrs. Dowling
+returned the salutation with a smile as convincingly benevolent
+as the ghastly smile upon a Santa Claus face; and then, while
+Alice passed on, exploded toward her a single compacted breath
+through tightened lips.
+
+The sound was eloquently audible, though Mrs. Dowling remained
+unaware that in this or any manner whatever she had shed a light
+upon her thoughts; for it was her lifelong innocent conviction
+that other people saw her only as she wished to be seen, and
+heard from her only what she intended to be heard. At home it
+was always her husband who pulled down the shades of their
+bedroom window.
+
+Alice looked serious for a few moments after the little
+encounter, then found some consolation in the behaviour of a
+gentleman of forty or so who was coming toward her. Like Mrs.
+Dowling, he had begun to show consciousness of Alice's approach
+while she was yet afar off; but his tokens were of a kind
+pleasanter to her. He was like Mrs. Dowling again, however, in
+his conception that Alice would not realize the significance of
+what he did. He passed his hand over his neck-scarf to see that
+it lay neatly to his collar, smoothed a lapel of his coat, and
+adjusted his hat, seeming to be preoccupied the while with
+problems that kept his eyes to the pavement; then, as he came
+within a few feet of her, he looked up, as in a surprised
+recognition almost dramatic, smiled winningly, lifted his hat
+decisively, and carried it to the full arm's length.
+
+Alice's response was all he could have asked. The cane in her
+right hand stopped short in its swing, while her left hand moved
+in a pretty gesture as if an impulse carried it toward the heart;
+and she smiled, with her under lip caught suddenly between her
+teeth. Months ago she had seen an actress use this smile in a
+play, and it came perfectly to Alice now, without conscious
+direction, it had been so well acquired; but the pretty hand's
+little impulse toward the heart was an original bit all her own,
+on the spur of the moment.
+
+The gentleman went on, passing from her forward vision as he
+replaced his hat. Of himself he was nothing to Alice, except for
+the gracious circumstance that he had shown strong consciousness
+of a pretty girl. He was middle-aged, substantial, a family man,
+securely married; and Alice had with him one of those long
+acquaintances that never become emphasized by so much as five
+minutes of talk; yet for this inconsequent meeting she had
+enacted a little part like a fragment in a pantomime of Spanish
+wooing.
+
+It was not for him--not even to impress him, except as a
+messenger. Alice was herself almost unaware of her thought,
+which was one of the running thousands of her thoughts that took
+no deliberate form in words. Nevertheless, she had it, and it
+was the impulse of all her pretty bits of pantomime when she met
+other acquaintances who made their appreciation visible, as this
+substantial gentleman did. In Alice's unworded thought, he was
+to be thus encouraged as in some measure a champion to speak well
+of her to the world; but more than this: he was to tell some
+magnificent unknown bachelor how wonderful, how mysterious, she
+was.
+
+She hastened on gravely, a little stirred reciprocally with the
+supposed stirrings in the breast of that shadowy ducal mate, who
+must be somewhere "waiting," or perhaps already seeking her; for
+she more often thought of herself as "waiting" while he sought
+her; and sometimes this view of things became so definite that it
+shaped into a murmur on her lips. "Waiting. Just waiting." And
+she might add, "For him!" Then, being twenty-two, she was apt to
+conclude the mystic interview by laughing at herself, though not
+without a continued wistfulness.
+
+She came to a group of small coloured children playing waywardly
+in a puddle at the mouth of a muddy alley; and at sight of her
+they gave over their pastime in order to stare. She smiled
+brilliantly upon them, but they were too struck with wonder to
+comprehend that the manifestation was friendly; and as Alice
+picked her way in a little detour to keep from the mud, she heard
+one of them say, "Lady got cane! Jeez'!"
+
+She knew that many coloured children use impieties familiarly,
+and she was not startled. She was disturbed, however, by an
+unfavourable hint in the speaker's tone. He was six, probably,
+but the sting of a criticism is not necessarily allayed by
+knowledge of its ignoble source, and Alice had already begun to
+feel a slight uneasiness about her cane. Mrs. Dowling's stare
+had been strikingly projected at it; other women more than merely
+glanced, their brows and lips contracting impulsively; and Alice
+was aware that one or two of them frankly halted as soon as she
+had passed.
+
+She had seen in several magazines pictures of ladies with canes,
+and on that account she had bought this one, never questioning
+that fashion is recognized, even in the provinces, as soon as
+beheld. On the contrary, these staring women obviously failed to
+realize that what they were being shown was not an eccentric
+outburst, but the bright harbinger of an illustrious mode. Alice
+had applied a bit of artificial pigment to her lips and cheeks
+before she set forth this morning; she did not need it, having a
+ready colour of her own, which now mounted high with annoyance.
+
+Then a splendidly shining closed black automobile, with windows
+of polished glass, came silently down the street toward her.
+Within it, as in a luxurious little apartment, three comely
+ladies in mourning sat and gossiped; but when they saw Alice they
+clutched one another. They instantly recovered, bowing to her
+solemnly as they were borne by, yet were not gone from her sight
+so swiftly but the edge of her side glance caught a flash of
+teeth in mouths suddenly opened, and the dark glisten of black
+gloves again clutching to share mirth.
+
+The colour that outdid the rouge on Alice's cheek extended its
+area and grew warmer as she realized how all too cordial had been
+her nod and smile to these humorous ladies. But in their
+identity lay a significance causing her a sharper smart, for they
+were of the family of that Lamb, chief of Lamb and Company, who
+had employed her father since before she was born.
+
+"And know his salary! They'd be SURE to find out about that!"
+was her thought, coupled with another bitter one to the effect
+that they had probably made instantaneous financial estimates of
+what she wore though certainly her walking-stick had most fed
+their hilarity.
+
+She tucked it under her arm, not swinging it again; and her
+breath became quick and irregular as emotion beset her. She had
+been enjoying her walk, but within the space of the few blocks
+she had gone since she met the substantial gentleman, she found
+that more than the walk was spoiled: suddenly her life seemed to
+be spoiled, too; though she did not view the ruin with
+complaisance. These Lamb women thought her and her cane
+ridiculous, did they? she said to herself. That was their
+parvenu blood: to think because a girl's father worked for their
+grandfather she had no right to be rather striking in style,
+especially when the striking WAS her style. Probably all the
+other girls and women would agree with them and would laugh at
+her when they got together, and, what might be fatal, would try
+to make all the men think her a silly pretender. Men were just
+like sheep, and nothing was easier than for women to set up as
+shepherds and pen them in a fold. "To keep out outsiders," Alice
+thought. "And make 'em believe I AM an outsider. What's the use
+of living?"
+
+All seemed lost when a trim young man appeared, striding out of a
+cross-street not far before her, and, turning at the corner, came
+toward her. Visibly, he slackened his gait to lengthen the time
+of his approach, and, as he was a stranger to her, no motive
+could be ascribed to him other than a wish to have a longer time
+to look at her.
+
+She lifted a pretty hand to a pin at her throat, bit her lip--not
+with the smile, but mysteriously--and at the last instant before
+her shadow touched the stranger, let her eyes gravely meet his.
+A moment later, having arrived before the house which was her
+destination, she halted at the entrance to a driveway leading
+through fine lawns to the intentionally important mansion. It
+was a pleasant and impressive place to be seen entering, but
+Alice did not enter at once. She paused, examining a tiny bit of
+mortar which the masons had forgotten to scrape from a brick in
+one of the massive gate-posts. She frowned at this tiny
+defacement, and with an air of annoyance scraped it away, using
+the ferrule of her cane an act of fastidious proprietorship. If
+any one had looked back over his shoulder he would not have
+doubted that she lived there.
+
+Alice did not turn to see whether anything of the sort happened
+or not, but she may have surmised that it did. At all events, it
+was with an invigorated step that she left the gateway behind her
+and went cheerfully up the drive to the house of her friend
+Mildred.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Adams had a restless morning, and toward noon he asked Miss Perry
+to call his daughter; he wished to say something to her.
+
+"I thought I heard her leaving the house a couple of hours
+ago--maybe longer," the nurse told him. "I'll go see." And she
+returned from the brief errand, her impression confirmed by
+information from Mrs. Adams. "Yes. She went up to Miss Mildred
+Palmer's to see what she's going to wear to-night."
+
+Adams looked at Miss Perry wearily, but remained passive, making
+no inquiries; for he was long accustomed to what seemed to him a
+kind of jargon among ladies, which became the more
+incomprehensible when they tried to explain it. A man's best
+course, he had found, was just to let it go as so much sound.
+His sorrowful eyes followed the nurse as she went back to her
+rocking-chair by the window, and her placidity showed him that
+there was no mystery for her in the fact that Alice walked two
+miles to ask so simple a question when there was a telephone in
+the house. Obviously Miss Perry also comprehended why Alice
+thought it important to know what Mildred meant to wear. Adams
+understood why Alice should be concerned with what she herself
+wore "to look neat and tidy and at her best, why, of course she'd
+want to," he thought--but he realized that it was forever beyond
+him to understand why the clothing of other people had long since
+become an absorbing part of her life.
+
+Her excursion this morning was no novelty; she was continually
+going to see what Mildred meant to wear, or what some other girl
+meant to wear; and when Alice came home from wherever other girls
+or women had been gathered, she always hurried to her mother with
+earnest descriptions of the clothing she had seen. At such
+times, if Adams was present, he might recognize "organdie," or
+"taffeta," or "chiffon," as words defining certain textiles, but
+the rest was too technical for him, and he was like a dismal boy
+at a sermon, just waiting for it to get itself finished. Not the
+least of the mystery was his wife's interest: she was almost
+indifferent about her own clothes, and when she consulted Alice
+about them spoke hurriedly and with an air of apology; but when
+Alice described other people's clothes, Mrs. Adams listened as
+eagerly as the daughter talked.
+
+"There they go!" he muttered to-day, a moment after he heard the
+front door closing, a sound recognizable throughout most of the
+thinly built house. Alice had just returned, and Mrs. Adams
+called to her from the upper hallway, not far from Adams's door.
+
+"What did she SAY?"
+
+"She was sort of snippy about it," Alice returned, ascending the
+stairs. "She gets that way sometimes, and pretended she hadn't
+made up her mind, but I'm pretty sure it'll be the maize
+Georgette with Malines flounces."
+
+"Didn't you say she wore that at the Pattersons'?" Mrs. Adams
+inquired, as Alice arrived at the top of the stairs. "And didn't
+you tell me she wore it again at the----"
+
+"Certainly not," Alice interrupted, rather petulantly. "She's
+never worn it but once, and of course she wouldn't want to wear
+anything to-night that people have seen her in a lot."
+
+Miss Perry opened the door of Adams's room and stepped out.
+"Your father wants to know if you'll come and see him a minute,
+Miss Adams."
+
+"Poor old thing! Of course!" Alice exclaimed, and went quickly
+into the room, Miss Perry remaining outside. "What's the matter,
+papa? Getting awful sick of lying on his tired old back, I
+expect."
+
+"I've had kind of a poor morning," Adams said, as she patted his
+hand comfortingly. "I been thinking----"
+
+"Didn't I tell you not to?" she cried, gaily. "Of course you'll
+have poor times when you go and do just exactly what I say you
+mustn't. You stop thinking this very minute!"
+
+He smiled ruefully, closing his eyes; was silent for a moment,
+then asked her to sit beside the bed. "I been thinking of
+something I wanted to say," he added.
+
+"What like, papa?"
+
+"Well, it's nothing--much," he said, with something deprecatory
+in his tone, as if he felt vague impulses toward both humour and
+apology. "I just thought maybe I ought to've said more to you
+some time or other about--well, about the way things ARE, down at
+Lamb and Company's, for instance."
+
+"Now, papa!" She leaned forward in the chair she had taken, and
+pretended to slap his hand crossly. "Isn't that exactly what I
+said you couldn't think one single think about till you get ALL
+well?"
+
+"Well----" he said, and went on slowly, not looking at her, but
+at the ceiling. "I just thought maybe it wouldn't been any harm
+if some time or other I told you something about the way they
+sort of depend on me down there."
+
+"Why don't they show it, then?" she asked, quickly. "That's just
+what mama and I have been feeling so much; they don't appreciate
+you."
+
+"Why, yes, they do," he said. "Yes, they do. They began
+h'isting my salary the second year I went in there, and they've
+h'isted it a little every two years all the time I've worked for
+'em. I've been head of the sundries department for seven years
+now, and I could hardly have more authority in that department
+unless I was a member of the firm itself."
+
+"Well, why don't they make you a member of the firm? That's what
+they ought to've done! Yes, and long ago!"
+
+Adams laughed, but sighed with more heartiness than he had
+laughed. "They call me their 'oldest stand-by' down there." He
+laughed again, apologetically, as if to excuse himself for taking
+a little pride in this title. "Yes, sir; they say I'm their
+'oldest stand-by'; and I guess they know they can count on my
+department's turning in as good a report as they look for, at the
+end of every month; but they don't have to take a man into the
+firm to get him to do my work, dearie."
+
+"But you said they depended on you, papa."
+
+"So they do; but of course not so's they couldn't get along
+without me." He paused, reflecting. "I don't just seem to know
+how to put it--I mean how to put what I started out to say. I
+kind of wanted to tell you--well, it seems funny to me, these
+last few years, the way your mother's taken to feeling about it.
+I'd like to see a better established wholesale drug business than
+Lamb and Company this side the Alleghanies--I don't say bigger, I
+say better established--and it's kind of funny for a man that's
+been with a business like that as long as I have to hear it
+called a 'hole.' It's kind of funny when you think, yourself,
+you've done pretty fairly well in a business like that, and the
+men at the head of it seem to think so, too, and put your salary
+just about as high as anybody could consider customary--well,
+what I mean, Alice, it's kind of funny to have your mother think
+it's mostly just--mostly just a failure, so to speak."
+
+His voice had become tremulous in spite of him; and this sign of
+weakness and emotion had sufficient effect upon Alice. She bent
+over him suddenly, with her arm about him and her cheek against
+his. "Poor papa!" she murmured. "Poor papa!"
+
+"No, no," he said. "I didn't mean anything to trouble you. I
+just thought----" He hesitated. "I just wondered--I thought
+maybe it wouldn't be any harm if I said something about how
+things ARE down there. I got to thinking maybe you didn't
+understand it's a pretty good place. They're fine people to work
+for; and they've always seemed to think something of me;--the way
+they took Walter on, for instance, soon as I asked 'em, last
+year. Don't you think that looked a good deal as if they thought
+something of me, Alice?"
+
+"Yes, papa," she said, not moving.
+
+"And the work's right pleasant," he went on. "Mighty nice boys
+in our department, Alice. Well, they are in all the departments,
+for that matter. We have a good deal of fun down there some
+days."
+
+She lifted her head. "More than you do at home 'some days,' I
+expect, papa!" she said.
+
+He protested feebly. "Now, I didn't mean that--I didn't want to
+trouble you----"
+
+She looked at him through winking eyelashes. "I'm sorry I called
+it a 'hole,' papa."
+
+"No, no," he protested, gently. "It was your mother said that."
+
+"No. I did, too."
+
+"Well, if you did, it was only because you'd heard her."
+
+She shook her head, then kissed him. "I'm going to talk to her,"
+she said, and rose decisively.
+
+But at this, her father's troubled voice became quickly louder:
+"You better let her alone. I just wanted to have a little talk
+with you. I didn't mean to start any--your mother won't----"
+
+"Now, papa!" Alice spoke cheerfully again, and smiled upon him.
+"I want you to quit worrying! Everything's going to be all right
+and nobody's going to bother you any more about anything. You'll
+see!"
+
+She carried her smile out into the hall, but after she had closed
+the door her face was all pity; and her mother, waiting for her
+in the opposite room, spoke sympathetically.
+
+"What's the matter, Alice? What did he say that's upset you?"
+
+"Wait a minute, mama." Alice found a handkerchief, used it for
+eyes and suffused nose, gulped, then suddenly and desolately sat
+upon the bed. "Poor, poor, POOR papa!" she whispered.
+
+"Why?" Mrs. Adams inquired, mildly. "What's the matter with
+him? Sometimes you act as if he weren't getting well. What's he
+been talking about?"
+
+"Mama--well, I think I'm pretty selfish. Oh, I do!"
+
+"Did he say you were?"
+
+"Papa? No, indeed! What I mean is, maybe we're both a little
+selfish to try to make him go out and hunt around for something
+new."
+
+Mrs. Adams looked thoughtful. "Oh, that's what he was up to!"
+
+"Mama, I think we ought to give it up. I didn't dream it had
+really hurt him."
+
+"Well, doesn't he hurt us?"
+
+"Never that I know of, mama."
+
+"I don't mean by SAYING things," Mrs. Adams explained,
+impatiently. "There are more ways than that of hurting people.
+When a man sticks to a salary that doesn't provide for his
+family, isn't that hurting them?"
+
+"Oh, it 'provides' for us well enough, mama. We have what we
+need--if I weren't so extravagant. Oh, _I_ know I am!"
+
+But at this admission her mother cried out sharply.
+"'Extravagant!' You haven't one tenth of what the other girls you
+go with have. And you CAN'T have what you ought to as long as he
+doesn't get out of that horrible place. It provides bare food
+and shelter for us, but what's that?"
+
+"I don't think we ought to try any more to change him."
+
+"You don't?" Mrs. Adams came and stood before her. "Listen,
+Alice: your father's asleep; that's his trouble, and he's got to
+be waked up. He doesn't know that things have changed. When you
+and Walter were little children we did have enough--at least it
+seemed to be about as much as most of the people we knew. But
+the town isn't what it was in those days, and times aren't what
+they were then, and these fearful PRICES aren't the old prices.
+Everything else but your father has changed, and all the time
+he's stood still. He doesn't know it; he thinks because they've
+given him a hundred dollars more every two years he's quite a
+prosperous man! And he thinks that because his children cost him
+more than he and I cost our parents he gives them--enough!"
+
+"But Walter----" Alice faltered. "Walter doesn't cost him
+anything at all any more." And she concluded, in a stricken
+voice, "It's all--me!"
+
+"Why shouldn't it be?" her mother cried. "You're young--you're
+just at the time when your life should be fullest of good things
+and happiness. Yet what do you get?"
+
+Alice's lip quivered; she was not unsusceptible to such an
+appeal, but she contrived the semblance of a protest. "I don't
+have such a bad time not a good DEAL of the time, anyhow. I've
+got a good MANY of the things other girls have----"
+
+"You have?" Mrs. Adams was piteously satirical. "I suppose
+you've got a limousine to go to that dance to-night? I suppose
+you've only got to call a florist and tell him to send you some
+orchids? I suppose you've----"
+
+But Alice interrupted this list. Apparently in a single instant
+all emotion left her, and she became businesslike, as one in the
+midst of trifles reminded of really serious matters. She got up
+from the bed and went to the door of the closet where she kept
+her dresses. "Oh, see here," she said, briskly. "I've decided
+to wear my white organdie if you could put in a new lining for
+me. I'm afraid it'll take you nearly all afternoon."
+
+She brought forth the dress, displayed it upon the bed, and Mrs.
+Adams examined it attentively.
+
+"Do you think you could get it done, mama?"
+
+"I don't see why not," Mrs. Adams answered, passing a thoughtful
+hand over the fabric. "It oughtn't to take more than four or
+five hours."
+
+"It's a shame to have you sit at the machine that long," Alice
+said, absently, adding, "And I'm sure we ought to let papa alone.
+Let's just give it up, mama."
+
+Mrs. Adams continued her thoughtful examination of the dress.
+"Did you buy the chiffon and ribbon, Alice?"
+
+"Yes. I'm sure we oughtn't to talk to him about it any more,
+mama."
+
+"Well, we'll see."
+
+"Let's both agree that we'll NEVER say another single word to him
+about it," said Alice. "It'll be a great deal better if we just
+let him make up his mind for himself."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+With this, having more immediately practical questions before
+them, they dropped the subject, to bend their entire attention
+upon the dress; and when the lunch-gong sounded downstairs Alice
+was still sketching repairs and alterations. She continued to
+sketch them, not heeding the summons.
+
+"I suppose we'd better go down to lunch," Mrs. Adams said,
+absently. "She's at the gong again." "In a minute, mama. Now
+about the sleeves----" And she went on with her planning.
+Unfortunately the gong was inexpressive of the mood of the person
+who beat upon it. It consisted of three little metal bowls upon
+a string; they were unequal in size, and, upon being tapped with
+a padded stick, gave forth vibrations almost musically pleasant.
+It was Alice who had substituted this contrivance for the brass
+"dinner-bell" in use throughout her childhood; and neither she
+nor the others of her family realized that the substitution of
+sweeter sounds had made the life of that household more
+difficult. In spite of dismaying increases in wages, the Adamses
+still strove to keep a cook; and, as they were unable to pay the
+higher rates demanded by a good one, what they usually had was a
+whimsical coloured woman of nomadic impulses. In the hands of
+such a person the old-fashioned "dinner-bell" was satisfying;
+life could instantly be made intolerable for any one dawdling on
+his way to a meal; the bell was capable of every desirable
+profanity and left nothing bottled up in the breast of the
+ringer. But the chamois-covered stick might whack upon Alice's
+little Chinese bowls for a considerable length of time and
+produce no great effect of urgency upon a hearer, nor any other
+effect, except fury in the cook. The ironical impossibility of
+expressing indignation otherwise than by sounds of gentle harmony
+proved exasperating; the cook was apt to become surcharged, so
+that explosive resignations, never rare, were somewhat more
+frequent after the introduction of the gong.
+
+Mrs. Adams took this increased frequency to be only another
+manifestation of the inexplicable new difficulties that beset all
+housekeeping. You paid a cook double what you had paid one a few
+years before; and the cook knew half as much of cookery, and had
+no gratitude. The more you gave these people, it seemed, the
+worse they behaved--a condition not to be remedied by simply
+giving them less, because you couldn't even get the worst unless
+you paid her what she demanded. Nevertheless, Mrs. Adams
+remained fitfully an optimist in the matter. Brought up by her
+mother to speak of a female cook as "the girl," she had been
+instructed by Alice to drop that definition in favour of one not
+an improvement in accuracy: "the maid." Almost always, during
+the first day or so after every cook came, Mrs. Adams would say,
+at intervals, with an air of triumph: "I believe--of course it's
+a little soon to be sure--but I do really believe this new maid
+is the treasure we've been looking for so long!" Much in the same
+way that Alice dreamed of a mysterious perfect mate for whom she
+"waited," her mother had a fairy theory that hidden somewhere in
+the universe there was the treasure, the perfect "maid," who
+would come and cook in the Adamses' kitchen, not four days or
+four weeks, but forever.
+
+The present incumbent was not she. Alice, profoundly interested
+herself, kept her mother likewise so preoccupied with the dress
+that they were but vaguely conscious of the gong's soft warnings,
+though these were repeated and protracted unusually. Finally the
+sound of a hearty voice, independent and enraged, reached the
+pair. It came from the hall below.
+
+"I says goo'-BYE!" it called. "Da'ss all!"
+
+Then the front door slammed.
+
+"Why, what----" Mrs. Adams began.
+
+They went down hurriedly to find out. Miss Perry informed them.
+
+"I couldn't make her listen to reason," she said. "She rang the
+gong four or five times and got to talking to herself; and then
+she went up to her room and packed her bag. I told her she had
+no business to go out the front door, anyhow."
+
+Mrs. Adams took the news philosophically. "I thought she had
+something like that in her eye when I paid her this morning, and
+I'm not surprised. Well, we won't let Mr. Adams know anything's
+the matter till I get a new one."
+
+They lunched upon what the late incumbent had left chilling on
+the table, and then Mrs. Adams prepared to wash the dishes; she
+would "have them done in a jiffy," she said, cheerfully. But it
+was Alice who washed the dishes.
+
+"I DON'T like to have you do that, Alice," her mother protested,
+following her into the kitchen. "It roughens the hands, and when
+a girl has hands like yours----"
+
+"I know, mama." Alice looked troubled, but shook her head. "It
+can't be helped this time; you'll need every minute to get that
+dress done."
+
+Mrs. Adams went away lamenting, while Alice, no expert, began to
+splash the plates and cups and saucers in the warm water. After
+a while, as she worked, her eyes grew dreamy: she was making
+little gay-coloured pictures of herself, unfounded prophecies of
+how she would look and what would happen to her that evening.
+She saw herself, charming and demure, wearing a fluffy
+idealization of the dress her mother now determinedly struggled
+with upstairs; she saw herself framed in a garlanded archway, the
+entrance to a ballroom, and saw the people on the shining floor
+turning dramatically to look at her; then from all points a rush
+of young men shouting for dances with her; and she constructed a
+superb stranger, tall, dark, masterfully smiling, who swung her
+out of the clamouring group as the music began. She saw herself
+dancing with him, saw the half-troubled smile she would give him;
+and she accurately smiled that smile as she rinsed the knives and
+forks.
+
+These hopeful fragments of drama were not to be realized, she
+knew; but she played that they were true, and went on creating
+them. In all of them she wore or carried flowers--her mother's
+sorrow for her in this detail but made it the more important--
+and she saw herself glamorous with orchids; discarded these for
+an armful of long-stemmed, heavy roses; tossed them away for a
+great bouquet of white camellias; and so wandered down a
+lengthening hothouse gallery of floral beauty, all costly and
+beyond her reach except in such a wistful day-dream. And upon
+her present whole horizon, though she searched it earnestly, she
+could discover no figure of a sender of flowers.
+
+Out of her fancies the desire for flowers to wear that night
+emerged definitely and became poignant; she began to feel that it
+might be particularly important to have them. "This might be the
+night!" She was still at the age to dream that the night of any
+dance may be the vital point in destiny. No matter how
+commonplace or disappointing other dance nights have been this
+one may bring the great meeting. The unknown magnifico may be
+there.
+
+Alice was almost unaware of her own reveries in which this being
+appeared--reveries often so transitory that they developed and
+passed in a few seconds. And in some of them the being was not
+wholly a stranger; there were moments when he seemed to be
+composed of recognizable fragments of young men she knew--a smile
+she had liked, from one; the figure of another, the hair of
+another--and sometimes she thought he might be concealed, so to
+say, within the person of an actual acquaintance, someone she had
+never suspected of being the right seeker for her, someone who
+had never suspected that it was she who "waited" for him.
+Anything might reveal them to each other: a look, a turn of the
+head, a singular word--perhaps some flowers upon her breast or in
+her hand.
+
+She wiped the dishes slowly, concluding the operation by dropping
+a saucer upon the floor and dreamily sweeping the fragments under
+the stove. She sighed and replaced the broom near a window,
+letting her glance wander over the small yard outside. The
+grass, repulsively besooted to the colour of coal-smoke all
+winter, had lately come to life again and now sparkled with
+green, in the midst of which a tiny shot of blue suddenly fixed
+her absent eyes. They remained upon it for several moments,
+becoming less absent.
+
+It was a violet.
+
+Alice ran upstairs, put on her hat, went outdoors and began to
+search out the violets. She found twenty-two, a bright
+omen--since the number was that of her years--but not enough
+violets. There were no more; she had ransacked every foot of the
+yard.
+
+She looked dubiously at the little bunch in her hand, glanced at
+the lawn next door, which offered no favourable prospect; then
+went thoughtfully into the house, left her twenty-two violets in
+a bowl of water, and came quickly out again, her brow marked with
+a frown of decision. She went to a trolley-line and took a car
+to the outskirts of the city where a new park had been opened.
+
+Here she resumed her search, but it was not an easily rewarded
+one, and for an hour after her arrival she found no violets. She
+walked conscientiously over the whole stretch of meadow, her eyes
+roving discontentedly; there was never a blue dot in the groomed
+expanse; but at last, as she came near the borders of an old
+grove of trees, left untouched by the municipal landscapers, the
+little flowers appeared, and she began to gather them. She
+picked them carefully, loosening the earth round each tiny plant,
+so as to bring the roots up with it, that it might live the
+longer; and she had brought a napkin, which she drenched at a
+hydrant, and kept loosely wrapped about the stems of her
+collection.
+
+The turf was too damp for her to kneel; she worked patiently,
+stooping from the waist; and when she got home in a drizzle of
+rain at five o'clock her knees were tremulous with strain, her
+back ached, and she was tired all over, but she had three hundred
+violets. Her mother moaned when Alice showed them to her,
+fragrant in a basin of water.
+
+"Oh, you POOR child! To think of your having to: work so hard to
+get things that other girls only need; lift their little fingers
+for!"
+
+"Never mind," said Alice, huskily. "I've got 'em and I AM going
+to have a good time to-night!"
+
+"You've just got to!" Mrs. Adams agreed, intensely sympathetic.
+"The Lord knows you deserve to, after picking all these violets,
+poor thing, and He wouldn't be mean enough to keep you from it.
+I may have to get dinner before I finish the dress, but I can get
+it done in a few minutes afterward, and it's going to look right
+pretty. Don't you worry about THAT! And with all these lovely
+violets----"
+
+"I wonder----" Alice began, paused, then went on, fragmentarily:
+"I suppose--well, I wonder--do you suppose it would have been
+better policy to have told Walter before----"
+
+"No," said her mother. "It would only have given him longer to
+grumble."
+
+"But he might----"
+
+"Don't worry," Mrs. Adams reassured her. "He'll be a little
+cross, but he won't be stubborn; just let me talk to him and
+don't you say anything at all, no matter what HE says."
+
+These references to Walter concerned some necessary manoeuvres
+which took place at dinner, and were conducted by the mother,
+Alice having accepted her advice to sit in silence. Mrs. Adams
+began by laughing cheerfully. "I wonder how much longer it took
+me to cook this dinner than it does Walter to eat it?" she said.
+"Don't gobble, child! There's no hurry."
+
+In contact with his own family Walter was no squanderer of words.
+
+"Is for me," he said. "Got date."
+
+"I know you have, but there's plenty of time."
+
+He smiled in benevolent pity. "YOU know, do you? If you made
+any coffee--don't bother if you didn't. Get some down-town." He
+seemed about to rise and depart; whereupon Alice, biting her lip,
+sent a panic-stricken glance at her mother.
+
+But Mrs. Adams seemed not at all disturbed; and laughed again.
+"Why, what nonsense, Walter! I'll bring your coffee in a few
+minutes, but we're going to have dessert first."
+
+"What sort?"
+
+"Some lovely peaches."
+
+"Doe' want 'ny canned peaches," said the frank Walter, moving
+back his chair. "G'-night."
+
+"Walter! It doesn't begin till about nine o'clock at the
+earliest."
+
+He paused, mystified. "What doesn't?"
+
+"The dance."
+
+"What dance?"
+
+"Why, Mildred Palmer's dance, of course."
+
+Walter laughed briefly. "What's that to me?"
+
+"Why, you haven't forgotten it's TO-NIGHT, have you?" Mrs. Adams
+cried. "What a boy!"
+
+"I told you a week ago I wasn't going to that ole dance," he
+returned, frowning. "You heard me."
+
+"Walter!" she exclaimed. "Of COURSE you're going. I got your
+clothes all out this afternoon, and brushed them for you.
+They'll look very nice, and----"
+
+"They won't look nice on ME," he interrupted. "Got date
+down-town, I tell you."
+
+"But of course you'll----"
+
+"See here!" Walter said, decisively. "Don't get any wrong ideas
+in your head. I'm just as liable to go up to that ole dance at
+the Palmers' as I am to eat a couple of barrels of broken glass."
+
+"But, Walter----"
+
+Walter was beginning to be seriously annoyed. "Don't 'Walter'
+me! I'm no s'ciety snake. I wouldn't jazz with that Palmer
+crowd if they coaxed me with diamonds."
+
+"Walter----"
+
+"Didn't I tell you it's no use to 'Walter' me?" he demanded.
+
+"My dear child----"
+
+"Oh, Glory!"
+
+At this Mrs. Adams abandoned her air of amusement, looked hurt,
+and glanced at the demure Miss Perry across the table. "I'm
+afraid Miss Perry won't think you have very good manners,
+Walter."
+
+"You're right she won't," he agreed, grimly. "Not if I haf to
+hear any more about me goin' to----"
+
+But his mother interrupted him with some asperity: "It seems very
+strange that you always object to going anywhere among OUR
+friends, Walter."
+
+"YOUR friends!" he said, and, rising from his chair, gave
+utterance to an ironical laugh strictly monosyllabic. "Your
+friends!" he repeated, going to the door. "Oh, yes! Certainly!
+Good-NIGHT!"
+
+And looking back over his shoulder to offer a final brief view of
+his derisive face, he took himself out of the room.
+
+Alice gasped: "Mama----"
+
+"I'll stop him!" her mother responded, sharply; and hurried after
+the truant, catching him at the front door with his hat and
+raincoat on.
+
+"Walter----"
+
+"Told you had a date down-town," he said, gruffly, and would have
+opened the door, but she caught his arm and detained him.
+
+"Walter, please come back and finish your dinner. When I take
+all the trouble to cook it for you, I think you might at
+least----"
+
+"Now, now!" he said. "That isn't what you're up to. You don't
+want to make me eat; you want to make me listen."
+
+"Well, you MUST listen!" She retained her grasp upon his arm, and
+made it tighter. "Walter, please!" she entreated, her voice
+becoming tremulous. "PLEASE don't make me so much trouble!"
+
+He drew back from her as far as her hold upon him permitted, and
+looked at her sharply. "Look here!" he said. "I get you, all
+right! What's the matter of Alice GOIN' to that party by
+herself?"
+
+"She just CAN'T!"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"It makes things too MEAN for her, Walter. All the other girls
+have somebody to depend on after they get there."
+
+"Well, why doesn't she have somebody?" he asked, testily.
+"Somebody besides ME, I mean! Why hasn't somebody asked her to
+go? She ought to be THAT popular, anyhow, I sh'd think--she
+TRIES enough!"
+
+"I don't understand how you can be so hard," his mother wailed,
+huskily. "You know why they don't run after her the way they do
+the other girls she goes with, Walter. It's because we're poor,
+and she hasn't got any background.
+
+"'Background?'" Walter repeated. "'Background?' What kind of
+talk is that?"
+
+"You WILL go with her to-night, Walter?" his mother pleaded, not
+stopping to enlighten him. "You don't understand how hard things
+are for her and how brave she is about them, or you COULDN'T be
+so selfish! It'd be more than I can bear to see her disappointed
+to-night! She went clear out to Belleview Park this afternoon,
+Walter, and spent hours and hours picking violets to wear. You
+WILL----"
+
+Walter's heart was not iron, and the episode of the violets may
+have reached it. "Oh, BLUB!" he said, and flung his soft hat
+violently at the wall.
+
+His mother beamed with delight. "THAT'S a good boy, darling!
+You'll never be sorry you----"
+
+"Cut it out," he requested. "If I take her, will you pay for a
+taxi?"
+
+"Oh, Walter!" And again Mrs. Adams showed distress. "Couldn't
+you?"
+
+"No, I couldn't; I'm not goin' to throw away my good money like
+that, and you can't tell what time o' night it'll be before she's
+willin' to come home. What's the matter you payin' for one?"
+
+"I haven't any money."
+
+"Well, father----"
+
+She shook her head dolefully. "I got some from him this morning,
+and I can't bother him for any more; it upsets him. He's ALWAYS
+been so terribly close with money----"
+
+"I guess he couldn't help that," Walter observed. "We're liable
+to go to the poorhouse the way it is. Well, what's the matter
+our walkin' to this rotten party?"
+
+"In the rain, Walter?"
+
+"Well, it's only a drizzle and we can take a streetcar to within
+a block of the house."
+
+Again his mother shook her head. "It wouldn't do."
+
+"Well, darn the luck, all right!" he consented, explosively.
+"I'll get her something to ride in. It means seventy-five
+cents."
+
+"Why, Walter!" Mrs. Adams cried, much pleased. "Do you know how
+to get a cab for that little? How splendid!"
+
+"Tain't a cab," Walter informed her crossly. "It's a tin Lizzie,
+but you don't haf' to tell her what it is till I get her into it,
+do you?"
+
+Mrs. Adams agreed that she didn't.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+Alice was busy with herself for two hours after dinner; but a
+little before nine o'clock she stood in front of her long mirror,
+completed, bright-eyed and solemn. Her hair, exquisitely
+arranged, gave all she asked of it; what artificialities in
+colour she had used upon her face were only bits of emphasis that
+made her prettiness the more distinct; and the dress, not rumpled
+by her mother's careful hours of work, was a white cloud of
+loveliness. Finally there were two triumphant bouquets of
+violets, each with the stems wrapped in tin-foil shrouded by a
+bow of purple chiffon; and one bouquet she wore at her waist and
+the other she carried in her hand.
+
+Miss Perry, called in by a rapturous mother for the free treat of
+a look at this radiance, insisted that Alice was a vision.
+"Purely and simply a vision!" she said, meaning that no other
+definition whatever would satisfy her. "I never saw anybody look
+a vision if she don't look one to-night," the admiring nurse
+declared. "Her papa'll think the same I do about it. You see if
+he doesn't say she's purely and simply a vision."
+
+Adams did not fulfil the prediction quite literally when Alice
+paid a brief visit to his room to "show" him and bid him
+good-night; but he chuckled feebly. "Well, well, well!" he said.
+
+"You look mighty fine--MIGHTY fine!" And he waggled a bony finger
+at her two bouquets. "Why, Alice, who's your beau?"
+
+"Never you mind!" she laughed, archly brushing his nose with the
+violets in her hand. "He treats me pretty well, doesn't he?"
+
+"Must like to throw his money around! These violets smell mighty
+sweet, and they ought to, if they're going to a party with YOU.
+Have a good time, dearie."
+
+"I mean to!" she cried; and she repeated this gaily, but with an
+emphasis expressing sharp determination as she left him. "I MEAN
+to!"
+
+"What was he talking about?" her mother inquired, smoothing the
+rather worn and old evening wrap she had placed on Alice's bed.
+"What were you telling him you 'mean to?'"
+
+Alice went back to her triple mirror for the last time, then
+stood before the long one. "That I mean to have a good time
+to-night," she said; and as she turned from her reflection to the
+wrap Mrs. Adams held up for her, "It looks as though I COULD,
+don't you think so?"
+
+"You'll just be a queen to-night," her mother whispered in fond
+emotion. "You mustn't doubt yourself."
+
+"Well, there's one thing," said Alice. "I think I do look nice
+enough to get along without having to dance with that Frank
+Dowling! All I ask is for it to happen just once; and if he
+comes near me to-night I'm going to treat him the way the other
+girls do. Do you suppose Walter's got the taxi out in front?"
+
+"He--he's waiting down in the hall," Mrs. Adams answered,
+nervously; and she held up another garment to go over the wrap.
+
+Alice frowned at it. "What's that, mama?"
+
+"It's--it's your father's raincoat. I thought you'd put it on
+over----"
+
+"But I won't need it in a taxicab."
+
+"You will to get in and out, and you needn't take it into the
+Palmers'. You can leave it in the--in the-- It's drizzling,
+and you'll need it."
+
+"Oh, well," Alice consented; and a few minutes later, as with
+Walter's assistance she climbed into the vehicle he had provided,
+she better understood her mother's solicitude.
+
+"What on earth IS this, Walter?" she asked.
+
+"Never mind; it'll keep you dry enough with the top up," he
+returned, taking his seat beside her. Then for a time, as they
+went rather jerkily up the street, she was silent; but finally
+she repeated her question: "What IS it, Walter?"
+
+"What's what?"
+
+"This--this CAR?"
+
+"It's a ottomobile."
+
+"I mean--what kind is it?"
+
+"Haven't you got eyes?"
+
+"It's too dark."
+
+"It's a second-hand tin Lizzie," said Walter. "D'you know what
+that means? It means a flivver."
+
+"Yes, Walter."
+
+"Got 'ny 'bjections?"
+
+"Why, no, dear," she said, placatively. "Is it yours, Walter?
+Have you bought it?"
+
+"Me?" he laughed. "_I_ couldn't buy a used wheelbarrow. I rent
+this sometimes when I'm goin' out among 'em. Costs me
+seventy-five cents and the price o' the gas."
+
+"That seems very moderate."
+
+"I guess it is! The feller owes me some money, and this is the
+only way I'd ever get it off him."
+
+"Is he a garage-keeper?"
+
+"Not exactly!" Walter uttered husky sounds of amusement. "You'll
+be just as happy, I guess, if you don't know who he is," he said.
+
+His tone misgave her; and she said truthfully that she was
+content not to know who owned the car. "I joke sometimes about
+how you keep things to yourself," she added, "but I really never
+do pry in your affairs, Walter."
+
+"Oh, no, you don't!"
+
+"Indeed, I don't."
+
+"Yes, you're mighty nice and cooing when you got me where you
+want me," he jeered. "Well, _I_ just as soon tell you where I
+get this car."
+
+"I'd just as soon you wouldn't, Walter," she said, hurriedly.
+"Please don't."
+
+But Walter meant to tell her. "Why, there's nothin' exactly
+CRIMINAL about it," he said. "It belongs to old J. A. Lamb
+himself. He keeps it for their coon chauffeur. I rent it from
+him."
+
+"From Mr. LAMB?"
+
+"No; from the coon chauffeur."
+
+"Walter!" she gasped.
+
+"Sure I do! I can get it any night when the coon isn't goin' to
+use it himself. He's drivin' their limousine to-night--that
+little Henrietta Lamb's goin' to the party, no matter if her
+father HAS only been dead less'n a year!" He paused, then
+inquired: "Well, how d'you like it?"
+
+She did not speak, and he began to be remorseful for having
+imparted so much information, though his way of expressing regret
+was his own. "Well, you WILL make the folks make me take you to
+parties!" he said. "I got to do it the best way I CAN, don't I?"
+
+Then as she made no response, "Oh, the car's CLEAN enough," he
+said. "This coon, he's as particular as any white man; you
+needn't worry about that." And as she still said nothing, he
+added gruffly, "I'd of had a better car if I could afforded it.
+You needn't get so upset about it."
+
+"I don't understand--" she said in a low voice--"I don't
+understand how you know such people."
+
+"Such people as who?"
+
+"As--coloured chauffeurs."
+
+"Oh, look here, now!" he protested, loudly. "Don't you know this
+is a democratic country?"
+
+"Not quite that democratic, is it, Walter?"
+
+"The trouble with you," he retorted, "you don't know there's
+anybody in town except just this silk-shirt crowd." He paused,
+seeming to await a refutation; but as none came, he expressed
+himself definitely: "They make me sick."
+
+They were coming near their destination, and the glow of the big,
+brightly lighted house was seen before them in the wet night.
+Other cars, not like theirs, were approaching this center of
+brilliance; long triangles of light near the ground swept through
+the fine drizzle; small red tail-lights gleamed again from the
+moist pavement of the street; and, through the myriads of little
+glistening leaves along the curving driveway, glimpses were
+caught of lively colours moving in a white glare as the
+limousines released their occupants under the shelter of the
+porte-cochere.
+
+Alice clutched Walter's arm in a panic; they were just at the
+driveway entrance. "Walter, we mustn't go in there."
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"Leave this awful car outside."
+
+"Why, I----"
+
+"Stop!" she insisted, vehemently. "You've got to! Go back!"
+
+"Oh, Glory!"
+
+The little car was between the entrance posts; but Walter backed
+it out, avoiding a collision with an impressive machine which
+swerved away from them and passed on toward the porte-cochere,
+showing a man's face grinning at the window as it went by.
+"Flivver runabout got the wrong number!" he said.
+
+"Did he SEE us?" Alice cried.
+
+"Did who see us?"
+
+"Harvey Malone--in that foreign coupe."
+
+"No; he couldn't tell who we were under this top," Walter assured
+her as he brought the little car to a standstill beside the
+curbstone, out in the street. "What's it matter if he did, the
+big fish?"
+
+Alice responded with a loud sigh, and sat still.
+
+"Well, want to go on back?" Walter inquired. "You bet I'm
+willing!"
+
+"No."
+
+"Well, then, what's the matter our drivin' on up to the
+porte-cochere? There's room for me to park just the other side
+of it."
+
+"No, NO!"
+
+"What you expect to do? Sit HERE all night?"
+
+"No, leave the car here."
+
+"_I_ don't care where we leave it," he said. "Sit still till I
+lock her, so none o' these millionaires around here'll run off
+with her." He got out with a padlock and chain; and, having put
+these in place, offered Alice his hand. "Come on, if you're
+ready."
+
+"Wait," she said, and, divesting herself of the raincoat, handed
+it to Walter. "Please leave this with your things in the men's
+dressing-room, as if it were an extra one of your own, Walter."
+
+He nodded; she jumped out; and they scurried through the drizzle.
+
+As they reached the porte-cochere she began to laugh airily, and
+spoke to the impassive man in livery who stood there. "Joke on
+us!" she said, hurrying by him toward the door of the house.
+"Our car broke down outside the gate."
+
+The man remained impassive, though he responded with a faint
+gleam as Walter, looking back at him, produced for his benefit a
+cynical distortion of countenance which offered little
+confirmation of Alice's account of things. Then the door was
+swiftly opened to the brother and sister; and they came into a
+marble-floored hall, where a dozen sleeked young men lounged,
+smoked cigarettes and fastened their gloves, as they waited for
+their ladies. Alice nodded to one or another of these, and went
+quickly on, her face uplifted and smiling; but Walter detained
+her at the door to which she hastened.
+
+"Listen here," he said. "I suppose you want me to dance the
+first dance with you----"
+
+"If you please, Walter," she said, meekly.
+
+"How long you goin' to hang around fixin' up in that
+dressin'-room?"
+
+"I'll be out before you're ready yourself," she promised him; and
+kept her word, she was so eager for her good time to begin. When
+he came for her, they went down the hall to a corridor opening
+upon three great rooms which had been thrown open together, with
+the furniture removed and the broad floors waxed. At one end of
+the corridor musicians sat in a green grove, and Walter, with
+some interest, turned toward these; but his sister, pressing his
+arm, impelled him in the opposite direction.
+
+"What's the matter now?" he asked. "That's Jazz Louie and his
+half-breed bunch--three white and four mulatto. Let's----?"
+
+"No, no," she whispered. "We must speak to Mildred and Mr. and
+Mrs. Palmer."
+
+"'Speak' to 'em? I haven't got a thing to say to THOSE berries!"
+
+"Walter, won't you PLEASE behave?"
+
+He seemed to consent, for the moment, at least, and suffered her
+to take him down the corridor toward a floral bower where the
+hostess stood with her father and mother. Other couples and
+groups were moving in the same direction, carrying with them a
+hubbub of laughter and fragmentary chatterings; and Alice,
+smiling all the time, greeted people on every side of her
+eagerly--a little more eagerly than most of them responded--while
+Walter nodded in a noncommittal manner to one or two, said
+nothing, and yawned audibly, the last resource of a person who
+finds himself nervous in a false situation. He repeated his yawn
+and was beginning another when a convulsive pressure upon his arm
+made him understand that he must abandon this method of
+reassuring himself. They were close upon the floral bower.
+
+Mildred was giving her hand to one and another of her guests as
+rapidly as she could, passing them on to her father and mother,
+and at the same time resisting the efforts of three or four
+detached bachelors who besought her to give over her duty in
+favour of the dance-music just beginning to blare.
+
+She was a large, fair girl, with a kindness of eye somewhat
+withheld by an expression of fastidiousness; at first sight of
+her it was clear that she would never in her life do anything
+"incorrect," or wear anything "incorrect." But her correctness
+was of the finer sort, and had no air of being studied or
+achieved; conduct would never offer her a problem to be settled
+from a book of rules, for the rules were so deep within her that
+she was unconscious of them. And behind this perfection there
+was an even ampler perfection of what Mrs. Adams called
+"background." The big, rich, simple house was part of it, and
+Mildred's father and mother were part of it. They stood beside
+her, large, serene people, murmuring graciously and gently
+inclining their handsome heads as they gave their hands to the
+guests; and even the youngest and most ebullient of these took on
+a hushed mannerliness with a closer approach to the bower.
+
+When the opportunity came for Alice and Walter to pass within
+this precinct, Alice, going first, leaned forward and whispered
+in Mildred's ear. "You DIDN'T wear the maize georgette! That's
+what I thought you were going to. But you look simply DARLING!
+And those pearls----"
+
+Others were crowding decorously forward, anxious to be done with
+ceremony and get to the dancing; and Mildred did not prolong the
+intimacy of Alice's enthusiastic whispering. With a faint
+accession of colour and a smile tending somewhat in the direction
+of rigidity, she carried Alice's hand immediately onward to Mrs.
+Palmer's. Alice's own colour showed a little heightening as she
+accepted the suggestion thus implied; nor was that emotional tint
+in any wise decreased, a moment later, by an impression that
+Walter, in concluding the brief exchange of courtesies between
+himself and the stately Mr. Palmer, had again reassured himself
+with a yawn.
+
+But she did not speak of it to Walter; she preferred not to
+confirm the impression and to leave in her mind a possible doubt
+that he had done it. He followed her out upon the waxed floor,
+said resignedly: "Well, come on," put his arm about her, and they
+began to dance.
+
+Alice danced gracefully and well, but not so well as Walter. Of
+all the steps and runs, of all the whimsical turns and twirlings,
+of all the rhythmic swayings and dips commanded that season by
+such blarings as were the barbaric product, loud and wild, of the
+Jazz Louies and their half-breed bunches, the thin and sallow
+youth was a master. Upon his face could be seen contempt of the
+easy marvels he performed as he moved in swift precision from one
+smooth agility to another; and if some too-dainty or jealous
+cavalier complained that to be so much a stylist in dancing was
+"not quite like a gentleman," at least Walter's style was what
+the music called for. No other dancer in the room could be
+thought comparable to him. Alice told him so.
+
+"It's wonderful!" she said. "And the mystery is, where you ever
+learned to DO it! You never went to dancing-school, but there
+isn't a man in the room who can dance half so well. I don't see
+why, when you dance like this, you always make such a fuss about
+coming to parties."
+
+He sounded his brief laugh, a jeering bark out of one side of the
+mouth, and swung her miraculously through a closing space between
+two other couples. "You know a lot about what goes on, don't
+you? You prob'ly think there's no other place to dance in this
+town except these frozen-face joints."
+
+"'Frozen face?'" she echoed, laughing. "Why, everybody's having
+a splendid time. Look at them."
+
+"Oh, they holler loud enough," he said. "They do it to make each
+other think they're havin' a good time. You don't call that
+Palmer family frozen-face berries, I s'pose. No?"
+
+"Certainly not. They're just dignified and----"
+
+"Yeuh!" said Walter. "They're dignified, 'specially when you
+tried to whisper to Mildred to show how IN with her you were, and
+she moved you on that way. SHE'S a hot friend, isn't she!"
+
+"She didn't mean anything by it. She----"
+
+"Ole Palmer's a hearty, slap you-on-the-back ole berry," Walter
+interrupted; adding in a casual tone, "All I'd like, I'd like to
+hit him."
+
+"Walter! By the way, you mustn't forget to ask Mildred for a
+dance before the evening is over."
+
+"Me?" He produced the lop-sided appearance of his laugh, but
+without making it vocal. "You watch me do it!"
+
+"She probably won't have one left, but you must ask her, anyway."
+
+"Why must I?"
+
+"Because, in the first place, you're supposed to, and, in the
+second place, she's my most intimate friend."
+
+"Yeuh? Is she? I've heard you pull that 'most-intimate-friend'
+stuff often enough about her. What's SHE ever do to show she
+is?"
+
+"Never mind. You really must ask her, Walter. I want you to;
+and I want you to ask several other girls afterwhile; I'll tell
+you who."
+
+"Keep on wanting; it'll do you good."
+
+"Oh, but you really----"
+
+"Listen!" he said. "I'm just as liable to dance with any of
+these fairies as I am to buy a bucket o' rusty tacks and eat 'em.
+Forget it! Soon as I get rid of you I'm goin' back to that room
+where I left my hat and overcoat and smoke myself to death."
+
+"Well," she said, a little ruefully, as the frenzy of Jazz Louie
+and his half-breeds was suddenly abated to silence, "you
+mustn't--you mustn't get rid of me TOO soon, Walter."
+
+They stood near one of the wide doorways, remaining where they
+had stopped. Other couples, everywhere, joined one another,
+forming vivacious clusters, but none of these groups adopted the
+brother and sister, nor did any one appear to be hurrying in
+Alice's direction to ask her for the next dance. She looked
+about her, still maintaining that jubilance of look and manner
+she felt so necessary--for it is to the girls who are "having a
+good time" that partners are attracted--and, in order to lend
+greater colour to her impersonation of a lively belle, she began
+to chatter loudly, bringing into play an accompaniment of
+frolicsome gesture. She brushed Walter's nose saucily with the
+bunch of violets in her hand, tapped him on the shoulder, shook
+her pretty forefinger in his face, flourished her arms, kept her
+shoulders moving, and laughed continuously as she spoke.
+
+"You NAUGHTY old Walter!" she cried. "AREN'T you ashamed to be
+such a wonderful dancer and then only dance with your own little
+sister! You could dance on the stage if you wanted to. Why, you
+could made your FORTUNE that way! Why don't you? Wouldn't it be
+just lovely to have all the rows and rows of people clapping
+their hands and shouting, 'Hurrah! Hurrah, for Walter Adams!
+Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!"
+
+He stood looking at her in stolid pity.
+
+"Cut it out," he said. "You better be givin' some of these
+berries the eye so they'll ask you to dance."
+
+She was not to be so easily checked, and laughed loudly,
+flourishing her violets in his face again. "You WOULD like it;
+you know you would; you needn't pretend! Just think! A whole
+big audience shouting, 'Hurrah! HURRAH! HUR----'"
+
+"The place'll be pulled if you get any noisier," he interrupted,
+not ungently. "Besides, I'm no muley cow."
+
+"A 'COW?'" she laughed. "What on earth----"
+
+"I can't eat dead violets," he explained. "So don't keep tryin'
+to make me do it."
+
+This had the effect he desired, and subdued her; she abandoned
+her unsisterly coquetries, and looked beamingly about her, but
+her smile was more mechanical than it had been at first.
+
+At home she had seemed beautiful; but here, where the other girls
+competed, things were not as they had been there, with only her
+mother and Miss Perry to give contrast. These crowds of other
+girls had all done their best, also, to look beautiful, though
+not one of them had worked so hard for such a consummation as
+Alice had. They did not need to; they did not need to get their
+mothers to make old dresses over; they did not need to hunt
+violets in the rain.
+
+At home her dress had seemed beautiful; but that was different,
+too, where there were dozens of brilliant fabrics, fashioned in
+new ways--some of these new ways startling, which only made the
+wearers centers of interest and shocked no one. And Alice
+remembered that she had heard a girl say, not long before, "Oh,
+ORGANDIE! Nobody wears organdie for evening gowns except in
+midsummer." Alice had thought little of this; but as she looked
+about her and saw no organdie except her own, she found greater
+difficulty in keeping her smile as arch and spontaneous as she
+wished it. In fact, it was beginning to make her face ache a
+little.
+
+Mildred came in from the corridor, heavily attended. She carried
+a great bouquet of violets laced with lilies of-the-valley; and
+the violets were lusty, big purple things, their stems wrapped in
+cloth of gold, with silken cords dependent, ending in long
+tassels. She and her convoy passed near the two young Adamses;
+and it appeared that one of the convoy besought his hostess to
+permit "cutting in"; they were "doing it other places" of late,
+he urged; but he was denied and told to console himself by
+holding the bouquet, at intervals, until his third of the
+sixteenth dance should come. Alice looked dubiously at her own
+bouquet.
+
+Suddenly she felt that the violets betrayed her; that any one who
+looked at them could see how rustic, how innocent of any
+florist's craft they were "I can't eat dead violets," Walter
+said. The little wild flowers, dying indeed in the warm air,
+were drooping in a forlorn mass; and it seemed to her that
+whoever noticed them would guess that she had picked them
+herself. She decided to get rid of them.
+
+Walter was becoming restive. "Look here!" he said. "Can't you
+flag one o' these long-tailed birds to take you on for the next
+dance? You came to have a good time; why don't you get busy and
+have it? I want to get out and smoke."
+
+"You MUSTN'T leave me, Walter," she whispered, hastily.
+"Somebody'll come for me before long, but until they do----"
+
+"Well, couldn't you sit somewhere?"
+
+"No, no! There isn't any one I could sit with."
+
+"Well, why not? Look at those ole dames in the corners. What's
+the matter your tyin' up with some o' them for a while?"
+
+"PLEASE, Walter; no!"
+
+In fact, that indomitable smile of hers was the more difficult to
+maintain because of these very elders to whom Walter referred.
+They were mothers of girls among the dancers, and they were there
+to fend and contrive for their offspring; to keep them in
+countenance through any trial; to lend them diplomacy in the
+carrying out of all enterprises; to be "background" for them; and
+in these essentially biological functionings to imitate their own
+matings and renew the excitement of their nuptial periods. Older
+men, husbands of these ladies and fathers of eligible girls, were
+also to be seen, most of them with Mr. Palmer in a billiard-room
+across the corridor. Mr. and Mrs. Adams had not been invited.
+"Of course papa and mama just barely know Mildred Palmer," Alice
+thought, "and most of the other girls' fathers and mothers are
+old friends of Mr. and Mrs. Palmer, but I do think she might
+have ASKED papa and mama, anyway--she needn't have been afraid
+just to ask them; she knew they couldn't come." And her smiling
+lip twitched a little threateningly, as she concluded the silent
+monologue. "I suppose she thinks I ought to be glad enough she
+asked Walter!"
+
+Walter was, in fact, rather noticeable. He was not Mildred's
+only guest to wear a short coat and to appear without gloves; but
+he was singular (at least in his present surroundings) on account
+of a kind of coiffuring he favoured, his hair having been shaped
+after what seemed a Mongol inspiration. Only upon the top of the
+head was actual hair perceived, the rest appearing to be nudity.
+And even more than by any difference in mode he was set apart by
+his look and manner, in which there seemed to be a brooding,
+secretive and jeering superiority and this was most vividly
+expressed when he felt called upon for his loud, short, lop-sided
+laugh. Whenever he uttered it Alice laughed, too, as loudly as
+she could, to cover it.
+
+"Well," he said. "How long we goin' to stand here? My feet are
+sproutin' roots."
+
+Alice took his arm, and they began to walk aimlessly through the
+rooms, though she tried to look as if they had a definite
+destination, keeping her eyes eager and her lips parted;--people
+had called jovially to them from the distance, she meant to
+imply, and they were going to join these merry friends. She was
+still upon this ghostly errand when a furious outbreak of drums
+and saxophones sounded a prelude for the second dance.
+
+Walter danced with her again, but he gave her a warning. "I
+don't want to leave you high and dry," he told her, "but I can't
+stand it. I got to get somewhere I don't haf' to hurt my eyes
+with these berries; I'll go blind if I got to look at any more of
+'em. I'm goin' out to smoke as soon as the music begins the next
+time, and you better get fixed for it."
+
+Alice tried to get fixed for it. As they danced she nodded
+sunnily to every man whose eye she caught, smiled her smile with
+the under lip caught between her teeth; but it was not until the
+end of the intermission after the dance that she saw help coming.
+
+Across the room sat the globular lady she had encountered that
+morning, and beside the globular lady sat a round-headed,
+round-bodied girl; her daughter, at first glance. The family
+contour was also as evident a characteristic of the short young
+man who stood in front of Mrs. Dowling, engaged with her in a
+discussion which was not without evidences of an earnestness
+almost impassioned. Like Walter, he was declining to dance a
+third time with sister; he wished to go elsewhere.
+
+Alice from a sidelong eye watched the controversy: she saw the
+globular young man glance toward her, over his shoulder;
+whereupon Mrs. Dowling, following this glance, gave Alice a look
+of open fury, became much more vehement in the argument, and even
+struck her knee with a round, fat fist for emphasis.
+
+"I'm on my way," said Walter. "There's the music startin' up
+again, and I told you----"
+
+She nodded gratefully. "It's all right--but come back before
+long, Walter."
+
+The globular young man, red with annoyance, had torn himself from
+his family and was hastening across the room to her. "C'n I have
+this dance?"
+
+"Why, you nice Frank Dowling!" Alice cried. "How lovely!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+They danced. Mr. Dowling should have found other forms of
+exercise and pastime.
+
+Nature has not designed everyone for dancing, though sometimes
+those she has denied are the last to discover her niggardliness.
+But the round young man was at least vigorous enough--too much
+so, when his knees collided with Alice's--and he was too sturdy
+to be thrown off his feet, himself, or to allow his partner to
+fall when he tripped her. He held her up valiantly, and
+continued to beat a path through the crowd of other dancers by
+main force.
+
+He paid no attention to anything suggested by the efforts of the
+musicians, and appeared to be unaware that there should have been
+some connection between what they were doing and what he was
+doing; but he may have listened to other music of his own, for
+his expression was of high content; he seemed to feel no doubt
+whatever that he was dancing. Alice kept as far away from him as
+under the circumstances she could; and when they stopped she
+glanced down, and found the execution of unseen manoeuvres,
+within the protection of her skirt, helpful to one of her insteps
+and to the toes of both of her slippers.
+
+Her cheery partner was paddling his rosy brows with a fine
+handkerchief. "That was great!" he said. "Let's go out and sit
+in the corridor; they've got some comfortable chairs out there."
+
+"Well--let's not," she returned. "I believe I'd rather stay in
+here and look at the crowd."
+
+"No; that isn't it," he said, chiding her with a waggish
+forefinger. "You think if you go out there you'll miss a chance
+of someone else asking you for the next dance, and so you'll have
+to give it to me."
+
+"How absurd!" Then, after a look about her that revealed nothing
+encouraging, she added graciously, "You can have the next if you
+want it."
+
+"Great!" he exclaimed, mechanically. "Now let's get out of
+here--out of THIS room, anyhow."
+
+"Why? What's the matter with----"
+
+"My mother," Mr. Dowling explained. "But don't look at her.
+She keeps motioning me to come and see after Ella, and I'm simply
+NOT going to do it, you see!"
+
+Alice laughed. "I don't believe it's so much that," she said,
+and consented to walk with him to a point in the next room from
+which Mrs. Dowling's continuous signalling could not be seen.
+"Your mother hates me."
+
+"Oh, no; I wouldn't say that. No, she don't," he protested,
+innocently. "She don't know you more than just to speak to, you
+see. So how could she?"
+
+"Well, she does. I can tell."
+
+A frown appeared upon his rounded brow. "No; I'll tell you the
+way she feels. It's like this: Ella isn't TOO popular, you
+know--it's hard to see why, because she's a right nice girl, in
+her way--and mother thinks I ought to look after her, you see.
+She thinks I ought to dance a whole lot with her myself, and stir
+up other fellows to dance with her--it's simply impossible to
+make mother understand you CAN'T do that, you see. And then
+about me, you see, if she had her way I wouldn't get to dance
+with anybody at all except girls like Mildred Palmer and
+Henrietta Lamb. Mother wants to run my whole programme for me,
+you understand, but the trouble of it is--about girls like that,
+you see well, I couldn't do what she wants, even if I wanted to
+myself, because you take those girls, and by the time I get Ella
+off my hands for a minute, why, their dances are always every
+last one taken, and where do I come in?"
+
+Alice nodded, her amiability undamaged. "I see. So that's why
+you dance with me."
+
+"No, I like to," he protested. "I rather dance with you than I
+do with those girls." And he added with a retrospective
+determination which showed that he had been through quite an
+experience with Mrs. Dowling in this matter. "I TOLD mother I
+would, too!"
+
+"Did it take all your courage, Frank?"
+
+He looked at her shrewdly. "Now you're trying to tease me," he
+said. "I don't care; I WOULD rather dance with you! In the
+first place, you're a perfectly beautiful dancer, you see, and in
+the second, a man feels a lot more comfortable with you than he
+does with them. Of course I know almost all the other fellows
+get along with those girls all right; but I don't waste any time
+on 'em I don't have to. _I_ like people that are always cordial
+to everybody, you see--the way you are."
+
+"Thank you," she said, thoughtfully.
+
+"Oh, I MEAN it," he insisted. "There goes the band again. Shall
+we?"
+
+"Suppose we sit it out?" she suggested. "I believe I'd like to
+go out in the corridor, after all--it's pretty warm in here."
+
+Assenting cheerfully, Dowling conducted her to a pair of
+easy-chairs within a secluding grove of box-trees, and when they
+came to this retreat they found Mildred Palmer just departing,
+under escort of a well-favoured gentleman about thirty. As these
+two walked slowly away, in the direction of the dancing-floor,
+they left it not to be doubted that they were on excellent terms
+with each other; Mildred was evidently willing to make their
+progress even slower, for she halted momentarily, once or twice;
+and her upward glances to her tall companion's face were of a
+gentle, almost blushing deference. Never before had Alice seen
+anything like this in her friend's manner.
+
+"How queer!" she murmured.
+
+"What's queer?" Dowling inquired as they sat down.
+
+"Who was that man?"
+
+"Haven't you met him?"
+
+"I never saw him before. Who is he?"
+
+"Why, it's this Arthur Russell."
+
+"What Arthur Russell? I never heard of him." Mr. Dowling was
+puzzled. "Why, THAT'S funny! Only the last time I saw you, you
+were telling me how awfully well you knew Mildred Palmer."
+
+"Why, certainly I do," Alice informed him. "She's my most
+intimate friend."
+
+"That's what makes it seem so funny you haven't heard anything
+about this Russell, because everybody says even if she isn't
+engaged to him right now, she most likely will be before very
+long. I must say it looks a good deal that way to me, myself."
+
+"What nonsense!" Alice exclaimed. "She's never even mentioned
+him to me."
+
+The young man glanced at her dubiously and passed a finger over
+the tiny prong that dashingly composed the whole substance of his
+moustache.
+
+"Well, you see, Mildred IS pretty reserved," he remarked. "This
+Russell is some kind of cousin of the Palmer family, I
+understand."
+
+"He is?"
+
+"Yes--second or third or something, the girls say. You see, my
+sister Ella hasn't got much to do at home, and don't read
+anything, or sew, or play solitaire, you see; and she hears about
+pretty much everything that goes on, you see. Well, Ella says a
+lot of the girls have been talking about Mildred and this Arthur
+Russell for quite a while back, you see. They were all wondering
+what he was going to look like, you see; because he only got here
+yesterday; and that proves she must have been talking to some of
+'em, or else how----"
+
+Alice laughed airily, but the pretty sound ended abruptly with an
+audible intake of breath. "Of course, while Mildred IS my most
+intimate friend," she said, "I don't mean she tells me
+everything--and naturally she has other friends besides. What
+else did your sister say she told them about this Mr. Russell?"
+
+"Well, it seems he's VERY well off; at least Henrietta Lamb told
+Ella he was. Ella says----"
+
+Alice interrupted again, with an increased irritability. "Oh,
+never mind what Ella says! Let's find something better to talk
+about than Mr. Russell!"
+
+"Well, I'M willing," Mr. Dowling assented, ruefully. "What you
+want to talk about?"
+
+But this liberal offer found her unresponsive; she sat leaning
+back, silent, her arms along the arms of her chair, and her eyes,
+moist and bright, fixed upon a wide doorway where the dancers
+fluctuated. She was disquieted by more than Mildred's reserve,
+though reserve so marked had certainly the significance of a
+warning that Alice's definition, "my most intimate friend,"
+lacked sanction. Indirect notice to this effect could not well
+have been more emphatic, but the sting of it was left for a later
+moment. Something else preoccupied Alice: she had just been
+surprised by an odd experience. At first sight of this Mr.
+Arthur Russell, she had said to herself instantly, in words as
+definite as if she spoke them aloud, though they seemed more like
+words spoken to her by some unknown person within her: "There!
+That's exactly the kind of looking man I'd like to marry!"
+
+In the eyes of the restless and the longing, Providence often
+appears to be worse than inscrutable: an unreliable Omnipotence
+given to haphazard whimsies in dealing with its own creatures,
+choosing at random some among them to be rent with tragic
+deprivations and others to be petted with blessing upon blessing.
+
+In Alice's eyes, Mildred had been blessed enough; something ought
+to be left over, by this time, for another girl. The final touch
+to the heaping perfection of Christmas-in-everything for Mildred
+was that this Mr. Arthur Russell, good-looking, kind-looking,
+graceful, the perfect fiance, should be also "VERY well off." Of
+course! These rich always married one another. And while the
+Mildreds danced with their Arthur Russells the best an outsider
+could do for herself was to sit with Frank Dowling--the one last
+course left her that was better than dancing with him.
+
+"Well, what DO you want to talk about?" he inquired.
+
+"Nothing," she said. "Suppose we just sit, Frank." But a moment
+later she remembered something, and, with a sudden animation,
+began to prattle. She pointed to the musicians down the
+corridor. "Oh, look at them! Look at the leader! Aren't they
+FUNNY? Someone told me they're called 'Jazz Louie and his
+half-breed bunch.' Isn't that just crazy? Don't you love it? Do
+watch them, Frank."
+
+She continued to chatter, and, while thus keeping his glance away
+from herself, she detached the forlorn bouquet of dead violets
+from her dress and laid it gently beside the one she had carried.
+
+The latter already reposed in the obscurity selected for it at
+the base of one of the box-trees.
+
+Then she was abruptly silent.
+
+"You certainly are a funny girl," Dowling remarked. "You say you
+don't want to talk about anything at all, and all of a sudden you
+break out and talk a blue streak; and just about the time I begin
+to get interested in what you're saying you shut off! What's the
+matter with girls, anyhow, when they do things like that?"
+
+"I don't know; we're just queer, I guess."
+
+"I say so! Well, what'll we do NOW? Talk, or just sit?"
+
+"Suppose we just sit some more."
+
+"Anything to oblige," he assented. "I'm willing to sit as long
+as you like."
+
+But even as he made his amiability clear in this matter, the
+peace was threatened--his mother came down the corridor like a
+rolling, ominous cloud. She was looking about her on all sides,
+in a fidget of annoyance, searching for him, and to his dismay
+she saw him. She immediately made a horrible face at his
+companion, beckoned to him imperiously with a dumpy arm, and
+shook her head reprovingly. The unfortunate young man tried to
+repulse her with an icy stare, but this effort having obtained
+little to encourage his feeble hope of driving her away, he
+shifted his chair so that his back was toward her discomfiting
+pantomime. He should have known better, the instant result was
+Mrs. Dowling in motion at an impetuous waddle.
+
+She entered the box-tree seclusion with the lower rotundities of
+her face hastily modelled into the resemblance of an
+over-benevolent smile a contortion which neglected to spread its
+intended geniality upward to the exasperated eyes and anxious
+forehead.
+
+"I think your mother wants to speak to you, Frank," Alice said,
+upon this advent.
+
+Mrs. Dowling nodded to her. "Good evening, Miss Adams," she
+said. "I just thought as you and Frank weren't dancing you
+wouldn't mind my disturbing you----"
+
+"Not at all," Alice murmured.
+
+Mr. Dowling seemed of a different mind. "Well, what DO you
+want?" he inquired, whereupon his mother struck him roguishly
+with her fan.
+
+"Bad fellow!" She turned to Alice. "I'm sure you won't mind
+excusing him to let him do something for his old mother, Miss
+Adams."
+
+"What DO you want?" the son repeated.
+
+"Two very nice things," Mrs. Dowling informed him. "Everybody
+is so anxious for Henrietta Lamb to have a pleasant evening,
+because it's the very first time she's been anywhere since her
+father's death, and of course her dear grandfather's an old
+friend of ours, and----"
+
+"Well, well!" her son interrupted. "Miss Adams isn't interested
+in all this, mother."
+
+"But Henrietta came to speak to Ella and me, and I told her you
+were so anxious to dance with her----"
+
+"Here!" he cried. "Look here! I'd rather do my own----"
+
+"Yes; that's just it," Mrs. Dowling explained. "I just thought
+it was such a good opportunity; and Henrietta said she had most
+of her dances taken, but she'd give you one if you asked her
+before they were all gone. So I thought you'd better see her as
+soon as possible."
+
+Dowling's face had become rosy. "I refuse to do anything of the
+kind."
+
+"Bad fellow!" said his mother, gaily. "I thought this would be
+the best time for you to see Henrietta, because it won't be long
+till all her dances are gone, and you've promised on your WORD to
+dance the next with Ella, and you mightn't have a chance to do it
+then. I'm sure Miss Adams won't mind if you----"
+
+"Not at all," Alice said.
+
+"Well, _I_ mind!" he said. "I wish you COULD understand that
+when I want to dance with any girl I don't need my mother to ask
+her for me. I really AM more than six years old!"
+
+He spoke with too much vehemence, and Mrs. Dowling at once saw
+how to have her way. As with husbands and wives, so with many
+fathers and daughters, and so with some sons and mothers: the man
+will himself be cross in public and think nothing of it, nor will
+he greatly mind a little crossness on the part of the woman; but
+let her show agitation before any spectator, he is instantly
+reduced to a coward's slavery. Women understand that ancient
+weakness, of course; for it is one of their most important means
+of defense, but can be used ignobly.
+
+Mrs. Dowling permitted a tremulousness to become audible in her
+voice. "It isn't very--very pleasant --to be talked to like that
+by your own son--before strangers!"
+
+"Oh, my! Look here!" the stricken Dowling protested. "_I_
+didn't say anything, mother. I was just joking about how you
+never get over thinking I'm a little boy. I only----"
+
+Mrs. Dowling continued: "I just thought I was doing you a little
+favour. I didn't think it would make you so angry."
+
+"Mother, for goodness' sake! Miss Adams'll think----"
+
+"I suppose," Mrs. Dowling interrupted, piteously, "I suppose it
+doesn't matter what _I_ think!"
+
+"Oh, gracious!"
+
+Alice interfered; she perceived that the ruthless Mrs. Dowling
+meant to have her way. "I think you'd better go, Frank.
+Really."
+
+"There!" his mother cried. "Miss Adams says so, herself! What
+more do you want?"
+
+"Oh, gracious!" he lamented again, and, with a sick look over his
+shoulder at Alice, permitted his mother to take his arm and
+propel him away. Mrs. Dowling's spirits had strikingly
+recovered even before the pair passed from the corridor: she
+moved almost bouncingly beside her embittered son, and her eyes
+and all the convolutions of her abundant face were blithe.
+
+Alice went in search of Walter, but without much hope of finding
+him. What he did with himself at frozen-face dances was one of
+his most successful mysteries, and her present excursion gave her
+no clue leading to its solution. When the musicians again
+lowered their instruments for an interval she had returned,
+alone, to her former seat within the partial shelter of the
+box-trees.
+
+She had now to practice an art that affords but a limited variety
+of methods, even to the expert: the art of seeming to have an
+escort or partner when there is none. The practitioner must
+imply, merely by expression and attitude, that the supposed
+companion has left her for only a few moments, that she herself
+has sent him upon an errand; and, if possible, the minds of
+observers must be directed toward a conclusion that this errand
+of her devising is an amusing one; at all events, she is alone
+temporarily and of choice, not deserted. She awaits a devoted
+man who may return at any instant.
+
+Other people desired to sit in Alice's nook, but discovered her
+in occupancy. She had moved the vacant chair closer to her own,
+and she sat with her arm extended so that her hand, holding her
+lace kerchief, rested upon the back of this second chair,
+claiming it. Such a preemption, like that of a traveller's bag
+in the rack, was unquestionable; and, for additional evidence,
+sitting with her knees crossed, she kept one foot continuously
+moving a little, in cadence with the other, which tapped the
+floor. Moreover, she added a fine detail: her half-smile, with
+the under lip caught, seemed to struggle against repression, as
+if she found the service engaging her absent companion even more
+amusing than she would let him see when he returned: there was
+jovial intrigue of some sort afoot, evidently. Her eyes, beaming
+with secret fun, were averted from intruders, but sometimes, when
+couples approached, seeking possession of the nook, her thoughts
+about the absentee appeared to threaten her with outright
+laughter; and though one or two girls looked at her skeptically,
+as they turned away, their escorts felt no such doubts, and
+merely wondered what importantly funny affair Alice Adams was
+engaged in. She had learned to do it perfectly.
+
+She had learned it during the last two years; she was twenty when
+for the first time she had the shock of finding herself without
+an applicant for one of her dances. When she was sixteen "all
+the nice boys in town," as her mother said, crowded the Adamses'
+small veranda and steps, or sat near by, cross-legged on the
+lawn, on summer evenings; and at eighteen she had replaced the
+boys with "the older men." By this time most of "the other
+girls," her contemporaries, were away at school or college, and
+when they came home to stay, they "came out"--that feeble revival
+of an ancient custom offering the maiden to the ceremonial
+inspection of the tribe. Alice neither went away nor "came out,"
+and, in contrast with those who did, she may have seemed to lack
+freshness of lustre--jewels are richest when revealed all new in
+a white velvet box. And Alice may have been too eager to secure
+new retainers, too kind in her efforts to keep the old ones. She
+had been a belle too soon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+The device of the absentee partner has the defect that it cannot
+be employed for longer than ten or fifteen minutes at a time, and
+it may not be repeated more than twice in one evening: a single
+repetition, indeed, is weak, and may prove a betrayal. Alice
+knew that her present performance could be effective during only
+this interval between dances; and though her eyes were guarded,
+she anxiously counted over the partnerless young men who lounged
+together in the doorways within her view. Every one of them
+ought to have asked her for dances, she thought, and although she
+might have been put to it to give a reason why any of them
+"ought," her heart was hot with resentment against them.
+
+For a girl who has been a belle, it is harder to live through
+these bad times than it is for one who has never known anything
+better. Like a figure of painted and brightly varnished wood,
+Ella Dowling sat against the wall through dance after dance with
+glassy imperturbability; it was easier to be wooden, Alice
+thought, if you had your mother with you, as Ella had. You were
+left with at least the shred of a pretense that you came to sit
+with your mother as a spectator, and not to offer yourself to be
+danced with by men who looked you over and rejected you--not for
+the first time. "Not for the first time": there lay a sting!
+Why had you thought this time might be different from the other
+times? Why had you broken your back picking those hundreds of
+violets?
+
+Hating the fatuous young men in the doorways more bitterly for
+every instant that she had to maintain her tableau, the smiling
+Alice knew fierce impulses to spring to her feet and shout at
+them, "You IDIOTS!" Hands in pockets, they lounged against the
+pilasters, or faced one another, laughing vaguely, each one of
+them seeming to Alice no more than so much mean beef in clothes.
+She wanted to tell them they were no better than that; and it
+seemed a cruel thing of heaven to let them go on believing
+themselves young lords. They were doing nothing, killing time.
+Wasn't she at her lowest value at least a means of killing time?
+Evidently the mean beeves thought not. And when one of them
+finally lounged across the corridor and spoke to her, he was the
+very one to whom she preferred her loneliness.
+
+"Waiting for somebody, Lady Alicia?" he asked, negligently; and
+his easy burlesque of her name was like the familiarity of the
+rest of him. He was one of those full-bodied, grossly handsome
+men who are powerful and active, but never submit themselves to
+the rigour of becoming athletes, though they shoot and fish from
+expensive camps. Gloss is the most shining outward mark of the
+type. Nowadays these men no longer use brilliantine on their
+moustaches, but they have gloss bought from manicure-girls, from
+masseurs, and from automobile-makers; and their eyes, usually
+large, are glossy. None of this is allowed to interfere with
+business; these are "good business men," and often make large
+fortunes. They are men of imagination about two things--women
+and money, and, combining their imaginings about both, usually
+make a wise first marriage. Later, however, they are apt to
+imagine too much about some little woman without whom life seems
+duller than need be. They run away, leaving the first wife well
+enough dowered. They are never intentionally unkind to women,
+and in the end they usually make the mistake of thinking they
+have had their money's worth of life. Here was Mr. Harvey
+Malone, a young specimen in an earlier stage of development,
+trying to marry Henrietta Lamb, and now sauntering over to speak
+to Alice, as a time-killer before his next dance with Henrietta.
+
+Alice made no response to his question, and he dropped lazily
+into the vacant chair, from which she sharply withdrew her hand.
+"I might as well use his chair till he comes, don't you think?
+You don't MIND, do you, old girl?"
+
+"Oh, no," Alice said. "It doesn't matter one way or the other.
+Please don't call me that."
+
+"So that's how you feel?" Mr. Malone laughed indulgently,
+without much interest. "I've been meaning to come to see you for
+a long time honestly I have--because I wanted to have a good talk
+with you about old times. I know you think it was funny, after
+the way I used to come to your house two or three times a week,
+and sometimes oftener--well, I don't blame you for being hurt,
+the way I stopped without explaining or anything. The truth is
+there wasn't any reason: I just happened to have a lot of
+important things to do and couldn't find the time. But I AM
+going to call on you some evening--honestly I am. I don't wonder
+you think----"
+
+"You're mistaken," Alice said. "I've never thought anything
+about it at all."
+
+"Well, well!" he said, and looked at her languidly. "What's the
+use of being cross with this old man? He always means well."
+And, extending his arm, he would have given her a friendly pat
+upon the shoulder but she evaded it. "Well, well!" he said.
+"Seems to me you're getting awful tetchy! Don't you like your
+old friends any more?"
+
+"Not all of them."
+
+"Who's the new one?" he asked, teasingly. "Come on and tell us,
+Alice. Who is it you were holding this chair for?"
+
+"Never mind."
+
+"Well, all I've got to do is to sit here till he comes back; then
+I'll see who it is."
+
+"He may not come back before you have to go."
+
+"Guess you got me THAT time," Malone admitted, laughing as he
+rose. "They're tuning up, and I've got this dance. I AM coming
+around to see you some evening." He moved away, calling back
+over his shoulder, "Honestly, I am!"
+
+Alice did not look at him,
+
+She had held her tableau as long as she could; it was time for
+her to abandon the box-trees; and she stepped forth frowning, as
+if a little annoyed with the absentee for being such a time upon
+her errand; whereupon the two chairs were instantly seized by a
+coquetting pair who intended to "sit out" the dance. She walked
+quickly down the broad corridor, turned into the broader hall,
+and hurriedly entered the dressing-room where she had left her
+wraps.
+
+She stayed here as long as she could, pretending to arrange her
+hair at a mirror, then fidgeting with one of her slipper-buckles;
+but the intelligent elderly woman in charge of the room made an
+indefinite sojourn impracticable. "Perhaps I could help you with
+that buckle, Miss," she suggested, approaching. "Has it come
+loose?" Alice wrenched desperately; then it was loose. The
+competent woman, producing needle and thread, deftly made the
+buckle fast; and there was nothing for Alice to do but to express
+her gratitude and go.
+
+She went to the door of the cloak-room opposite, where a coloured
+man stood watchfully in the doorway. "I wonder if you know which
+of the gentlemen is my brother, Mr. Walter Adams," she said.
+
+"Yes'm; I know him."
+
+"Could you tell me where he is?"
+
+"No'm; I couldn't say."
+
+"Well, if you see him, would you please tell him that his sister,
+Miss Adams, is looking for him and very anxious to speak to him?"
+
+"Yes'm. Sho'ly, sho'ly!"
+
+As she went away he stared after her and seemed to swell with
+some bursting emotion. In fact, it was too much for him, and he
+suddenly retired within the room, releasing strangulated
+laughter.
+
+Walter remonstrated. Behind an excellent screen of coats and
+hats, in a remote part of the room, he was kneeling on the floor,
+engaged in a game of chance with a second coloured attendant; and
+the laughter became so vehement that it not only interfered with
+the pastime in hand, but threatened to attract frozen-face
+attention.
+
+"I cain' he'p it, man," the laughter explained. "I cain' he'p
+it! You sut'n'y the beatin'es' white boy 'n 'is city!"
+
+The dancers were swinging into an "encore" as Alice halted for an
+irresolute moment in a doorway. Across the room, a cluster of
+matrons sat chatting absently, their eyes on their dancing
+daughters; and Alice, finding a refugee's courage, dodged through
+the scurrying couples, seated herself in a chair on the outskirts
+of this colony of elders, and began to talk eagerly to the matron
+nearest her. The matron seemed unaccustomed to so much vivacity,
+and responded but dryly, whereupon Alice was more vivacious than
+ever; for she meant now to present the picture of a jolly girl
+too much interested in these wise older women to bother about
+every foolish young man who asked her for a dance.
+
+Her matron was constrained to go so far as to supply a tolerant
+nod, now and then, in complement to the girl's animation, and
+Alice was grateful for the nods. In this fashion she
+supplemented the exhausted resources of the dressing-room and the
+box-tree nook; and lived through two more dances, when again Mr.
+Frank Dowling presented himself as a partner.
+
+She needed no pretense to seek the dressing-room for repairs
+after that number; this time they were necessary and genuine.
+Dowling waited for her, and when she came out he explained for
+the fourth or fifth time how the accident had happened. "It was
+entirely those other people's fault," he said. "They got me in a
+kind of a corner, because neither of those fellows knows the
+least thing about guiding; they just jam ahead and expect
+everybody to get out of their way. It was Charlotte Thom's
+diamond crescent pin that got caught on your dress in the back
+and made such a----"
+
+"Never mind," Alice said in a tired voice. "The maid fixed it so
+that she says it isn't very noticeable."
+
+"Well, it isn't," he returned. "You could hardly tell there'd
+been anything the matter. Where do you want to go? Mother's
+been interfering in my affairs some more and I've got the next
+taken."
+
+"I was sitting with Mrs. George Dresser. You might take me back
+there."
+
+He left her with the matron, and Alice returned to her
+picture-making, so that once more, while two numbers passed,
+whoever cared to look was offered the sketch of a jolly, clever
+girl preoccupied with her elders. Then she found her friend
+Mildred standing before her, presenting Mr. Arthur Russell, who
+asked her to dance with him.
+
+Alice looked uncertain, as though not sure what her engagements
+were; but her perplexity cleared; she nodded, and swung
+rhythmically away with the tall applicant. She was not grateful
+to her hostess for this alms. What a young hostess does with a
+fiance, Alice thought, is to make him dance with the unpopular
+girls. She supposed that Mr. Arthur Russell had already danced
+with Ella Dowling.
+
+The loan of a lover, under these circumstances, may be painful to
+the lessee, and Alice, smiling never more brightly, found nothing
+to say to Mr. Russell, though she thought he might have found
+something to say to her. "I wonder what Mildred told him," she
+thought. "Probably she said, 'Dearest, there's one more girl
+you've got to help me out with. You wouldn't like her much, but
+she dances well enough and she's having a rotten time. Nobody
+ever goes near her any more.'"
+
+When the music stopped, Russell added his applause to the
+hand-clapping that encouraged the uproarious instruments to
+continue, and as they renewed the tumult, he said heartily,
+"That's splendid!"
+
+Alice gave him a glance, necessarily at short range, and found
+his eyes kindly and pleased. Here was a friendly soul, it
+appeared, who probably "liked everybody." No doubt he had
+applauded for an "encore" when he danced with Ella Dowling, gave
+Ella the same genial look, and said, "That's splendid!"
+
+When the "encore" was over, Alice spoke to him for the first
+time.
+
+"Mildred will be looking for you," she said. "I think you'd
+better take me back to where you found me."
+
+He looked surprised. "Oh, if you----"
+
+"I'm sure Mildred will be needing you," Alice said, and as she
+took his arm and they walked toward Mrs. Dresser, she thought it
+might be just possible to make a further use of the loan. "Oh, I
+wonder if you----" she began.
+
+"Yes?" he said, quickly.
+
+"You don't know my brother, Walter Adams," she said. "But he's
+somewhere I think possibly he's in a smoking-room or some place
+where girls aren't expected, and if you wouldn't think it too
+much trouble to inquire----"
+
+"I'll find him," Russell said, promptly. "Thank you so much for
+that dance. I'll bring your brother in a moment."
+
+It was to be a long moment, Alice decided, presently. Mrs.
+Dresser had grown restive; and her nods and vague responses to
+her young dependent's gaieties were as meager as they could well
+be. Evidently the matron had no intention of appearing to her
+world in the light of a chaperone for Alice Adams; and she
+finally made this clear. With a word or two of excuse, breaking
+into something Alice was saying, she rose and went to sit next to
+Mildred's mother, who had become the nucleus of the cluster. So
+Alice was left very much against the wall, with short stretches
+of vacant chairs on each side of her. She had come to the end of
+her picture-making, and could only pretend that there was
+something amusing the matter with the arm of her chair.
+
+She supposed that Mildred's Mr. Russell had forgotten Walter by
+this time. "I'm not even an intimate enough friend of Mildred's
+for him to have thought he ought to bother to tell me he couldn't
+find him," she thought. And then she saw Russell coming across
+the room toward her, with Walter beside him. She jumped up
+gaily.
+
+"Oh, thank you!" she cried. "I know this naughty boy must have
+been terribly hard to find. Mildred'll NEVER forgive me! I've
+put you to so much----"
+
+"Not at all," he said, amiably, and went away, leaving the
+brother and sister together.
+
+"Walter, let's dance just once more," Alice said, touching his
+arm placatively. "I thought--well, perhaps we might go home
+then."
+
+But Walter's expression was that of a person upon whom an outrage
+has just been perpetrated. "No," he said. "We've stayed THIS
+long, I'm goin' to wait and see what they got to eat. And you
+look here!" He turned upon her angrily. "Don't you ever do that
+again!"
+
+"Do what?"
+
+"Send somebody after me that pokes his nose into every corner of
+the house till he finds me! 'Are you Mr. Walter Adams?' he
+says. I guess he must asked everybody in the place if they were
+Mr. Walter Adams! Well, I'll bet a few iron men you wouldn't
+send anybody to hunt for me again if you knew where he found me!"
+
+"Where was it?"
+
+Walter decided that her fit punishment was to know. "I was
+shootin' dice with those coons in the cloak-room."
+
+"And he saw you?"
+
+"Unless he was blind!" said Walter. "Come on, I'll dance this
+one more dance with you. Supper comes after that, and THEN we'll
+go home."
+
+
+Mrs. Adams heard Alice's key turning in the front door and
+hurried down the stairs to meet her.
+
+"Did you get wet coming in, darling?" she asked. "Did you have a
+good time?"
+
+"Just lovely!" Alice said, cheerily, and after she had arranged
+the latch for Walter, who had gone to return the little car, she
+followed her mother upstairs and hummed a dance-tune on the way.
+
+"Oh, I'm so glad you had a nice time," Mrs. Adams said, as they
+reached the door of her daughter's room together. "You DESERVED
+to, and it's lovely to think----"
+
+But at this, without warning, Alice threw herself into her
+mother's arms, sobbing so loudly that in his room, close by, her
+father, half drowsing through the night, started to full
+wakefulness.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+On a morning, a week after this collapse of festal hopes, Mrs.
+Adams and her daughter were concluding a three-days' disturbance,
+the "Spring house-cleaning"--postponed until now by Adams's long
+illness--and Alice, on her knees before a chest of drawers, in
+her mother's room, paused thoughtfully after dusting a packet of
+letters wrapped in worn muslin. She called to her mother, who
+was scrubbing the floor of the hallway just beyond the open door,
+
+"These old letters you had in the bottom drawer, weren't they
+some papa wrote you before you were married?"
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed and said, "Yes. Just put 'em back where they
+were--or else up in the attic--anywhere you want to."
+
+"Do you mind if I read one, mama?"
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed again. "Oh, I guess you can if you want to.
+I expect they're pretty funny!"
+
+Alice laughed in response, and chose the topmost letter of the
+packet. "My dear, beautiful girl," it began; and she stared at
+these singular words. They gave her a shock like that caused by
+overhearing some bewildering impropriety; and, having read them
+over to herself several times, she went on to experience other
+shocks.
+
+
+MY DEAR, BEAUTIFUL GIRL:
+
+
+This time yesterday I had a mighty bad case of blues because I
+had not had a word from you in two whole long days and when I do
+not hear from you every day things look mighty down in the mouth
+to me. Now it is all so different because your letter has
+arrived and besides I have got a piece of news I believe you will
+think as fine as I do. Darling, you will be surprised, so get
+ready to hear about a big effect on our future. It is this way.
+I had sort of a suspicion the head of the firm kind of took a
+fancy to me from the first when I went in there, and liked the
+way I attended to my work and so when he took me on this business
+trip with him I felt pretty sure of it and now it turns out I was
+about right. In return I guess I have got about the best boss in
+this world and I believe you will think so too. Yes, sweetheart,
+after the talk I have just had with him if J. A. Lamb asked me
+to cut my hand off for him I guess I would come pretty near doing
+it because what he says means the end of our waiting to be
+together. From New Years on he is going to put me in entire
+charge of the sundries dept. and what do you think is going to
+be my salary? Eleven hundred cool dollars a year ($1,100.00).
+That's all! Just only a cool eleven hundred per annum! Well, I
+guess that will show your mother whether I can take care of you
+or not. And oh how I would like to see your dear, beautiful,
+loving face when you get this news.
+
+I would like to go out on the public streets and just dance and
+shout and it is all I can do to help doing it, especially when I
+know we will be talking it all over together this time next week,
+and oh my darling, now that your folks have no excuse for putting
+it off any longer we might be in our own little home before Xmas.
+
+Would you be glad?
+
+Well, darling, this settles everything and makes our future just
+about as smooth for us as anybody could ask. I can hardly
+realize after all this waiting life's troubles are over for you
+and me and we have nothing to do but to enjoy the happiness
+granted us by this wonderful, beautiful thing we call life. I
+know I am not any poet and the one I tried to write about you the
+day of the picnic was fearful but the way I THINK about you is a
+poem.
+
+Write me what you think of the news. I know but write me anyhow.
+
+I'll get it before we start home and I can be reading it over all
+the time on the tram.
+
+
+Your always loving
+
+VIRGIL.
+
+
+
+The sound of her mother's diligent scrubbing in the hall came
+back slowly to Alice's hearing, as she restored the letter to the
+packet, wrapped the packet in its muslin covering, and returned
+it to the drawer. She had remained upon her knees while she read
+the letter; now she sank backward, sitting upon the floor with
+her hands behind her, an unconscious relaxing for better ease to
+think. Upon her face there had fallen a look of wonder.
+
+For the first time she was vaguely perceiving that life is
+everlasting movement. Youth really believes what is running
+water to be a permanent crystallization and sees time fixed to a
+point: some people have dark hair, some people have blond hair,
+some people have gray hair. Until this moment, Alice had no
+conviction that there was a universe before she came into it.
+She had always thought of it as the background of herself: the
+moon was something to make her prettier on a summer night.
+
+But this old letter, through which she saw still flickering an
+ancient starlight of young love, astounded her. Faintly before
+her it revealed the whole lives of her father and mother, who had
+been young, after all--they REALLY had--and their youth was now
+so utterly passed from them that the picture of it, in the
+letter, was like a burlesque of them. And so she, herself, must
+pass to such changes, too, and all that now seemed vital to her
+would be nothing.
+
+When her work was finished, that afternoon, she went into her
+father's room. His recovery had progressed well enough to permit
+the departure of Miss Perry; and Adams, wearing one of Mrs.
+Adams's wrappers over his night-gown, sat in a high-backed chair
+by a closed window. The weather was warm, but the closed window
+and the flannel wrapper had not sufficed him: round his shoulders
+he had an old crocheted scarf of Alice's; his legs were wrapped
+in a heavy comfort; and, with these swathings about him, and his
+eyes closed, his thin and grizzled head making but a slight
+indentation in the pillow supporting it, he looked old and little
+and queer.
+
+Alice would have gone out softly, but without opening his eyes,
+he spoke to her: "Don't go, dearie. Come sit with the old man a
+little while."
+
+She brought a chair near his. "I thought you were napping."
+
+"No. I don't hardly ever do that. I just drift a little
+sometimes."
+
+"How do you mean you drift, papa?"
+
+He looked at her vaguely. "Oh, I don't know. Kind of pictures.
+They get a little mixed up--old times with times still ahead,
+like planning what to do, you know. That's as near a nap as I
+get--when the pictures mix up some. I suppose it's sort of
+drowsing."
+
+She took one of his hands and stroked it. "What do you mean when
+you say you have pictures like 'planning what to do'?" she asked.
+
+"I mean planning what to do when I get out and able to go to work
+again."
+
+"But that doesn't need any planning," Alice said, quickly.
+"You're going back to your old place at Lamb's, of course."
+
+Adams closed his eyes again, sighing heavily, but made no other
+response.
+
+"Why, of COURSE you are!" she cried. "What are you talking
+about?"
+
+His head turned slowly toward her, revealing the eyes, open in a
+haggard stare. "I heard you the other night when you came from
+the party," he said. "I know what was the matter."
+
+"Indeed, you don't," she assured him. "You don't know anything
+about it, because there wasn't anything the matter at all."
+
+"Don't you suppose I heard you crying? What'd you cry for if
+there wasn't anything the matter?"
+
+"Just nerves, papa. It wasn't anything else in the world."
+
+"Never mind," he said. "Your mother told me."
+
+"She promised me not to!"
+
+At that Adams laughed mournfully. "It wouldn't be very likely
+I'd hear you so upset and not ask about it, even if she didn't
+come and tell me on her own hook. You needn't try to fool me; I
+tell you I know what was the matter."
+
+"The only matter was I had a silly fit," Alice protested. "It
+did me good, too."
+
+"How's that?"
+
+"Because I've decided to do something about it, papa."
+
+"That isn't the way your mother looks at it," Adams said,
+ruefully. "She thinks it's our place to do something about it.
+Well, I don't know--I don't know; everything seems so changed
+these days. You've always been a good daughter, Alice, and you
+ought to have as much as any of these girls you go with; she's
+convinced me she's right about THAT. The trouble is----" He
+faltered, apologetically, then went on, "I mean the question
+is--how to get it for you."
+
+"No!" she cried. "I had no business to make such a fuss just
+because a lot of idiots didn't break their necks to get dances
+with me and because I got mortified about Walter--Walter WAS
+pretty terrible----"
+
+"Oh, me, my!" Adams lamented. "I guess that's something we just
+have to leave work out itself. What you going to do with a boy
+nineteen or twenty years old that makes his own living? Can't
+whip him. Can't keep him locked up in the house. Just got to
+hope he'll learn better, I suppose."
+
+"Of course he didn't want to go to the Palmers'," Alice
+explained, tolerantly--"and as mama and I made him take me, and
+he thought that was pretty selfish in me, why, he felt he had a
+right to amuse himself any way he could. Of course it was awful
+that this--that this Mr. Russell should----" In spite of her,
+the recollection choked her.
+
+"Yes, it was awful," Adams agreed. "Just awful. Oh, me, my!"
+
+But Alice recovered herself at once, and showed him a cheerful
+face. "Well, just a few years from now I probably won't even
+remember it! I believe hardly anything amounts to as much as we
+think it does at the time."
+
+"Well--sometimes it don't."
+
+"What I've been thinking, papa: it seems to me I ought to DO
+something."
+
+"What like?"
+
+She looked dreamy, but was obviously serious as she told him:
+"Well, I mean I ought to be something besides just a kind of
+nobody. I ought to----" She paused.
+
+"What, dearie?"
+
+"Well--there's one thing I'd like to do. I'm sure I COULD do it,
+too."
+
+"What?"
+
+"I want to go on the stage: I know I could act." At this, her
+father abruptly gave utterance to a feeble cackling of laughter;
+and when Alice, surprised and a little offended, pressed him for
+his reason, he tried to evade, saying, "Nothing, dearie. I just
+thought of something." But she persisted until he had to
+explain.
+
+"It made me think of your mother's sister, your Aunt Flora, that
+died when you were little," he said. "She was always telling how
+she was going on the stage, and talking about how she was certain
+she'd make a great actress, and all so on; and one day your
+mother broke out and said she ought 'a' gone on the stage,
+herself, because she always knew she had the talent for it--and,
+well, they got into kind of a spat about which one'd make the
+best actress. I had to go out in the hall to laugh!"
+
+"Maybe you were wrong," Alice said, gravely. "If they both felt
+it, why wouldn't that look as if there was talent in the family?
+I've ALWAYS thought----"
+
+"No, dearie," he said, with a final chuckle. "Your mother and
+Flora weren't different from a good many others. I expect ninety
+per cent. of all the women I ever knew were just sure they'd be
+mighty fine actresses if they ever got the chance. Well, I guess
+it's a good thing; they enjoy thinking about it and it don't do
+anybody any harm."
+
+Alice was piqued. For several days she had thought almost
+continuously of a career to be won by her own genius. Not that
+she planned details, or concerned herself with first steps; her
+picturings overleaped all that. Principally, she saw her name
+great on all the bill-boards of that unkind city, and herself,
+unchanged in age but glamorous with fame and Paris clothes,
+returning in a private car. No doubt the pleasantest development
+of her vision was a dialogue with Mildred; and this became so
+real that, as she projected it, Alice assumed the proper
+expressions for both parties to it, formed words with her lips,
+and even spoke some of them aloud. "No, I haven't forgotten you,
+Mrs. Russell. I remember you quite pleasantly, in fact. You
+were a Miss Palmer, I recall, in those funny old days. Very kind
+of you, I'm shaw. I appreciate your eagerness to do something
+for me in your own little home. As you say, a reception WOULD
+renew my acquaintanceship with many old friends--but I'm shaw
+you won't mind my mentioning that I don't find much inspiration
+in these provincials. I really must ask you not to press me. An
+artist's time is not her own, though of course I could hardly
+expect you to understand----"
+
+Thus Alice illuminated the dull time; but she retired from the
+interview with her father still manfully displaying an outward
+cheerfulness, while depression grew heavier within, as if she had
+eaten soggy cake. Her father knew nothing whatever of the stage,
+and she was aware of his ignorance, yet for some reason his
+innocently skeptical amusement reduced her bright project almost
+to nothing. Something like this always happened, it seemed; she
+was continually making these illuminations, all gay with gildings
+and colourings; and then as soon as anybody else so much as
+glanced at them--even her father, who loved her--the pretty
+designs were stricken with a desolating pallor. "Is this LIFE?"
+Alice wondered, not doubting that the question was original and
+all her own. "Is it life to spend your time imagining things
+that aren't so, and never will be? Beautiful things happen to
+other people; why should I be the only one they never CAN happen
+to?"
+
+The mood lasted overnight; and was still upon her the next
+afternoon when an errand for her father took her down-town.
+Adams had decided to begin smoking again, and Alice felt rather
+degraded, as well as embarrassed, when she went into the large
+shop her father had named, and asked for the cheap tobacco he
+used in his pipe. She fell back upon an air of amused
+indulgence, hoping thus to suggest that her purchase was made for
+some faithful old retainer, now infirm; and although the calmness
+of the clerk who served her called for no such elaboration of her
+sketch, she ornamented it with a little laugh and with the
+remark, as she dropped the package into her coat-pocket, "I'm
+sure it'll please him; they tell me it's the kind he likes."
+
+Still playing Lady Bountiful, smiling to herself in anticipation
+of the joy she was bringing to the simple old negro or Irish
+follower of the family, she left the shop; but as she came out
+upon the crowded pavement her smile vanished quickly.
+
+Next to the door of the tobacco-shop, there was the open entrance
+to a stairway, and, above this rather bleak and dark aperture, a
+sign-board displayed in begrimed gilt letters the information
+that Frincke's Business College occupied the upper floors of the
+building. Furthermore, Frincke here publicly offered "personal
+instruction and training in practical mathematics, bookkeeping,
+and all branches of the business life, including stenography,
+typewriting, etc."
+
+Alice halted for a moment, frowning at this signboard as though
+it were something surprising and distasteful which she had never
+seen before. Yet it was conspicuous in a busy quarter; she
+almost always passed it when she came down-town, and never
+without noticing it. Nor was this the first time she had paused
+to lift toward it that same glance of vague misgiving.
+
+The building was not what the changeful city defined as a modern
+one, and the dusty wooden stairway, as seen from the pavement,
+disappeared upward into a smoky darkness. So would the footsteps
+of a girl ascending there lead to a hideous obscurity, Alice
+thought; an obscurity as dreary and as permanent as death. And
+like dry leaves falling about her she saw her wintry imaginings
+in the May air: pretty girls turning into withered creatures as
+they worked at typing-machines; old maids "taking dictation" from
+men with double chins; Alice saw old maids of a dozen different
+kinds "taking dictation." Her mind's eye was crowded with them,
+as it always was when she passed that stairway entrance; and
+though they were all different from one another, all of them
+looked a little like herself.
+
+She hated the place, and yet she seldom hurried by it or averted
+her eyes. It had an unpleasant fascination for her, and a
+mysterious reproach, which she did not seek to fathom. She
+walked on thoughtfully to-day; and when, at the next corner, she
+turned into the street that led toward home, she was given a
+surprise. Arthur Russell came rapidly from behind her, lifting
+his hat as she saw him.
+
+"Are you walking north, Miss Adams?" he asked. "Do you mind if I
+walk with you?"
+
+She was not delighted, but seemed so. "How charming!" she cried,
+giving him a little flourish of the shapely hands; and then,
+because she wondered if he had seen her coming out of the
+tobacco-shop, she laughed and added, "I've just been on the most
+ridiculous errand!"
+
+"What was that?"
+
+"To order some cigars for my father. He's been quite ill, poor
+man, and he's so particular--but what in the world do _I_ know
+about cigars?"
+
+Russell laughed. "Well, what DO you know about 'em? Did you
+select by the price?"
+
+"Mercy, no!" she exclaimed, and added, with an afterthought, "Of
+course he wrote down the name of the kind he wanted and I gave it
+to the shopman. I could never have pronounced it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+In her pocket as she spoke her hand rested upon the little sack
+of tobacco, which responded accusingly to the touch of her
+restless fingers; and she found time to wonder why she was
+building up this fiction for Mr. Arthur Russell. His discovery
+of Walter's device for whiling away the dull evening had shamed
+and distressed her; but she would have suffered no less if almost
+any other had been the discoverer. In this gentleman, after
+hearing that he was Mildred's Mr. Arthur Russell, Alice felt not
+the slightest "personal interest"; and there was yet to develop
+in her life such a thing as an interest not personal. At
+twenty-two this state of affairs is not unique.
+
+So far as Alice was concerned Russell might have worn a placard,
+"Engaged." She looked upon him as diners entering a restaurant
+look upon tables marked "Reserved": the glance, slightly
+discontented, passes on at once. Or so the eye of a prospector
+wanders querulously over staked and established claims on the
+mountainside, and seeks the virgin land beyond; unless, indeed,
+the prospector be dishonest. But Alice was no claim-jumper--so
+long as the notice of ownership was plainly posted.
+
+Though she was indifferent now, habit ruled her: and, at the very
+time she wondered why she created fictitious cigars for her
+father, she was also regretting that she had not boldly carried
+her Malacca stick down-town with her. Her vivacity increased
+automatically.
+
+"Perhaps the clerk thought you wanted the cigars for yourself,"
+Russell suggested. "He may have taken you for a Spanish
+countess."
+
+"I'm sure he did!" Alice agreed, gaily; and she hummed a bar or
+two of "LaPaloma," snapping her fingers as castanets, and swaying
+her body a little, to suggest the accepted stencil of a "Spanish
+Dancer." "Would you have taken me for one, Mr. Russell?" she
+asked, as she concluded the impersonation.
+
+"I? Why, yes," he said. "I'D take you for anything you wanted
+me to."
+
+"Why, what a speech!" she cried, and, laughing, gave him a quick
+glance in which there glimmered some real surprise. He was
+looking at her quizzically, but with the liveliest appreciation.
+Her surprise increased; and she was glad that he had joined her.
+
+To be seen walking with such a companion added to her pleasure.
+She would have described him as "altogether quite
+stunning-looking"; and she liked his tall, dark thinness, his
+gray clothes, his soft hat, and his clean brown shoes; she liked
+his easy swing of the stick he carried.
+
+"Shouldn't I have said it?" he asked. "Would you rather not be
+taken for a Spanish countess?"
+
+"That isn't it," she explained. "You said----"
+
+"I said I'd take you for whatever you wanted me to. Isn't that
+all right?"
+
+"It would all depend, wouldn't it?"
+
+"Of course it would depend on what you wanted."
+
+"Oh, no!" she laughed. "It might depend on a lot of things."
+
+"Such as?"
+
+"Well----" She hesitated, having the mischievous impulse to say,
+"Such as Mildred!" But she decided to omit this reference, and
+became serious, remembering Russell's service to her at Mildred's
+house. "Speaking of what I want to be taken for," she
+said;--"I've been wondering ever since the other night what you
+did take me for! You must have taken me for the sister of a
+professional gambler, I'm afraid!"
+
+Russell's look of kindness was the truth about him, she was to
+discover; and he reassured her now by the promptness of his
+friendly chuckle. "Then your young brother told you where I
+found him, did he? I kept my face straight at the time, but I
+laughed afterward--to myself. It struck me as original, to say
+the least: his amusing himself with those darkies."
+
+"Walter IS original," Alice said; and, having adopted this new
+view of her brother's eccentricities, she impulsively went on to
+make it more plausible. "He's a very odd boy, and I was afraid
+you'd misunderstand. He tells wonderful 'darky stories,' and
+he'll do anything to draw coloured people out and make them talk;
+and that's what he was doing at Mildred's when you found him for
+me--he says he wins their confidence by playing dice with them.
+In the family we think he'll probably write about them some day.
+He's rather literary."
+
+"Are you?" Russell asked, smiling.
+
+"I? Oh----" She paused, lifting both hands in a charming gesture
+of helplessness. "Oh, I'm just--me!"
+
+His glance followed the lightly waved hands with keen approval,
+then rose to the lively and colourful face, with its hazel eyes,
+its small and pretty nose, and the lip-caught smile which seemed
+the climax of her decorative transition. Never had he seen a
+creature so plastic or so wistful.
+
+Here was a contrast to his cousin Mildred, who was not wistful,
+and controlled any impulses toward plasticity, if she had them.
+"By George!" he said. "But you ARE different!"
+
+With that, there leaped in her such an impulse of roguish
+gallantry as she could never resist. She turned her head, and,
+laughing and bright-eyed, looked him full in the face.
+
+"From whom?" she cried.
+
+"From--everybody!" he said. "Are you a mind-reader?"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"How did you know I was thinking you were different from my
+cousin, Mildred Palmer?"
+
+"What makes you think I DID know it?"
+
+"Nonsense!" he said. "You knew what I was thinking and I knew
+you knew."
+
+"Yes," she said with cool humour. "How intimate that seems to
+make us all at once!"
+
+Russell left no doubt that he was delighted with these gaieties
+of hers. "By George!" he exclaimed again. "I thought you were
+this sort of girl the first moment I saw you!"
+
+"What sort of girl? Didn't Mildred tell you what sort of girl I
+am when she asked you to dance with me?"
+
+"She didn't ask me to dance with you--I'd been looking at you.
+You were talking to some old ladies, and I asked Mildred who you
+were."
+
+"Oh, so Mildred DIDN'T----" Alice checked herself. "Who did she
+tell you I was?"
+
+"She just said you were a Miss Adams, so I----"
+
+"'A' Miss Adams?" Alice interrupted.
+
+"Yes. Then I said I'd like to meet you."
+
+"I see. You thought you'd save me from the old ladies."
+
+"No. I thought I'd save myself from some of the girls Mildred
+was getting me to dance with. There was a Miss Dowling----"
+
+"Poor man!" Alice said, gently, and her impulsive thought was
+that Mildred had taken few chances, and that as a matter of
+self-defense her carefulness might have been well founded. This
+Mr. Arthur Russell was a much more responsive person than one
+had supposed.
+
+"So, Mr. Russell, you don't know anything about me except what
+you thought when you first saw me?"
+
+"Yes, I know I was right when I thought it."
+
+"You haven't told me what you thought."
+
+"I thought you were like what you ARE like."
+
+"Not very definite, is it? I'm afraid you shed more light a
+minute or so ago, when you said how different from Mildred you
+thought I was. That WAS definite, unfortunately!"
+
+"I didn't say it," Russell explained. "I thought it, and you
+read my mind. That's the sort of girl I thought you were--one
+that could read a man's mind. Why do you say 'unfortunately'
+you're not like Mildred?"
+
+Alice's smooth gesture seemed to sketch Mildred. "Because she's
+perfect--why, she's PERFECTLY perfect! She never makes a
+mistake, and everybody looks up to her--oh, yes, we all fairly
+adore her! She's like some big, noble, cold statue--'way above
+the rest of us--and she hardly ever does anything mean or
+treacherous. Of all the girls I know I believe she's played the
+fewest really petty tricks. She's----"
+
+Russell interrupted; he looked perplexed. "You say she's
+perfectly perfect, but that she does play SOME----"
+
+Alice laughed, as if at his sweet innocence. "Men are so funny!"
+she informed him. "Of course girls ALL do mean things sometimes.
+My own career's just one long brazen smirch of 'em! What I mean
+is, Mildred's perfectly perfect compared to the rest of us."
+
+"I see," he said, and seemed to need a moment or two of
+thoughtfulness. Then he inquired, "What sort of treacherous
+things do YOU do?"
+
+"I? Oh, the very worst kind! Most people bore me particularly
+the men in this town--and I show it."
+
+"But I shouldn't call that treacherous, exactly."
+
+"Well, THEY do," Alice laughed. "It's made me a terribly
+unpopular character! I do a lot of things they hate. For
+instance, at a dance I'd a lot rather find some clever old woman
+and talk to her than dance with nine-tenths of these nonentities.
+I usually do it, too."
+
+"But you danced as if you liked it. You danced better than any
+other girl I----"
+
+"This flattery of yours doesn't quite turn my head, Mr.
+Russell," Alice interrupted. "Particularly since Mildred only
+gave you Ella Dowling to compare with me!"
+
+"Oh, no," he insisted. "There were others--and of course
+Mildred, herself."
+
+"Oh, of course, yes. I forgot that. Well----" She paused, then
+added, "I certainly OUGHT to dance well."
+
+"Why is it so much a duty?"
+
+"When I think of the dancing-teachers and the expense to papa!
+All sorts of fancy instructors--I suppose that's what daughters
+have fathers for, though, isn't it? To throw money away on
+them?"
+
+"You don't----" Russell began, and his look was one of alarm.
+"You haven't taken up----"
+
+She understood his apprehension and responded merrily, "Oh,
+murder, no! You mean you're afraid I break out sometimes in a
+piece of cheesecloth and run around a fountain thirty times, and
+then, for an encore, show how much like snakes I can make my arms
+look."
+
+"I SAID you were a mind-reader!" he exclaimed. "That's exactly
+what I was pretending to be afraid you might do."
+
+"'Pretending?' That's nicer of you. No; it's not my mania."
+
+"What is?"
+
+"Oh, nothing in particular that I know of just now. Of course
+I've had the usual one: the one that every girl goes through."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"Good heavens, Mr. Russell, you can't expect me to believe
+you're really a man of the world if you don't know that every
+girl has a time in her life when she's positive she's divinely
+talented for the stage! It's the only universal rule about women
+that hasn't got an exception. I don't mean we all want to go on
+the stage, but we all think we'd be wonderful if we did. Even
+Mildred. Oh, she wouldn't confess it to you: you'd have to know
+her a great deal better than any man can ever know her to find
+out."
+
+"I see," he said. "Girls are always telling us we can't know
+them. I wonder if you----"
+
+She took up his thought before he expressed it, and again he was
+fascinated by her quickness, which indeed seemed to him almost
+telepathic. "Oh, but DON'T we know one another, though!" she
+cried.
+
+"Such things we have to keep secret--things that go on right
+before YOUR eyes!"
+
+"Why don't some of you tell us?" he asked.
+
+"We can't tell you."
+
+"Too much honour?"
+
+"No. Not even too much honour among thieves, Mr. Russell. We
+don't tell you about our tricks against one another because we
+know it wouldn't make any impression on you. The tricks aren't
+played against you, and you have a soft side for cats with lovely
+manners!"
+
+"What about your tricks against us?"
+
+"Oh, those!" Alice laughed. "We think they're rather cute!"
+
+"Bravo!" he cried, and hammered the ferrule of his stick upon the
+pavement.
+
+"What's the applause for?"
+
+"For you. What you said was like running up the black flag to
+the masthead."
+
+"Oh, no. It was just a modest little sign in a pretty
+flower-bed: 'Gentlemen, beware!'"
+
+"I see I must," he said, gallantly.
+
+"Thanks! But I mean, beware of the whole bloomin' garden!" Then,
+picking up a thread that had almost disappeared: "You needn't
+think you'll ever find out whether I'm right about Mildred's not
+being an exception by asking her," she said. "She won't tell
+you: she's not the sort that ever makes a confession."
+
+But Russell had not followed her shift to the former topic.
+"'Mildred's not being an exception?'" he said, vaguely.
+"I don't----"
+
+"An exception about thinking she could be a wonderful thing on the
+stage if she only cared to. If you asked her I'm pretty sure
+she'd say, 'What nonsense!' Mildred's the dearest, finest thing
+anywhere, but you won't find out many things about her by asking
+her."
+
+Russell's expression became more serious, as it did whenever his
+cousin was made their topic. "You think not?" he said. "You
+think she's----"
+
+"No. But it's not because she isn't sincere exactly. It's only
+because she has such a lot to live up to. She has to live up to
+being a girl on the grand style to herself, I mean, of course."
+And without pausing Alice rippled on, "You ought to have seen ME
+when I had the stage-fever! I used to play 'Juliet' all alone in
+my room.' She lifted her arms in graceful entreaty, pleading
+musically,
+
+ "O, swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon,
+ That monthly changes in her circled orb,
+ Lest thy love prove----"
+
+
+She broke off abruptly with a little flourish, snapping thumb and
+finger of each outstretched hand, then laughed and said, "Papa
+used to make such fun of me! Thank heaven, I was only fifteen; I
+was all over it by the next year."
+
+"No wonder you had the fever," Russell observed. "You do it
+beautifully. Why didn't you finish the line?"
+
+"Which one? 'Lest thy love prove likewise variable'? Juliet was
+saying it to a MAN, you know. She seems to have been ready to
+worry about his constancy pretty early in their affair!"
+
+Her companion was again thoughtful. "Yes," he said, seeming to
+be rather irksomely impressed with Alice's suggestion. "Yes; it
+does appear so."
+
+Alice glanced at his serious face, and yielded to an audacious
+temptation. "You mustn't take it so hard," she said, flippantly.
+
+"It isn't about you: it's only about Romeo and Juliet."
+
+"See here!" he exclaimed. "You aren't at your mind-reading
+again, are you? There are times when it won't do, you know!"
+
+She leaned toward him a little, as if companionably: they were
+walking slowly, and this geniality of hers brought her shoulder
+in light contact with his for a moment. "Do you dislike my
+mind-reading?" she asked, and, across their two just touching
+shoulders, gave him her sudden look of smiling wistfulness. "Do
+you hate it?"
+
+He shook his head. "No, I don't," he said, gravely. "It's quite
+pleasant. But I think it says, 'Gentlemen, beware!'"
+
+She instantly moved away from him, with the lawless and frank
+laugh of one who is delighted to be caught in a piece of
+hypocrisy. "How lovely!" she cried. Then she pointed ahead.
+"Our walk is nearly over. We're coming to the foolish little
+house where I live. It's a queer little place, but my father's
+so attached to it the family have about given up hope of getting
+him to build a real house farther out. He doesn't mind our being
+extravagant about anything else, but he won't let us alter one
+single thing about his precious little old house. Well!" She
+halted, and gave him her hand. "Adieu!"
+
+"I couldn't," he began; hesitated, then asked: "I couldn't come
+in with you for a little while?"
+
+"Not now," she said, quickly. "You can come----" She paused.
+
+"When?"
+
+"Almost any time." She turned and walked slowly up the path, but
+he waited. "You can come in the evening if you like," she called
+back to him over her shoulder.
+
+"Soon?"
+
+"As soon as you like!" She waved her hand; then ran indoors and
+watched him from a window as he went up the street. He walked
+rapidly, a fine, easy figure, swinging his stick in a way that
+suggested exhilaration. Alice, staring after him through the
+irregular apertures of a lace curtain, showed no similar
+buoyancy. Upon the instant she closed the door all sparkle left
+her: she had become at once the simple and sometimes troubled
+girl her family knew.
+
+"What is going on out there?" her mother asked, approaching from
+the dining-room.
+
+"Oh, nothing," Alice said, indifferently, as she turned away.
+"That Mr. Russell met me downtown and walked up with me."
+
+"Mr. Russell? Oh, the one that's engaged to Mildred?"
+
+"Well--I don't know for certain. He didn't seem so much like an
+engaged man to me." And she added, in the tone of thoughtful
+preoccupation: "Anyhow--not so terribly!"
+
+Then she ran upstairs, gave her father his tobacco, filled his
+pipe for him, and petted him as he lighted it.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+After that, she went to her room and sat down before her
+three-leaved mirror. There was where she nearly always sat when
+she came into her room, if she had nothing in mind to do. She
+went to that chair as naturally as a dog goes to his corner.
+
+She leaned forward, observing her profile; gravity seemed to be
+her mood. But after a long, almost motionless scrutiny, she
+began to produce dramatic sketches upon that ever-ready stage,
+her countenance: she showed gaiety, satire, doubt, gentleness,
+appreciation of a companion and love-in-hiding--all studied in
+profile first, then repeated for a "three-quarter view."
+Subsequently she ran through them, facing herself in full.
+
+In this manner she outlined a playful scenario for her next
+interview with Arthur Russell; but grew solemn again, thinking of
+the impression she had already sought to give him. She had no
+twinges for any underminings of her "most intimate friend"--in
+fact, she felt that her work on a new portrait of Mildred for Mr.
+
+Russell had been honest and accurate. But why had it been her
+instinct to show him an Alice Adams who didn't exist?
+
+Almost everything she had said to him was upon spontaneous
+impulse, springing to her lips on the instant; yet it all seemed
+to have been founded upon a careful design, as if some hidden
+self kept such designs in stock and handed them up to her,
+ready-made, to be used for its own purpose. What appeared to be
+the desired result was a false-coloured image in Russell's mind;
+but if he liked that image he wouldn't be liking Alice Adams; nor
+would anything he thought about the image be a thought about her.
+
+Nevertheless, she knew she would go on with her false, fancy
+colourings of this nothing as soon as she saw him again; she had
+just been practicing them. "What's the idea?" she wondered.
+"What makes me tell such lies? Why shouldn't I be just myself?"
+And then she thought, "But which one is myself?"
+
+Her eyes dwelt on the solemn eyes in the mirror; and her lips,
+disquieted by a deepening wonder, parted to whisper:
+
+"Who in the world are you?"
+
+The apparition before her had obeyed her like an alert slave, but
+now, as she subsided to a complete stillness, that aspect changed
+to the old mockery with which mirrors avenge their wrongs. The
+nucleus of some queer thing seemed to gather and shape itself
+behind the nothingness of the reflected eyes until it became
+almost an actual strange presence. If it could be identified,
+perhaps the presence was that of the hidden designer who handed
+up the false, ready-made pictures, and, for unknown purposes,
+made Alice exhibit them; but whatever it was, she suddenly found
+it monkey-like and terrifying. In a flutter she jumped up and
+went to another part of the room.
+
+A moment or two later she was whistling softly as she hung her
+light coat over a wooden triangle in her closet, and her musing
+now was quainter than the experience that led to it; for what she
+thought was this, "I certainly am a queer girl!" She took a
+little pride in so much originality, believing herself probably
+the only person in the world to have such thoughts as had been
+hers since she entered the room, and the first to be disturbed by
+a strange presence in the mirror. In fact, the effect of the
+tiny episode became apparent in that look of preoccupied
+complacency to be seen for a time upon any girl who has found
+reason to suspect that she is a being without counterpart.
+
+This slight glow, still faintly radiant, was observed across the
+dinner-table by Walter, but he misinterpreted it. "What YOU
+lookin' so self-satisfied about?" he inquired, and added in his
+knowing way, "I saw you, all right, cutie!"
+
+"Where'd you see me?"
+
+"Down-town."
+
+"This afternoon, you mean, Walter?"
+
+"Yes, 'this afternoon, I mean, Walter,'" he returned,
+burlesquing her voice at least happily enough to please himself;
+for he laughed applausively. "Oh, you never saw me! I passed
+you close enough to pull a tooth, but you were awful busy. I
+never did see anybody as busy as you get, Alice, when you're
+towin' a barge. My, but you keep your hands goin'! Looked like
+the air was full of 'em! That's why I'm onto why you look so
+tickled this evening; I saw you with that big fish."
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed benevolently; she was not displeased with
+this rallying. "Well, what of it, Walter?" she asked. "If you
+happen to see your sister on the street when some nice young man
+is being attentive to her----"
+
+Walter barked and then cackled. "Whoa, Sal!" he said. "You got
+the parts mixed. It's little Alice that was 'being attentive.' I
+know the big fish she was attentive to, all right, too."
+
+"Yes," his sister retorted, quietly. "I should think you might
+have recognized him, Walter."
+
+Walter looked annoyed. "Still harpin' on THAT!" he complained.
+"The kind of women I like, if they get sore they just hit you
+somewhere on the face and then they're through. By the way, I
+heard this Russell was supposed to be your dear, old, sweet
+friend Mildred's steady. What you doin' walkin' as close to him
+as all that?"
+
+Mrs. Adams addressed her son in gentle reproof, "Why Walter!"
+
+"Oh, never mind, mama," Alice said. "To the horrid all things
+are horrid."
+
+"Get out!" Walter protested, carelessly. "I heard all about this
+Russell down at the shop. Young Joe Lamb's such a talker I
+wonder he don't ruin his grandfather's business; he keeps all us
+cheap help standin' round listening to him nine-tenths of our
+time. Well, Joe told me this Russell's some kin or other to the
+Palmer family, and he's got some little money of his own, and
+he's puttin' it into ole Palmer's trust company and Palmer's
+goin' to make him a vice-president of the company. Sort of a
+keep-the-money-in-the-family arrangement, Joe Lamb says."
+
+Mrs. Adams looked thoughtful. "I don't see----" she began.
+
+"Why, this Russell's supposed to be tied up to Mildred," her son
+explained. "When ole Palmer dies this Russell will be his
+son-in-law, and all he'll haf' to do'll be to barely lift his
+feet and step into the ole man's shoes. It's certainly a mighty
+fat hand-me-out for this Russell! You better lay off o' there,
+Alice. Pick somebody that's got less to lose and you'll make
+better showing."
+
+Mrs. Adams's air of thoughtfulness had not departed. "But you
+say this Mr. Russell is well off on his own account, Walter."
+
+"Oh, Joe Lamb says he's got some little of his own. Didn't know
+how much."
+
+"Well, then----"
+
+Walter laughed his laugh. "Cut it out," he bade her. "Alice
+wouldn't run in fourth place."
+
+Alice had been looking at him in a detached way, as though
+estimating the value of a specimen in a collection not her own.
+"Yes," she said, indifferently. "You REALLY are vulgar, Walter."
+
+He had finished his meal; and, rising, he came round the table to
+her and patted her good-naturedly on the shoulder. "Good ole
+Allie!" he said. "HONEST, you wouldn't run in fourth place. If
+I was you I'd never even start in the class. That frozen-face
+gang will rule you off the track soon as they see your colours."
+
+"Walter!" his mother said again.
+
+"Well, ain't I her brother?" he returned, seeming to be entirely
+serious and direct, for the moment, at least. "_I_ like the ole
+girl all right. Fact is, sometimes I'm kind of sorry for her."
+
+"But what's it all ABOUT?" Alice cried. "Simply because you met
+me down-town with a man I never saw but once before and just
+barely know! Why all this palaver?"
+
+"'Why?'" he repeated, grinning. "Well, I've seen you start
+before, you know!" He went to the door, and paused. "I got no
+date to-night. Take you to the movies, you care to go."
+
+She declined crisply. "No, thanks!"
+
+"Come on," he said, as pleasantly as he knew how.
+
+"Give me a chance to show you a better time than we had up at
+that frozen-face joint. I'll get you some chop suey afterward."
+
+"No, thanks!"
+
+"All right," he responded and waved a flippant adieu. "As the
+barber says, 'The better the advice, the worse it's wasted!'
+Good-night!"
+
+Alice shrugged her shoulders; but a moment or two later, as the
+jar of the carelessly slammed front door went through the house,
+she shook her head, reconsidering. "Perhaps I ought to have gone
+with him. It might have kept him away from whatever dreadful
+people are his friends--at least for one night."
+
+"Oh, I'm sure Walter's a GOOD boy," Mrs. Adams said, soothingly;
+and this was what she almost always said when either her husband
+or Alice expressed such misgivings. "He's odd, and he's picked
+up right queer manners; but that's only because we haven't given
+him advantages like the other young men. But I'm sure he's a
+GOOD boy."
+
+She reverted to the subject a little later, while she washed the
+dishes and Alice wiped them. "Of course Walter could take his
+place with the other nice boys of the town even yet," she said.
+"I mean, if we could afford to help him financially. They all
+belong to the country clubs and have cars and----"
+
+"Let's don't go into that any more, mama," the daughter begged
+her. "What's the use?"
+
+"It COULD be of use," Mrs. Adams insisted. "It could if your
+father----"
+
+"But papa CAN'T."
+
+"Yes, he can."
+
+"But how can he? He told me a man of his age CAN'T give up a
+business he's been in practically all his life, and just go
+groping about for something that might never turn up at all. I
+think he's right about it, too, of course!"
+
+Mrs. Adams splashed among the plates with a new vigour
+heightened by an old bitterness. "Oh, yes," she said. "He talks
+that way; but he knows better."
+
+"How could he 'know better,' mama?"
+
+"HE knows how!"
+
+"But what does he know?"
+
+Mrs. Adams tossed her head. "You don't suppose I'm such a fool
+I'd be urging him to give up something for nothing, do you,
+Alice? Do you suppose I'd want him to just go 'groping around'
+like he was telling you? That would be crazy, of course. Little
+as his work at Lamb's brings in, I wouldn't be so silly as to ask
+him to give it up just on a CHANCE he could find something else.
+Good gracious, Alice, you must give me credit for a little
+intelligence once in a while!"
+
+Alice was puzzled. "But what else could there be except a
+chance? I don't see----"
+
+"Well, I do," her mother interrupted, decisively. "That man
+could make us all well off right now if he wanted to. We could
+have been rich long ago if he'd ever really felt as he ought to
+about his family."
+
+"What! Why, how could----"
+
+"You know how as well as I do," Mrs. Adams said, crossly. "I
+guess you haven't forgotten how he treated me about it the Sunday
+before he got sick."
+
+She went on with her work, putting into it a sudden violence
+inspired by the recollection; but Alice, enlightened, gave
+utterance to a laugh of lugubrious derision. "Oh, the GLUE
+factory again!" she cried. "How silly!" And she renewed her
+laughter.
+
+So often do the great projects of parents appear ignominious to
+their children. Mrs. Adams's conception of a glue factory as a
+fairy godmother of this family was an absurd old story which
+Alice had never taken seriously. She remembered that when she
+was about fifteen her mother began now and then to say something
+to Adams about a "glue factory," rather timidly, and as a vague
+suggestion, but never without irritating him. Then, for years,
+the preposterous subject had not been mentioned; possibly because
+of some explosion on the part of Adams, when his daughter had not
+been present. But during the last year Mrs. Adams had quietly
+gone back to these old hints, reviving them at intervals and also
+reviving her husband's irritation. Alice's bored impression was
+that her mother wanted him to found, or buy, or do something, or
+other, about a glue factory; and that he considered the proposal
+so impracticable as to be insulting. The parental conversations
+took place when neither Alice nor Walter was at hand, but
+sometimes Alice had come in upon the conclusion of one, to find
+her father in a shouting mood, and shocking the air behind him
+with profane monosyllables as he departed. Mrs. Adams would be
+left quiet and troubled; and when Alice, sympathizing with the
+goaded man, inquired of her mother why these tiresome bickerings
+had been renewed, she always got the brooding and cryptic answer,
+"He COULD do it--if he wanted to." Alice failed to comprehend
+the desirability of a glue factory--to her mind a father engaged
+in a glue factory lacked impressiveness; had no advantage over a
+father employed by Lamb and Company; and she supposed that Adams
+knew better than her mother whether such an enterprise would be
+profitable or not. Emphatically, he thought it would not, for
+she had heard him shouting at the end of one of these painful
+interviews, "You can keep up your dang talk till YOU die and _I_
+die, but I'll never make one God's cent that way!"
+
+There had been a culmination. Returning from church on the
+Sunday preceding the collapse with which Adams's illness had
+begun, Alice found her mother downstairs, weeping and
+intimidated, while her father's stamping footsteps were loudly
+audible as he strode up and down his room overhead. So were his
+endless repetitions of invective loudly audible: "That woman!
+Oh, that woman; Oh, that danged woman!"
+
+Mrs. Adams admitted to her daughter that it was "the old glue
+factory" and that her husband's wildness had frightened her into
+a "solemn promise" never to mention the subject again so long as
+she had breath. Alice laughed. The "glue factory" idea was not
+only a bore, but ridiculous, and her mother's evident seriousness
+about it one of those inexplicable vagaries we sometimes discover
+in the people we know best. But this Sunday rampage appeared to
+be the end of it, and when Adams came down to dinner, an hour
+later, he was unusually cheerful. Alice was glad he had gone
+wild enough to settle the glue factory once and for all; and she
+had ceased to think of the episode long before Friday of that
+week, when Adams was brought home in the middle of the afternoon
+by his old employer, the "great J. A. Lamb," in the latter's
+car.
+
+During the long illness the "glue factory" was completely
+forgotten, by Alice at least; and her laugh was rueful as well as
+derisive now, in the kitchen, when she realized that her mother's
+mind again dwelt upon this abandoned nuisance. "I thought you'd
+got over all that nonsense, mama," she said.
+
+Mrs. Adams smiled, pathetically. "Of course you think it's
+nonsense, dearie. Young people think everything's nonsense that
+they don't know anything about."
+
+"Good gracious!" Alice cried. "I should think I used to hear
+enough about that horrible old glue factory to know something
+about it!"
+
+"No," her mother returned patiently. "You've never heard
+anything about it at all."
+
+"I haven't?"
+
+"No. Your father and I didn't discuss it before you children.
+All you ever heard was when he'd get in such a rage, after we'd
+been speaking of it, that he couldn't control himself when you
+came in. Wasn't _I_ always quiet? Did _I_ ever go on talking
+about it?"
+
+"No; perhaps not. But you're talking about it now, mama, after
+you promised never to mention it again."
+
+"I promised not to mention it to your father," said Mrs. Adams,
+gently. "I haven't mentioned it to him, have I?"
+
+"Ah, but if you mention it to me I'm afraid you WILL mention it
+to him. You always do speak of things that you have on your
+mind, and you might get papa all stirred up again about--" Alice
+paused, a light of divination flickering in her eyes. "Oh!" she
+cried. "I SEE!"
+
+"What do you see?"
+
+"You HAVE been at him about it!"
+
+"Not one single word!"
+
+"No!" Alice cried. "Not a WORD, but that's what you've meant all
+along! You haven't spoken the words to him, but all this urging
+him to change, to 'find something better to go into'--it's all
+been about nothing on earth but your foolish old glue factory
+that you know upsets him, and you gave your solemn word never to
+speak to him about again! You didn't say it, but you meant
+it--and he KNOWS that's what you meant! Oh, mama!"
+
+Mrs. Adams, with her hands still automatically at work in the
+flooded dishpan, turned to face her daughter. "Alice," she said,
+tremulously, "what do I ask for myself?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"I say, What do I ask for myself? Do you suppose _I_ want
+anything? Don't you know I'd be perfectly content on your
+father's present income if I were the only person to be
+considered? What do I care about any pleasure for myself? I'd
+be willing never to have a maid again; _I_ don't mind doing the
+work. If we didn't have any children I'd be glad to do your
+father's cooking and the housework and the washing and ironing,
+too, for the rest of my life. I wouldn't care. I'm a poor cook
+and a poor housekeeper; I don't do anything well; but it would be
+good enough for just him and me. I wouldn't ever utter one word
+of com----"
+
+"Oh, goodness!" Alice lamented. "What IS it all about?"
+
+"It's about this," said Mrs. Adams, swallowing. "You and Walter
+are a new generation and you ought to have the same as the rest
+of the new generation get. Poor Walter--asking you to go to the
+movies and a Chinese restaurant: the best he had to offer! Don't
+you suppose _I_ see how the poor boy is deteriorating? Don't you
+suppose I know what YOU have to go through, Alice? And when I
+think of that man upstairs----" The agitated voice grew louder.
+"When I think of him and know that nothing in the world but his
+STUBBORNNESS keeps my children from having all they want and what
+they OUGHT to have, do you suppose I'm going to hold myself bound
+to keep to the absolute letter of a silly promise he got from me
+by behaving like a crazy man? I can't! I can't do it! No
+mother could sit by and see him lock up a horn of plenty like
+that in his closet when the children were starving!"
+
+"Oh, goodness, goodness me!" Alice protested. "We aren't
+precisely 'starving,' are we?"
+
+Mrs. Adams began to weep. "It's just the same. Didn't I see
+how flushed and pretty you looked, this afternoon, after you'd
+been walking with this young man that's come here? Do you
+suppose he'd LOOK at a girl like Mildred Palmer if you had what
+you ought to have? Do you suppose he'd be going into business
+with her father if YOUR father----"
+
+"Good heavens, mama; you're worse than Walter: I just barely know
+the man! DON'T be so absurd!"
+
+"Yes, I'm always 'absurd,'" Mrs. Adams moaned. "All I can do
+is cry, while your father sits upstairs, and his horn of
+plenty----"
+
+But Alice interrupted with a peal of desperate laughter. "Oh,
+that 'horn of plenty!' Do come down to earth, mama. How can you
+call a GLUE factory, that doesn't exist except in your mind, a
+'horn of plenty'? Do let's be a little rational!"
+
+"It COULD be a horn of plenty," the tearful Mrs, Adams insisted.
+"It could! You don't understand a thing about it."
+
+"Well, I'm willing," Alice said, with tired skepticism. "Make me
+understand, then. Where'd you ever get the idea?"
+
+Mrs. Adams withdrew her hands from the water, dried them on a
+towel, and then wiped her eyes with a handkerchief. "Your father
+could make a fortune if he wanted to," she said, quietly. "At
+least, I don't say a fortune, but anyhow a great deal more than
+he does make."
+
+"Yes, I've heard that before, mama, and you think he could make
+it out of a glue factory. What I'm asking is: How?"
+
+"How? Why, by making glue and selling it. Don't you know how
+bad most glue is when you try to mend anything? A good glue is
+one of the rarest things there is; and it would just sell itself,
+once it got started. Well, your father knows how to make as good
+a glue as there is in the world."
+
+Alice was not interested. "What of it? I suppose probably
+anybody could make it if they wanted to."
+
+"I SAID you didn't know anything about it. Nobody else could
+make it. Your father knows a formula for making it."
+
+"What of that?"
+
+"It's a secret formula. It isn't even down on paper. It's worth
+any amount of money."
+
+"'Any amount?'" Alice said, remaining incredulous. "Why hasn't
+papa sold it then?"
+
+"Just because he's too stubborn to do anything with it at all!"
+
+"How did papa get it?"
+
+"He got it before you were born, just after we were married. I
+didn't think much about it then: it wasn't till you were growing
+up and I saw how much we needed money that I----"
+
+"Yes, but how did papa get it?" Alice began to feel a little more
+curious about this possible buried treasure. "Did he invent it?"
+
+"Partly," Mrs. Adams said, looking somewhat preoccupied. "He
+and another man invented it."
+
+"Then maybe the other man----"
+
+"He's dead."
+
+"Then his family----"
+
+"I don't think he left any family," Mrs. Adams said. "Anyhow,
+it belongs to your father. At least it belongs to him as much as
+it does to any one else. He's got an absolutely perfect right to
+do anything he wants to with it, and it would make us all
+comfortable if he'd do what I want him to--and he KNOWS it would,
+too!"
+
+Alice shook her head pityingly. "Poor mama!" she said. "Of
+course he knows it wouldn't do anything of the kind, or else he'd
+have done it long ago."
+
+"He would, you say?" her mother cried. "That only shows how
+little you know him!"
+
+"Poor mama!" Alice said again, soothingly. "If papa were like
+what you say he is, he'd be--why, he'd be crazy!"
+
+Mrs. Adams agreed with a vehemence near passion. "You're right
+about him for once: that's just what he is! He sits up there in
+his stubbornness and lets us slave here in the kitchen when if he
+wanted to--if he'd so much as lift his little finger----"
+
+"Oh, come, now!" Alice laughed. "You can't build even a glue
+factory with just one little finger."
+
+Mrs. Adams seemed about to reply that finding fault with a
+figure of speech was beside the point; but a ringing of the front
+door bell forestalled the retort. "Now, who do you suppose that
+is?" she wondered aloud, then her face brightened. "Ah--did Mr.
+Russell ask if he could----"
+
+"No, he wouldn't be coming this evening," Alice said. "Probably
+it's the great J. A. Lamb: he usually stops for a minute on
+Thursdays to ask how papa's getting along. I'll go."
+
+She tossed her apron off, and as she went through the house her
+expression was thoughtful. She was thinking vaguely about the
+glue factory and wondering if there might be "something in it"
+after all. If her mother was right about the rich possibilities
+of Adams's secret--but that was as far as Alice's speculations
+upon the matter went at this time: they were checked, partly by
+the thought that her father probably hadn't enough money for such
+an enterprise, and partly by the fact that she had arrived at the
+front door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+The fine old gentleman revealed when she opened the door was
+probably the last great merchant in America to wear the chin
+beard. White as white frost, it was trimmed short with exquisite
+precision, while his upper lip and the lower expanses of his
+cheeks were clean and rosy from fresh shaving. With this trim
+white chin beard, the white waistcoat, the white tie, the suit of
+fine gray cloth, the broad and brilliantly polished black shoes,
+and the wide-brimmed gray felt hat, here was a man who had found
+his style in the seventies of the last century, and thenceforth
+kept it. Files of old magazines of that period might show him,
+in woodcut, as, "Type of Boston Merchant"; Nast might have drawn
+him as an honest statesman. He was eighty, hale and sturdy, not
+aged; and his quick blue eyes, still unflecked, and as brisk as a
+boy's, saw everything.
+
+"Well, well, well!" he said, heartily. "You haven't lost any of
+your good looks since last week, I see, Miss Alice, so I guess
+I'm to take it you haven't been worrying over your daddy. The
+young feller's getting along all right, is he?"
+
+"He's much better; he's sitting up, Mr. Lamb. Won't you come
+in?"
+
+"Well, I don't know but I might." He turned to call toward twin
+disks of light at the curb, "Be out in a minute, Billy"; and the
+silhouette of a chauffeur standing beside a car could be seen to
+salute in response, as the old gentleman stepped into the hall.
+"You don't suppose your daddy's receiving callers yet, is he?"
+
+"He's a good deal stronger than he was when you were here last
+week, but I'm afraid he's not very presentable, though."
+
+"'Presentable?'" The old man echoed her jovially. "Pshaw! I've
+seen lots of sick folks. _I_ know what they look like and how
+they love to kind of nest in among a pile of old blankets and
+wrappers. Don't you worry about THAT, Miss Alice, if you think
+he'd like to see me."
+
+"Of course he would--if----" Alice hesitated; then said quickly,"
+Of course he'd love to see you and he's quite able to, if you
+care to come up."
+
+She ran up the stairs ahead of him, and had time to snatch the
+crocheted wrap from her father's shoulders. Swathed as usual, he
+was sitting beside a table, reading the evening paper; but when
+his employer appeared in the doorway he half rose as if to come
+forward in greeting.
+
+"Sit still!" the old gentleman shouted. "What do you mean?
+Don't you know you're weak as a cat? D'you think a man can be
+sick as long as you have and NOT be weak as a cat? What you
+trying to do the polite with ME for?"
+
+Adams gratefully protracted the handshake that accompanied these
+inquiries. "This is certainly mighty fine of you, Mr. Lamb," he
+said. "I guess Alice has told you how much our whole family
+appreciate your coming here so regularly to see how this old bag
+o' bones was getting along. Haven't you, Alice?"
+
+"Yes, papa," she said; and turned to go out, but Lamb checked
+her.
+
+"Stay right here, Miss Alice; I'm not even going to sit down. I
+know how it upsets sick folks when people outside the family come
+in for the first time."
+
+"You don't upset me," Adams said. "I'll feel a lot better for
+getting a glimpse of you, Mr. Lamb."
+
+The visitor's laugh was husky, but hearty and re-assuring, like
+his voice in speaking. "That's the way all my boys blarney me,
+Miss Alice," he said. "They think I'll make the work lighter on
+'em if they can get me kind of flattered up. You just tell your
+daddy it's no use; he doesn't get on MY soft side, pretending he
+likes to see me even when he's sick."
+
+"Oh, I'm not so sick any more," Adams said. "I expect to be back
+in my place ten days from now at the longest."
+
+"Well, now, don't hurry it, Virgil; don't hurry it. You take
+your time; take your time."
+
+This brought to Adams's lips a feeble smile not lacking in a kind
+of vanity, as feeble. "Why?" he asked. "I suppose you think my
+department runs itself down there, do you?"
+
+His employer's response was another husky laugh. "Well, well,
+well!" he cried, and patted Adams's shoulder with a strong pink
+hand. "Listen to this young feller, Miss Alice, will you! He
+thinks we can't get along without him a minute! Yes, sir, this
+daddy of yours believes the whole works 'll just take and run
+down if he isn't there to keep 'em wound up. I always suspected
+he thought a good deal of himself, and now I know he does!"
+
+Adams looked troubled. "Well, I don't like to feel that my
+salary's going on with me not earning it."
+
+"Listen to him, Miss Alice! Wouldn't you think, now, he'd let me
+be the one to worry about that? Why, on my word, if your daddy
+had his way, _I_ wouldn't be anywhere. He'd take all my worrying
+and everything else off my shoulders and shove me right out of
+Lamb and Company! He would!"
+
+"It seems to me I've been soldiering on you a pretty long while,
+Mr. Lamb," the convalescent said, querulously. "I don't feel
+right about it; but I'll be back in ten days. You'll see."
+
+The old man took his hand in parting. "All right; we'll see,
+Virgil. Of course we do need you, seriously speaking; but we
+don't need you so bad we'll let you come down there before you're
+fully fit and able." He went to the door. "You hear, Miss
+Alice? That's what I wanted to make the old feller understand,
+and what I want you to kind of enforce on him. The old place is
+there waiting for him, and it'd wait ten years if it took him
+that long to get good and well. You see that he remembers it,
+Miss Alice!"
+
+She went down the stairs with him, and he continued to impress
+this upon her until he had gone out of the front door. And even
+after that, the husky voice called back from the darkness, as he
+went to his car, "Don't forget, Miss Alice; let him take his own
+time. We always want him, but we want him to get good and well
+first. Good-night, good-night, young lady!"
+
+When she closed the door her mother came from the farther end of
+the "living-room," where there was no light; and Alice turned to
+her.
+
+"I can't help liking that old man, mama," she said. "He always
+sounds so--well, so solid and honest and friendly! I do like
+him."
+
+But Mrs. Adams failed in sympathy upon this point. "He didn't
+say anything about raising your father's salary, did he?" she
+asked, dryly.
+
+"No."
+
+"No. I thought not."
+
+She would have said more, but Alice, indisposed to listen, began
+to whistle, ran up the stairs, and went to sit with her father.
+She found him bright-eyed with the excitement a first caller
+brings into a slow convalescence: his cheeks showed actual hints
+of colour; and he was smiling tremulously as he filled and lit
+his pipe. She brought the crocheted scarf and put it about his
+shoulders again, then took a chair near him.
+
+"I believe seeing Mr. Lamb did do you good, papa," she said.
+"I sort of thought it might, and that's why I let him come up.
+You really look a little like your old self again."
+
+Adams exhaled a breathy "Ha!" with the smoke from his pipe as he
+waved the match to extinguish it. "That's fine," he said. "The
+smoke I had before dinner didn't taste the way it used to, and I
+kind of wondered if I'd lost my liking for tobacco, but this one
+seems to be all right. You bet it did me good to see J. A.
+Lamb! He's the biggest man that's ever lived in this town or
+ever will live here; and you can take all the Governors and
+Senators or anything they've raised here, and put 'em in a pot
+with him, and they won't come out one-two-three alongside o' him!
+And to think as big a man as that, with all his interests and
+everything he's got on his mind--to think he'd never let anything
+prevent him from coming here once every week to ask how I was
+getting along, and then walk right upstairs and kind of CALL on
+me, as it were well, it makes me sort of feel as if I wasn't so
+much of a nobody, so to speak, as your mother seems to like to
+make out sometimes."
+
+"How foolish, papa! Of COURSE you're not 'a nobody.'"
+
+Adams chuckled faintly upon his pipe-stem, what vanity he had
+seeming to be further stimulated by his daughter's applause. "I
+guess there aren't a whole lot of people in this town that could
+claim J. A. showed that much interest in 'em," he said. "Of
+course I don't set up to believe it's all because of merit, or
+anything like that. He'd do the same for anybody else that'd
+been with the company as long as I have, but still it IS
+something to be with the company that long and have him show he
+appreciates it."
+
+"Yes, indeed, it is, papa."
+
+"Yes, sir," Adams said, reflectively. "Yes, sir, I guess that's
+so. And besides, it all goes to show the kind of a man he is.
+Simon pure, that's what that man is, Alice. Simon pure! There's
+never been anybody work for him that didn't respect him more than
+they did any other man in the world, I guess. And when you work
+for him you know he respects you, too. Right from the start you
+get the feeling that J. A. puts absolute confidence in you; and
+that's mighty stimulating: it makes you want to show him he
+hasn't misplaced it. There's great big moral values to the way a
+man like him gets you to feeling about your relations with the
+business: it ain't all just dollars and cents--not by any means!"
+
+He was silent for a time, then returned with increasing
+enthusiasm to this theme, and Alice was glad to see so much
+renewal of life in him; he had not spoken with a like cheerful
+vigour since before his illness. The visit of his idolized great
+man had indeed been good for him, putting new spirit into him;
+and liveliness of the body followed that of the spirit. His
+improvement carried over the night: he slept well and awoke late,
+declaring that he was "pretty near a well man and ready for
+business right now." Moreover, having slept again in the
+afternoon, he dressed and went down to dinner, leaning but
+lightly on Alice, who conducted him.
+
+"My! but you and your mother have been at it with your scrubbing
+and dusting!" he said, as they came through the "living-room."
+"I don't know I ever did see the house so spick and span before!"
+His glance fell upon a few carnations in a vase, and he chuckled
+admiringly. "Flowers, too! So THAT'S what you coaxed that
+dollar and a half out o 'me for, this morning!"
+
+Other embellishments brought forth his comment when he had taken
+his old seat at the head of the small dinner-table. "Why, I
+declare, Alice!" he exclaimed. "I been so busy looking at all
+the spick-and-spanishness after the house-cleaning, and the
+flowers out in the parlour--'living-room' I suppose you want me
+to call it, if I just GOT to be fashionable--I been so busy
+studying over all this so-and-so, I declare I never noticed YOU
+till this minute! My, but you ARE all dressed up! What's goin'
+on? What's it about: you so all dressed up, and flowers in the
+parlour and everything?"
+
+"Don't you see, papa? It's in honour of your coming downstairs
+again, of course."
+
+"Oh, so that's it," he said. "I never would 'a' thought of that,
+I guess."
+
+But Walter looked sidelong at his father, and gave forth his sly
+and knowing laugh. "Neither would I!" he said.
+
+Adams lifted his eyebrows jocosely. "You're jealous, are you,
+sonny? You don't want the old man to think our young lady'd make
+so much fuss over him, do you?"
+
+"Go on thinkin' it's over you," Walter retorted, amused. "Go on
+and think it. It'll do you good."
+
+"Of course I'll think it," Adams said. "It isn't anybody's
+birthday. Certainly the decorations are on account of me coming
+downstairs. Didn't you hear Alice say so?"
+
+"Sure, I heard her say so."
+
+"Well, then----"
+
+Walter interrupted him with a little music. Looking shrewdly at
+Alice, he sang:
+
+ "I was walkin' out on Monday with my sweet thing.
+ She's my neat thing,
+ My sweet thing:
+ I'll go round on Tuesday night to see her.
+ Oh, how we'll spoon----"
+
+
+"Walter!" his mother cried. "WHERE do you learn such vulgar
+songs?" However, she seemed not greatly displeased with him, and
+laughed as she spoke.
+
+"So that's it, Alice!" said Adams. "Playing the hypocrite with
+your old man, are you? It's some new beau, is it?"
+
+"I only wish it were," she said, calmly. "No. It's just what I
+said: it's all for you, dear."
+
+"Don't let her con you," Walter advised his father. "She's got
+expectations. You hang around downstairs a while after dinner
+and you'll see."
+
+But the prophecy failed, though Adams went to his own room
+without waiting to test it. No one came.
+
+Alice stayed in the "living-room" until half-past nine, when she
+went slowly upstairs. Her mother, almost tearful, met her at the
+top, and whispered, "You mustn't mind, dearie."
+
+"Mustn't mind what?" Alice asked, and then, as she went on her
+way, laughed scornfully. "What utter nonsense!" she said.
+
+Next day she cut the stems of the rather scant show of carnations
+and refreshed them with new water. At dinner, her father, still
+in high spirits, observed that she had again "dressed up" in
+honour of his second descent of the stairs; and Walter repeated
+his fragment of objectionable song; but these jocularities were
+rendered pointless by the eventless evening that followed; and in
+the morning the carnations began to appear tarnished and flaccid.
+
+Alice gave them a long look, then threw them away; and neither
+Walter nor her father was inspired to any rallying by her plain
+costume for that evening. Mrs. Adams was visibly depressed.
+
+When Alice finished helping her mother with the dishes, she went
+outdoors and sat upon the steps of the little front veranda. The
+night, gentle with warm air from the south, surrounded her
+pleasantly, and the perpetual smoke was thinner. Now that the
+furnaces of dwelling-houses were no longer fired, life in that
+city had begun to be less like life in a railway tunnel; people
+were aware of summer in the air, and in the thickened foliage of
+the shade-trees, and in the sky. Stars were unveiled by the
+passing of the denser smoke fogs, and to-night they could be seen
+clearly; they looked warm and near. Other girls sat upon
+verandas and stoops in Alice's street, cheerful as young
+fishermen along the banks of a stream.
+
+Alice could hear them from time to time; thin sopranos persistent
+in laughter that fell dismally upon her ears. She had set no
+lines or nets herself, and what she had of "expectations," as
+Walter called them, were vanished. For Alice was experienced;
+and one of the conclusions she drew from her experience was that
+when a man says, "I'd take you for anything you wanted me to," he
+may mean it or, he may not; but, if he does, he will not postpone
+the first opportunity to say something more. Little affairs,
+once begun, must be warmed quickly; for if they cool they are
+dead.
+
+But Alice was not thinking of Arthur Russell. When she tossed
+away the carnations she likewise tossed away her thoughts of that
+young man. She had been like a boy who sees upon the street,
+some distance before him, a bit of something round and
+glittering, a possible dime. He hopes it is a dime, and, until
+he comes near enough to make sure, he plays that it is a dime.
+In his mind he has an adventure with it: he buys something
+delightful. If he picks it up, discovering only some tin-foil
+which has happened upon a round shape, he feels a sinking. A
+dulness falls upon him.
+
+So Alice was dull with the loss of an adventure; and when the
+laughter of other girls reached her, intermittently, she had not
+sprightliness enough left in her to be envious of their gaiety.
+Besides, these neighbours were ineligible even for her envy,
+being of another caste; they could never know a dance at the
+Palmers', except remotely, through a newspaper. Their laughter
+was for the encouragement of snappy young men of the stores and
+offices down-town, clerks, bookkeepers, what not--some of them
+probably graduates of Frincke's Business College.
+
+Then, as she recalled that dark portal, with its dusty stairway
+mounting between close walls to disappear in the upper shadows,
+her mind drew back as from a doorway to Purgatory. Nevertheless,
+it was a picture often in her reverie; and sometimes it came
+suddenly, without sequence, into the midst of her other thoughts,
+as if it leaped up among them from a lower darkness; and when it
+arrived it wanted to stay. So a traveller, still roaming the
+world afar, sometimes broods without apparent reason upon his
+family burial lot: "I wonder if I shall end there."
+
+The foreboding passed abruptly, with a jerk of her breath, as the
+street-lamp revealed a tall and easy figure approaching from the
+north, swinging a stick in time to its stride. She had given
+Russell up--and he came.
+
+"What luck for me!" he exclaimed. "To find you alone!"
+
+Alice gave him her hand for an instant, not otherwise moving.
+"I'm glad it happened so," she said. "Let's stay out here, shall
+we? Do you think it's too provincial to sit on a girl's front
+steps with her?"
+
+"'Provincial?' Why, it's the very best of our institutions," he
+returned, taking his place beside her. "At least, I think so
+to-night."
+
+"Thanks! Is that practice for other nights somewhere else?"
+
+"No," he laughed. "The practicing all led up to this. Did I
+come too soon?"
+
+"No," she replied, gravely. "Just in time!"
+
+"I'm glad to be so accurate; I've spent two evenings wanting to
+come, Miss Adams, instead of doing what I was doing."
+
+"What was that?"
+
+"Dinners. Large and long dinners. Your fellow-citizens are
+immensely hospitable to a newcomer."
+
+"Oh, no," Alice said. "We don't do it for everybody. Didn't you
+find yourself charmed?"
+
+"One was a men's dinner," he explained. "Mr. Palmer seemed to
+think I ought to be shown to the principal business men."
+
+"What was the other dinner?"
+
+"My cousin Mildred gave it."
+
+"Oh, DID she!" Alice said, sharply, but she recovered herself in
+the same instant, and laughed. "She wanted to show you to the
+principal business women, I suppose."
+
+"I don't know. At all events, I shouldn't give myself out to be
+so much feted by your 'fellow-citizens,' after all, seeing these
+were both done by my relatives, the Palmers. However, there are
+others to follow, I'm afraid. I was wondering--I hoped maybe
+you'd be coming to some of them. Aren't you?"
+
+"I rather doubt it," Alice said, slowly. "Mildred's dance was
+almost the only evening I've gone out since my father's illness
+began. He seemed better that day; so I went. He was better the
+other day when he wanted those cigars. He's very much up and
+down." She paused. "I'd almost forgotten that Mildred is your
+cousin."
+
+"Not a very near one," he explained. "Mr. Palmer's father was
+my great-uncle."
+
+"Still, of course you are related."
+
+"Yes; that distantly."
+
+Alice said placidly, "It's quite an advantage."
+
+He agreed. "Yes. It is."
+
+"No," she said, in the same placid tone. "I mean for Mildred."
+
+"I don't see----"
+
+She laughed. "No. You wouldn't. I mean it's an advantage over
+the rest of us who might like to compete for some of your time;
+and the worst of it is we can't accuse her of being unfair about
+it. We can't prove she showed any trickiness in having you for a
+cousin. Whatever else she might plan to do with you, she didn't
+plan that. So the rest of us must just bear it!"
+
+"The 'rest of you!'" he laughed. "It's going to mean a great
+deal of suffering!"
+
+Alice resumed her placid tone. "You're staying at the Palmers',
+aren't you?"
+
+"No, not now. I've taken an apartment. I'm going to live here;
+I'm permanent. Didn't I tell you?"
+
+"I think I'd heard somewhere that you were," she said. "Do you
+think you'll like living here?"
+
+"How can one tell?"
+
+"If I were in your place I think I should be able to tell, Mr.
+Russell."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Why, good gracious!" she cried. "Haven't you got the most
+perfect creature in town for your--your cousin? SHE expects to
+make you like living here, doesn't she? How could you keep from
+liking it, even if you tried not to, under the circumstances?"
+
+"Well, you see, there's such a lot of circumstances," he
+explained; "I'm not sure I'll like getting back into a business
+again. I suppose most of the men of my age in the country have
+been going through the same experience: the War left us with a
+considerable restlessness of spirit."
+
+"You were in the War?" she asked, quickly, and as quickly
+answered herself, "Of course you were!"
+
+"I was a left-over; they only let me out about four months ago,"
+he said. "It's quite a shake-up trying to settle down again."
+
+"You were in France, then?"
+
+"Oh, yes; but I didn't get up to the front much--only two or
+three times, and then just for a day or so. I was in the
+transportation service."
+
+"You were an officer, of course."
+
+"Yes," he said. "They let me play I was a major."
+
+"I guessed a major," she said. "You'd always be pretty grand, of
+course."
+
+Russell was amused. "Well, you see," he informed her, "as it
+happened, we had at least several other majors in our army. Why
+would I always be something 'pretty grand?'"
+
+"You're related to the Palmers. Don't you notice they always
+affect the pretty grand?"
+
+"Then you think I'm only one of their affectations, I take it."
+
+"Yes, you seem to be the most successful one they've got!" Alice
+said, lightly. "You certainly do belong to them." And she
+laughed as if at something hidden from him. "Don't you?"
+
+"But you've just excused me for that," he protested. "You said
+nobody could be blamed for my being their third cousin. What a
+contradictory girl you are!"
+
+Alice shook her head. "Let's keep away from the kind of girl I
+am."
+
+"No," he said. "That's just what I came here to talk about."
+
+She shook her head again. "Let's keep first to the kind of man
+you are. I'm glad you were in the War."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know." She was quiet a moment, for she was thinking
+that here she spoke the truth: his service put about him a little
+glamour that helped to please her with him. She had been pleased
+with him during their walk; pleased with him on his own account;
+and now that pleasure was growing keener. She looked at him, and
+though the light in which she saw him was little more than
+starlight, she saw that he was looking steadily at her with a
+kindly and smiling seriousness. All at once it seemed to her
+that the night air was sweeter to breathe, as if a distant
+fragrance of new blossoms had been blown to her. She smiled back
+to him, and said, "Well, what kind of man are you?"
+
+"I don't know; I've often wondered," he replied. "What kind of
+girl are you?"
+
+"Don't you remember? I told you the other day. I'm just me!"
+
+"But who is that?"
+
+"You forget everything;" said Alice. "You told me what kind of a
+girl I am. You seemed to think you'd taken quite a fancy to me
+from the very first."
+
+"So I did," he agreed, heartily.
+
+"But how quickly you forgot it!"
+
+"Oh, no. I only want YOU to say what kind of a girl you are."
+
+She mocked him. "'I don't know; I've often wondered!' What kind
+of a girl does Mildred tell you I am? What has she said about me
+since she told you I was 'a Miss Adams?'"
+
+"I don't know; I haven't asked her."
+
+"Then DON'T ask her," Alice said, quickly.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because she's such a perfect creature and I'm such an imperfect
+one. Perfect creatures have the most perfect way of ruining the
+imperfect ones."
+
+"But then they wouldn't be perfect. Not if they----"
+
+"Oh, yes, they remain perfectly perfect," she assured him.
+"That's because they never go into details. They're not so
+vulgar as to come right out and TELL that you've been in jail for
+stealing chickens. They just look absent-minded and say in a low
+voice, 'Oh, very; but I scarcely think you'd like her
+particularly'; and then begin to talk of something else right
+away."
+
+His smile had disappeared. "Yes," he said, somewhat ruefully.
+"That does sound like Mildred. You certainly do seem to know
+her! Do you know everybody as well as that?"
+
+"Not myself," Alice said. "I don't know myself at all. I got to
+wondering about that--about who I was--the other day after you
+walked home with me."
+
+He uttered an exclamation, and added, explaining it, "You do give
+a man a chance to be fatuous, though! As if it were walking home
+with me that made you wonder about yourself!"
+
+"It was," Alice informed him, coolly. "I was wondering what I
+wanted to make you think of me, in case I should ever happen to
+see you again."
+
+This audacity appeared to take his breath. "By George!" he
+cried.
+
+"You mustn't be astonished," she said. "What I decided then was
+that I would probably never dare to be just myself with you--not
+if I cared to have you want to see me again--and yet here I am,
+just being myself after all!"
+
+"You ARE the cheeriest series of shocks," Russell exclaimed,
+whereupon Alice added to the series.
+
+"Tell me: Is it a good policy for me to follow with you?" she
+asked, and he found the mockery in her voice delightful. "Would
+you advise me to offer you shocks as a sort of vacation from
+suavity?"
+
+"Suavity" was yet another sketch of Mildred; a recognizable one,
+or it would not have been humorous. In Alice's hands, so
+dexterous in this work, her statuesque friend was becoming as
+ridiculous as a fine figure of wax left to the mercies of a
+satirist.
+
+But the lively young sculptress knew better than to overdo: what
+she did must appear to spring all from mirth; so she laughed as
+if unwillingly, and said, "I MUSTN'T laugh at Mildred! In the
+first place, she's your--your cousin. And in the second place,
+she's not meant to be funny; it isn't right to laugh at really
+splendid people who take themselves seriously. In the third
+place, you won't come again if I do."
+
+"Don't be sure of that," Russell said, "whatever you do."
+
+"'Whatever I do?'" she echoed. "That sounds as if you thought I
+COULD be terrific! Be careful; there's one thing I could do that
+would keep you away."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"I could tell you not to come," she said. "I wonder if I ought
+to."
+
+"Why do you wonder if you 'ought to?'"
+
+"Don't you guess?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then let's both be mysteries to each other," she suggested. "I
+mystify you because I wonder, and you mystify me because you
+don't guess why I wonder. We'll let it go at that, shall we?"
+
+"Very well; so long as it's certain that you DON'T tell me not to
+come again."
+
+"I'll not tell you that--yet," she said. "In fact----" She
+paused, reflecting, with her head to one side. "In fact, I won't
+tell you not to come, probably, until I see that's what you want
+me to tell you. I'll let you out easily--and I'll be sure to see
+it. Even before you do, perhaps."
+
+"That arrangement suits me," Russell returned, and his voice held
+no trace of jocularity: he had become serious. "It suits me
+better if you're enough in earnest to mean that I can come--oh,
+not whenever I want to; I don't expect so much!--but if you mean
+that I can see you pretty often."
+
+"Of course I'm in earnest," she said. "But before I say you can
+come 'pretty often,' I'd like to know how much of my time you'd
+need if you did come 'whenever you want to'; and of course you
+wouldn't dare make any answer to that question except one.
+Wouldn't you let me have Thursdays out?"
+
+"No, no," he protested. "I want to know. Will you let me come
+pretty often?"
+
+"Lean toward me a little," Alice said. "I want you to
+understand." And as he obediently bent his head near hers, she
+inclined toward him as if to whisper; then, in a half-shout, she
+cried,
+
+"YES!"
+
+He clapped his hands. "By George!" he said. "What a girl you
+are!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, for the first reason, because you have such gaieties as
+that one. I should think your father would actually like being
+ill, just to be in the house with you all the time."
+
+"You mean by that," Alice inquired, "I keep my family cheerful
+with my amusing little ways?"
+
+"Yes. Don't you?"
+
+"There were only boys in your family, weren't there, Mr.
+Russell?"
+
+"I was an only child, unfortunately."
+
+"Yes," she said. "I see you hadn't any sisters."
+
+For a moment he puzzled over her meaning, then saw it, and was
+more delighted with her than ever. "I can answer a question of
+yours, now, that I couldn't a while ago."
+
+"Yes, I know," she returned, quietly.
+
+"But how could you know?"
+
+"It's the question I asked you about whether you were going to
+like living here," she said. "You're about to tell me that now
+you know you WILL like it."
+
+"More telepathy!" he exclaimed. "Yes, that was it, precisely. I
+suppose the same thing's been said to you so many times that
+you----"
+
+"No, it hasn't," Alice said, a little confused for the moment.
+"Not at all. I meant----" She paused, then asked in a gentle
+voice, "Would you really like to know?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, I was only afraid you didn't mean it."
+
+"See here," he said. "I did mean it. I told you it was being
+pretty difficult for me to settle down to things again. Well,
+it's more difficult than you know, but I think I can pull through
+in fair spirits if I can see a girl like you 'pretty often.'"
+
+"All right," she said, in a business-like tone. "I've told you
+that you can if you want to."
+
+"I do want to," he assured her. "I do, indeed!"
+
+"How often is 'pretty often,' Mr. Russell?"
+
+"Would you walk with me sometimes? To-morrow?"
+
+"Sometimes. Not to-morrow. The day after."
+
+"That's splendid!" he said. "You'll walk with me day after
+to-morrow, and the night after that I'll see you at Miss Lamb's
+dance, won't I?"
+
+But this fell rather chillingly upon Alice. "Miss Lamb's dance?
+Which Miss Lamb?" she asked.
+
+"I don't know--it's the one that's just coming out of mourning."
+
+"Oh, Henrietta--yes. Is her dance so soon? I'd forgotten."
+
+"You'll be there, won't you?" he asked. "Please say you're
+going."
+
+Alice did not respond at once, and he urged her again: "Please do
+promise you'll be there."
+
+"No, I can't promise anything," she said, slowly. "You see, for
+one thing, papa might not be well enough."
+
+"But if he is?" said Russell. "If he is you'll surely come,
+won't you? Or, perhaps----" He hesitated, then went on quickly,
+"I don't know the rules in this place yet, and different places
+have different rules; but do you have to have a chaperone, or
+don't girls just go to dances with the men sometimes? If they
+do, would you--would you let me take you?"
+
+Alice was startled. "Good gracious!"
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"Don't you think your relatives---- Aren't you expected to go
+with Mildred--and Mrs. Palmer?"
+
+"Not necessarily. It doesn't matter what I might be expected to
+do," he said. "Will you go with me?"
+
+"I---- No; I couldn't."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"I can't. I'm not going."
+
+"But why?"
+
+"Papa's not really any better," Alice said, huskily. "I'm too
+worried about him to go to a dance." Her voice sounded
+emotional, genuinely enough; there was something almost like a
+sob in it. "Let's talk of other things, please."
+
+He acquiesced gently; but Mrs. Adams, who had been listening to
+the conversation at the open window, just overhead, did not hear
+him. She had correctly interpreted the sob in Alice's voice,
+and, trembling with sudden anger, she rose from her knees, and
+went fiercely to her husband's room.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+He had not undressed, and he sat beside the table, smoking his
+pipe and reading his newspaper. Upon his forehead the lines in
+that old pattern, the historical map of his troubles, had grown a
+little vaguer lately; relaxed by the complacency of a man who not
+only finds his health restored, but sees the days before him
+promising once more a familiar routine that he has always liked
+to follow.
+
+As his wife came in, closing the door behind her, he looked up
+cheerfully, "Well, mother," he said, "what's the news
+downstairs?"
+
+"That's what I came to tell you," she informed him, grimly.
+
+Adams lowered his newspaper to his knee and peered over his
+spectacles at her. She had remained by the door, standing, and
+the great greenish shadow of the small lamp-shade upon his table
+revealed her but dubiously. "Isn't everything all right?" he
+asked. "What's the matter?"
+
+"Don't worry: I'm going to tell you," she said, her grimness not
+relaxed. "There's matter enough, Virgil Adams. Matter enough to
+make me sick of being alive!"
+
+With that, the markings on his brows began to emerge again in all
+their sharpness; the old pattern reappeared. "Oh, my, my!" he
+lamented. "I thought maybe we were all going to settle down to a
+little peace for a while. What's it about now?"
+
+"It's about Alice. Did you think it was about ME or anything for
+MYSELF?"
+
+Like some ready old machine, always in order, his irritability
+responded immediately and automatically to her emotion. "How in
+thunder could I think what it's about, or who it's for? SAY it,
+and get it over!"
+
+"Oh, I'll 'say' it," she promised, ominously. "What I've come to
+ask you is, How much longer do you expect me to put up with that
+old man and his doings?"
+
+"Whose doings? What old man?"
+
+She came at him, fiercely accusing. "You know well enough what
+old man, Virgil Adams! That old man who was here the other
+night."
+
+"Mr. Lamb?"
+
+"Yes; 'Mister Lamb!'" She mocked his voice. "What other old man
+would I be likely to mean except J. A. Lamb?"
+
+"What's he been doing now?" her husband inquired, satirically.
+"Where'd you get something new against him since the last time
+you----"
+
+"Just this!" she cried. "The other night when that man was here,
+if I'd known how he was going to make my child suffer, I'd never
+have let him set his foot in my house."
+
+Adams leaned back in his chair as though her absurdity had eased
+his mind. "Oh, I see," he said. "You've just gone plain crazy.
+That's the only explanation of such talk, and it suits the case."
+
+"Hasn't that man made us all suffer every day of our lives?" she
+demanded. "I'd like to know why it is that my life and my
+children's lives have to be sacrificed to him?"
+
+"How are they 'sacrificed' to him?"
+
+"Because you keep on working for him! Because you keep on
+letting him hand out whatever miserable little pittance he
+chooses to give you; that's why! It's as if he were some
+horrible old Juggernaut and I had to see my children's own father
+throwing them under the wheels to keep him satisfied."
+
+"I won't hear any more such stuff!" Lifting his paper, Adams
+affected to read.
+
+"You'd better listen to me," she admonished him. "You might be
+sorry you didn't, in case he ever tried to set foot in my house
+again! I might tell him to his face what I think of him."
+
+At this, Adams slapped the newspaper down upon his knee. "Oh,
+the devil! What's it matter what you think of him?"
+
+"It had better matter to you!" she cried. "Do you suppose I'm
+going to submit forever to him and his family and what they're
+doing to my child?"
+
+"What are he and his family doing to 'your child?'"
+
+Mrs. Adams came out with it. "That snippy little Henrietta Lamb
+has always snubbed Alice every time she's ever had the chance.
+She's followed the lead of the other girls; they've always all of
+'em been jealous of Alice because she dared to try and be happy,
+and because she's showier and better-looking than they are, even
+though you do give her only about thirty-five cents a year to do
+it on! They've all done everything on earth they could to drive
+the young men away from her and belittle her to 'em; and this
+mean little Henrietta Lamb's been the worst of the whole crowd to
+Alice, every time she could see a chance."
+
+"What for?" Adams asked, incredulously. "Why should she or
+anybody else pick on Alice?"
+
+"'Why?' 'What for?'" his wife repeated with a greater vehemence.
+"Do YOU ask me such a thing as that? Do you really want to
+know?"
+
+"Yes; I'd want to know--I would if I believed it."
+
+"Then I'll tell you," she said in a cold fury. "It's on account
+of you, Virgil, and nothing else in the world."
+
+He hooted at her. "Oh, yes! These girls don't like ME, so they
+pick on Alice."
+
+"Quit your palavering and evading," she said. "A crowd of girls
+like that, when they get a pretty girl like Alice among them,
+they act just like wild beasts. They'll tear her to pieces, or
+else they'll chase her and run her out, because they know if she
+had half a chance she'd outshine 'em. They can't do that to a
+girl like Mildred Palmer because she's got money and family to
+back her. Now you listen to me, Virgil Adams: the way the world
+is now, money IS family. Alice would have just as much 'family'
+as any of 'em every single bit--if you hadn't fallen behind in
+the race."
+
+"How did I----"
+
+"Yes, you did!" she cried. "Twenty-five years ago when we were
+starting and this town was smaller, you and I could have gone
+with any of 'em if we'd tried hard enough. Look at the people we
+knew then that do hold their heads up alongside of anybody in
+this town! WHY can they? Because the men of those families made
+money and gave their children everything that makes life worth
+living! Why can't we hold our heads up? Because those men
+passed you in the race. They went up the ladder, and you--you're
+still a clerk down at that old hole!"
+
+"You leave that out, please," he said. "I thought you were going
+to tell me something Henrietta Lamb had done to our Alice."
+
+"You BET I'm going to tell you," she assured him, vehemently.
+"But first I'm telling WHY she does it. It's because you've
+never given Alice any backing nor any background, and they all
+know they can do anything they like to her with perfect impunity.
+If she had the hundredth part of what THEY have to fall back on
+she'd have made 'em sing a mighty different song long ago!"
+
+"How would she?"
+
+"Oh, my heavens, but you're slow!" Mrs. Adams moaned. "Look
+here! You remember how practically all the nicest boys in this
+town used to come here a few years ago. Why, they were all crazy
+over her; and the girls HAD to be nice to her then. Look at the
+difference now! There'll be a whole month go by and not a young
+man come to call on her, let alone send her candy or flowers, or
+ever think of TAKING her any place and yet she's prettier and
+brighter than she was when they used to come. It isn't the
+child's fault she couldn't hold 'em, is it? Poor thing, SHE
+tried hard enough! I suppose you'd say it was her fault,
+though."
+
+"No; I wouldn't."
+
+"Then whose fault is it?"
+
+"Oh, mine, mine," he said, wearily. "I drove the young men away,
+of course."
+
+"You might as well have driven 'em, Virgil. It amounts to just
+the same thing."
+
+"How does it?"
+
+"Because as they got older a good many of 'em began to think more
+about money; that's one thing. Money's at the bottom of it all,
+for that matter. Look at these country clubs and all such
+things: the other girls' families belong and we don't, and Alice
+don't; and she can't go unless somebody takes her, and nobody
+does any more. Look at the other girls' houses, and then look at
+our house, so shabby and old-fashioned she'd be pretty near
+ashamed to ask anybody to come in and sit down nowadays! Look at
+her clothes--oh, yes; you think you shelled out a lot for that
+little coat of hers and the hat and skirt she got last March; but
+it's nothing. Some of these girls nowadays spend more than your
+whole salary on their clothes. And what jewellery has she got?
+A plated watch and two or three little pins and rings of the kind
+people's maids wouldn't wear now. Good Lord, Virgil Adams, wake
+up! Don't sit there and tell me you don't know things like this
+mean SUFFERING for the child!"
+
+He had begun to rub his hands wretchedly back and forth over his
+bony knees, as if in that way he somewhat alleviated the tedium
+caused by her racking voice. "Oh, my, my!" he muttered. "OH,
+my, my!"
+
+"Yes, I should think you WOULD say 'Oh, my, my!'" she took him
+up, loudly. "That doesn't help things much! If you ever wanted
+to DO anything about it, the poor child might see some gleam of
+hope in her life. You don't CARE for her, that's the trouble;
+you don't care a single thing about her."
+
+"I don't?"
+
+"No; you don't. Why, even with your miserable little salary you
+could have given her more than you have. You're the closest man
+I ever knew: it's like pulling teeth to get a dollar out of you
+for her, now and then, and yet you hide some away, every month or
+so, in some wretched little investment or other. You----"
+
+"Look here, now," he interrupted, angrily. "You look here! If I
+didn't put a little by whenever I could, in a bond or something,
+where would you be if anything happened to me? The insurance
+doctors never passed me; YOU know that. Haven't we got to have
+SOMETHING to fall back on?"
+
+"Yes, we have!" she cried. "We ought to have something to go on
+with right now, too, when we need it. Do you suppose these
+snippets would treat Alice the way they do if she could afford to
+ENTERTAIN? They leave her out of their dinners and dances simply
+because they know she can't give any dinners and dances to leave
+them out of! They know she can't get EVEN, and that's the whole
+story! That's why Henrietta Lamb's done this thing to her now."
+
+Adams had gone back to his rubbing of his knees. "Oh, my, my!"
+he said. "WHAT thing?"
+
+She told him. "Your dear, grand, old Mister Lamb's Henrietta has
+sent out invitations for a large party--a LARGE one. Everybody
+that is anybody in this town is asked, you can be sure. There's
+a very fine young man, a Mr. Russell, has just come to town, and
+he's interested in Alice, and he's asked her to go to this dance
+with him. Well, Alice can't accept. She can't go with him,
+though she'd give anything in the world to do it. Do you
+understand? The reason she can't is because Henrietta Lamb
+hasn't invited her. Do you want to know why Henrietta hasn't
+invited her? It's because she knows Alice can't get even, and
+because she thinks Alice ought to be snubbed like this on account
+of only being the daughter of one of her grandfather's clerks. I
+HOPE you understand!"
+
+"Oh, my, my!" he said. "OH, my, my!"
+
+"That's your sweet old employer," his wife cried, tauntingly.
+"That's your dear, kind, grand old Mister Lamb! Alice has been
+left out of a good many smaller things, like big dinners and
+little dances, but this is just the same as serving her notice
+that she's out of everything! And it's all done by your dear,
+grand old----"
+
+"Look here!" Adams exclaimed. "I don't want to hear any more of
+that! You can't hold him responsible for everything his
+grandchildren do, I guess! He probably doesn't know a thing
+about it. You don't suppose he's troubling HIS head over----"
+
+But she burst out at him passionately. "Suppose you trouble YOUR
+head about it! You'd better, Virgil Adams! You'd better, unless
+you want to see your child just dry up into a miserable old maid!
+She's still young and she has a chance for happiness, if she had
+a father that didn't bring a millstone to hang around her neck,
+instead of what he ought to give her! You just wait till you die
+and God asks you what you had in your breast instead of a heart!"
+
+"Oh, my, my!" he groaned. "What's my heart got to do with it?"
+
+"Nothing! You haven't got one or you'd give her what she needed.
+Am I asking anything you CAN'T do? You know better; you know I'm
+not!"
+
+At this he sat suddenly rigid, his troubled hands ceasing to rub
+his knees; and he looked at her fixedly. "Now, tell me," he
+said, slowly. "Just what ARE you asking?"
+
+"You know!" she sobbed.
+
+"You mean you've broken your word never to speak of THAT to me
+again?"
+
+"What do _I_ care for my word?" she cried, and, sinking to the
+floor at his feet, rocked herself back and forth there. "Do you
+suppose I'll let my 'word' keep me from struggling for a little
+happiness for my children? It won't, I tell you; it won't! I'll
+struggle for that till I die! I will, till I die till I die!"
+
+He rubbed his head now instead of his knees, and, shaking all
+over, he got up and began with uncertain steps to pace the floor.
+
+"Hell, hell, hell!" he said. "I've got to go through THAT
+again!"
+
+"Yes, you have!" she sobbed. "Till I die."
+
+"Yes; that's what you been after all the time I was getting
+well."
+
+"Yes, I have, and I'll keep on till I die!"
+
+"A fine wife for a man," he said. "Beggin' a man to be a dirty
+dog!"
+
+"No! To be a MAN--and I'll keep on till I die!"
+
+Adams again fell back upon his last solace: he walked, half
+staggering, up and down the room, swearing in a rhythmic
+repetition.
+
+His wife had repetitions of her own, and she kept at them in a
+voice that rose to a higher and higher pitch, like the sound of
+an old well-pump. "Till I die! Till I die! Till I DIE!"
+
+She ended in a scream; and Alice, coming up the stairs, thanked
+heaven that Russell had gone. She ran to her father's door and
+went in.
+
+Adams looked at her, and gesticulated shakily at the convulsive
+figure on the floor. "Can you get her out of here?"
+
+Alice helped Mrs. Adams to her feet; and the stricken woman
+threw her arms passionately about her daughter.
+
+"Get her out!" Adams said, harshly; then cried, "Wait!"
+
+Alice, moving toward the door, halted, and looked at him blankly,
+over her mother's shoulder. "What is it, papa?"
+
+He stretched out his arm and pointed at her. "She says--she says
+you have a mean life, Alice."
+
+"No, papa."
+
+Mrs. Adams turned in her daughter's arms. "Do you hear her lie?
+Couldn't you be as brave as she is, Virgil?"
+
+"Are you lying, Alice?" he asked. "Do you have a mean time?"
+
+"No, papa."
+
+He came toward her. "Look at me!" he said. "Things like this
+dance now--is that so hard to bear?"
+
+Alice tried to say, "No, papa," again, but she couldn't.
+Suddenly and in spite of herself she began to cry.
+
+"Do you hear her?" his wife sobbed. "Now do you----"
+
+He waved at them fiercely. "Get out of here!" he said. "Both of
+you! Get out of here!"
+
+As they went, he dropped in his chair and bent far forward, so
+that his haggard face was concealed from them. Then, as Alice
+closed the door, he began to rub his knees again, muttering, "Oh,
+my, my! OH, my, my!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+There shone a jovial sun overhead on the appointed "day after
+to-morrow"; a day not cool yet of a temperature friendly to
+walkers; and the air, powdered with sunshine, had so much life in
+it that it seemed to sparkle. To Arthur Russell this was a day
+like a gay companion who pleased him well; but the gay companion
+at his side pleased him even better. She looked her prettiest,
+chattered her wittiest, smiled her wistfulest, and delighted him
+with all together.
+
+"You look so happy it's easy to see your father's taken a good
+turn," he told her.
+
+"Yes; he has this afternoon, at least," she said. "I might have
+other reasons for looking cheerful, though."
+
+"For instance?"
+
+"Exactly!" she said, giving him a sweet look just enough mocked
+by her laughter. "For instance!"
+
+"Well, go on," he begged.
+
+"Isn't it expected?" she asked.
+
+"Of you, you mean?"
+
+"No," she returned. "For you, I mean!"
+
+In this style, which uses a word for any meaning that quick look
+and colourful gesture care to endow it with, she was an expert;
+and she carried it merrily on, leaving him at liberty (one of the
+great values of the style) to choose as he would how much or how
+little she meant. He was content to supply mere cues, for
+although he had little coquetry of his own, he had lately begun
+to find that the only interesting moments in his life were those
+during which Alice Adams coquetted with him. Happily, these
+obliging moments extended themselves to cover all the time he
+spent with her. However serious she might seem, whatever
+appeared to be her topic, all was thou-and-I.
+
+He planned for more of it, seeing otherwise a dull evening ahead;
+and reverted, afterwhile, to a forbidden subject. "About that
+dance at Miss Lamb's--since your father's so much better----"
+
+She flushed a little. "Now, now!" she chided him. "We agreed
+not to say any more about that."
+
+"Yes, but since he IS better----"
+
+Alice shook her head. "He won't be better to-morrow. He always
+has a bad day after a good one especially after such a good one
+as this is."
+
+"But if this time it should be different," Russell persisted;
+"wouldn't you be willing to come if he's better by to-morrow
+evening? Why not wait and decide at the last minute?"
+
+She waved her hands airily. "What a pother!" she cried. "What
+does it matter whether poor little Alice Adams goes to a dance or
+not?"
+
+"Well, I thought I'd made it clear that it looks fairly bleak to
+me if you don't go."
+
+"Oh, yes!" she jeered.
+
+"It's the simple truth," he insisted. "I don't care a great deal
+about dances these days; and if you aren't going to be there----"
+
+"You could stay away," she suggested. "You wouldn't!"
+
+"Unfortunately, I can't. I'm afraid I'm supposed to be the
+excuse. Miss Lamb, in her capacity as a friend of my
+relatives----"
+
+"Oh, she's giving it for YOU! I see! On Mildred's account you
+mean?"
+
+At that his face showed an increase of colour. "I suppose just
+on account of my being a cousin of Mildred's and of----"
+
+"Of course! You'll have a beautiful time, too. Henrietta'll see
+that you have somebody to dance with besides Miss Dowling, poor
+man!"
+
+"But what I want somebody to see is that I dance with you! And
+perhaps your father----"
+
+"Wait!" she said, frowning as if she debated whether or not to
+tell him something of import; then, seeming to decide
+affirmatively, she asked: "Would you really like to know the
+truth about it?"
+
+"If it isn't too unflattering."
+
+"It hasn't anything to do with you at all," she said. "Of course
+I'd like to go with you and to dance with you--though you don't
+seem to realize that you wouldn't be permitted much time with
+me."
+
+"Oh, yes, I----"
+
+"Never mind!" she laughed. "Of course you wouldn't. But even if
+papa should be better to-morrow, I doubt if I'd go. In fact, I
+know I wouldn't. There's another reason besides papa."
+
+"Is there?"
+
+"Yes. The truth is, I don't get on with Henrietta Lamb. As a
+matter of fact, I dislike her, and of course that means she
+dislikes me. I should never think of asking her to anything I
+gave, and I really wonder she asks me to things SHE gives." This
+was a new inspiration; and Alice, beginning to see her way out of
+a perplexity, wished that she had thought of it earlier: she
+should have told him from the first that she and Henrietta had a
+feud, and consequently exchanged no invitations. Moreover, there
+was another thing to beset her with little anxieties: she might
+better not have told him from the first, as she had indeed told
+him by intimation, that she was the pampered daughter of an
+indulgent father, presumably able to indulge her; for now she
+must elaborately keep to the part. Veracity is usually simple;
+and its opposite, to be successful, should be as simple; but
+practitioners of the opposite are most often impulsive, like
+Alice; and, like her, they become enmeshed in elaborations.
+
+"It wouldn't be very nice for me to go to her house," Alice went
+on, "when I wouldn't want her in mine. I've never admired her.
+I've always thought she was lacking in some things most people
+are supposed to be equipped with--for instance, a certain feeling
+about the death of a father who was always pretty decent to his
+daughter. Henrietta's father died just, eleven months and
+twenty-seven days before your cousin's dance, but she couldn't
+stick out those few last days and make it a year; she was there."
+
+Alice stopped, then laughed ruefully, exclaiming, "But this is
+dreadful of me!"
+
+"Is it?"
+
+"Blackguarding her to you when she's giving a big party for you!
+Just the way Henrietta would blackguard me to you--heaven knows
+what she WOULDN'T say if she talked about me to you! It would be
+fair, of course, but--well, I'd rather she didn't!" And with
+that, Alice let her pretty hand, in its white glove, rest upon
+his arm for a moment; and he looked down at it, not unmoved to
+see it there. "I want to be unfair about just this," she said,
+letting a troubled laughter tremble through her appealing voice
+as she spoke. "I won't take advantage of her with anybody,
+except just--you! I'd a little rather you didn't hear anybody
+blackguard me, and, if you don't mind--could you promise not to
+give Henrietta the chance?"
+
+It was charmingly done, with a humorous, faint pathos altogether
+genuine; and Russell found himself suddenly wanting to shout at
+her, "Oh, you DEAR!" Nothing else seemed adequate; but he
+controlled the impulse in favour of something more conservative.
+
+"Imagine any one speaking unkindly of you--not praising you!"
+
+"Who HAS praised me to you?" she asked, quickly.
+
+"I haven't talked about you with any one; but if I did, I know
+they'd----"
+
+"No, no!" she cried, and went on, again accompanying her words
+with little tremulous runs of laughter. "You don't understand
+this town yet. You'll be surprised when you do; we're different.
+We talk about one another fearfully! Haven't I just proved it,
+the way I've been going for Henrietta? Of course I didn't say
+anything really very terrible about her, but that's only because
+I don't follow that practice the way most of the others do. They
+don't stop with the worst of the truth they can find: they make
+UP things--yes, they really do! And, oh, I'd RATHER they didn't
+make up things about me--to you!"
+
+"What difference would it make if they did?" he inquired,
+cheerfully. "I'd know they weren't true."
+
+"Even if you did know that, they'd make a difference," she said.
+"Oh, yes, they would! It's too bad, but we don't like anything
+quite so well that's had specks on it, even if we've wiped the
+specks off;--it's just that much spoiled, and some things are all
+spoiled the instant they're the least bit spoiled. What a man
+thinks about a girl, for instance. Do you want to have what you
+think about me spoiled, Mr. Russell?"
+
+"Oh, but that's already far beyond reach," he said, lightly.
+
+"But it can't be!" she protested.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because it never can be. Men don't change their minds about one
+another often: they make it quite an event when they do, and talk
+about it as if something important had happened. But a girl only
+has to go down-town with a shoe-string unfastened, and every man
+who sees her will change his mind about her. Don't you know
+that's true?"
+
+"Not of myself, I think."
+
+"There!" she cried. "That's precisely what every man in the
+world would say!"
+
+"So you wouldn't trust me?"
+
+"Well--I'll be awfully worried if you give 'em a chance to tell
+you that I'm too lazy to tie my shoe-strings!"
+
+He laughed delightedly. "Is that what they do say?" he asked.
+
+"Just about! Whatever they hope will get results." She shook
+her head wisely. "Oh, yes; we do that here!"
+
+"But I don't mind loose shoe-strings," he said. "Not if they're
+yours."
+
+"They'll find out what you do mind."
+
+"But suppose," he said, looking at her whimsically; "suppose I
+wouldn't mind anything--so long as it's yours?"
+
+She courtesied. "Oh, pretty enough! But a girl who's talked
+about has a weakness that's often a fatal one."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"It's this: when she's talked about she isn't THERE. That's how
+they kill her."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't follow you."
+
+"Don't you see? If Henrietta--or Mildred--or any of 'em--or some
+of their mothers--oh, we ALL do it! Well, if any of 'em told you
+I didn't tie my shoe-strings, and if I were there, so that you
+could see me, you'd know it wasn't true. Even if I were sitting
+so that you couldn't see my feet, and couldn't tell whether the
+strings were tied or not just then, still you could look at me,
+and see that I wasn't the sort of girl to neglect my
+shoe-strings. But that isn't the way it happens: they'll get at
+you when I'm nowhere around and can't remind you of the sort of
+girl I really am."
+
+"But you don't do that," he complained. "You don't remind me you
+don't even tell me--the sort of girl you really are! I'd like to
+know."
+
+"Let's be serious then," she said, and looked serious enough
+herself. "Would you honestly like to know?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, you must be careful."
+
+"'Careful?'" The word amused him.
+
+"I mean careful not to get me mixed up," she said. "Careful not
+to mix up the girl you might hear somebody talking about with the
+me I honestly try to make you see. If you do get those two mixed
+up--well, the whole show'll be spoiled!"
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"Because it's----" She checked herself, having begun to speak too
+impulsively; and she was disturbed, realizing in what tricky
+stuff she dealt. What had been on her lips to say was, "Because
+it's happened before!" She changed to, "Because it's so easy to
+spoil anything--easiest of all to spoil anything that's
+pleasant."
+
+"That might depend."
+
+"No; it's so. And if you care at all about--about knowing a girl
+who'd like someone to know her----"
+
+"Just 'someone?' That's disappointing."
+
+"Well--you," she said.
+
+"Tell me how 'careful' you want me to be, then!"
+
+"Well, don't you think it would be nice if you didn't give
+anybody the chance to talk about me the way--the way I've just
+been talking about Henrietta Lamb?"
+
+With that they laughed together, and he said, "You may be cutting
+me off from a great deal of information, you know."
+
+"Yes," Alice admitted. "Somebody might begin to praise me to
+you, too; so it's dangerous to ask you to change the subject if I
+ever happen to be mentioned. But after all----" She paused.
+
+"'After all' isn't the end of a thought, is it?"
+
+"Sometimes it is of a girl's thought; I suppose men are neater
+about their thoughts, and always finish 'em. It isn't the end of
+the thought I had then, though."
+
+"What is the end of it?"
+
+She looked at him impulsively. "Oh, it's foolish," she said, and
+she laughed as laughs one who proposes something probably
+impossible. "But, WOULDN'T it be pleasant if two people could
+ever just keep themselves TO themselves, so far as they two were
+concerned? I mean, if they could just manage to be friends
+without people talking about it, or talking to THEM about it?"
+
+"I suppose that might be rather difficult," he said, more amused
+than impressed by her idea.
+
+"I don't know: it might be done," she returned, hopefully.
+"Especially in a town of this size; it's grown so it's quite a
+huge place these days. People can keep themselves to themselves
+in a big place better, you know. For instance, nobody knows that
+you and I are taking a walk together today."
+
+"How absurd, when here we are on exhibition!"
+
+"No; we aren't."
+
+"We aren't?"
+
+"Not a bit of it!" she laughed. "We were the other day, when you
+walked home with me, but anybody could tell that had just
+happened by chance, on account of your overtaking me; people can
+always see things like that. But we're not on exhibition now.
+Look where I've led you!"
+
+Amused and a little bewildered, he looked up and down the street,
+which was one of gaunt-faced apartment-houses, old, sooty, frame
+boarding-houses, small groceries and drug-stores, laundries and
+one-room plumbers' shops, with the sign of a clairvoyant here
+and there.
+
+"You see?" she said. "I've been leading you without your knowing
+it. Of course that's because you're new to the town, and you
+give yourself up to the guidance of an old citizen."
+
+"I'm not so sure, Miss Adams. It might mean that I don't care
+where I follow so long as I follow you."
+
+"Very well," she said. "I'd like you to keep on following me at
+least long enough for me to show you that there's something nicer
+ahead of us than this dingy street."
+
+"Is that figurative?" he asked.
+
+"Might be!" she returned, gaily. "There's a pretty little park
+at the end, but it's very proletarian, and nobody you and I know
+will be more likely to see us there than on this street."
+
+"What an imagination you have!" he exclaimed. "You turn our
+proper little walk into a Parisian adventure."
+
+She looked at him in what seemed to be a momentary grave
+puzzlement. "Perhaps you feel that a Parisian adventure mightn't
+please your--your relatives?"
+
+"Why, no," he returned. "You seem to think of them oftener than
+I do."
+
+This appeared to amuse Alice, or at least to please her, for she
+laughed. "Then I can afford to quit thinking of them, I suppose.
+It's only that I used to be quite a friend of Mildred's--but
+there! we needn't to go into that. I've never been a friend of
+Henrietta Lamb's, though, and I almost wish she weren't taking
+such pains to be a friend of yours."
+
+"Oh, but she's not. It's all on account of----"
+
+"On Mildred's account," Alice finished this for him, coolly.
+"Yes, of course."
+
+"It's on account of the two families," he was at pains to
+explain, a little awkwardly. "It's because I'm a relative of the
+Palmers, and the Palmers and the Lambs seem to be old family
+friends."
+
+"Something the Adamses certainly are not," Alice said. "Not with
+either of 'em; particularly not with the Lambs!" And here, scarce
+aware of what impelled her, she returned to her former
+elaborations and colourings. "You see, the differences between
+Henrietta and me aren't entirely personal: I couldn't go to her
+house even if I liked her. The Lambs and Adamses don't get on
+with each other, and we've just about come to the breaking-point
+as it happens."
+
+"I hope it's nothing to bother you."
+
+"Why? A lot of things bother me."
+
+"I'm sorry they do," he said, and seemed simply to mean it.
+
+She nodded gratefully. "That's nice of you, Mr. Russell. It
+helps. The break between the Adamses and the Lambs is a pretty
+bothersome thing. It's been coming on a long time." She sighed
+deeply, and the sigh was half genuine; this half being for her
+father, but the other half probably belonged to her instinctive
+rendering of Juliet Capulet, daughter to a warring house. "I
+hate it all so!" she added.
+
+"Of course you must."
+
+"I suppose most quarrels between families are on account of
+business," she said. "That's why they're so sordid. Certainly
+the Lambs seem a sordid lot to me, though of course I'm biased."
+And with that she began to sketch a history of the commercial
+antagonism that had risen between the Adamses and the Lambs.
+
+The sketching was spontaneous and dramatic. Mathematics had no
+part in it; nor was there accurate definition of Mr. Adams's
+relation to the institution of Lamb and Company. The point was
+clouded, in fact; though that might easily be set down to the
+general haziness of young ladies confronted with the mysteries of
+trade or commerce. Mr. Adams either had been a vague sort of
+junior member of the firm, it appeared, or else he should have
+been made some such thing; at all events, he was an old mainstay
+of the business; and he, as much as any Lamb, had helped to build
+up the prosperity of the company. But at last, tired of
+providing so much intelligence and energy for which other people
+took profit greater than his own, he had decided to leave the
+company and found a business entirely for himself. The Lambs
+were going to be enraged when they learned what was afoot.
+
+Such was the impression, a little misted, wrought by Alice's
+quick narrative. But there was dolorous fact behind it: Adams
+had succumbed.
+
+His wife, grave and nervous, rather than triumphant, in success,
+had told their daughter that the great J. A. would be furious
+and possibly vindictive. Adams was afraid of him, she said.
+
+"But what for, mama?" Alice asked, since this seemed a turn of
+affairs out of reason. "What in the world has Mr. Lamb to do
+with papa's leaving the company to set up for himself? What
+right has he to be angry about it? If he's such a friend as he
+claims to be, I should think he'd be glad--that is, if the glue
+factory turns out well. What will he be angry for?"
+
+Mrs. Adams gave Alice an uneasy glance, hesitated, and then
+explained that a resignation from Lamb's had always been looked
+upon, especially by "that old man," as treachery. You were
+supposed to die in the service, she said bitterly, and her
+daughter, a little mystified, accepted this explanation. Adams
+had not spoken to her of his surrender; he seemed not inclined to
+speak to her at all, or to any one.
+
+Alice was not serious too long, and she began to laugh as she
+came to the end of her decorative sketch. "After all, the whole
+thing is perfectly ridiculous," she said. "In fact, it's FUNNY!
+That's on account of what papa's going to throw over the Lamb
+business FOR! To save your life you couldn't imagine what he's
+going to do!"
+
+"I won't try, then," Russell assented.
+
+"It takes all the romance out of ME," she laughed. "You'll never
+go for a Parisian walk with me again, after I tell you what I'll
+be heiress to." They had come to the entrance of the little
+park; and, as Alice had said, it was a pretty place, especially
+on a day so radiant. Trees of the oldest forest stood there,
+hale and serene over the trim, bright grass; and the proletarians
+had not come from their factories at this hour; only a few
+mothers and their babies were to be seen, here and there, in the
+shade. "I think I'll postpone telling you about it till we get
+nearly home again," Alice said, as they began to saunter down one
+of the gravelled paths. "There's a bench beside a spring farther
+on; we can sit there and talk about a lot of things--things not
+so sticky as my dowry's going to be."
+
+"'Sticky?'" he echoed. "What in the world----" She laughed
+despairingly.
+
+"A glue factory!"
+
+Then he laughed, too, as much from friendliness as from
+amusement; and she remembered to tell him that the project of a
+glue factory was still "an Adams secret." It would be known
+soon, however, she added; and the whole Lamb connection would
+probably begin saying all sorts of things, heaven knew what!
+
+Thus Alice built her walls of flimsy, working always gaily, or
+with at least the air of gaiety; and even as she rattled on,
+there was somewhere in her mind a constant little wonder.
+Everything she said seemed to be necessary to support something
+else she had said. How had it happened? She found herself
+telling him that since her father had decided on making so great
+a change in his ways, she and her mother hoped at last to
+persuade him to give up that "foolish little house" he had been
+so obstinate about; and she checked herself abruptly on this
+declivity just as she was about to slide into a remark concerning
+her own preference for a "country place." Discretion caught her
+in time; and something else, in company with discretion, caught
+her, for she stopped short in her talk and blushed.
+
+They had taken possession of the bench beside the spring, by this
+time; and Russell, his elbow on the back of the bench and his
+chin on his hand, the better to look at her, had no guess at the
+cause of the blush, but was content to find it lovely. At his
+first sight of Alice she had seemed pretty in the particular way
+of being pretty that he happened to like best; and, with every
+moment he spent with her, this prettiness appeared to increase.
+He felt that he could not look at her enough: his gaze followed
+the fluttering of the graceful hands in almost continual gesture
+as she talked; then lifted happily to the vivacious face again.
+She charmed him.
+
+After her abrupt pause, she sighed, then looked at him with her
+eyebrows lifted in a comedy appeal. "You haven't said you
+wouldn't give Henrietta the chance," she said, in the softest
+voice that can still have a little laugh running in it.
+
+He was puzzled. "Give Henrietta the chance?"
+
+"YOU know! You'll let me keep on being unfair, won't you? Not
+give the other girls a chance to get even?"
+
+He promised, heartily.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+Alice had said that no one who knew either Russell or herself
+would be likely to see them in the park or upon the dingy street;
+but although they returned by that same ungenteel thoroughfare
+they were seen by a person who knew them both. Also, with some
+surprise on the part of Russell, and something more poignant than
+surprise for Alice, they saw this person.
+
+All of the dingy street was ugly, but the greater part of it
+appeared to be honest. The two pedestrians came upon a block or
+two, however, where it offered suggestions of a less upright
+character, like a steady enough workingman with a naughty book
+sticking out of his pocket. Three or four dim shops, a single
+story in height, exhibited foul signboards, yet fair enough so
+far as the wording went; one proclaiming a tobacconist, one a
+junk-dealer, one a dispenser of "soft drinks and cigars." The
+most credulous would have doubted these signboards; for the craft
+of the modern tradesman is exerted to lure indoors the passing
+glance, since if the glance is pleased the feet may follow; but
+this alleged tobacconist and his neighbours had long been fond of
+dust on their windows, evidently, and shades were pulled far down
+on the glass of their doors. Thus the public eye, small of pupil
+in the light of the open street, was intentionally not invited to
+the dusky interiors. Something different from mere lack of
+enterprise was apparent; and the signboards might have been
+omitted; they were pains thrown away, since it was plain to the
+world that the business parts of these shops were the brighter
+back rooms implied by the dark front rooms; and that the commerce
+there was in perilous new liquors and in dice and rough girls.
+
+Nothing could have been more innocent than the serenity with
+which these wicked little places revealed themselves for what
+they were; and, bound by this final tie of guilelessness, they
+stood together in a row which ended with a companionable
+barbershop, much like them. Beyond was a series of soot-harried
+frame two-story houses, once part of a cheerful neighbourhood
+when the town was middle-aged and settled, and not old and
+growing. These houses, all carrying the label. "Rooms," had the
+worried look of vacancy that houses have when they are too full
+of everybody without being anybody's home; and there was, too, a
+surreptitious air about them, as if, like the false little shops,
+they advertised something by concealing it.
+
+One of them--the one next to the barber-shop--had across its
+front an ample, jig-sawed veranda, where aforetime, no doubt, the
+father of a family had fanned himself with a palm-leaf fan on
+Sunday afternoons, watching the surreys go by, and where his
+daughter listened to mandolins and badinage on starlit evenings;
+but, although youth still held the veranda, both the youth and
+the veranda were in decay. The four or five young men who
+lounged there this afternoon were of a type known to shady
+pool-parlours. Hats found no favour with them; all of them wore
+caps; and their tight clothes, apparently from a common source,
+showed a vivacious fancy for oblique pockets, false belts, and
+Easter-egg colourings. Another thing common to the group was
+the expression of eye and mouth; and Alice, in the midst of her
+other thoughts, had a distasteful thought about this.
+
+The veranda was within a dozen feet of the sidewalk, and as she
+and her escort came nearer, she took note of the young men, her
+face hardening a little, even before she suspected there might be
+a resemblance between them and any one she knew. Then she
+observed that each of these loungers wore not for the occasion,
+but as of habit, a look of furtively amused contempt; the mouth
+smiled to one side as if not to dislodge a cigarette, while the
+eyes kept languidly superior. All at once Alice was reminded of
+Walter; and the slight frown caused by this idea had just begun
+to darken her forehead when Walter himself stepped out of the
+open door of the house and appeared upon the veranda. Upon his
+head was a new straw hat, and in his hand was a Malacca stick
+with an ivory top, for Alice had finally decided against it for
+herself and had given it to him. His mood was lively: he twirled
+the stick through his fingers like a drum-major's baton, and
+whistled loudly.
+
+Moreover, he was indeed accompanied. With him was a thin girl
+who had made a violent black-and-white poster of herself: black
+dress, black flimsy boa, black stockings, white slippers, great
+black hat down upon the black eyes; and beneath the hat a curve
+of cheek and chin made white as whitewash, and in strong
+bilateral motion with gum.
+
+The loungers on the veranda were familiars of the pair; hailed
+them with cacklings; and one began to sing, in a voice all tin:
+
+ "Then my skirt, Sal, and me did go
+ Right straight to the moving-pitcher show.
+ OH, you bashful vamp!"
+
+
+The girl laughed airily. "God, but you guys are wise!" she said.
+
+"Come on, Wallie."
+
+Walter stared at his sister; then grinned faintly, and nodded at
+Russell as the latter lifted his hat in salutation. Alice
+uttered an incoherent syllable of exclamation, and, as she began
+to walk faster, she bit her lip hard, not in order to look
+wistful, this time, but to help her keep tears of anger from her
+eyes.
+
+Russell laughed cheerfully. "Your brother certainly seems to
+have found the place for 'colour' today," he said. "That girl's
+talk must be full of it."
+
+But Alice had forgotten the colour she herself had used in
+accounting for Walter's peculiarities, and she did not
+understand. "What?" she said, huskily.
+
+"Don't you remember telling me about him? How he was going to
+write, probably, and would go anywhere to pick up types and get
+them to talk?"
+
+She kept her eyes ahead, and said sharply, "I think his literary
+tastes scarcely cover this case!"
+
+"Don't be too sure. He didn't look at all disconcerted. He
+didn't seem to mind your seeing him."
+
+"That's all the worse, isn't it?"
+
+"Why, no," her friend said, genially. "It means he didn't
+consider that he was engaged in anything out of the way. You
+can't expect to understand everything boys do at his age; they do
+all sorts of queer things, and outgrow them. Your brother
+evidently has a taste for queer people, and very likely he's been
+at least half sincere when he's made you believe he had a
+literary motive behind it. We all go through----"
+
+"Thanks, Mr. Russell," she interrupted. "Let's don't say any
+more."
+
+He looked at her flushed face and enlarged eyes; and he liked her
+all the better for her indignation: this was how good sisters
+ought to feel, he thought, failing to understand that most of
+what she felt was not about Walter. He ventured only a word
+more. "Try not to mind it so much; it really doesn't amount to
+anything."
+
+She shook her head, and they went on in silence; she did not look
+at him again until they stopped before her own house. Then she
+gave him only one glimpse of her eyes before she looked down.
+"It's spoiled, isn't it?" she said, in a low voice.
+
+"What's 'spoiled?'"
+
+"Our walk--well, everything. Somehow it always--is."
+
+"'Always is' what?" he asked.
+
+"Spoiled," she said.
+
+He laughed at that; but without looking at him she suddenly
+offered him her hand, and, as he took it, he felt a hurried,
+violent pressure upon his fingers, as if she meant to thank him
+almost passionately for being kind. She was gone before he could
+speak to her again.
+
+
+In her room, with the door locked, she did not go to her mirror,
+but to her bed, flinging herself face down, not caring how far
+the pillows put her hat awry. Sheer grief had followed her
+anger; grief for the calamitous end of her bright afternoon,
+grief for the "end of everything," as she thought then.
+Nevertheless, she gradually grew more composed, and, when her
+mother tapped on the door presently, let her in. Mrs. Adams
+looked at her with quick apprehension.
+
+"Oh, poor child! Wasn't he----"
+
+Alice told her. "You see how it--how it made me look, mama," she
+quavered, having concluded her narrative. "I'd tried to cover up
+Walter's awfulness at the dance with that story about his being
+'literary,' but no story was big enough to cover this up--and oh!
+it must make him think I tell stories about other things!"
+
+"No, no, no!" Mrs. Adams protested. "Don't you see? At the
+worst, all HE could think is that Walter told stories to you
+about why he likes to be with such dreadful people, and you
+believed them. That's all HE'D think; don't you see?"
+
+Alice's wet eyes began to show a little hopefulness. "You
+honestly think it might be that way, mama?"
+
+"Why, from what you've told me he said, I KNOW it's that way.
+Didn't he say he wanted to come again?"
+
+"N-no," Alice said, uncertainly. "But I think he will. At least
+I begin to think so now. He----" She stopped.
+
+"From all you tell me, he seems to be a very desirable young
+man," Mrs. Adams said, primly.
+
+Her daughter was silent for several moments; then new tears
+gathered upon her downcast lashes. "He's just--dear!" she
+faltered.
+
+Mrs. Adams nodded. "He's told you he isn't engaged, hasn't he?"
+
+"No. But I know he isn't. Maybe when he first came here he was
+near it, but I know he's not."
+
+"I guess Mildred Palmer would LIKE him to be, all right!" Mrs.
+Adams was frank enough to say, rather triumphantly; and Alice,
+with a lowered head, murmured:
+
+"Anybody--would."
+
+The words were all but inaudible.
+
+"Don't you worry," her mother said, and patted her on the
+shoulder. "Everything will come out all right; don't you fear,
+Alice. Can't you see that beside any other girl in town you're
+just a perfect QUEEN? Do you think any young man that wasn't
+prejudiced, or something, would need more than just one look
+to----"
+
+But Alice moved away from the caressing hand. "Never mind, mama.
+I wonder he looks at me at all. And if he does again, after
+seeing my brother with those horrible people----"
+
+"Now, now!" Mrs. Adams interrupted, expostulating mournfully.
+"I'm sure Walter's a GOOD boy----"
+
+"You are?" Alice cried, with a sudden vigour. "You ARE?"
+
+"I'm sure he's GOOD, yes--and if he isn't, it's not his fault.
+It's mine."
+
+"What nonsense!"
+
+"No, it's true," Mrs. Adams lamented. "I tried to bring him up
+to be good, God knows; and when he was little he was the best boy
+I ever saw. When he came from Sunday-school he'd always run to
+me and we'd go over the lesson together; and he let me come in
+his room at night to hear his prayers almost until he was
+sixteen. Most boys won't do that with their mothers--not nearly
+that long. I tried so hard to bring him up right--but if
+anything's gone wrong it's my fault."
+
+"How could it be? You've just said----"
+
+"It's because I didn't make your father this--this new step
+earlier. Then Walter might have had all the advantages that
+other----"
+
+"Oh, mama, PLEASE!" Alice begged her. "Let's don't go over all
+that again. Isn't it more important to think what's to be done
+about him? Is he going to be allowed to go on disgracing us as
+he does?"
+
+Mrs. Adams sighed profoundly. "I don't know what to do," she
+confessed, unhappily. "Your father's so upset about--about this
+new step he's taking--I don't feel as if we ought to----"
+
+"No, no!" Alice cried. "Papa mustn't be distressed with this, on
+top of everything else. But SOMETHING'S got to be done about
+Walter."
+
+"What can be?" her mother asked, helplessly. "What can be?"
+
+Alice admitted that she didn't know.
+
+
+At dinner, an hour later, Walter's habitually veiled glance
+lifted, now and then, to touch her furtively;--he was waiting, as
+he would have said, for her to "spring it"; and he had prepared a
+brief and sincere defense to the effect that he made his own
+living, and would like to inquire whose business it was to offer
+intrusive comment upon his private conduct. But she said
+nothing, while his father and mother were as silent as she.
+Walter concluded that there was to be no attack, but changed his
+mind when his father, who ate only a little, and broodingly at
+that, rose to leave the table and spoke to him.
+
+"Walter," he said, "when you've finished I wish you'd come up to
+my room. I got something I want to say to you."
+
+Walter shot a hard look at his apathetic sister, then turned to
+his father. "Make it to-morrow," he said. "This is Satad'y
+night and I got a date."
+
+"No," Adams said, frowning. "You come up before you go out.
+It's important."
+
+"All right; I've had all I want to eat," Walter returned. "I got
+a few minutes. Make it quick."
+
+He followed his father upstairs, and when they were in the room
+together Adams shut the door, sat down, and began to rub his
+knees.
+
+"Rheumatism?" the boy inquired, slyly. "That what you want to
+talk to me about?"
+
+"No." But Adams did not go on; he seemed to be in difficulties
+for words, and Walter decided to help him.
+
+"Hop ahead and spring it," he said. "Get it off your mind: I'll
+tell the world _I_ should worry! You aren't goin' to bother ME
+any, so why bother yourself? Alice hopped home and told you she
+saw me playin' around with some pretty gay-lookin' berries and
+you----"
+
+"Alice?" his father said, obviously surprised. "It's nothing
+about Alice."
+
+"Didn't she tell you----"
+
+"I haven't talked with her all day."
+
+"Oh, I see," Walter said. "She told mother and mother told you."
+
+"No, neither of 'em have told me anything. What was there to
+tell?"
+
+Walter laughed. "Oh, it's nothin'," he said. "I was just
+startin' out to buy a girl friend o' mine a rhinestone buckle I
+lost to her on a bet, this afternoon, and Alice came along with
+that big Russell fish; and I thought she looked sore. She
+expects me to like the kind she likes, and I don't like 'em. I
+thought she'd prob'ly got you all stirred up about it."
+
+"No, no," his father said, peevishly. "I don't know anything
+about it, and I don't care to know anything about it. I want to
+talk to you about something important."
+
+Then, as he was again silent, Walter said, "Well, TALK about it;
+I'm listening."
+
+"It's this," Adams began, heavily. "It's about me going into
+this glue business. Your mother's told you, hasn't she?"
+
+"She said you were goin' to leave the old place down-town and
+start a glue factory. That's all I know about it; I got my own
+affairs to 'tend to."
+
+"Well, this is your affair," his father said, frowning. "You
+can't stay with Lamb and Company."
+
+Walter looked a little startled. "What you mean, I can't? Why
+not?"
+
+"You've got to help me," Adams explained slowly; and he frowned
+more deeply, as if the interview were growing increasingly
+laborious for him. "It's going to be a big pull to get this
+business on its feet."
+
+"Yes!" Walter exclaimed with a sharp skepticism. "I should say
+it was!" He stared at his father incredulously. "Look here;
+aren't you just a little bit sudden, the way you're goin' about
+things? You've let mother shove you a little too fast, haven't
+you? Do you know anything about what it means to set up a new
+business these days?"
+
+"Yes, I know all about it," Adams said. "About this business, I
+do."
+
+"How do you?"
+
+"Because I made a long study of it. I'm not afraid of going
+about it the wrong way; but it's a hard job and you'll have to
+put in all whatever sense and strength you've got."
+
+Walter began to breathe quickly, and his lips were agitated; then
+he set them obstinately. "Oh; I will," he said.
+
+"Yes, you will," Adams returned, not noticing that his son's
+inflection was satiric. "It's going to take every bit of energy
+in your body, and all the energy I got left in mine, and every
+cent of the little I've saved, besides something I'll have to
+raise on this house. I'm going right at it, now I've got to; and
+you'll have to quit Lamb's by the end of next week."
+
+"Oh, I will?" Walter's voice grew louder, and there was a
+shrillness in it. "I got to quit Lamb's the end of next week,
+have I?" He stepped forward, angrily. "Listen!" he said. "I'm
+not walkin' out o' Lamb's, see? I'm not quittin' down there: I
+stay with 'em, see?"
+
+Adams looked up at him, astonished. "You'll leave there next
+Saturday," he said. "I've got to have you."
+
+"You don't anything o' the kind," Walter told him, sharply. "Do
+you expect to pay me anything?"
+
+"I'd pay you about what you been getting down there."
+
+"Then pay somebody else; _I_ don't know anything about glue. You
+get somebody else."
+
+"No. You've got to---"
+
+Walter cut him off with the utmost vehemence. "Don't tell me
+what I got to do! I know what I got to do better'n you, I guess!
+I stay at Lamb's, see?"
+
+Adams rose angrily. "You'll do what I tell you. You can't stay
+down there."
+
+"Why can't I?"
+
+"Because I won't let you."
+
+"Listen! Keep on not lettin' me: I'll be there just the same."
+
+At that his father broke into a sour laughter. "THEY won't let
+you, Walter! They won't have you down there after they find out
+I'm going."
+
+"Why won't they? You don't think they're goin' to be all shot to
+pieces over losin' YOU, do you?"
+
+"I tell you they won't let you stay," his father insisted,
+loudly.
+
+"Why, what do they care whether you go or not?"
+
+"They'll care enough to fire YOU, my boy!"
+
+"Look here, then; show me why."
+
+"They'll do it!"
+
+"Yes," Walter jeered; "you keep sayin' they will, but when I ask
+you to show me why, you keep sayin' they will! That makes little
+headway with ME, I can tell you!"
+
+Adams groaned, and, rubbing his head, began to pace the floor.
+Walter's refusal was something he had not anticipated; and he
+felt the weakness of his own attempt to meet it: he seemed
+powerless to do anything but utter angry words, which, as Walter
+said, made little headway. "Oh, my, my!" he muttered, "OH, my,
+my!"
+
+Walter, usually sallow, had grown pale: he watched his father
+narrowly, and now took a sudden resolution. "Look here," he
+said. "When you say Lamb's is likely to fire me because you're
+goin' to quit, you talk like the people that have to be locked
+up. I don't know where you get such things in your head; Lamb
+and Company won't know you're gone. Listen: I can stay there
+long as I want to. But I'll tell you what I'll do: make it worth
+my while and I'll hook up with your old glue factory, after all."
+
+Adams stopped his pacing abruptly, and stared at him. "'Make it
+worth your while?' What you mean?"
+
+"I got a good use for three hundred dollars right now," Walter
+said. "Let me have it and I'll quit Lamb's to work for you.
+Don't let me have it and I SWEAR I won't!"
+
+"Are you crazy?"
+
+"Is everybody crazy that needs three hundred dollars?"
+
+"Yes," Adams said. "They are if they ask ME for it, when I got
+to stretch every cent I can lay my hands on to make it look like
+a dollar!"
+
+"You won't do it?"
+
+Adams burst out at him. "You little fool! If I had three
+hundred dollars to throw away, besides the pay I expected to give
+you, haven't you got sense enough to see I could hire a man worth
+three hundred dollars more to me than you'd be? It's a FINE time
+to ask me for three hundred dollars, isn't it! What FOR?
+Rhinestone buckles to throw around on your 'girl friends?' Shame
+on you! Ask me to BRIBE you to help yourself and your own
+family!"
+
+"I'll give you a last chance," Walter said. "Either you do what
+I want, or I won't do what you want. Don't ask me again after
+this, because----"
+
+Adams interrupted him fiercely. "'Ask you again!' Don't worry
+about that, my boy! All I ask you is to get out o' my room."
+
+"Look here," Walter said, quietly; and his lopsided smile
+distorted his livid cheek. "Look here: I expect YOU wouldn't
+give me three hundred dollars to save my life, would you?"
+
+"You make me sick," Adams said, in his bitterness. "Get out of
+here."
+
+Walter went out, whistling; and Adams drooped into his old chair
+again as the door closed. "OH, my, my!" he groaned. "Oh, Lordy,
+Lordy! The way of the transgressor----"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+He meant his own transgression and his own way; for Walter's
+stubborn refusal appeared to Adams just then as one of the
+inexplicable but righteous besettings he must encounter in
+following that way. "Oh, Lordy, Lord!" he groaned, and then, as
+resentment moved him--"That dang boy! Dang idiot" Yet he knew
+himself for a greater idiot because he had not been able to tell
+Walter the truth. He could not bring himself to do it, nor even
+to state his case in its best terms; and that was because he felt
+that even in its best terms the case was a bad one.
+
+Of all his regrets the greatest was that in a moment of vanity
+and tenderness, twenty-five years ago, he had told his young wife
+a business secret. He had wanted to show how important her
+husband was becoming, and how much the head of the universe, J.
+A. Lamb, trusted to his integrity and ability. The great man
+had an idea: he thought of "branching out a little," he told
+Adams confidentially, and there were possibilities of profit in
+glue.
+
+What he wanted was a liquid glue to be put into little bottles
+and sold cheaply. "The kind of thing that sells itself," he
+said; "the kind of thing that pays its own small way as it goes
+along, until it has profits enough to begin advertising it right.
+Everybody has to use glue, and if I make mine convenient and
+cheap, everybody'll buy mine. But it's got to be glue that'll
+STICK; it's got to be the best; and if we find how to make it
+we've got to keep it a big secret, of course, or anybody can
+steal it from us. There was a man here last month; he knew a
+formula he wanted to sell me, 'sight unseen'; but he was in such
+a hurry I got suspicious, and I found he'd managed to steal it,
+working for the big packers in their glue-works. We've got to
+find a better glue than that, anyhow. I'm going to set you and
+Campbell at it. You're a practical, wide-awake young feller, and
+Campbell's a mighty good chemist; I guess you two boys ought to
+make something happen."
+
+His guess was shrewd enough. Working in a shed a little way
+outside the town, where their cheery employer visited them
+sometimes to study their malodorous stews, the two young men
+found what Lamb had set them to find. But Campbell was
+thoughtful over the discovery. "Look here," he said. "Why ain't
+this just about yours and mine? After all, it may be Lamb's
+money that's paid for the stuff we've used, but it hasn't cost
+much."
+
+"But he pays US," Adams remonstrated, horrified by his
+companion's idea. "He paid us to do it. It belongs absolutely
+to him."
+
+"Oh, I know he THINKS it does," Campbell admitted, plaintively.
+"I suppose we've got to let him take it. It's not patentable,
+and he'll have to do pretty well by us when he starts his
+factory, because he's got to depend on us to run the making of
+the stuff so that the workmen can't get onto the process. You
+better ask him the same salary I do, and mine's going to be high."
+
+But the high salary, thus pleasantly imagined, was never paid.
+Campbell died of typhoid fever, that summer, leaving Adams and
+his employer the only possessors of the formula, an unwritten
+one; and Adams, pleased to think himself more important to the
+great man than ever, told his wife that there could be little
+doubt of his being put in sole charge of the prospective
+glue-works. Unfortunately, the enterprise remained prospective.
+
+Its projector had already become "inveigled into another
+side-line," as he told Adams. One of his sons had persuaded him
+to take up a "cough-lozenge," to be called the "Jalamb Balm
+Trochee"; and the lozenge did well enough to amuse Mr. Lamb and
+occupy his spare time, which was really about all he had asked of
+the glue project. He had "all the MONEY anybody ought to want,"
+he said, when Adams urged him; and he could "start up this little
+glue side-line" at any time; the formula was safe in their two
+heads.
+
+At intervals Adams would seek opportunity to speak of "the little
+glue side-line" to his patron, and to suggest that the years were
+passing; but Lamb, petting other hobbies, had lost interest.
+"Oh, I'll start it up some day, maybe. If I don't, I may turn it
+over to my heirs: it's always an asset, worth something or other,
+of course. We'll probably take it up some day, though, you and
+I."
+
+The sun persistently declined to rise on that day, and, as time
+went on, Adams saw that his rather timid urgings bored his
+employer, and he ceased to bring up the subject. Lamb apparently
+forgot all about glue, but Adams discovered that unfortunately
+there was someone else who remembered it.
+
+"It's really YOURS," she argued, that painful day when for the
+first time she suggested his using his knowledge for the benefit
+of himself and his family. "Mr. Campbell might have had a right
+to part of it, but he died and didn't leave any kin, so it
+belongs to you."
+
+"Suppose J. A. Lamb hired me to saw some wood," Adams said.
+"Would the sticks belong to me?"
+
+"He hasn't got any right to take your invention and bury it," she
+protested. "What good is it doing him if he doesn't DO anything
+with it? What good is it doing ANYBODY? None in the world! And
+what harm would it do him if you went ahead and did this for
+yourself and for your children? None in the world! And what
+could he do to you if he WAS old pig enough to get angry with you
+for doing it? He couldn't do a single thing, and you've admitted
+he couldn't, yourself. So what's your reason for depriving your
+children and your wife of the benefits you know you could give
+'em?"
+
+"Nothing but decency," he answered; and she had her reply ready
+for that. It seemed to him that, strive as he would, he could
+not reach her mind with even the plainest language; while
+everything that she said to him, with such vehemence, sounded
+like so much obstinate gibberish. Over and over he pressed her
+with the same illustration, on the point of ownership, though he
+thought he was varying it.
+
+"Suppose he hired me to build him a house: would that be MY
+house?"
+
+"He didn't hire you to build him a house. You and Campbell
+invented----"
+
+"Look here: suppose you give a cook a soup-bone and some
+vegetables, and pay her to make you a soup: has she got a right
+to take and sell it? You know better!"
+
+"I know ONE thing: if that old man tried to keep your own
+invention from you he's no better than a robber!"
+
+They never found any point of contact in all their passionate
+discussions of this ethical question; and the question was no
+more settled between them, now that Adams had succumbed, than it
+had ever been. But at least the wrangling about it was over:
+they were grave together, almost silent, and an uneasiness
+prevailed with her as much as with him.
+
+He had already been out of the house, to walk about the small
+green yard; and on Monday afternoon he sent for a taxicab and
+went down-town, but kept a long way from the "wholesale section,"
+where stood the formidable old oblong pile of Lamb and Company.
+He arranged for the sale of the bonds he had laid away, and for
+placing a mortgage upon his house; and on his way home, after
+five o'clock, he went to see an old friend, a man whose term of
+service with Lamb and Company was even a little longer than his
+own.
+
+This veteran, returned from the day's work, was sitting in front
+of the apartment house where he lived, but when the cab stopped
+at the curb he rose and came forward, offering a jocular
+greeting. "Well, well, Virgil Adams! I always thought you had a
+sporty streak in you. Travel in your own hired private
+automobile nowadays, do you? Pamperin' yourself because you're
+still layin' off sick, I expect."
+
+"Oh, I'm well enough again, Charley Lohr," Adams said, as he got
+out and shook hands. Then, telling the driver to wait, he took
+his friend's arm, walked to the bench with him, and sat down. "I
+been practically well for some time," he said. "I'm fixin' to
+get into harness again."
+
+"Bein' sick has certainly produced a change of heart in you," his
+friend laughed. "You're the last man I ever expected to see
+blowin' yourself--or anybody else to a taxicab! For that matter,
+I never heard of you bein' in ANY kind of a cab, 'less'n it might
+be when you been pall-bearer for somebody. What's come over
+you?"
+
+"Well, I got to turn over a new leaf, and that's a fact," Adams
+said. "I got a lot to do, and the only way to accomplish it,
+it's got to be done soon, or I won't have anything to live on
+while I'm doing it."
+
+"What you talkin' about? What you got to do except to get strong
+enough to come back to the old place?"
+
+"Well----" Adams paused, then coughed, and said slowly, "Fact is,
+Charley Lohr, I been thinking likely I wouldn't come back."
+
+"What! What you talkin' about?"
+
+"No," said Adams. "I been thinking I might likely kind of branch
+out on my own account."
+
+"Well, I'll be doggoned!" Old Charley Lohr was amazed; he ruffled
+up his gray moustache with thumb and forefinger, leaving his
+mouth open beneath, like a dark cave under a tangled wintry
+thicket. "Why, that's the doggonedest thing I ever heard!" he
+said. "I already am the oldest inhabitant down there, but if you
+go, there won't be anybody else of the old generation at all.
+What on earth you thinkin' of goin' into?"
+
+"Well," said Adams, "I rather you didn't mention it till I get
+started of course anybody'll know what it is by then--but I HAVE
+been kind of planning to put a liquid glue on the market."
+
+His friend, still ruffling the gray moustache upward, stared at
+him in frowning perplexity. "Glue?" he said. "GLUE!"
+
+"Yes. I been sort of milling over the idea of taking up
+something like that."
+
+"Handlin' it for some firm, you mean?"
+
+"No. Making it. Sort of a glue-works likely."
+
+Lohr continued to frown. "Let me think," he said. "Didn't the
+ole man have some such idea once, himself?"
+
+Adams leaned forward, rubbing his knees; and he coughed again
+before he spoke. "Well, yes. Fact is, he did. That is to say,
+a mighty long while ago he did."
+
+"I remember," said Lohr. "He never said anything about it that I
+know of; but seems to me I recollect we had sort of a rumour
+around the place how you and that man--le's see, wasn't his name
+Campbell, that died of typhoid fever? Yes, that was it,
+Campbell. Didn't the ole man have you and Campbell workin' sort
+of private on some glue proposition or other?"
+
+"Yes, he did." Adams nodded. "I found out a good deal about
+glue then, too."
+
+"Been workin' on it since, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes. Kept it in my mind and studied out new things about it."
+
+Lohr looked serious. "Well, but see here," he said. "I hope it
+ain't anything the ole man'll think might infringe on whatever he
+had you doin' for HIM. You know how he is: broad-minded,
+liberal, free-handed man as walks this earth, and if he thought
+he owed you a cent he'd sell his right hand for a pork-chop to
+pay it, if that was the only way; but if he got the idea anybody
+was tryin' to get the better of him, he'd sell BOTH his hands, if
+he had to, to keep 'em from doin' it. Yes, at eighty, he would!
+Not that I mean I think you might be tryin' to get the better of
+him, Virg. You're a mighty close ole codger, but such a thing
+ain't in you. What I mean: I hope there ain't any chance for the
+ole man to THINK you might be----"
+
+"Oh, no," Adams interrupted. "As a matter of fact, I don't
+believe he'll ever think about it at all, and if he did he
+wouldn't have any real right to feel offended at me: the process
+I'm going to use is one I expect to change and improve a lot
+different from the one Campbell and I worked on for him."
+
+"Well, that's good," said Lohr. "Of course you know what you're
+up to: you're old enough, God knows!" He laughed ruefully. "My,
+but it will seem funny to me--down there with you gone! I expect
+you and I both been gettin' to be pretty much dead-wood in the
+place, the way the young fellows look at it, and the only one
+that'd miss either of us would be the other one! Have you told
+the ole man yet?"
+
+"Well----" Adams spoke laboriously. "No. No, I haven't. I
+thought--well, that's what I wanted to see you about."
+
+"What can I do?"
+
+"I thought I'd write him a letter and get you to hand it to him
+for me."
+
+"My soul!" his friend exclaimed. "Why on earth don't you just go
+down there and tell him?"
+
+Adams became pitiably embarrassed. He stammered, coughed,
+stammered again, wrinkling his face so deeply he seemed about to
+weep; but finally he contrived to utter an apologetic laugh. "I
+ought to do that, of course; but in some way or other I just
+don't seem to be able to--to manage it."
+
+"Why in the world not?" the mystified Lohr inquired.
+
+"I could hardly tell you--'less'n it is to say that when you been
+with one boss all your life it's so--so kind of embarrassing--to
+quit him, I just can't make up my mind to go and speak to him
+about it. No; I got it in my head a letter's the only
+satisfactory way to do it, and I thought I'd ask you to hand it
+to him,"
+
+"Well, of course I don't mind doin' that for you," Lohr said,
+mildly. "But why in the world don't you just mail it to him?"
+
+"Well, I'll tell you," Adams returned. "You know, like that,
+it'd have to go through a clerk and that secretary of his, and I
+don't know who all. There's a couple of kind of delicate points
+I want to put in it: for instance, I want to explain to him how
+much improvement and so on I'm going to introduce on the old
+process I helped to work out with Campbell when we were working
+for him, so't he'll understand it's a different article and no
+infringement at all. Then there's another thing: you see all
+during while I was sick he had my salary paid to me it amounts to
+considerable, I was on my back so long. Under the circumstances,
+because I'm quitting, I don't feel as if I ought to accept it,
+and so I'll have a check for him in the letter to cover it, and I
+want to be sure he knows it, and gets it personally. If it had
+to go through a lot of other people, the way it would if I put it
+in the mail, why, you can't tell. So what I thought: if you'd
+hand it to him for me, and maybe if he happened to read it right
+then, or anything, it might be you'd notice whatever he'd happen
+to say about it--and you could tell me afterward."
+
+"All right," Lohr said. "Certainly if you'd rather do it that
+way, I'll hand it to him and tell you what he says; that is, if
+he says anything and I hear him. Got it written?"
+
+"No; I'll send it around to you last of the week." Adams moved
+toward his taxicab. "Don't say anything to anybody about it,
+Charley, especially till after that."
+
+"All right."
+
+"And, Charley, I'll be mighty obliged to you," Adams said, and
+came back to shake hands in farewell. "There's one thing more
+you might do--if you'd ever happen to feel like it." He kept his
+eyes rather vaguely fixed on a point above his friend's head as
+he spoke, and his voice was not well controlled. "I been--I been
+down there a good many years and I may not 'a' been so much use
+lately as I was at first, but I always tried to do my best for
+the old firm. If anything turned out so's they DID kind of take
+offense with me, down there, why, just say a good word for me--if
+you'd happen to feel like it, maybe."
+
+Old Charley Lohr assured him that he would speak a good word if
+opportunity became available; then, after the cab had driven
+away, he went up to his small apartment on the third floor and
+muttered ruminatively until his wife inquired what he was talking
+to himself about.
+
+"Ole Virg Adams," he told her. "He's out again after his long
+spell of sickness, and the way it looks to me he'd better stayed
+in bed."
+
+"You mean he still looks too bad to be out?"
+
+"Oh, I expect he's gettin' his HEALTH back," Lohr said, frowning.
+
+"Then what's the matter with him? You mean he's lost his mind?"
+
+"My goodness, but women do jump at conclusions!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Well," said Mrs. Lohr, "what other conclusion did you leave me
+to jump at?"
+
+Her husband explained with a little heat: "People can have a
+sickness that AFFECTS their mind, can't they? Their mind can get
+some affected without bein' LOST, can't it?"
+
+"Then you mean the poor man's mind does seem affected?"
+
+"Why, no; I'd scarcely go as far as that," Lohr said,
+inconsistently, and declined to be more definite.
+
+
+Adams devoted the latter part of that evening to the composition
+of his letter--a disquieting task not completed when, at eleven
+o'clock, he heard his daughter coming up the stairs. She was
+singing to herself in a low, sweet voice, and Adams paused to
+listen incredulously, with his pen lifted and his mouth open, as
+if he heard the strangest sound in the world. Then he set down
+the pen upon a blotter, went to his door, and opened it, looking
+out at her as she came.
+
+"Well, dearie, you seem to be feeling pretty good," he said.
+"What you been doing?"
+
+"Just sitting out on the front steps, papa."
+
+"All alone, I suppose."
+
+"No. Mr. Russell called."
+
+"Oh, he did?" Adams pretended to be surprised. "What all could
+you and he find to talk about till this hour o' the night?"
+
+She laughed gaily. "You don't know me, papa!"
+
+"How's that?"
+
+"You've never found out that I always do all the talking."
+
+"Didn't you let him get a word in all evening?"
+
+"Oh, yes; every now and then."
+
+Adams took her hand and petted it. "Well, what did he say?"
+
+Alice gave him a radiant look and kissed him. "Not what you
+think!" she laughed; then slapped his cheek with saucy affection,
+pirouetted across the narrow hall and into her own room, and
+curtsied to him as she closed her door.
+
+Adams went back to his writing with a lighter heart; for since
+Alice was born she had been to him the apple of his eye, his own
+phrase in thinking of her; and what he was doing now was for her.
+
+He smiled as he picked up his pen to begin a new draft of the
+painful letter; but presently he looked puzzled. After all, she
+could be happy just as things were, it seemed. Then why had he
+taken what his wife called "this new step," which he had so long
+resisted?
+
+He could only sigh and wonder. "Life works out pretty
+peculiarly," he thought; for he couldn't go back now, though the
+reason he couldn't was not clearly apparent. He had to go ahead.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+He was out in his taxicab again the next morning, and by noon he
+had secured what he wanted.
+
+It was curiously significant that he worked so quickly. All the
+years during which his wife had pressed him toward his present
+shift he had sworn to himself, as well as to her, that he would
+never yield; and yet when he did yield he had no plans to make,
+because he found them already prepared and worked out in detail
+in his mind; as if he had long contemplated the "step" he
+believed himself incapable of taking.
+
+Sometimes he had thought of improving his income by exchanging
+his little collection of bonds for a "small rental property," if
+he could find "a good buy"; and he had spent many of his spare
+hours rambling over the enormously spreading city and its
+purlieus, looking for the ideal "buy." It remained unattainable,
+so far as he was concerned; but he found other things.
+
+Not twice a crow's mile from his own house there was a dismal and
+slummish quarter, a decayed "industrial district" of earlier
+days. Most of the industries were small; some of them died,
+perishing of bankruptcy or fire; and a few had moved, leaving
+their shells. Of the relics, the best was a brick building which
+had been the largest and most important factory in the quarter:
+it had been injured by a long vacancy almost as serious as a
+fire, in effect, and Adams had often guessed at the sum needed to
+put it in repair.
+
+When he passed it, he would look at it with an interest which he
+supposed detached and idly speculative. "That'd be just the
+thing," he thought. "If a fellow had money enough, and took a
+notion to set up some new business on a big scale, this would be
+a pretty good place--to make glue, for instance, if that wasn't
+out of the question, of course. It would take a lot of money,
+though; a great deal too much for me to expect to handle--even if
+I'd ever dream of doing such a thing."
+
+Opposite the dismantled factory was a muddy, open lot of two
+acres or so, and near the middle of the lot, a long brick shed
+stood in a desolate abandonment, not happily decorated by old
+coatings of theatrical and medicinal advertisements. But the
+brick shed had two wooden ells, and, though both shed and ells
+were of a single story, here was empty space enough for a modest
+enterprise--"space enough for almost anything, to start with,"
+Adams thought, as he walked through the low buildings, one day,
+when he was prospecting in that section. "Yes, I suppose I COULD
+swing this," he thought. "If the process belonged to me, say,
+instead of being out of the question because it isn't my
+property--or if I was the kind of man to do such a thing anyhow,
+here would be something I could probably get hold of pretty
+cheap. They'd want a lot of money for a lease on that big
+building over the way--but this, why, I should think it'd be
+practically nothing at all."
+
+Then, by chance, meeting an agent he knew, he made
+inquiries--merely to satisfy a casual curiosity, he thought--and
+he found matters much as he had supposed, except that the owners
+of the big building did not wish to let, but to sell it, and this
+at a price so exorbitant that Adams laughed. But the long brick
+shed in the great muddy lot was for sale or to let, or "pretty
+near to be given away," he learned, if anybody would take it.
+
+Adams took it now, though without seeing that he had been
+destined to take it, and that some dreary wizard in the back of
+his head had foreseen all along that he would take it, and
+planned to be ready. He drove in his taxicab to look the place
+over again, then down-town to arrange for a lease; and came home
+to lunch with his wife and daughter. Things were "moving," he
+told them.
+
+He boasted a little of having acted so decisively, and said that
+since the dang thing had to be done, it was "going to be done
+RIGHT!" He was almost cheerful, in a feverish way, and when the
+cab came for him again, soon after lunch, he explained that he
+intended not only to get things done right, but also to "get 'em
+done quick!" Alice, following him to the front door, looked at
+him anxiously and asked if she couldn't help. He laughed at her
+grimly.
+
+"Then let me go along with you in the cab," she begged. "You
+don't look able to start in so hard, papa, just when you're
+barely beginning to get your strength back. Do let me go with
+you and see if I can't help--or at least take care of you if you
+should get to feeling badly."
+
+He declined, but upon pressure let her put a tiny bottle of
+spirits of ammonia in his pocket, and promised to make use of it
+if he "felt faint or anything." Then he was off again; and the
+next morning had men at work in his sheds, though the wages he
+had to pay frightened him.
+
+He directed the workmen in every detail, hurrying them by example
+and exhortations, and receiving, in consequence, several
+declarations of independence, as well as one resignation, which
+took effect immediately. "Yous capitalusts seem to think a man's
+got nothin' to do but break his back p'doosin' wealth fer yous to
+squander," the resigning person loudly complained. "You look
+out: the toiler's day is a-comin', and it ain't so fur off,
+neither!" But the capitalist was already out of hearing, gone to
+find a man to take this orator's place.
+
+By the end of the week, Adams felt that he had moved
+satisfactorily forward in his preparations for the simple
+equipment he needed; but he hated the pause of Sunday. He didn't
+WANT any rest, he told Alice impatiently, when she suggested that
+the idle day might be good for him.
+
+Late that afternoon he walked over to the apartment house where
+old Charley Lohr lived, and gave his friend the letter he wanted
+the head of Lamb and Company to receive "personally." "I'll take
+it as a mighty great favour in you to hand it to him personally,
+Charley," he said, in parting. "And you won't forget, in case he
+says anything about it--and remember if you ever do get a chance
+to put in a good word for me later, you know----"
+
+Old Charley promised to remember, and, when Mrs. Lohr came out
+of the "kitchenette," after the door closed, he said
+thoughtfully, "Just skin and bones."
+
+"You mean Mr. Adams is?" Mrs. Lohr inquired.
+
+"Who'd you think I meant?" he returned. "One o' these partridges
+in the wall-paper?"
+
+"Did he look so badly?"
+
+"Looked kind of distracted to me," her husband replied. "These
+little thin fellers can stand a heap sometimes, though. He'll be
+over here again Monday."
+
+"Did he say he would?"
+
+"No," said Lohr. "But he will. You'll see. He'll be over to
+find out what the big boss says when I give him this letter.
+Expect I'd be kind of anxious, myself, if I was him."
+
+"Why would you? What's Mr. Adams doing to be so anxious about?"
+
+Lohr's expression became one of reserve, the look of a man who
+has found that when he speaks his inner thoughts his wife jumps
+too far to conclusions. "Oh, nothing," he said. "Of course any
+man starting up a new business is bound to be pretty nervous a
+while. He'll be over here to-morrow evening, all right; you'll
+see."
+
+The prediction was fulfilled: Adams arrived just after Mrs. Lohr
+had removed the dinner dishes to her "kitchenette"; but Lohr had
+little information to give his caller.
+
+"He didn't say a word, Virgil; nary a word. I took it into his
+office and handed it to him, and he just sat and read it; that's
+all. I kind of stood around as long as I could, but he was
+sittin' at his desk with his side to me, and he never turned
+around full toward me, as it were, so I couldn't hardly even tell
+anything. All I know: he just read it."
+
+"Well, but see here," Adams began, nervously. "Well----"
+
+"Well what, Virg?"
+
+"Well, but what did he say when he DID speak?"
+
+"He didn't speak. Not so long I was in there, anyhow. He just
+sat there and read it. Read kind of slow. Then, when he came to
+the end, he turned back and started to read it all over again.
+By that time there was three or four other men standin' around in
+the office waitin' to speak to him, and I had to go."
+
+Adams sighed, and stared at the floor, irresolute. "Well, I'll
+be getting along back home then, I guess, Charley. So you're
+sure you couldn't tell anything what he might have thought about
+it, then?"
+
+"Not a thing in the world. I've told you all I know, Virg."
+
+"I guess so, I guess so," Adams said, mournfully. "I feel mighty
+obliged to you, Charley Lohr; mighty obliged. Good-night to
+you." And he departed, sighing in perplexity.
+
+On his way home, preoccupied with many thoughts, he walked so
+slowly that once or twice he stopped and stood motionless for a
+few moments, without being aware of it; and when he reached the
+juncture of the sidewalk with the short brick path that led to
+his own front door, he stopped again, and stood for more than a
+minute. "Ah, I wish I knew," he whispered, plaintively. "I do
+wish I knew what he thought about it."
+
+He was roused by a laugh that came lightly from the little
+veranda near by. "Papa!" Alice called gaily. "What are you
+standing there muttering to yourself about?"
+
+"Oh, are you there, dearie?" he said, and came up the path. A
+tall figure rose from a chair on the veranda.
+
+"Papa, this is Mr. Russell."
+
+The two men shook hands, Adams saying, "Pleased to make your
+acquaintance," as they looked at each other in the faint light
+diffused through the opaque glass in the upper part of the door.
+Adams's impression was of a strong and tall young man,
+fashionable but gentle; and Russell's was of a dried, little old
+business man with a grizzled moustache, worried bright eyes,
+shapeless dark clothes, and a homely manner.
+
+"Nice evening," Adams said further, as their hands parted. "Nice
+time o' year it is, but we don't always have as good weather as
+this; that's the trouble of it. Well----" He went to the door.
+"Well--I bid you good evening," he said, and retired within the
+house.
+
+Alice laughed. "He's the old-fashionedest man in town, I suppose
+and frightfully impressed with you, I could see!"
+
+"What nonsense!" said Russell. "How could anybody be impressed
+with me?"
+
+"Why not? Because you're quiet? Good gracious! Don't you know
+that you're the most impressive sort? We chatterers spend all
+our time playing to you quiet people."
+
+"Yes; we're only the audience."
+
+"'Only!'" she echoed. "Why, we live for you, and we can't live
+without you."
+
+"I wish you couldn't," said Russell. "That would be a new
+experience for both of us, wouldn't it?"
+
+"It might be a rather bleak one for me," she answered, lightly.
+"I'm afraid I'll miss these summer evenings with you when they're
+over. I'll miss them enough, thanks!"
+
+"Do they have to be over some time?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, everything's over some time, isn't it?"
+
+Russell laughed at her. "Don't let's look so far ahead as that,"
+he said. "We don't need to be already thinking of the cemetery,
+do we?"
+
+"I didn't," she said, shaking her head. "Our summer evenings
+will be over before then, Mr. Russell."
+
+"Why?" he asked.
+
+"Good heavens!" she said. "THERE'S laconic eloquence: almost a
+proposal in a single word! Never mind, I shan't hold you to it.
+But to answer you: well, I'm always looking ahead, and somehow I
+usually see about how things are coming out."
+
+"Yes," he said. "I suppose most of us do; at least it seems as
+if we did, because we so seldom feel surprised by the way they do
+come out. But maybe that's only because life isn't like a play
+in a theatre, and most things come about so gradually we get used
+to them."
+
+"No, I'm sure I can see quite a long way ahead," she insisted,
+gravely. "And it doesn't seem to me as if our summer evenings
+could last very long. Something'll interfere--somebody will, I
+mean--they'll SAY something----"
+
+"What if they do?"
+
+She moved her shoulders in a little apprehensive shiver. "It'll
+change you," she said. "I'm just sure something spiteful's going
+to happen to me. You'll feel differently about--things."
+
+"Now, isn't that an idea!" he exclaimed.
+
+"It will," she insisted. "I know something spiteful's going to
+happen!"
+
+"You seem possessed by a notion not a bit flattering to me," he
+remarked.
+
+"Oh, but isn't it? That's just what it is! Why isn't it?"
+
+"Because it implies that I'm made of such soft material the
+slightest breeze will mess me all up. I'm not so like that as I
+evidently appear; and if it's true that we're afraid other people
+will do the things we'd be most likely to do ourselves, it seems
+to me that I ought to be the one to be afraid. I ought to be
+afraid that somebody may say something about me to you that will
+make you believe I'm a professional forger."
+
+"No. We both know they won't," she said. "We both know you're
+the sort of person everybody in the world says nice things
+about." She lifted her hand to silence him as he laughed at
+this. "Oh, of course you are! I think perhaps you're a little
+flirtatious--most quiet men have that one sly way with 'em--oh,
+yes, they do! But you happen to be the kind of man everybody
+loves to praise. And if you weren't, _I_ shouldn't hear anything
+terrible about you. I told you I was unpopular: I don't see
+anybody at all any more. The only man except you who's been to
+see me in a month is that fearful little fat Frank Dowling, and I
+sent word to HIM I wasn't home. Nobody'd tell me of your
+wickedness, you see."
+
+"Then let me break some news to you," Russell said. "Nobody
+would tell me of yours, either. Nobody's even mentioned you to
+me."
+
+She burlesqued a cry of anguish. "That IS obscurity! I suppose
+I'm too apt to forget that they say the population's about half a
+million nowadays. There ARE other people to talk about, you
+feel, then?"
+
+"None that I want to," he said. "But I should think the size of
+the place might relieve your mind of what seems to insist on
+burdening it. Besides, I'd rather you thought me a better man
+than you do."
+
+"What kind of a man do I think you are?"
+
+"The kind affected by what's said about people instead of by what
+they do themselves."
+
+"Aren't you?"
+
+"No, I'm not," he said. "If you want our summer evenings to be
+over you'll have to drive me away yourself."
+
+"Nobody else could?"
+
+"No."
+
+She was silent, leaning forward, with her elbows on her knees and
+her clasped hands against her lips. Then, not moving, she said
+softly:
+
+"Well--I won't!"
+
+She was silent again, and he said nothing, but looked at her,
+seeming to be content with looking. Her attitude was one only a
+graceful person should assume, but she was graceful; and, in the
+wan light, which made a prettily shaped mist of her, she had
+beauty. Perhaps it was beauty of the hour, and of the love scene
+almost made into form by what they had both just said, but she
+had it; and though beauty of the hour passes, he who sees it will
+long remember it and the hour when it came.
+
+"What are you thinking of?" he asked.
+
+She leaned back in her chair and did not answer at once. Then
+she said:
+
+"I don't know; I doubt if I was thinking of anything. It seems
+to me I wasn't. I think I was just being sort of sadly happy
+just then."
+
+"Were you? Was it 'sadly,' too?"
+
+"Don't you know?" she said. "It seems to me that only little
+children can be just happily happy. I think when we get older
+our happiest moments are like the one I had just then: it's as if
+we heard strains of minor music running through them--oh, so
+sweet, but oh, so sad!"
+
+"But what makes it sad for YOU?"
+
+"I don't know," she said, in a lighter tone. "Perhaps it's a
+kind of useless foreboding I seem to have pretty often. It may
+be that--or it may be poor papa."
+
+"You ARE a funny, delightful girl, though!" Russell laughed.
+"When your father's so well again that he goes out walking in the
+evenings!"
+
+"He does too much walking," Alice said. "Too much altogether,
+over at his new plant. But there isn't any stopping him." She
+laughed and shook her head. "When a man gets an ambition to be a
+multi-millionaire his family don't appear to have much weight
+with him. He'll walk all he wants to, in spite of them."
+
+"I suppose so," Russell said, absently; then he leaned forward.
+"I wish I could understand better why you were 'sadly' happy."
+
+Meanwhile, as Alice shed what further light she could on this
+point, the man ambitious to be a "multi-millionaire" was indeed
+walking too much for his own good. He had gone to bed, hoping to
+sleep well and rise early for a long day's work, but he could not
+rest, and now, in his nightgown and slippers, he was pacing the
+floor of his room.
+
+"I wish I DID know," he thought, over and over. "I DO wish I
+knew how he feels about it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+That was a thought almost continuously in his mind, even when he
+was hardest at work; and, as the days went on and he could not
+free himself, he became querulous about it. "I guess I'm the
+biggest dang fool alive," he told his wife as they sat together
+one evening. "I got plenty else to bother me, without worrying
+my head off about what HE thinks. I can't help what he thinks;
+it's too late for that. So why should I keep pestering myself
+about it?"
+
+"It'll wear off, Virgil," Mrs. Adams said, reassuringly. She
+was gentle and sympathetic with him, and for the first time in
+many years he would come to sit with her and talk, when he had
+finished his day's work. He had told her, evading her eye, "Oh,
+I don't blame you. You didn't get after me to do this on your
+own account; you couldn't help it."
+
+"Yes; but it don't wear off," he complained. "This afternoon I
+was showing the men how I wanted my vats to go, and I caught my
+fool self standing there saying to my fool self, 'It's funny I
+don't hear how he feels about it from SOMEbody.' I was saying it
+aloud, almost--and it IS funny I don't hear anything!"
+
+"Well, you see what it means, don't you, Virgil? It only means
+he hasn't said anything to anybody about it. Don't you think
+you're getting kind of morbid over it?"
+
+"Maybe, maybe," he muttered.
+
+"Why, yes," she said, briskly. "You don't realize what a little
+bit of a thing all this is to him. It's been a long, long while
+since the last time you even mentioned glue to him, and he's
+probably forgotten everything about it."
+
+"You're off your base; it isn't like him to forget things," Adams
+returned, peevishly. "He may seem to forget 'em, but he don't."
+
+"But he's not thinking about this, or you'd have heard from him
+before now."
+
+Her husband shook his head. "Ah, that's just it!" he said. "Why
+HAVEN'T I heard from him?"
+
+"It's all your morbidness, Virgil. Look at Walter: if Mr. Lamb
+held this up against you, would he still let Walter stay there?
+Wouldn't he have discharged Walter if he felt angry with you?"
+
+"That dang boy!" Adams said. "If he WANTED to come with me now,
+I wouldn't hardly let him, What do you suppose makes him so
+bull-headed?"
+
+"But hasn't he a right to choose for himself?" she asked. "I
+suppose he feels he ought to stick to what he thinks is sure pay.
+As soon as he sees that you're going to succeed with the
+glue-works he'll want to be with you quick enough."
+
+"Well, he better get a little sense in his head," Adams returned,
+crossly. "He wanted me to pay him a three-hundred-dollar bonus
+in advance, when anybody with a grain of common sense knows I
+need every penny I can lay my hands on!"
+
+"Never mind," she said. "He'll come around later and be glad of
+the chance."
+
+"He'll have to beg for it then! _I_ won't ask him again."
+
+"Oh, Walter will come out all right; you needn't worry. And
+don't you see that Mr. Lamb's not discharging him means there's
+no hard feeling against you, Virgil?"
+
+"I can't make it out at all," he said, frowning. "The only thing
+I can THINK it means is that J. A. Lamb is so fair-minded--and
+of course he IS one of the fair-mindedest men alive I suppose
+that's the reason he hasn't fired Walter. He may know," Adams
+concluded, morosely--"he may know that's just another thing to
+make me feel all the meaner: keeping my boy there on a salary
+after I've done him an injury."
+
+"Now, now!" she said, trying to comfort him. "You couldn't do
+anybody an injury to save your life, and everybody knows it."
+
+"Well, anybody ought to know I wouldn't WANT to do an injury, but
+this world isn't built so't we can do just what we want." He
+paused, reflecting. "Of course there may be one explanation of
+why Walter's still there: J. A. maybe hasn't noticed that he IS
+there. There's so many I expect he hardly knows him by sight."
+
+"Well, just do quit thinking about it," she urged him. "It only
+bothers you without doing any good. Don't you know that?"
+
+"Don't I, though!" he laughed, feebly. "I know it better'n
+anybody! How funny that is: when you know thinking about a thing
+only pesters you without helping anything at all, and yet you
+keep right on pestering yourself with it!"
+
+"But WHY?" she said. "What's the use when you know you haven't
+done anything wrong, Virgil? You said yourself you were going to
+improve the process so much it would be different from the old
+one, and you'd REALLY have a right to it."
+
+Adams had persuaded himself of this when he yielded; he had found
+it necessary to persuade himself of it--though there was a part
+of him, of course, that remained unpersuaded; and this
+discomfiting part of him was what made his present trouble.
+"Yes, I know," he said. "That's true, but I can't quite seem to
+get away from the fact that the principle of the process is a
+good deal the same--well, it's more'n that; it's just about the
+same as the one he hired Campbell and me to work out for him.
+Truth is, nobody could tell the difference, and I don't know as
+there IS any difference except in these improvements I'm making.
+Of course, the improvements do give me pretty near a perfect
+right to it, as a person might say; and that's one of the things
+I thought of putting in my letter to him; but I was afraid he'd
+just think I was trying to make up excuses, so I left it out. I
+kind of worried all the time I was writing that letter, because
+if he thought I WAS just making up excuses, why, it might set him
+just so much more against me."
+
+Ever since Mrs. Adams had found that she was to have her way,
+the depths of her eyes had been troubled by a continuous
+uneasiness; and, although she knew it was there, and sometimes
+veiled it by keeping the revealing eyes averted from her husband
+and children, she could not always cover it under that assumption
+of absent-mindedness. The uneasy look became vivid, and her
+voice was slightly tremulous now, as she said, "But what if he
+SHOULD be against you--although I don't believe he is, of
+course--you told me he couldn't DO anything to you, Virgil."
+
+"No," he said, slowly. "I can't see how he could do anything.
+It was just a secret, not a patent; the thing ain't patentable.
+I've tried to think what he could do--supposing he was to want
+to--but I can't figure out anything at all that would be any harm
+to me. There isn't any way in the world it could be made a
+question of law. Only thing he could do'd be to TELL people his
+side of it, and set 'em against me. I been kind of waiting for
+that to happen, all along."
+
+She looked somewhat relieved. "So did I expect it," she said.
+"I was dreading it most on Alice's account: it might have--well,
+young men are so easily influenced and all. But so far as the
+business is concerned, what if Mr. Lamb did talk? That wouldn't
+amount to much. It wouldn't affect the business; not to hurt.
+And, besides, he isn't even doing that."
+
+"No; anyhow not yet, it seems." And Adams sighed again,
+wistfully. "But I WOULD give a good deal to know what he
+thinks!"
+
+Before his surrender he had always supposed that if he did such
+an unthinkable thing as to seize upon the glue process for
+himself, what he would feel must be an overpowering shame. But
+shame is the rarest thing in the world: what he felt was this
+unremittent curiosity about his old employer's thoughts. It was
+an obsession, yet he did not want to hear what Lamb "thought"
+from Lamb himself, for Adams had a second obsession, and this was
+his dread of meeting the old man face to face. Such an encounter
+could happen only by chance and unexpectedly; since Adams would
+have avoided any deliberate meeting, so long as his legs had
+strength to carry him, even if Lamb came to the house to see him.
+
+But people do meet unexpectedly; and when Adams had to be
+down-town he kept away from the "wholesale district." One day he
+did see Lamb, as the latter went by in his car, impassive, going
+home to lunch; and Adams, in the crowd at a corner, knew that the
+old man had not seen him. Nevertheless, in a street car, on the
+way back to his sheds, an hour later, he was still subject to
+little shivering seizures of horror.
+
+He worked unceasingly, seeming to keep at it even in his sleep,
+for he always woke in the midst of a planning and estimating that
+must have been going on in his mind before consciousness of
+himself returned. Moreover, the work, thus urged, went rapidly,
+in spite of the high wages he had to pay his labourers for their
+short hours. "It eats money," he complained, and, in fact, by
+the time his vats and boilers were in place it had eaten almost
+all he could supply; but in addition to his equipment he now
+owned a stock of "raw material," raw indeed; and when operations
+should be a little further along he was confident his banker
+would be willing to "carry" him.
+
+Six weeks from the day he had obtained his lease he began his
+glue-making. The terrible smells came out of the sheds and went
+writhing like snakes all through that quarter of the town. A
+smiling man, strolling and breathing the air with satisfaction,
+would turn a corner and smile no more, but hurry. However,
+coloured people had almost all the dwellings of this old section
+to themselves; and although even they were troubled, there was
+recompense for them. Being philosophic about what appeared to
+them as in the order of nature, they sought neither escape nor
+redress, and soon learned to bear what the wind brought them.
+They even made use of it to enrich those figures of speech with
+which the native impulses of coloured people decorate their
+communications: they flavoured metaphor, simile, and invective
+with it; and thus may be said to have enjoyed it. But the man
+who produced it took a hot bath as soon as he reached his home
+the evening of that first day when his manufacturing began. Then
+he put on fresh clothes; but after dinner he seemed to be
+haunted, and asked his wife if she "noticed anything."
+
+She laughed and inquired what he meant.
+
+"Seems to me as if that glue-works smell hadn't quit hanging to
+me," he explained. "Don't you notice it?"
+
+"No! What an idea!"
+
+He laughed, too, but uneasily; and told her he was sure "the dang
+glue smell" was somehow sticking to him. Later, he went outdoors
+and walked up and down the small yard in the dusk; but now and
+then he stood still, with his head lifted, and sniffed the air
+suspiciously. "Can YOU smell it?" he called to Alice, who sat
+upon the veranda, prettily dressed and waiting in a reverie.
+
+"Smell what, papa?"
+
+"That dang glue-works."
+
+She did the same thing her mother had done: laughed, and said,
+"No! How foolish! Why, papa, it's over two miles from here!"
+
+"You don't get it at all?" he insisted.
+
+"The idea! The air is lovely to-night, papa."
+
+The air did not seem lovely to him, for he was positive that he
+detected the taint. He wondered how far it carried, and if J.
+A. Lamb would smell it, too, out on his own lawn a mile to the
+north; and if he did, would he guess what it was? Then Adams
+laughed at himself for such nonsense; but could not rid his
+nostrils of their disgust. To him the whole town seemed to smell
+of his glue-works.
+
+Nevertheless, the glue was making, and his sheds were busy.
+"Guess we're stirrin' up this ole neighbourhood with more than
+the smell," his foreman remarked one morning.
+
+"How's that?" Adams inquired.
+
+"That great big, enormous ole dead butterine factory across the
+street from our lot," the man said. "Nothin' like settin' an
+example to bring real estate to life. That place is full o'
+carpenters startin' in to make a regular buildin' of it again.
+Guess you ought to have the credit of it, because you was the
+first man in ten years to see any possibilities in this
+neighbourhood."
+
+Adams was pleased, and, going out to see for himself, heard a
+great hammering and sawing from within the building; while
+carpenters were just emerging gingerly upon the dangerous roof.
+He walked out over the dried mud of his deep lot, crossed the
+street, and spoke genially to a workman who was removing the
+broken glass of a window on the ground floor.
+
+"Here! What's all this howdy-do over here?"
+
+"Goin' to fix her all up, I guess," the workman said. "Big job
+it is, too."
+
+"Sh' think it would be."
+
+"Yes, sir; a pretty big job--a pretty big job. Got men at it on
+all four floors and on the roof. They're doin' it RIGHT."
+
+"Who's doing it?"
+
+"Lord! I d' know. Some o' these here big manufacturing
+corporations, I guess."
+
+"What's it going to be?"
+
+"They tell ME," the workman answered--"they tell ME she's goin'
+to be a butterine factory again. Anyways, I hope she won't be
+anything to smell like that glue-works you got over there not
+while I'm workin' around her, anyways!"
+
+"That smell's all right," Adams said. "You soon get used to it."
+
+"You do?" The man appeared incredulous. "Listen! I was over in
+France: it's a good thing them Dutchmen never thought of it; we'd
+of had to quit!"
+
+Adams laughed, and went back to his sheds. "I guess my foreman
+was right," he told his wife, that evening, with a little
+satisfaction. "As soon as one man shows enterprise enough to
+found an industry in a broken-down neighbourhood, somebody else
+is sure to follow. I kind of like the look of it: it'll help
+make our place seem sort of more busy and prosperous when it
+comes to getting a loan from the bank--and I got to get one
+mighty soon, too. I did think some that if things go as well as
+there's every reason to think they OUGHT to, I might want to
+spread out and maybe get hold of that old factory myself; but I
+hardly expected to be able to handle a proposition of that size
+before two or three years from now, and anyhow there's room
+enough on the lot I got, if we need more buildings some day.
+Things are going about as fine as I could ask: I hired some girls
+to-day to do the bottling--coloured girls along about sixteen to
+twenty years old. Afterwhile, I expect to get a machine to put
+the stuff in the little bottles, when we begin to get good
+returns; but half a dozen of these coloured girls can do it all
+right now, by hand. We're getting to have really quite a little
+plant over there: yes, sir, quite a regular little plant!"
+
+He chuckled, and at this cheerful sound, of a kind his wife had
+almost forgotten he was capable of producing, she ventured to put
+her hand upon his arm. They had gone outdoors, after dinner,
+taking two chairs with them, and were sitting through the late
+twilight together, keeping well away from the "front porch,"
+which was not yet occupied, however Alice was in her room
+changing her dress.
+
+"Well, honey," Mrs. Adams said, taking confidence not only to
+put her hand upon his arm, but to revive this disused
+endearment;--"it's grand to have you so optimistic. Maybe some
+time you'll admit I was right, after all. Everything's going so
+well, it seems a pity you didn't take this--this step--long ago.
+Don't you think maybe so, Virgil?"
+
+"Well--if I was ever going to, I don't know but I might as well
+of. I got to admit the proposition begins to look pretty good: I
+know the stuff'll sell, and I can't see a thing in the world to
+stop it. It does look good, and if--if----" He paused.
+
+"If what?" she said, suddenly anxious.
+
+He laughed plaintively, as if confessing a superstition. "It's
+funny--well, it's mighty funny about that smell. I've got so
+used to it at the plant I never seem to notice it at all over
+there. It's only when I get away. Honestly, can't you
+notice----?"
+
+"Virgil!" She lifted her hand to strike his arm chidingly. "Do
+quit harping on that nonsense!"
+
+"Oh, of course it don't amount to anything," he said. "A person
+can stand a good deal of just smell. It don't WORRY me any."
+
+"I should think not especially as there isn't any."
+
+"Well," he said, "I feel pretty fair over the whole thing--a lot
+better'n I ever expected to, anyhow. I don't know as there's any
+reason I shouldn't tell you so."
+
+She was deeply pleased with this acknowledgment, and her voice
+had tenderness in it as she responded: "There, honey! Didn't I
+always say you'd be glad if you did it?"
+
+Embarrassed, he coughed loudly, then filled his pipe and lit it.
+"Well," he said, slowly, "it's a puzzle. Yes, sir, it's a
+puzzle."
+
+"What is?"
+
+"Pretty much everything, I guess."
+
+As he spoke, a song came to them from a lighted window over their
+heads. Then the window darkened abruptly, but the song continued
+as Alice went down through the house to wait on the little
+veranda. "Mi chiamo Mimi," she sang, and in her voice throbbed
+something almost startling in its sweetness. Her father and
+mother listened, not speaking until the song stopped with the
+click of the wire screen at the front door as Alice came out.
+
+"My!" said her father. "How sweet she does sing! I don't know
+as I ever heard her voice sound nicer than it did just then."
+
+"There's something that makes it sound that way," his wife told
+him.
+
+"I suppose so," he said, sighing. "I suppose so. You think----"
+
+"She's just terribly in love with him!"
+
+"I expect that's the way it ought to be," he said, then drew upon
+his pipe for reflection, and became murmurous with the symptoms
+of melancholy laughter. "It don't make things less of a puzzle,
+though, does it?"
+
+"In what way, Virgil?"
+
+"Why, here," he said--"here we go through all this muck and moil
+to help fix things nicer for her at home, and what's it all
+amount to? Seems like she's just gone ahead the way she'd 'a'
+gone anyhow; and now, I suppose, getting ready to up and leave
+us! Ain't that a puzzle to you? It is to me."
+
+"Oh, but things haven't gone that far yet."
+
+"Why, you just said----"
+
+She gave a little cry of protest. "Oh, they aren't ENGAGED yet.
+Of course they WILL be; he's just as much interested in her as
+she is in him, but----"
+
+"Well, what's the trouble then?"
+
+"You ARE a simple old fellow!" his wife exclaimed, and then rose
+from her chair. "That reminds me," she said.
+
+"What of?" he asked. "What's my being simple remind you of?"
+
+"Nothing!" she laughed. "It wasn't you that reminded me. It was
+just something that's been on my mind. I don't believe he's
+actually ever been inside our house!"
+
+"Hasn't he?"
+
+"I actually don't believe he ever has," she said. "Of course we
+must----" She paused, debating.
+
+"We must what?"
+
+"I guess I better talk to Alice about it right now," she said.
+"He don't usually come for about half an hour yet; I guess I've
+got time." And with that she walked away, leaving him to his
+puzzles.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+Alice was softly crooning to herself as her mother turned the
+corner of the house and approached through the dusk.
+
+"Isn't it the most BEAUTIFUL evening!" the daughter said. "WHY
+can't summer last all year? Did you ever know a lovelier
+twilight than this, mama?"
+
+Mrs. Adams laughed, and answered, "Not since I was your age, I
+expect."
+
+Alice was wistful at once. "Don't they stay beautiful after my
+age?"
+
+"Well, it's not the same thing."
+
+"Isn't it? Not ever?"
+
+"You may have a different kind from mine," the mother said, a
+little sadly. "I think you will, Alice. You deserve----"
+
+"No, I don't. I don't deserve anything, and I know it. But I'm
+getting a great deal these days--more than I ever dreamed COULD
+come to me. I'm-- I'm pretty happy, mama!"
+
+"Dearie!" Her mother would have kissed her, but Alice drew away.
+
+"Oh, I don't mean----" She laughed nervously. "I wasn't meaning
+to tell you I'm ENGAGED, mama. We're not. I mean--oh! things
+seem pretty beautiful in spite of all I've done to spoil 'em."
+
+"You?" Mrs. Adams cried, incredulously. "What have you done to
+spoil anything?"
+
+"Little things," Alice said. "A thousand little silly--oh,
+what's the use? He's so honestly what he is--just simple and
+good and intelligent--I feel a tricky mess beside him! I don't
+see why he likes me; and sometimes I'm afraid he wouldn't if he
+knew me."
+
+"He'd just worship you," said the fond mother. "And the more he
+knew you, the more he'd worship you."
+
+Alice shook her head. "He's not the worshiping kind. Not like
+that at all. He's more----"
+
+But Mrs. Adams was not interested in this analysis, and she
+interrupted briskly, "Of course it's time your father and I
+showed some interest in him. I was just saying I actually don't
+believe he's ever been inside the house."
+
+"No," Alice said, musingly; "that's true: I don't believe he has.
+Except when we've walked in the evening we've always sat out
+here, even those two times when it was drizzly. It's so much
+nicer."
+
+"We'll have to do SOMETHING or other, of course," her mother
+said.
+
+"What like?"
+
+"I was thinking----" Mrs. Adams paused. "Well, of course we
+could hardly put off asking him to dinner, or something, much
+longer."
+
+Alice was not enthusiastic; so far from it, indeed, that there
+was a melancholy alarm in her voice. "Oh, mama, must we? Do you
+think so?"
+
+"Yes, I do. I really do."
+
+"Couldn't we--well, couldn't we wait?"
+
+"It looks queer," Mrs. Adams said. "It isn't the thing at all
+for a young man to come as much as he does, and never more than
+just barely meet your father and mother. No. We ought to do
+something."
+
+"But a dinner!" Alice objected. "In the first place, there isn't
+anybody I want to ask. There isn't anybody I WOULD ask."
+
+"I didn't mean trying to give a big dinner," her mother
+explained. "I just mean having him to dinner. That mulatto
+woman, Malena Burns, goes out by the day, and she could bring a
+waitress. We can get some flowers for the table and some to put
+in the living-room. We might just as well go ahead and do it
+to-morrow as any other time; because your father's in a fine
+mood, and I saw Malena this afternoon and told her I might want
+her soon. She said she didn't have any engagements this week,
+and I can let her know to-night. Suppose when he comes you ask
+him for to-morrow, Alice. Everything'll be very nice, I'm sure.
+Don't worry about it."
+
+"Well--but----" Alice was uncertain.
+
+"But don't you see, it looks so queer, not to do SOMETHING?" her
+mother urged. "It looks so kind of poverty-stricken. We really
+oughtn't to wait any longer."
+
+Alice assented, though not with a good heart. "Very well, I'll
+ask him, if you think we've got to."
+
+"That matter's settled then," Mrs. Adams said. "I'll go
+telephone Malena, and then I'll tell your father about it."
+
+But when she went back to her husband, she found him in an
+excited state of mind, and Walter standing before him in the
+darkness. Adams was almost shouting, so great was his vehemence.
+
+"Hush, hush!" his wife implored, as she came near them. "They'll
+hear you out on the front porch!"
+
+"I don't care who hears me," Adams said, harshly, though he
+tempered his loudness. "Do you want to know what this boy's
+asking me for? I thought he'd maybe come to tell me he'd got a
+little sense in his head at last, and a little decency about
+what's due his family! I thought he was going to ask me to take
+him into my plant. No, ma'am; THAT'S not what he wants!"
+
+"No, it isn't," Walter said. In the darkness his face could not
+be seen; he stood motionless, in what seemed an apathetic
+attitude; and he spoke quietly, "No," he repeated. "That isn't
+what I want."
+
+"You stay down at that place," Adams went on, hotly, "instead of
+trying to be a little use to your family; and the only reason
+you're ALLOWED to stay there is because Mr. Lamb's never
+happened to notice you ARE still there! You just wait----"
+
+"You're off," Walter said, in the same quiet way. "He knows I'm
+there. He spoke to me yesterday: he asked me how I was getting
+along with my work."
+
+"He did?" Adams said, seeming not to believe him.
+
+"Yes. He did."
+
+"What else did he say, Walter?" Mrs. Adams asked quickly.
+
+"Nothin'. Just walked on."
+
+"I don't believe he knew who you were," Adams declared.
+
+"Think not? He called me 'Walter Adams.'"
+
+At this Adams was silent; and Walter, after waiting a moment,
+said:
+
+"Well, are you going to do anything about me? About what I told
+you I got to have?"
+
+"What is it, Walter?" his mother asked, since Adams did not
+speak.
+
+Walter cleared his throat, and replied in a tone as quiet as that
+he had used before, though with a slight huskiness, "I got to
+have three hundred and fifty dollars. You better get him to give
+it to me if you can."
+
+Adams found his voice. "Yes," he said, bitterly. "That's all he
+asks! He won't do anything I ask HIM to, and in return he asks
+me for three hundred and fifty dollars! That's all!"
+
+"What in the world!" Mrs. Adams exclaimed. "What FOR, Walter?"
+
+"I got to have it," Walter said.
+
+"But what FOR?"
+
+His quiet huskiness did not alter. "I got to have it."
+
+"But can't you tell us----"
+
+"I got to have it."
+
+"That's all you can get out of him," Adams said. "He seems to
+think it'll bring him in three hundred and fifty dollars!"
+
+A faint tremulousness became evident in the husky voice.
+"Haven't you got it?"
+
+"NO, I haven't got it!" his father answered. "And I've got to go
+to a bank for more than my pay-roll next week. Do you think I'm
+a mint?"
+
+"I don't understand what you mean, Walter," Mrs. Adams
+interposed, perplexed and distressed. "If your father had the
+money, of course he'd need every cent of it, especially just now,
+and, anyhow, you could scarcely expect him to give it to you,
+unless you told us what you want with it. But he hasn't got it."
+
+"All right," Walter said; and after standing a moment more, in
+silence, he added, impersonally, "I don't see as you ever did
+anything much for me, anyhow either of you."
+
+Then, as if this were his valedictory, he turned his back upon
+them, walked away quickly, and was at once lost to their sight in
+the darkness.
+
+"There's a fine boy to've had the trouble of raising!" Adams
+grumbled. "Just crazy, that's all."
+
+"What in the world do you suppose he wants all that money for?"
+his wife said, wonderingly. "I can't imagine what he could DO
+with it. I wonder----" She paused. "I wonder if he----"
+
+"If he what?" Adams prompted her irritably.
+
+"If he COULD have bad--associates."
+
+"God knows!" said Adams. "_I_ don't! It just looks to me like
+he had something in him I don't understand. You can't keep your
+eye on a boy all the time in a city this size, not a boy Walter's
+age. You got a girl pretty much in the house, but a boy'll
+follow his nature. _I_ don't know what to do with him!"
+
+Mrs. Adams brightened a little. "He'll come out all right," she
+said. "I'm sure he will. I'm sure he'd never be anything really
+bad: and he'll come around all right about the glue-works, too;
+you'll see. Of course every young man wants money--it doesn't
+prove he's doing anything wrong just because he asks you for it."
+
+"No. All it proves to me is that he hasn't got good sense asking
+me for three hundred and fifty dollars, when he knows as well as
+you do the position I'm in! If I wanted to, I couldn't hardly
+let him have three hundred and fifty cents, let alone dollars!"
+
+"I'm afraid you'll have to let ME have that much--and maybe a
+little more," she ventured, timidly; and she told him of her
+plans for the morrow. He objected vehemently.
+
+"Oh, but Alice has probably asked him by this time," Mrs. Adams
+said. "It really must be done, Virgil: you don't want him to
+think she's ashamed of us, do you?"
+
+"Well, go ahead, but just let me stay away," he begged. "Of
+course I expect to undergo a kind of talk with him, when he gets
+ready to say something to us about Alice, but I do hate to have
+to sit through a fashionable dinner."
+
+"Why, it isn't going to bother you," she said; "just one young
+man as a guest."
+
+"Yes, I know; but you want to have all this fancy cookin'; and I
+see well enough you're going to get that old dress suit out of
+the cedar chest in the attic, and try to make me put it on me."
+
+"I do think you better, Virgil."
+
+"I hope the moths have got in it," he said. "Last time I wore it
+was to the banquet, and it was pretty old then. Of course I
+didn't mind wearing it to the banquet so much, because that was
+what you might call quite an occasion." He spoke with some
+reminiscent complacency; "the banquet," an affair now five years
+past, having provided the one time in his life when he had been
+so distinguished among his fellow-citizens as to receive an
+invitation to be present, with some seven hundred others, at the
+annual eating and speech-making of the city's Chamber of
+Commerce. "Anyhow, as you say, I think it would look foolish of
+me to wear a dress suit for just one young man," he went on
+protesting, feebly. "What's the use of all so much howdy-do,
+anyway? You don't expect him to believe we put on all that style
+every night, do you? Is that what you're after?"
+
+"Well, we want him to think we live nicely," she admitted.
+
+"So that's it!" he said, querulously. "You want him to think
+that's our regular gait, do you? Well, he'll know better about
+me, no matter how you fix me up, because he saw me in my regular
+suit the evening she introduced me to him, and he could tell
+anyway I'm not one of these moving-picture sporting-men that's
+always got a dress suit on. Besides, you and Alice certainly
+have some idea he'll come AGAIN, haven't you? If they get things
+settled between 'em he'll be around the house and to meals most
+any time, won't he? You don't hardly expect to put on style all
+the time, I guess. Well, he'll see then that this kind of thing
+was all show-off, and bluff, won't he? What about it?"
+
+"Oh, well, by THAT time----" She left the sentence unfinished, as
+if absently. "You could let us have a little money for
+to-morrow, couldn't you, honey?"
+
+"Oh, I reckon, I reckon," he mumbled. "A girl like Alice is some
+comfort: she don't come around acting as if she'd commit suicide
+if she didn't get three hundred and fifty dollars in the next
+five minutes. I expect I can spare five or six dollars for your
+show-off if I got to."
+
+However, she finally obtained fifteen before his bedtime; and the
+next morning "went to market" after breakfast, leaving Alice to
+make the beds. Walter had not yet come downstairs. "You had
+better call him," Mrs. Adams said, as she departed with a big
+basket on her arm. "I expect he's pretty sleepy; he was out so
+late last night I didn't hear him come in, though I kept awake
+till after midnight, listening for him. Tell him he'll be late
+to work if he doesn't hurry; and see that he drinks his coffee,
+even if he hasn't time for anything else. And when Malena comes,
+get her started in the kitchen: show her where everything is."
+She waved her hand, as she set out for a corner where the cars
+stopped. "Everything'll be lovely. Don't forget about Walter."
+
+Nevertheless, Alice forgot about Walter for a few minutes. She
+closed the door, went into the "living-room" absently, and
+stared vaguely at one of the old brown-plush rocking-chairs
+there. Upon her forehead were the little shadows of an
+apprehensive reverie, and her thoughts overlapped one another in
+a fretful jumble. "What will he think? These old
+chairs--they're hideous. I'll scrub those soot-streaks on the
+columns: it won't do any good, though. That long crack in the
+column--nothing can help it. What will he think of papa? I hope
+mama won't talk too much. When he thinks of Mildred's house, or
+of Henrietta's, or any of 'em, beside this-- She said she'd buy
+plenty of roses; that ought to help some. Nothing could be done
+about these horrible chairs: can't take 'em up in the attic--a
+room's got to have chairs! Might have rented some. No; if he
+ever comes again he'd see they weren't here. 'If he ever comes
+again'--oh, it won't be THAT bad! But it won't be what he
+expects. I'm responsible for what he expects: he expects just
+what the airs I've put on have made him expect. What did I want
+to pose so to him for--as if papa were a wealthy man and all
+that? What WILL he think? The photograph of the Colosseum's a
+rather good thing, though. It helps some--as if we'd bought it
+in Rome perhaps. I hope he'll think so; he believes I've been
+abroad, of course. The other night he said, 'You remember the
+feeling you get in the Sainte-Chapelle'.--There's another lie of
+mine, not saying I didn't remember because I'd never been there.
+What makes me do it? Papa MUST wear his evening clothes. But
+Walter----"
+
+With that she recalled her mother's admonition, and went upstairs
+to Walter's door. She tapped upon it with her fingers.
+
+"Time to get up, Walter. The rest of us had breakfast over half
+an hour ago, and it's nearly eight o'clock. You'll be late.
+Hurry down and I'll have some coffee and toast ready for you."
+There came no sound from within the room, so she rapped louder.
+
+"Wake up, Walter!"
+
+She called and rapped again, without getting any response, and
+then, finding that the door yielded to her, opened it and went
+in. Walter was not there.
+
+He had been there, however; had slept upon the bed, though not
+inside the covers; and Alice supposed he must have come home so
+late that he had been too sleepy to take off his clothes. Near
+the foot of the bed was a shallow closet where he kept his "other
+suit" and his evening clothes; and the door stood open, showing a
+bare wall. Nothing whatever was in the closet, and Alice was
+rather surprised at this for a moment. "That's queer," she
+murmured; and then she decided that when he woke he found the
+clothes he had slept in "so mussy" he had put on his "other
+suit," and had gone out before breakfast with the mussed clothes
+to have them pressed, taking his evening things with them.
+Satisfied with this explanation, and failing to observe that it
+did not account for the absence of shoes from the closet floor,
+she nodded absently, "Yes, that must be it"; and, when her mother
+returned, told her that Walter had probably breakfasted
+down-town. They did not delay over this; the coloured woman had
+arrived, and the basket's disclosures were important.
+
+"I stopped at Worlig's on the way back," said Mrs. Adams,
+flushed with hurry and excitement. "I bought a can of caviar
+there. I thought we'd have little sandwiches brought into the
+'living-room' before dinner, the way you said they did when you
+went to that dinner at the----"
+
+"But I think that was to go with cocktails, mama, and of course
+we haven't----"
+
+"No," Mrs. Adams said. "Still, I think it would be nice. We
+can make them look very dainty, on a tray, and the waitress can
+bring them in. I thought we'd have the soup already on the
+table; and we can walk right out as soon as we have the
+sandwiches, so it won't get cold. Then, after the soup, Malena
+says she can make sweetbread pates with mushrooms: and for the
+meat course we'll have larded fillet. Malena's really a fancy
+cook, you know, and she says she can do anything like that to
+perfection. We'll have peas with the fillet, and potato balls
+and Brussels sprouts. Brussels sprouts are fashionable now, they
+told me at market. Then will come the chicken salad, and after
+that the ice-cream--she's going to make an angel-food cake to go
+with it--and then coffee and crackers and a new kind of cheese I
+got at Worlig's, he says is very fine."
+
+Alice was alarmed. "Don't you think perhaps it's too much,
+mama?"
+
+"It's better to have too much than too little," her mother said,
+cheerfully. "We don't want him to think we're the kind that
+skimp. Lord knows we have to enough, though, most of the time!
+Get the flowers in water, child. I bought 'em at market because
+they're so much cheaper there, but they'll keep fresh and nice.
+You fix 'em any way you want. Hurry! It's got to be a busy
+day."
+
+She had bought three dozen little roses. Alice took them and
+began to arrange them in vases, keeping the stems separated as
+far as possible so that the clumps would look larger. She put
+half a dozen in each of three vases in the "living-room," placing
+one vase on the table in the center of the room, and one at each
+end of the mantelpiece. Then she took the rest of the roses to
+the dining-room; but she postponed the arrangement of them until
+the table should be set, just before dinner. She was thoughtful;
+planning to dry the stems and lay them on the tablecloth like a
+vine of roses running in a delicate design, if she found that the
+dozen and a half she had left were enough for that. If they
+weren't she would arrange them in a vase.
+
+She looked a long time at the little roses in the basin of water,
+where she had put them; then she sighed, and went away to heavier
+tasks, while her mother worked in the kitchen with Malena. Alice
+dusted the "living-room" and the dining-room vigorously, though
+all the time with a look that grew more and more pensive; and
+having dusted everything, she wiped the furniture; rubbed it
+hard. After that, she washed the floors and the woodwork.
+
+Emerging from the kitchen at noon, Mrs. Adams found her daughter
+on hands and knees, scrubbing the bases of the columns between
+the hall and the "living-room."
+
+"Now, dearie," she said, "you mustn't tire yourself out, and
+you'd better come and eat something. Your father said he'd get a
+bite down-town to-day--he was going down to the bank--and Walter
+eats down-town all the time lately, so I thought we wouldn't
+bother to set the table for lunch. Come on and we'll have
+something in the kitchen."
+
+"No," Alice said, dully, as she went on with the work. "I don't
+want anything."
+
+Her mother came closer to her. "Why, what's the matter?" she
+asked, briskly. "You seem kind of pale, to me; and you don't
+look--you don't look HAPPY."
+
+"Well----" Alice began, uncertainly, but said no more.
+
+"See here!" Mrs. Adams exclaimed. "This is all just for you!
+You ought to be ENJOYING it. Why, it's the first time
+we've--we've entertained in I don't know how long! I guess it's
+almost since we had that little party when you were eighteen.
+What's the matter with you?"
+
+"Nothing. I don't know."
+
+"But, dearie, aren't you looking FORWARD to this evening?"
+
+The girl looked up, showing a pallid and solemn face. "Oh, yes,
+of course," she said, and tried to smile. "Of course we had to
+do it--I do think it'll be nice. Of course I'm looking forward
+to it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+She was indeed "looking forward" to that evening, but in a cloud
+of apprehension; and, although she could never have guessed it,
+this was the simultaneous condition of another person--none other
+than the guest for whose pleasure so much cooking and scrubbing
+seemed to be necessary. Moreover, Mr. Arthur Russell's
+premonitions were no product of mere coincidence; neither had any
+magical sympathy produced them. His state of mind was rather the
+result of rougher undercurrents which had all the time been
+running beneath the surface of a romantic friendship.
+
+Never shrewder than when she analyzed the gentlemen, Alice did
+not libel him when she said he was one of those quiet men who are
+a bit flirtatious, by which she meant that he was a bit
+"susceptible," the same thing--and he had proved himself
+susceptible to Alice upon his first sight of her. "There!" he
+said to himself. "Who's that?" And in the crowd of girls at his
+cousin's dance, all strangers to him, she was the one he wanted
+to know.
+
+Since then, his summer evenings with her had been as secluded as
+if, for three hours after the falling of dusk, they two had drawn
+apart from the world to some dear bower of their own. The little
+veranda was that glamorous nook, with a faint golden light
+falling through the glass of the closed door upon Alice, and
+darkness elsewhere, except for the one round globe of the street
+lamp at the corner. The people who passed along the sidewalk,
+now and then, were only shadows with voices, moving vaguely under
+the maple trees that loomed in obscure contours against the
+stars. So, as the two sat together, the back of the world was
+the wall and closed door behind them; and Russell, when he was
+away from Alice, always thought of her as sitting there before
+the closed door. A glamour was about her thus, and a spell upon
+him; but he had a formless anxiety never put into words: all the
+pictures of her in his mind stopped at the closed door.
+
+He had another anxiety; and, for the greater part, this was of
+her own creating. She had too often asked him (no matter how
+gaily) what he heard about her, too often begged him not to hear
+anything. Then, hoping to forestall whatever he might hear, she
+had been at too great pains to account for it, to discredit and
+mock it; and, though he laughed at her for this, telling her
+truthfully he did not even hear her mentioned, the everlasting
+irony that deals with all such human forefendings prevailed.
+
+Lately, he had half confessed to her what a nervousness she had
+produced. "You make me dread the day when I'll hear somebody
+speaking of you. You're getting me so upset about it that if I
+ever hear anybody so much as say the name 'Alice Adams,' I'll
+run!" The confession was but half of one because he laughed; and
+she took it for an assurance of loyalty in the form of burlesque.
+
+She misunderstood: he laughed, but his nervousness was genuine.
+
+After any stroke of events, whether a happy one or a catastrophe,
+we see that the materials for it were a long time gathering, and
+the only marvel is that the stroke was not prophesied. What bore
+the air of fatal coincidence may remain fatal indeed, to this
+later view; but, with the haphazard aspect dispelled, there is
+left for scrutiny the same ancient hint from the Infinite to the
+effect that since events have never yet failed to be law-abiding,
+perhaps it were well for us to deduce that they will continue to
+be so until further notice.
+
+. . . On the day that was to open the closed door in the
+background of his pictures of Alice, Russell lunched with his
+relatives. There were but the four people, Russell and Mildred
+and her mother and father, in the great, cool dining-room.
+Arched French windows, shaded by awnings, admitted a mellow light
+and looked out upon a green lawn ending in a long conservatory,
+which revealed through its glass panes a carnival of plants in
+luxuriant blossom. From his seat at the table, Russell glanced
+out at this pretty display, and informed his cousins that he was
+surprised. "You have such a glorious spread of flowers all over
+the house," he said, "I didn't suppose you'd have any left out
+yonder. In fact, I didn't know there were so many splendid
+flowers in the world."
+
+Mrs. Palmer, large, calm, fair, like her daughter, responded
+with a mild reproach: "That's because you haven't been cousinly
+enough to get used to them, Arthur. You've almost taught us to
+forget what you look like."
+
+In defense Russell waved a hand toward her husband. "You see,
+he's begun to keep me so hard at work----"
+
+But Mr. Palmer declined the responsibility. "Up to four or five
+in the afternoon, perhaps," he said. "After that, the young
+gentleman is as much a stranger to me as he is to my family.
+I've been wondering who she could be."
+
+"When a man's preoccupied there must be a lady then?" Russell
+inquired.
+
+"That seems to be the view of your sex," Mrs; Palmer suggested.
+"It was my husband who said it, not Mildred or I."
+
+Mildred smiled faintly. "Papa may be singular in his ideas; they
+may come entirely from his own experience, and have nothing to do
+with Arthur."
+
+"Thank you, Mildred," her cousin said, bowing to her gratefully.
+"You seem to understand my character--and your father's quite as
+well!"
+
+However, Mildred remained grave in the face of this customary
+pleasantry, not because the old jest, worn round, like what
+preceded it, rolled in an old groove, but because of some
+preoccupation of her own. Her faint smile had disappeared, and,
+as her cousin's glance met hers, she looked down; yet not before
+he had seen in her eyes the flicker of something like a
+question--a question both poignant and dismayed. He may have
+understood it; for his own smile vanished at once in favour of a
+reciprocal solemnity.
+
+"You see, Arthur," Mrs. Palmer said, "Mildred is always a good
+cousin. She and I stand by you, even if you do stay away from us
+for weeks and weeks." Then, observing that he appeared to be so
+occupied with a bunch of iced grapes upon his plate that he had
+not heard her, she began to talk to her husband, asking him what
+was "going on down-town."
+
+Arthur continued to eat his grapes, but he ventured to look again
+at Mildred after a few moments. She, also, appeared to be
+occupied with a bunch of grapes though she ate none, and only
+pulled them from their stems. She sat straight, her features as
+composed and pure as those of a new marble saint in a cathedral
+niche; yet her downcast eyes seemed to conceal many thoughts; and
+her cousin, against his will, was more aware of what these
+thoughts might be than of the leisurely conversation between her
+father and mother. All at once, however, he heard something that
+startled him, and he listened--and here was the effect of all
+Alice's forefendings; he listened from the first with a sinking
+heart.
+
+Mr. Palmer, mildly amused by what he was telling his wife, had
+just spoken the words, "this Virgil Adams." What he had said
+was, "this Virgil Adams--that's the man's name. Queer case."
+
+"Who told you?" Mrs. Palmer inquired, not much interested.
+
+"Alfred Lamb," her husband answered. "He was laughing about his
+father, at the club. You see the old gentleman takes a great
+pride in his judgment of men, and always boasted to his sons that
+he'd never in his life made a mistake in trusting the wrong man.
+Now Alfred and James Albert, Junior, think they have a great joke
+on him; and they've twitted him so much about it he'll scarcely
+speak to them. From the first, Alfred says, the old chap's only
+repartee was, 'You wait and you'll see!' And they've asked him so
+often to show them what they're going to see that he won't say
+anything at all!"
+
+"He's a funny old fellow," Mrs. Palmer observed. "But he's so
+shrewd I can't imagine his being deceived for such a long time.
+Twenty years, you said?"
+
+"Yes, longer than that, I understand. It appears when this
+man--this Adams--was a young clerk, the old gentleman trusted him
+with one of his business secrets, a glue process that Mr. Lamb
+had spent some money to get hold of. The old chap thought this
+Adams was going to have quite a future with the Lamb concern, and
+of course never dreamed he was dishonest. Alfred says this Adams
+hasn't been of any real use for years, and they should have let
+him go as dead wood, but the old gentleman wouldn't hear of it,
+and insisted on his being kept on the payroll; so they just
+decided to look on it as a sort of pension. Well, one morning
+last March the man had an attack of some sort down there, and Mr.
+Lamb got his own car out and went home with him, himself, and
+worried about him and went to see him no end, all the time he was
+ill."
+
+"He would," Mrs. Palmer said, approvingly. "He's a kind-hearted
+creature, that old man."
+
+Her husband laughed. "Alfred says he thinks his kind-heartedness
+is about cured! It seems that as soon as the man got well again
+he deliberately walked off with the old gentleman's glue secret.
+Just calmly stole it! Alfred says he believes that if he had a
+stroke in the office now, himself, his father wouldn't lift a
+finger to help him!"
+
+Mrs. Palmer repeated the name to herself thoughtfully.
+"'Adams'--'Virgil Adams.' You said his name was Virgil Adams?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+She looked at her daughter. "Why, you know who that is,
+Mildred," she said, casually. "It's that Alice Adams's father,
+isn't it? Wasn't his name Virgil Adams?"
+
+"I think it is," Mildred said.
+
+Mrs. Palmer turned toward her husband. "You've seen this Alice
+Adams here. Mr. Lamb's pet swindler must be her father."
+
+Mr. Palmer passed a smooth hand over his neat gray hair, which
+was not disturbed by this effort to stimulate recollection. "Oh,
+yes," he said. "Of course--certainly. Quite a good-looking
+girl--one of Mildred's friends. How queer!"
+
+Mildred looked up, as if in a little alarm, but did not speak.
+Her mother set matters straight. "Fathers ARE amusing," she said
+smilingly to Russell, who was looking at her, though how fixedly
+she did not notice; for she turned from him at once to enlighten
+her husband. "Every girl who meets Mildred, and tries to push
+the acquaintance by coming here until the poor child has to hide,
+isn't a FRIEND of hers, my dear!"
+
+Mildred's eyes were downcast again, and a faint colour rose in
+her cheeks. "Oh, I shouldn't put it quite that way about Alice
+Adams," she said, in a low voice. "I saw something of her for a
+time. She's not unattractive in a way."
+
+Mrs. Palmer settled the whole case of Alice carelessly. "A
+pushing sort of girl," she said. "A very pushing little person."
+
+"I----" Mildred began; and, after hesitating, concluded, "I
+rather dropped her."
+
+"Fortunate you've done so," her father remarked, cheerfully.
+"Especially since various members of the Lamb connection are here
+frequently. They mightn't think you'd show great tact in having
+her about the place." He laughed, and turned to his cousin.
+"All this isn't very interesting to poor Arthur. How terrible
+people are with a newcomer in a town; they talk as if he knew all
+about everybody!"
+
+"But we don't know anything about these queer people, ourselves,"
+said Mrs. Palmer. "We know something about the girl, of
+course--she used to be a bit too conspicuous, in fact! However,
+as you say, we might find a subject more interesting for Arthur."
+
+She smiled whimsically upon the young man. "Tell the truth," she
+said. "Don't you fairly detest going into business with that
+tyrant yonder?"
+
+"What? Yes--I beg your pardon!" he stammered.
+
+"You were right," Mrs. Palmer said to her husband. "You've
+bored him so, talking about thievish clerks, he can't even answer
+an honest question."
+
+But Russell was beginning to recover his outward composure. "Try
+me again," he said. "I'm afraid I was thinking of something
+else."
+
+This was the best he found to say. There was a part of him that
+wanted to protest and deny, but he had not heat enough, in the
+chill that had come upon him. Here was the first "mention" of
+Alice, and with it the reason why it was the first: Mr. Palmer
+had difficulty in recalling her, and she happened to be spoken
+of, only because her father's betrayal of a benefactor's trust
+had been so peculiarly atrocious that, in the view of the
+benefactor's family, it contained enough of the element of humour
+to warrant a mild laugh at a club. There was the deadliness of
+the story: its lack of malice, even of resentment. Deadlier
+still were Mrs. Palmer's phrases: "a pushing sort of girl," "a
+very pushing little person," and "used to be a bit TOO
+conspicuous, in fact." But she spoke placidly and by chance;
+being as obviously without unkindly motive as Mr. Palmer was
+when he related the cause of Alfred Lamb's amusement. Her
+opinion of the obscure young lady momentarily her topic had been
+expressed, moreover, to her husband, and at her own table. She
+sat there, large, kind, serene--a protest might astonish but
+could not change her; and Russell, crumpling in his strained
+fingers the lace-edged little web of a napkin on his knee, found
+heart enough to grow red, but not enough to challenge her.
+
+She noticed his colour, and attributed it to the embarrassment of
+a scrupulously gallant gentleman caught in a lapse of attention
+to a lady. "Don't be disturbed," she said, benevolently.
+"People aren't expected to listen all the time to their
+relatives. A high colour's very becoming to you, Arthur; but it
+really isn't necessary between cousins. You can always be
+informal enough with us to listen only when you care to."
+
+His complexion continued to be ruddier than usual, however,
+throughout the meal, and was still somewhat tinted when Mrs.
+Palmer rose. "The man's bringing you cigarettes here," she said,
+nodding to the two gentlemen. "We'll give you a chance to do the
+sordid kind of talking we know you really like. Afterwhile,
+Mildred will show you what's in bloom in the hothouse, if you
+wish, Arthur."
+
+Mildred followed her, and, when they were alone in another of the
+spacious rooms, went to a window and looked out, while her mother
+seated herself near the center of the room in a gilt armchair,
+mellowed with old Aubusson tapestry. Mrs. Palmer looked
+thoughtfully at her daughter's back, but did not speak to her
+until coffee had been brought for them.
+
+"Thanks," Mildred said, not turning, "I don't care for any
+coffee, I believe."
+
+"No?" Mrs. Palmer said, gently. "I'm afraid our good-looking
+cousin won't think you're very talkative, Mildred. You spoke
+only about twice at lunch. I shouldn't care for him to get the
+idea you're piqued because he's come here so little lately,
+should you?"
+
+"No, I shouldn't," Mildred answered in a low voice, and with that
+she turned quickly, and came to sit near her mother. "But it's
+what I am afraid of! Mama, did you notice how red he got?"
+
+"You mean when he was caught not listening to a question of mine?
+Yes; it's very becoming to him."
+
+"Mama, I don't think that was the reason. I don't think it was
+because he wasn't listening, I mean."
+
+"No?"
+
+"I think his colour and his not listening came from the same
+reason," Mildred said, and although she had come to sit near her
+mother, she did not look at her. "I think it happened because
+you and papa----" She stopped.
+
+"Yes?" Mrs. Palmer said, good-naturedly, to prompt her. "Your
+father and I did something embarrassing?"
+
+"Mama, it was because of those things that came out about Alice
+Adams."
+
+"How could that bother Arthur? Does he know her?"
+
+"Don't you remember?" the daughter asked. "The day after my
+dance I mentioned how odd I thought it was in him--I was a little
+disappointed in him. I'd been seeing that he met everybody, of
+course, but she was the only girl HE asked to meet; and he did it
+as soon as he noticed her. I hadn't meant to have him meet
+her--in fact, I was rather sorry I'd felt I had to ask her,
+because she oh, well, she's the sort that 'tries for the new
+man,' if she has half a chance; and sometimes they seem quite
+fascinated--for a time, that is. I thought Arthur was above all
+that; or at the very least I gave him credit for being too
+sophisticated."
+
+"I see," Mrs. Palmer said, thoughtfully. "I remember now that
+you spoke of it. You said it seemed a little peculiar, but of
+course it really wasn't: a 'new man' has nothing to go by, except
+his own first impressions. You can't blame poor Arthur--she's
+quite a piquant looking little person. You think he's seen
+something of her since then?"
+
+Mildred nodded slowly. "I never dreamed such a thing till
+yesterday, and even then I rather doubted it--till he got so red,
+just now! I was surprised when he asked to meet her, but he just
+danced with her once and didn't mention her afterward; I forgot
+all about it--in fact, I virtually forgot all about HER. I'd
+seen quite a little of her----"
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Palmer. "She did keep coming here!"
+
+"But I'd just about decided that it really wouldn't do," Mildred
+went on. "She isn't--well, I didn't admire her."
+
+"No," her mother assented, and evidently followed a direct
+connection of thought in a speech apparently irrelevant. "I
+understand the young Malone wants to marry Henrietta. I hope she
+won't; he seems rather a gross type of person."
+
+"Oh, he's just one," Mildred said. "I don't know that he and
+Alice Adams were ever engaged--she never told me so. She may not
+have been engaged to any of them; she was just enough among the
+other girls to get talked about--and one of the reasons I felt a
+little inclined to be nice to her was that they seemed to be
+rather edging her out of the circle. It wasn't long before I saw
+they were right, though. I happened to mention I was going to
+give a dance and she pretended to take it as a matter of course
+that I meant to invite her brother--at least, I thought she
+pretended; she may have really believed it. At any rate, I had
+to send him a card; but I didn't intend to be let in for that
+sort of thing again, of course. She's what you said, 'pushing';
+though I'm awfully sorry you said it."
+
+"Why shouldn't I have said it, my dear?"
+
+"Of course I didn't say 'shouldn't.'" Mildred explained,
+gravely. "I meant only that I'm sorry it happened."
+
+"Yes; but why?"
+
+"Mama"--Mildred turned to her, leaning forward and speaking in a
+lowered voice--"Mama, at first the change was so little it seemed
+as if Arthur hardly knew it himself. He'd been lovely to me
+always, and he was still lovely to me but--oh, well, you've
+understood--after my dance it was more as if it was just his
+nature and his training to be lovely to me, as he would be to
+everyone a kind of politeness. He'd never said he CARED for me,
+but after that I could see he didn't. It was clear--after that.
+I didn't know what had happened; I couldn't think of anything I'd
+done. Mama--it was Alice Adams."
+
+Mrs. Palmer set her little coffee-cup upon the table beside her,
+calmly following her own motion with her eyes, and not seeming to
+realize with what serious entreaty her daughter's gaze was fixed
+upon her. Mildred repeated the last sentence of her revelation,
+and introduced a stress of insistence.
+
+"Mama, it WAS Alice Adams!"
+
+But Mrs. Palmer declined to be greatly impressed, so far as her
+appearance went, at least; and to emphasize her refusal, she
+smiled indulgently. "What makes you think so?"
+
+"Henrietta told me yesterday."
+
+At this Mrs. Palmer permitted herself to laugh softly aloud.
+"Good heavens! Is Henrietta a soothsayer? Or is she Arthur's
+particular confidante?"
+
+"No. Ella Dowling told her."
+
+Mrs. Palmer's laughter continued. "Now we have it!" she
+exclaimed. "It's a game of gossip: Arthur tells Ella, Ella tells
+Henrietta, and Henrietta tells----"
+
+"Don't laugh, please, mama," Mildred begged. "Of course Arthur
+didn't tell anybody. It's roundabout enough, but it's true. I
+know it! I hadn't quite believed it, but I knew it was true when
+he got so red. He looked--oh, for a second or so he looked
+--stricken! He thought I didn't notice it. Mama, he's been to
+see her almost every evening lately. They take long walks
+together. That's why he hasn't been here."
+
+Of Mrs. Palmer's laughter there was left only her indulgent
+smile, which she had not allowed to vanish. "Well, what of it?"
+she said.
+
+"Mama!"
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Palmer. "What of it?"
+
+"But don't you see?" Mildred's well-tutored voice, though
+modulated and repressed even in her present emotion, nevertheless
+had a tendency to quaver. "It's true. Frank Dowling was going
+to see her one evening and he saw Arthur sitting on the stoop
+with her, and didn't go in. And Ella used to go to school with a
+girl who lives across the street from here. She told Ella----"
+
+"Oh, I understand," Mrs. Palmer interrupted. "Suppose he does
+go there. My dear, I said, 'What of it?'"
+
+"I don't see what you mean, mama. I'm so afraid he might think
+we knew about it, and that you and papa said those things about
+her and her father on that account--as if we abused them because
+he goes there instead of coming here."
+
+"Nonsense!" Mrs. Palmer rose, went to a window, and, turning
+there, stood with her back to it, facing her daughter and looking
+at her cheerfully. "Nonsense, my dear! It was perfectly clear
+that she was mentioned by accident, and so was her father. What
+an extraordinary man! If Arthur makes friends with people like
+that, he certainly knows better than to expect to hear favourable
+opinions of them. Besides, it's only a little passing thing with
+him."
+
+"Mama! When he goes there almost every----"
+
+"Yes," Mrs. Palmer said, dryly. "It seems to me I've heard
+somewhere that other young men have gone there 'almost every!'
+She doesn't last, apparently. Arthur's gallant, and he's
+impressionable--but he's fastidious, and fastidiousness is
+always the check on impressionableness. A girl belongs to her
+family, too--and this one does especially, it strikes me!
+Arthur's very sensible; he sees more than you'd think."
+
+Mildred looked at her hopefully. "Then you don't believe he's
+likely to imagine we said those things of her in any meaning
+way?"
+
+At this, Mrs. Palmer laughed again. "There's one thing you seem
+not to have noticed, Mildred."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"It seems to have escaped your attention that he never said a
+word."
+
+"Mightn't that mean----?" Mildred began, but she stopped.
+
+"No, it mightn't," her mother replied, comprehending easily. "On
+the contrary, it might mean that instead of his feeling it too
+deeply to speak, he was getting a little illumination."
+
+Mildred rose and came to her. "WHY do you suppose he never told
+us he went there? Do you think he's--do you think he's pleased
+with her, and yet ashamed of it? WHY do you suppose he's never
+spoken of it?"
+
+"Ah, that," Mrs. Palmer said,--"that might possibly be her own
+doing. If it is, she's well paid by what your father and I said,
+because we wouldn't have said it if we'd known that Arthur----"
+She checked herself quickly. Looking over her daughter's
+shoulder, she saw the two gentlemen coming from the corridor
+toward the wide doorway of the room; and she greeted them
+cheerfully. "If you've finished with each other for a while,"
+she added, "Arthur may find it a relief to put his thoughts on
+something prettier than a trust company--and more fragrant."
+
+Arthur came to Mildred.
+
+"Your mother said at lunch that perhaps you'd----"
+
+"I didn't say 'perhaps,' Arthur," Mrs. Palmer interrupted, to
+correct him. "I said she would. If you care to see and smell
+those lovely things out yonder, she'll show them to you. Run
+along, children!"
+
+
+Half an hour later, glancing from a window, she saw them come
+from the hothouses and slowly cross the lawn. Arthur had a fine
+rose in his buttonhole and looked profoundly thoughtful.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+That morning and noon had been warm, though the stirrings of a
+feeble breeze made weather not flagrantly intemperate; but at
+about three o'clock in the afternoon there came out of the
+southwest a heat like an affliction sent upon an accursed people,
+and the air was soon dead of it. Dripping negro ditch-diggers
+whooped with satires praising hell and hot weather, as the
+tossing shovels flickered up to the street level, where sluggish
+male pedestrians carried coats upon hot arms, and fanned
+themselves with straw hats, or, remaining covered, wore soaked
+handkerchiefs between scalp and straw. Clerks drooped in silent,
+big department stores, stenographers in offices kept as close to
+electric fans as the intervening bulk of their employers would
+let them; guests in hotels left the lobbies and went to lie
+unclad upon their beds; while in hospitals the patients murmured
+querulously against the heat, and perhaps against some noisy
+motorist who strove to feel the air by splitting it, not troubled
+by any foreboding that he, too, that hour next week, might need
+quiet near a hospital. The "hot spell" was a true spell, one
+upon men's spirits; for it was so hot that, in suburban
+outskirts, golfers crept slowly back over the low undulations of
+their club lands, abandoning their matches and returning to
+shelter.
+
+Even on such a day, sizzling work had to be done, as in winter.
+There were glowing furnaces to be stoked, liquid metals to be
+poured; but such tasks found seasoned men standing to them; and
+in all the city probably no brave soul challenged the heat more
+gamely than Mrs. Adams did, when, in a corner of her small and
+fiery kitchen, where all day long her hired African immune cooked
+fiercely, she pressed her husband's evening clothes with a hot
+iron. No doubt she risked her life, but she risked it cheerfully
+in so good and necessary a service for him. She would have given
+her life for him at any time, and both his and her own for her
+children.
+
+Unconscious of her own heroism, she was surprised to find herself
+rather faint when she finished her ironing. However, she took
+heart to believe that the clothes looked better, in spite of one
+or two scorched places; and she carried them upstairs to her
+husband's room before increasing blindness forced her to grope
+for the nearest chair. Then, trying to rise and walk, without
+having sufficiently recovered, she had to sit down again; but
+after a little while she was able to get upon her feet; and,
+keeping her hand against the wall, moved successfully to the door
+of her own room. Here she wavered; might have gone down, had she
+not been stimulated by the thought of how much depended upon
+her;--she made a final great effort, and floundered across the
+room to her bureau, where she kept some simple restoratives.
+They served her need, or her faith in them did; and she returned
+to her work.
+
+She went down the stairs, keeping a still tremulous hand upon the
+rail; but she smiled brightly when Alice looked up from below,
+where the woodwork was again being tormented with superfluous
+attentions.
+
+"Alice, DON'T!" her mother said, commiseratingly. "You did all
+that this morning and it looks lovely. What's the use of wearing
+yourself out on it? You ought to be lying down, so's to look
+fresh for to-night."
+
+"Hadn't you better lie down yourself?" the daughter returned.
+"Are you ill, mama?"
+
+"Certainly not. What in the world makes you think so?"
+
+"You look pretty pale," Alice said, and sighed heavily. "It
+makes me ashamed, having you work so hard--for me."
+
+"How foolish! I think it's fun, getting ready to entertain a
+little again, like this. I only wish it hadn't turned so hot:
+I'm afraid your poor father'll suffer--his things are pretty
+heavy, I noticed. Well, it'll do him good to bear something for
+style's sake this once, anyhow!" She laughed, and coming to
+Alice, bent down and kissed her. "Dearie," she said, tenderly,
+"wouldn't you please slip upstairs now and take just a little
+teeny nap to please your mother?"
+
+But Alice responded only by moving her head slowly, in token of
+refusal.
+
+"Do!" Mrs. Adams urged. "You don't want to look worn out, do
+you?"
+
+"I'll LOOK all right," Alice said, huskily. "Do you like the way
+I've arranged the furniture now? I've tried all the different
+ways it'll go."
+
+"It's lovely," her mother said, admiringly. "I thought the last
+way you had it was pretty, too. But you know best; I never knew
+anybody with so much taste. If you'd only just quit now, and
+take a little rest----"
+
+"There'd hardly be time, even if I wanted to; it's after five but
+I couldn't; really, I couldn't. How do you think we can manage
+about Walter--to see that he wears his evening things, I mean?"
+
+Mrs. Adams pondered. "I'm afraid he'll make a lot of
+objections, on account of the weather and everything. I wish
+we'd had a chance to tell him last night or this morning. I'd
+have telephoned to him this afternoon except--well, I scarcely
+like to call him up at that place, since your father----"
+
+"No, of course not, mama."
+
+"If Walter gets home late," Mrs. Adams went on, "I'll just slip
+out and speak to him, in case Mr. Russell's here before he
+comes. I'll just tell him he's got to hurry and get his things
+on."
+
+"Maybe he won't come home to dinner," Alice suggested, rather
+hopefully. "Sometimes he doesn't."
+
+"No; I think he'll be here. When he doesn't come he usually
+telephones by this time to say not to wait for him; he's very
+thoughtful about that. Well, it really is getting late: I must
+go and tell her she ought to be preparing her fillet. Dearie, DO
+rest a little."
+
+"You'd much better do that yourself," Alice called after her, but
+Mrs. Adams shook her head cheerily, not pausing on her way to
+the fiery kitchen.
+
+Alice continued her useless labours for a time; then carried her
+bucket to the head of the cellar stairway, where she left it upon
+the top step; and, closing the door, returned to the
+"living-room;" Again she changed the positions of the old plush
+rocking-chairs, moving them into the corners where she thought
+they might be least noticeable; and while thus engaged she was
+startled by a loud ringing of the door-bell. For a moment her
+face was panic-stricken, and she stood staring, then she realized
+that Russell would not arrive for another hour, at the earliest,
+and recovering her equipoise, went to the door.
+
+Waiting there, in a languid attitude, was a young coloured woman,
+with a small bundle under her arm and something malleable in her
+mouth. "Listen," she said. "You folks expectin' a coloured
+lady?"
+
+"No," said Alice. "Especially not at the front door."
+
+"Listen," the coloured woman said again. "Listen. Say, listen.
+Ain't they another coloured lady awready here by the day?
+Listen. Ain't Miz Malena Burns here by the day this evenin'?
+Say, listen. This the number house she give ME."
+
+"Are you the waitress?" Alice asked, dismally.
+
+"Yes'm, if Malena here."
+
+"Malena is here," Alice said, and hesitated; but she decided not
+to send the waitress to the back door; it might be a risk. She
+let her in. "What's your name?"
+
+"Me? I'm name' Gertrude. Miss Gertrude Collamus."
+
+"Did you bring a cap and apron?"
+
+Gertrude took the little bundle from under her arm. "Yes'm. I'm
+all fix'."
+
+"I've already set the table," Alice said. "I'll show you what we
+want done."
+
+She led the way to the dining-room, and, after offering some
+instruction there, received by Gertrude with languor and a slowly
+moving jaw, she took her into the kitchen, where the cap and
+apron were put on. The effect was not fortunate; Gertrude's eyes
+were noticeably bloodshot, an affliction made more apparent by
+the white cap; and Alice drew her mother apart, whispering
+anxiously,
+
+"Do you suppose it's too late to get someone else?"
+
+"I'm afraid it is," Mrs. Adams said. "Malena says it was hard
+enough to get HER! You have to pay them so much that they only
+work when they feel like it."
+
+"Mama, could you ask her to wear her cap straighter? Every time
+she moves her head she gets it on one side, and her skirt's too
+long behind and too short in front--and oh, I've NEVER seen such
+FEET!" Alice laughed desolately. "And she MUST quit that
+terrible chewing!"
+
+"Never mind; I'll get to work with her. I'll straighten her out
+all I can, dearie; don't worry." Mrs. Adams patted her
+daughter's shoulder encouragingly. "Now YOU can't do another
+thing, and if you don't run and begin dressing you won't be
+ready. It'll only take me a minute to dress, myself, and I'll be
+down long before you will. Run, darling! I'll look after
+everything."
+
+Alice nodded vaguely, went up to her room, and, after only a
+moment with her mirror, brought from her closet the dress of
+white organdie she had worn the night when she met Russell for
+the first time. She laid it carefully upon her bed, and began to
+make ready to put it on. Her mother came in, half an hour later,
+to "fasten" her.
+
+"I'M all dressed," Mrs. Adams said, briskly. "Of course it
+doesn't matter. He won't know what the rest of us even look
+like: How could he? I know I'm an old SIGHT, but all I want is
+to look respectable. Do I?"
+
+"You look like the best woman in the world; that's all!" Alice
+said, with a little gulp.
+
+Her mother laughed and gave her a final scrutiny. "You might use
+just a tiny bit more colour, dearie-- I'm afraid the excitement's
+made you a little pale. And you MUST brighten up! There's sort
+of a look in your eyes as if you'd got in a trance and couldn't
+get out. You've had it all day. I must run: your father wants
+me to help him with his studs. Walter hasn't come yet, but I'll
+look after him; don't worry, And you better HURRY, dearie, if
+you're going to take any time fixing the flowers on the table."
+
+She departed, while Alice sat at the mirror again, to follow her
+advice concerning a "tiny bit more colour." Before she had
+finished, her father knocked at the door, and, when she
+responded, came in. He was dressed in the clothes his wife had
+pressed; but he had lost substantially in weight since they were
+made for him; no one would have thought that they had been
+pressed. They hung from him voluminously, seeming to be the
+clothes of a larger man.
+
+"Your mother's gone downstairs," he said, in a voice of distress.
+
+"One of the buttonholes in my shirt is too large and I can't keep
+the dang thing fastened. _I_ don't know what to do about it! I
+only got one other white shirt, and it's kind of ruined: I tried
+it before I did this one. Do you s'pose you could do anything?"
+
+"I'll see," she said.
+
+"My collar's got a frayed edge," he complained, as she examined
+his troublesome shirt. "It's a good deal like wearing a saw; but
+I expect it'll wilt down flat pretty soon, and not bother me
+long. I'm liable to wilt down flat, myself, I expect; I don't
+know as I remember any such hot night in the last ten or twelve
+years." He lifted his head and sniffed the flaccid air, which
+was laden with a heavy odour. "My, but that smell is pretty
+strong!" he said.
+
+"Stand still, please, papa," Alice begged him. "I can't see
+what's the matter if you move around. How absurd you are about
+your old glue smell, papa! There isn't a vestige of it, of
+course."
+
+"I didn't mean glue," he informed her. "I mean cabbage. Is that
+fashionable now, to have cabbage when there's company for
+dinner?"
+
+"That isn't cabbage, papa. It's Brussels sprouts."
+
+"Oh, is it? I don't mind it much, because it keeps that glue
+smell off me, but it's fairly strong. I expect you don't notice
+it so much because you been in the house with it all along, and
+got used to it while it was growing."
+
+"It is pretty dreadful," Alice said. "Are all the windows open
+downstairs?"
+
+"I'll go down and see, if you'll just fix that hole up for me."
+
+"I'm afraid I can't," she said. "Not unless you take your shirt
+off and bring it to me. I'll have to sew the hole smaller."
+
+"Oh, well, I'll go ask your mother to----"
+
+"No," said Alice. "She's got everything on her hands. Run and
+take it off. Hurry, papa; I've got to arrange the flowers on the
+table before he comes."
+
+He went away, and came back presently, half undressed, bringing
+the shirt. "There's ONE comfort," he remarked, pensively, as she
+worked. "I've got that collar off--for a while, anyway. I wish
+I could go to table like this; I could stand it a good deal
+better. Do you seem to be making any headway with the dang
+thing?"
+
+"I think probably I can----"
+
+Downstairs the door-bell rang, and Alice's arms jerked with the
+shock.
+
+"Golly!" her father said. "Did you stick your finger with that
+fool needle?"
+
+She gave him a blank stare. "He's come!"
+
+She was not mistaken, for, upon the little veranda, Russell stood
+facing the closed door at last. However, it remained closed for
+a considerable time after he rang. Inside the house the warning
+summons of the bell was immediately followed by another sound,
+audible to Alice and her father as a crash preceding a series of
+muffled falls. Then came a distant voice, bitter in complaint.
+
+"Oh, Lord!" said Adams. "What's that?"
+
+Alice went to the top of the front stairs, and her mother
+appeared in the hall below.
+
+"Mama!"
+
+Mrs. Adams looked up. "It's all right," she said, in a loud
+whisper. "Gertrude fell down the cellar stairs. Somebody left a
+bucket there, and----" She was interrupted by a gasp from Alice,
+and hastened to reassure her. "Don't worry, dearie. She may
+limp a little, but----"
+
+Adams leaned over the banisters. "Did she break anything?" he
+asked.
+
+"Hush!" his wife whispered. "No. She seems upset and angry
+about it, more than anything else; but she's rubbing herself, and
+she'll be all right in time to bring in the little sandwiches.
+Alice! Those flowers!"
+
+"I know, mama. But----"
+
+"Hurry!" Mrs. Adams warned her. "Both of you hurry! I MUST let
+him in!"
+
+She turned to the door, smiling cordially, even before she opened
+it. "Do come right in, Mr. Russell," she said, loudly, lifting
+her voice for additional warning to those above. "I'm SO glad to
+receive you informally, this way, in our own little home.
+There's a hat-rack here under the stairway," she continued, as
+Russell, murmuring some response, came into the hall. "I'm
+afraid you'll think it's almost TOO informal, my coming to the
+door, but unfortunately our housemaid's just had a little
+accident--oh, nothing to mention! I just thought we better not
+keep you waiting any longer. Will you step into our living-room,
+please?"
+
+She led the way between the two small columns, and seated herself
+in one of the plush rocking-chairs, selecting it because Alice
+had once pointed out that the chairs, themselves, were less
+noticeable when they had people sitting in them. "Do sit down,
+Mr. Russell; it's so very warm it's really quite a trial just to
+stand up!"
+
+"Thank you," he said, as he took a seat. "Yes. It is quite
+warm." And this seemed to be the extent of his responsiveness
+for the moment. He was grave, rather pale; and Mrs. Adams's
+impression of him, as she formed it then, was of "a
+distinguished-looking young man, really elegant in the best sense
+of the word, but timid and formal when he first meets you." She
+beamed upon him, and used with everything she said a continuous
+accompaniment of laughter, meaningless except that it was meant
+to convey cordiality. "Of course we DO have a great deal of warm
+weather," she informed him. "I'm glad it's so much cooler in the
+house than it is outdoors."
+
+"Yes," he said. "It is pleasanter indoors." And, stopping with
+this single untruth, he permitted himself the briefest glance
+about the room; then his eyes returned to his smiling hostess.
+
+"Most people make a great fuss about hot weather," she said.
+"The only person I know who doesn't mind the heat the way other
+people do is Alice. She always seems as cool as if we had a
+breeze blowing, no matter how hot it is. But then she's so
+amiable she never minds anything. It's just her character.
+She's always been that way since she was a little child; always
+the same to everybody, high and low. I think character's the
+most important thing in the world, after all, don't you, Mr.
+Russell?"
+
+"Yes," he said, solemnly; and touched his bedewed white forehead
+with a handkerchief.
+
+"Indeed it is," she agreed with herself, never failing to
+continue her murmur of laughter. "That's what I've always told
+Alice; but she never sees anything good in herself, and she just
+laughs at me when I praise her. She sees good in everybody ELSE
+in the world, no matter how unworthy they are, or how they behave
+toward HER; but she always underestimates herself. From the time
+she was a little child she was always that way. When some other
+little girl would behave selfishly or meanly toward her, do you
+think she'd come and tell me? Never a word to anybody! The
+little thing was too proud! She was the same way about school.
+The teachers had to tell me when she took a prize; she'd bring it
+home and keep it in her room without a word about it to her
+father and mother. Now, Walter was just the other way. Walter
+would----" But here Mrs. Adams checked herself, though she
+increased the volume of her laughter. "How silly of me!" she
+exclaimed. "I expect you know how mothers ARE, though, Mr.
+Russell. Give us a chance and we'll talk about our children
+forever! Alice would feel terribly if she knew how I've been
+going on about her to you."
+
+In this Mrs. Adams was right, though she did not herself suspect
+it, and upon an almost inaudible word or two from him she went on
+with her topic. "Of course my excuse is that few mothers have a
+daughter like Alice. I suppose we all think the same way about
+our children, but SOME of us must be right when we feel we've got
+the best. Don't you think so?"
+
+"Yes. Yes, indeed."
+
+"I'm sure _I_ am!" she laughed. "I'll let the others speak for
+themselves." She paused reflectively. "No; I think a mother
+knows when she's got a treasure in her family. If she HASN'T got
+one, she'll pretend she has, maybe; but if she has, she knows it.
+I certainly know _I_ have. She's always been what people call
+'the joy of the household'--always cheerful, no matter what went
+wrong, and always ready to smooth things over with some bright,
+witty saying. You must be sure not to TELL we've had this little
+chat about her--she'd just be furious with me--but she IS such a
+dear child! You won't tell her, will you?"
+
+"No," he said, and again applied the handkerchief to his forehead
+for an instant. "No, I'll----" He paused, and finished lamely:
+"I'll--not tell her."
+
+Thus reassured, Mrs. Adams set before him some details of her
+daughter's popularity at sixteen, dwelling upon Alice's
+impartiality among her young suitors: "She never could BEAR to
+hurt their feelings, and always treated all of them just alike.
+About half a dozen of them were just BOUND to marry her!
+Naturally, her father and I considered any such idea ridiculous;
+she was too young, of course."
+
+Thus the mother went on with her biographical sketches, while the
+pale young man sat facing her under the hard overhead light of a
+white globe, set to the ceiling; and listened without
+interrupting. She was glad to have the chance to tell him a few
+things about Alice he might not have guessed for himself, and,
+indeed, she had planned to find such an opportunity, if she
+could; but this was getting to be altogether too much of one, she
+felt. As time passed, she was like an actor who must improvise
+to keep the audience from perceiving that his fellow-players have
+missed their cues; but her anxiety was not betrayed to the still
+listener; she had a valiant soul.
+
+Alice, meanwhile, had arranged her little roses on the table in
+as many ways, probably, as there were blossoms; and she was still
+at it when her father arrived in the dining-room by way of the
+back stairs and the kitchen.
+
+"It's pulled out again," he said. "But I guess there's no help
+for it now; it's too late, and anyway it lets some air into me
+when it bulges. I can sit so's it won't be noticed much, I
+expect. Isn't it time you quit bothering about the looks of the
+table? Your mother's been talking to him about half an hour now,
+and I had the idea he came on your account, not hers. Hadn't you
+better go and----"
+
+"Just a minute." Alice said, piteously. "Do YOU think it looks
+all right?"
+
+"The flowers? Fine! Hadn't you better leave 'em the way they
+are, though?"
+
+"Just a minute," she begged again. "Just ONE minute, papa!" And
+she exchanged a rose in front of Russell's plate for one that
+seemed to her a little larger.
+
+"You better come on," Adams said, moving to the door.
+
+"Just ONE more second, papa." She shook her head, lamenting.
+"Oh, I wish we'd rented some silver!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because so much of the plating has rubbed off a lot of it. JUST
+a second, papa." And as she spoke she hastily went round the
+table, gathering the knives and forks and spoons that she thought
+had their plating best preserved, and exchanging them for more
+damaged pieces at Russell's place. "There!" she sighed, finally.
+
+"Now I'll come." But at the door she paused to look back
+dubiously, over her shoulder.
+
+"What's the matter now?"
+
+"The roses. I believe after all I shouldn't have tried that vine
+effect; I ought to have kept them in water, in the vase. It's so
+hot, they already begin to look a little wilted, out on the dry
+tablecloth like that. I believe I'll----"
+
+"Why, look here, Alice!" he remonstrated, as she seemed disposed
+to turn back. "Everything'll burn up on the stove if you keep
+on----"
+
+"Oh, well," she said, "the vase was terribly ugly; I can't do any
+better. We'll go in." But with her hand on the door-knob she
+paused. "No, papa. We mustn't go in by this door. It might
+look as if----"
+
+"As if what?"
+
+"Never mind," she said. "Let's go the other way."
+
+"I don't see what difference it makes," he grumbled, but
+nevertheless followed her through the kitchen, and up the back
+stairs then through the upper hallway. At the top of the front
+stairs she paused for a moment, drawing a deep breath; and then,
+before her father's puzzled eyes, a transformation came upon her.
+
+Her shoulders, like her eyelids, had been drooping, but now she
+threw her head back: the shoulders straightened, and the lashes
+lifted over sparkling eyes; vivacity came to her whole body in a
+flash; and she tripped down the steps, with her pretty hands
+rising in time to the lilting little tune she had begun to hum.
+
+At the foot of the stairs, one of those pretty hands extended
+itself at full arm's length toward Russell, and continued to be
+extended until it reached his own hand as he came to meet her.
+"How terrible of me!" she exclaimed. "To be so late coming down!
+And papa, too--I think you know each other."
+
+Her father was advancing toward the young man, expecting to shake
+hands with him, but Alice stood between them, and Russell, a
+little flushed, bowed to him gravely over her shoulder, without
+looking at him; whereupon Adams, slightly disconcerted, put his
+hands in his pockets and turned to his wife.
+
+"I guess dinner's more'n ready," he said. "We better go sit
+down."
+
+But she shook her head at him fiercely, "Wait!" she whispered.
+
+"What for? For Walter?"
+
+"No; he can't be coming," she returned, hurriedly, and again
+warned him by a shake of her head. "Be quiet!"
+
+"Oh, well----" he muttered.
+
+"Sit down!"
+
+He was thoroughly mystified, but obeyed her gesture and went to
+the rocking-chair in the opposite corner, where he sat down, and,
+with an expression of meek inquiry, awaited events.
+
+Meanwhile, Alice prattled on: "It's really not a fault of mine,
+being tardy. The shameful truth is I was trying to hurry papa.
+He's incorrigible: he stays so late at his terrible old
+factory--terrible new factory, I should say. I hope you don't
+HATE us for making you dine with us in such fearful weather! I'm
+nearly dying of the heat, myself, so you have a fellow-sufferer,
+if that pleases you. Why is it we always bear things better if
+we think other people have to stand them, too?" And she added,
+with an excited laugh: "SILLY of us, don't you think?"
+
+Gertrude had just made her entrance from the dining-room, bearing
+a tray. She came slowly, with an air of resentment; and her
+skirt still needed adjusting, while her lower jaw moved at
+intervals, though not now upon any substance, but reminiscently,
+of habit. She halted before Adams, facing him.
+
+He looked plaintive. "What you want o' me?" he asked.
+
+For response, she extended the tray toward him with a gesture of
+indifference; but he still appeared to be puzzled. "What in the
+world----?" he began, then caught his wife's eye, and had
+presence of mind enough to take a damp and plastic sandwich from
+the tray. "Well, I'll TRY one," he said, but a moment later, as
+he fulfilled this promise, an expression of intense dislike came
+upon his features, and he would have returned the sandwich to
+Gertrude. However, as she had crossed the room to Mrs. Adams he
+checked the gesture, and sat helplessly, with the sandwich in his
+hand. He made another effort to get rid of it as the waitress
+passed him, on her way back to the dining-room, but she appeared
+not to observe him, and he continued to be troubled by it.
+
+Alice was a loyal daughter. "These are delicious, mama," she
+said; and turning to Russell, "You missed it; you should have
+taken one. Too bad we couldn't have offered you what ought to go
+with it, of course, but----"
+
+She was interrupted by the second entrance of Gertrude, who
+announced, "Dinner serve'," and retired from view.
+
+"Well, well!" Adams said, rising from his chair, with relief.
+"That's good! Let's go see if we can eat it." And as the little
+group moved toward the open door of the dining-room he disposed
+of his sandwich by dropping it in the empty fireplace.
+
+Alice, glancing back over her shoulder, was the only one who saw
+him, and she shuddered in spite of herself. Then, seeing that he
+looked at her entreatingly, as if he wanted to explain that he
+was doing the best he could, she smiled upon him sunnily, and
+began to chatter to Russell again.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+Alice kept her sprightly chatter going when they sat down, though
+the temperature of the room and the sight of hot soup might have
+discouraged a less determined gayety. Moreover, there were
+details as unpropitious as the heat: the expiring roses expressed
+not beauty but pathos, and what faint odour they exhaled was no
+rival to the lusty emanations of the Brussels sprouts; at the
+head of the table, Adams, sitting low in his chair, appeared to
+be unable to flatten the uprising wave of his starched bosom; and
+Gertrude's manner and expression were of a recognizable hostility
+during the long period of vain waiting for the cups of soup to be
+emptied. Only Mrs. Adams made any progress in this direction;
+the others merely feinting, now and then lifting their spoons as
+if they intended to do something with them.
+
+Alice's talk was little more than cheerful sound, but, to fill a
+desolate interval, served its purpose; and her mother supported
+her with ever-faithful cooings of applausive laughter. "What a
+funny thing weather is!" the girl ran on. "Yesterday it was
+cool--angels had charge of it--and to-day they had an engagement
+somewhere else, so the devil saw his chance and started to move
+the equator to the North Pole; but by the time he got half-way,
+he thought of something else he wanted to do, and went off; and
+left the equator here, right on top of US! I wish he'd come back
+and get it!"
+
+"Why, Alice dear!" her mother cried, fondly. "What an
+imagination! Not a very pious one, I'm afraid Mr. Russell might
+think, though!" Here she gave Gertrude a hidden signal to remove
+the soup; but, as there was no response, she had to make the
+signal more conspicuous. Gertrude was leaning against the wall,
+her chin moving like a slow pendulum, her streaked eyes fixed
+mutinously upon Russell. Mrs. Adams nodded several times,
+increasing the emphasis of her gesture, while Alice talked
+briskly; but the brooding waitress continued to brood. A faint
+snap of the fingers failed to disturb her; nor was a covert
+hissing whisper of avail, and Mrs. Adams was beginning to show
+signs of strain when her daughter relieved her.
+
+"Imagine our trying to eat anything so hot as soup on a night
+like this!" Alice laughed. "What COULD have been in the cook's
+mind not to give us something iced and jellied instead? Of
+course it's because she's equatorial, herself, originally, and
+only feels at home when Mr. Satan moves it north." She looked
+round at Gertrude, who stood behind her. "Do take this dreadful
+soup away!"
+
+Thus directly addressed, Gertrude yielded her attention, though
+unwillingly, and as if she decided only by a hair's weight not to
+revolt, instead. However, she finally set herself in slow
+motion; but overlooked the supposed head of the table, seeming to
+be unaware of the sweltering little man who sat there. As she
+disappeared toward the kitchen with but three of the cups upon
+her tray he turned to look plaintively after her, and ventured an
+attempt to recall her.
+
+"Here!" he said, in a low voice. "Here, you!"
+
+"What is it, Virgil?" his wife asked.
+
+"What's her name?"
+
+Mrs. Adams gave him a glance of sudden panic, and, seeing that
+the guest of the evening was not looking at her, but down at the
+white cloth before him, she frowned hard, and shook her head.
+
+Unfortunately Alice was not observing her mother, and asked,
+innocently: "What's whose name, papa?"
+
+"Why, this young darky woman," he explained. "She left mine."
+
+"Never mind," Alice laughed. "There's hope for you, papa. She
+hasn't gone forever!"
+
+"I don't know about that," he said, not content with this
+impulsive assurance. "She LOOKED like she is." And his remark,
+considered as a prediction, had begun to seem warranted before
+Gertrude's return with china preliminary to the next stage of the
+banquet.
+
+Alice proved herself equal to the long gap, and rattled on
+through it with a spirit richly justifying her mother's praise of
+her as "always ready to smooth things over"; for here was more
+than long delay to be smoothed over. She smoothed over her
+father and mother for Russell; and she smoothed over him for
+them, though he did not know it, and remained unaware of what he
+owed her. With all this, throughout her prattlings, the girl's
+bright eyes kept seeking his with an eager gayety, which but
+little veiled both interrogation and entreaty--as if she asked:
+"Is it too much for you? Can't you bear it? Won't you PLEASE
+bear it? I would for you. Won't you give me a sign that it's
+all right?"
+
+He looked at her but fleetingly, and seemed to suffer from the
+heat, in spite of every manly effort not to wipe his brow too
+often. His colour, after rising when he greeted Alice and her
+father, had departed, leaving him again moistly pallid; a
+condition arising from discomfort, no doubt, but, considered as a
+decoration, almost poetically becoming to him. Not less becoming
+was the faint, kindly smile, which showed his wish to express
+amusement and approval; and yet it was a smile rather strained
+and plaintive, as if he, like Adams, could only do the best he
+could.
+
+He pleased Adams, who thought him a fine young man, and decidedly
+the quietest that Alice had ever shown to her family. In her
+father's opinion this was no small merit; and it was to Russell's
+credit, too, that he showed embarrassment upon this first
+intimate presentation; here was an applicant with both reserve
+and modesty. "So far, he seems to be first rate a mighty fine
+young man," Adams thought; and, prompted by no wish to part from
+Alice but by reminiscences of apparent candidates less pleasing,
+he added, "At last!"
+
+Alice's liveliness never flagged. Her smoothing over of things
+was an almost continuous performance, and had to be. Yet, while
+she chattered through the hot and heavy courses, the questions
+she asked herself were as continuous as the performance, and as
+poignant as what her eyes seemed to be asking Russell. Why had
+she not prevailed over her mother's fear of being "skimpy?" Had
+she been, indeed, as her mother said she looked, "in a trance?"
+But above all: What was the matter with HIM? What had happened?
+For she told herself with painful humour that something even
+worse than this dinner must be "the matter with him."
+
+The small room, suffocated with the odour of boiled sprouts, grew
+hotter and hotter as more and more food appeared, slowly borne
+in, between deathly long waits, by the resentful, loud-breathing
+Gertrude. And while Alice still sought Russell's glance, and
+read the look upon his face a dozen different ways, fearing all
+of them; and while the straggling little flowers died upon the
+stained cloth, she felt her heart grow as heavy as the food, and
+wondered that it did not die like the roses.
+
+With the arrival of coffee, the host bestirred himself to make
+known a hospitable regret, "By George!" he said. "I meant to buy
+some cigars." He addressed himself apologetically to the guest.
+"I don't know what I was thinking about, to forget to bring some
+home with me. I don't use 'em myself--unless somebody hands me
+one, you might say. I've always been a pipe-smoker, pure and
+simple, but I ought to remembered for kind of an occasion like
+this."
+
+"Not at all," Russell said. "I'm not smoking at all lately; but
+when I do, I'm like you, and smoke a pipe."
+
+Alice started, remembering what she had told him when he overtook
+her on her way from the tobacconist's; but, after a moment,
+looking at him, she decided that he must have forgotten it. If
+he had remembered, she thought, he could not have helped glancing
+at her. On the contrary, he seemed more at ease, just then, than
+he had since they sat down, for he was favouring her father with
+a thoughtful attention as Adams responded to the introduction of
+a man's topic into the conversation at last. "Well, Mr.
+Russell, I guess you're right, at that. I don't say but what
+cigars may be all right for a man that can afford 'em, if he
+likes 'em better than a pipe, but you take a good old pipe
+now----"
+
+He continued, and was getting well into the eulogium customarily
+provoked by this theme, when there came an interruption: the
+door-bell rang, and he paused inquiringly, rather surprised.
+
+Mrs. Adams spoke to Gertrude in an undertone:
+
+"Just say, 'Not at home.'"
+
+"What?"
+
+"If it's callers, just say we're not at home."
+
+Gertrude spoke out freely: "You mean you astin' me to 'tend you'
+front do' fer you?"
+
+She seemed both incredulous and affronted, but Mrs. Adams
+persisted, though somewhat apprehensively. "Yes.
+Hurry--uh--please. Just say we're not at home if you please."
+
+Again Gertrude obviously hesitated between compliance and revolt,
+and again the meeker course fortunately prevailed with her. She
+gave Mrs. Adams a stare, grimly derisive, then departed. When
+she came back she said:
+
+"He say he wait."
+
+"But I told you to tell anybody we were not at home," Mrs Adams
+returned. "Who is it?"
+
+"Say he name Mr. Law."
+
+"We don't know any Mr. Law."
+
+"Yes'm; he know you. Say he anxious to speak Mr. Adams. Say he
+wait."
+
+"Tell him Mr. Adams is engaged."
+
+"Hold on a minute," Adams intervened. "Law? No. I don't know
+any Mr. Law. You sure you got the name right?"
+
+"Say he name Law," Gertrude replied, looking at the ceiling to
+express her fatigue. "Law. 'S all he tell me; 's all I know."
+
+Adams frowned. "Law," he said. "Wasn't it maybe 'Lohr?'"
+
+"Law," Gertrude repeated. "'S all he tell me; 's all I know."
+
+"What's he look like?"
+
+"He ain't much," she said. "'Bout you' age; got brustly white
+moustache, nice eye-glasses."
+
+"It's Charley Lohr!" Adams exclaimed. "I'll go see what he
+wants."
+
+"But, Virgil," his wife remonstrated, "do finish your coffee; he
+might stay all evening. Maybe he's come to call."
+
+Adams laughed. "He isn't much of a caller, I expect. Don't
+worry: I'll take him up to my room." And turning toward Russell,
+"Ah--if you'll just excuse me," he said; and went out to his
+visitor.
+
+When he had gone, Mrs. Adams finished her coffee, and, having
+glanced intelligently from her guest to her daughter, she rose.
+"I think perhaps I ought to go and shake hands with Mr. Lohr,
+myself," she said, adding in explanation to Russell, as she
+reached the door, "He's an old friend of my husband's and it's a
+very long time since he's been here."
+
+Alice nodded and smiled to her brightly, but upon the closing of
+the door, the smile vanished; all her liveliness disappeared; and
+with this change of expression her complexion itself appeared to
+change, so that her rouge became obvious, for she was pale
+beneath it. However, Russell did not see the alteration, for he
+did not look at her; and it was but a momentary lapse the
+vacation of a tired girl, who for ten seconds lets herself look
+as she feels. Then she shot her vivacity back into place as by
+some powerful spring.
+
+"Penny for your thoughts!" she cried, and tossed one of the
+wilted roses at him, across the table. "I'll bid more than a
+penny; I'll bid tuppence--no, a poor little dead rose a rose for
+your thoughts, Mr. Arthur Russell! What are they?"
+
+He shook his head. "I'm afraid I haven't any."
+
+"No, of course not," she said. "Who could have thoughts in
+weather like this? Will you EVER forgive us?"
+
+"What for?"
+
+"Making you eat such a heavy dinner--I mean LOOK at such a heavy
+dinner, because you certainly didn't do more than look at it--on
+such a night! But the crime draws to a close, and you can begin
+to cheer up!" She laughed gaily, and, rising, moved to the door.
+"Let's go in the other room; your fearful duty is almost done,
+and you can run home as soon as you want to. That's what you're
+dying to do."
+
+"Not at all," he said in a voice so feeble that she laughed
+aloud.
+
+"Good gracious!" she cried. "I hadn't realized it was THAT bad!"
+
+For this, though he contrived to laugh, he seemed to have no
+verbal retort whatever; but followed her into the "living-room,"
+where she stopped and turned, facing him.
+
+"Has it really been so frightful?" she asked.
+
+"Why, of course not. Not at all."
+
+"Of course yes, though, you mean!"
+
+"Not at all. It's been most kind of your mother and father and
+you."
+
+"Do you know," she said, "you've never once looked at me for more
+than a second at a time the whole evening? And it seemed to me I
+looked rather nice to-night, too!"
+
+"You always do," he murmured.
+
+"I don't see how you know," she returned; and then stepping
+closer to him, spoke with gentle solicitude: "Tell me: you're
+really feeling wretchedly, aren't you? I know you've got a
+fearful headache, or something. Tell me!"
+
+"Not at all."
+
+"You are ill--I'm sure of it."
+
+"Not at all."
+
+"On your word?"
+
+"I'm really quite all right."
+
+"But if you are----" she began; and then, looking at him with a
+desperate sweetness, as if this were her last resource to rouse
+him, "What's the matter, little boy?" she said with lisping
+tenderness. "Tell auntie!"
+
+It was a mistake, for he seemed to flinch, and to lean backward,
+however, slightly. She turned away instantly, with a flippant
+lift and drop of both hands. "Oh, my dear!" she laughed. "I
+won't eat you!"
+
+And as the discomfited young man watched her, seeming able to
+lift his eyes, now that her back was turned, she went to the
+front door and pushed open the screen. "Let's go out on the
+porch," she said. "Where we belong!"
+
+Then, when he had followed her out, and they were seated, "Isn't
+this better?" she asked. "Don't you feel more like yourself out
+here?"
+
+He began a murmur: "Not at----"
+
+But she cut him off sharply: "Please don't say 'Not at all'
+again!"
+
+"I'm sorry."
+
+"You do seem sorry about something," she said. "What is it?
+Isn't it time you were telling me what's the matter?"
+
+"Nothing. Indeed nothing's the matter. Of course one IS rather
+affected by such weather as this. It may make one a little
+quieter than usual, of course."
+
+She sighed, and let the tired muscles of her face rest. Under
+the hard lights, indoors, they had served her until they ached,
+and it was a luxury to feel that in the darkness no grimacings
+need call upon them.
+
+"Of course, if you won't tell me----" she said.
+
+"I can only assure you there's nothing to tell."
+
+"I know what an ugly little house it is," she said. "Maybe it
+was the furniture--or mama's vases that upset you. Or was it
+mama herself--or papa?"
+
+"Nothing 'upset' me."
+
+At that she uttered a monosyllable of doubting laughter. "I
+wonder why you say that."
+
+"Because it's so."
+
+"No. It's because you're too kind, or too conscientious, or too
+embarrassed--anyhow too something--to tell me." She leaned
+forward, elbows on knees and chin in hands, in the reflective
+attitude she knew how to make graceful. "I have a feeling that
+you're not going to tell me," she said, slowly. "Yes--even that
+you're never going to tell me. I wonder--I wonder----"
+
+"Yes? What do you wonder?"
+
+"I was just thinking--I wonder if they haven't done it, after
+all."
+
+"I don't understand."
+
+"I wonder," she went on, still slowly, and in a voice of
+reflection, "I wonder who HAS been talking about me to you, after
+all? Isn't that it?"
+
+"Not at----" he began, but checked himself and substituted
+another form of denial. "Nothing is 'it.'"
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Why, yes."
+
+"How curious!" she said.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because all evening you've been so utterly different."
+
+"But in this weather----"
+
+"No. That wouldn't make you afraid to look at me all evening!"
+
+"But I did look at you. Often."
+
+"No. Not really a LOOK."
+
+"But I'm looking at you now."
+
+"Yes--in the dark!" she said. "No--the weather might make you
+even quieter than usual, but it wouldn't strike you so nearly
+dumb. No--and it wouldn't make you seem to be under such a
+strain--as if you thought only of escape!"
+
+"But I haven't----"
+
+"You shouldn't," she interrupted, gently. "There's nothing you
+have to escape from, you know. You aren't committed to--to this
+friendship."
+
+"I'm sorry you think----" he began, but did not complete the
+fragment.
+
+She took it up. "You're sorry I think you're so different, you
+mean to say, don't you? Never mind: that's what you did mean to
+say, but you couldn't finish it because you're not good at
+deceiving."
+
+"Oh, no," he protested, feebly. "I'm not deceiving. I'm----"
+
+"Never mind," she said again. "You're sorry I think you're so
+different--and all in one day--since last night. Yes, your voice
+SOUNDS sorry, too. It sounds sorrier than it would just because
+of my thinking something you could change my mind about in a
+minute so it means you're sorry you ARE different."
+
+"No--I----"
+
+But disregarding the faint denial, "Never mind," she said. "Do
+you remember one night when you told me that nothing anybody else
+could do would ever keep you from coming here? That if you--if
+you left me it would be because I drove you away myself?"
+
+"Yes," he said, huskily. "It was true."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Indeed I am," he answered in a low voice, but with conviction.
+
+"Then----" She paused. "Well--but I haven't driven you away."
+
+"No."
+
+"And yet you've gone," she said, quietly.
+
+"Do I seem so stupid as all that?"
+
+"You know what I mean." She leaned back in her chair again, and
+her hands, inactive for once, lay motionless in her lap. When
+she spoke it was in a rueful whisper:
+
+"I wonder if I HAVE driven you away?"
+
+"You've done nothing--nothing at all," he said.
+
+"I wonder----" she said once more, but she stopped. In her mind
+she was going back over their time together since the first
+meeting--fragments of talk, moments of silence, little things of
+no importance, little things that might be important; moonshine,
+sunshine, starlight; and her thoughts zigzagged among the
+jumbling memories; but, as if she made for herself a picture of
+all these fragments, throwing them upon the canvas haphazard, she
+saw them all just touched with the one tainting quality that gave
+them coherence, the faint, false haze she had put over this
+friendship by her own pretendings. And, if this terrible dinner,
+or anything, or everything, had shown that saffron tint in its
+true colour to the man at her side, last night almost a lover,
+then she had indeed of herself driven him away, and might well
+feel that she was lost.
+
+"Do you know?" she said, suddenly, in a clear, loud voice. "I
+have the strangest feeling. I feel as if I were going to be with
+you only about five minutes more in all the rest of my life!"
+
+"Why, no," he said. "Of course I'm coming to see you--often.
+I----"
+
+"No," she interrupted. "I've never had a feeling like this
+before. It's--it's just SO; that's all! You're GOING--why,
+you're never coming here again!" She stood up, abruptly,
+beginning to tremble all over. "Why, it's FINISHED, isn't it?"
+she said, and her trembling was manifest now in her voice. "Why,
+it's all OVER, isn't it? Why, yes!"
+
+He had risen as she did. "I'm afraid you're awfully tired and
+nervous," he said. "I really ought to be going."
+
+"Yes, of COURSE you ought," she cried, despairingly. "There's
+nothing else for you to do. When anything's spoiled, people
+CAN'T do anything but run away from it. So good-bye!"
+
+"At least," he returned, huskily, "we'll only--only say
+good-night."
+
+Then, as moving to go, he stumbled upon the veranda steps, "Your
+HAT!" she cried. "I'd like to keep it for a souvenir, but I'm
+afraid you need it!"
+
+She ran into the hall and brought his straw hat from the chair
+where he had left it. "You poor thing!" she said, with quavering
+laughter. "Don't you know you can't go without your hat?"
+
+Then, as they faced each other for the short moment which both of
+them knew would be the last of all their veranda moments, Alice's
+broken laughter grew louder. "What a thing to say!" she cried.
+"What a romantic parting--talking about HATS!"
+
+Her laughter continued as he turned away, but other sounds came
+from within the house, clearly audible with the opening of a door
+upstairs--a long and wailing cry of lamentation in the voice of
+Mrs. Adams. Russell paused at the steps, uncertain, but Alice
+waved to him to go on.
+
+"Oh, don't bother," she said. "We have lots of that in this
+funny little old house! Good-bye!"
+
+And as he went down the steps, she ran back into the house and
+closed the door heavily behind her.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+Her mother's wailing could still be heard from overhead, though
+more faintly; and old Charley Lohr was coming down the stairs
+alone.
+
+He looked at Alice compassionately. "I was just comin' to
+suggest maybe you'd excuse yourself from your company," he said.
+"Your mother was bound not to disturb you, and tried her best to
+keep you from hearin' how she's takin' on, but I thought probably
+you better see to her."
+
+"Yes, I'll come. What's the matter?"
+
+"Well," he said, "_I_ only stepped over to offer my sympathy and
+services, as it were. _I_ thought of course you folks knew all
+about it. Fact is, it was in the evening paper--just a little
+bit of an item on the back page, of course."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+He coughed. "Well, it ain't anything so terrible," he said.
+"Fact is, your brother Walter's got in a little trouble--well, I
+suppose you might call it quite a good deal of trouble. Fact is,
+he's quite considerable short in his accounts down at Lamb and
+Company."
+
+Alice ran up the stairs and into her father's room, where Mrs.
+Adams threw herself into her daughter's arms. "Is he gone?" she
+sobbed. "He didn't hear me, did he? I tried so hard----"
+
+Alice patted the heaving shoulders her arms enclosed. "No, no,"
+she said. "He didn't hear you--it wouldn't have mattered--he
+doesn't matter anyway."
+
+"Oh, POOR Walter!" The mother cried. "Oh, the POOR boy! Poor,
+poor Walter! Poor, poor, poor, POOR----"
+
+"Hush, dear, hush!" Alice tried to soothe her, but the lament
+could not be abated, and from the other side of the room a
+repetition in a different spirit was as continuous. Adams paced
+furiously there, pounding his fist into his left palm as he
+strode. "The dang boy!" he said. "Dang little fool! Dang
+idiot! Dang fool! Whyn't he TELL me, the dang little fool?"
+
+"He DID!" Mrs. Adams sobbed. "He DID tell you, and you wouldn't
+GIVE it to him."
+
+"He DID, did he?" Adams shouted at her. "What he begged me for
+was money to run away with! He never dreamed of putting back
+what he took. What the dangnation you talking about--accusing
+me!"
+
+"He NEEDED it," she said. "He needed it to run away with! How
+could he expect to LIVE, after he got away, if he didn't have a
+little money? Oh, poor, poor, POOR Walter! Poor, poor,
+poor----"
+
+She went back to this repetition; and Adams went back to his own,
+then paused, seeing his old friend standing in the hallway
+outside the open door.
+
+"Ah--I'll just be goin', I guess, Virgil," Lohr said. "I don't
+see as there's any use my tryin' to say any more. I'll do
+anything you want me to, you understand."
+
+"Wait a minute," Adams said, and, groaning, came and went down
+the stairs with him. "You say you didn't see the old man at
+all?"
+
+"No, I don't know a thing about what he's going to do," Lohr
+said, as they reached the lower floor. "Not a thing. But look
+here, Virgil, I don't see as this calls for you and your wife to
+take on so hard about--anyhow not as hard as the way you've
+started."
+
+"No," Adams gulped. "It always seems that way to the other party
+that's only looking on!"
+
+"Oh, well, I know that, of course," old Charley returned,
+soothingly. "But look here, Virgil: they may not catch the boy;
+they didn't even seem to be sure what train he made, and if they
+do get him, why, the ole man might decide not to prosecute
+if----"
+
+"HIM?" Adams cried, interrupting. "Him not prosecute? Why,
+that's what he's been waiting for, all along! He thinks my boy
+and me both cheated him! Why, he was just letting Walter walk
+into a trap! Didn't you say they'd been suspecting him for some
+time back? Didn't you say they'd been watching him and were just
+about fixing to arrest him?"
+
+"Yes, I know," said Lohr; "but you can't tell, especially if you
+raise the money and pay it back."
+
+"Every cent!" Adams vociferated. "Every last penny! I can raise
+it--I GOT to raise it! I'm going to put a loan on my factory
+to-morrow. Oh, I'll get it for him, you tell him! Every last
+penny!"
+
+"Well, ole feller, you just try and get quieted down some now."
+Charley held out his hand in parting. "You and your wife just
+quiet down some. You AIN'T the healthiest man in the world, you
+know, and you already been under quite some strain before this
+happened. You want to take care of yourself for the sake of your
+wife and that sweet little girl upstairs, you know. Now,
+good-night," he finished, stepping out upon the veranda. "You
+send for me if there's anything I can do."
+
+"Do?" Adams echoed. "There ain't anything ANYBODY can do!" And
+then, as his old friend went down the path to the sidewalk, he
+called after him, "You tell him I'll pay him every last cent!
+Every last, dang, dirty PENNY!"
+
+He slammed the door and went rapidly up the stairs, talking
+loudly to himself. "Every dang, last, dirty penny! Thinks
+EVERYBODY in this family wants to steal from him, does he?
+Thinks we're ALL yellow, does he? I'll show him!" And he came
+into his own room vociferating, "Every last, dang, dirty penny!"
+
+Mrs. Adams had collapsed, and Alice had put her upon his bed,
+where she lay tossing convulsively and sobbing, "Oh, POOR
+Walter!" over and over, but after a time she varied the sorry
+tune. "Oh, poor Alice!" she moaned, clinging to her daughter's
+hand. "Oh, poor, POOR Alice to have THIS come on the night of
+your dinner--just when everything seemed to be going so well--at
+last--oh, poor, poor, POOR----"
+
+"Hush!" Alice said, sharply. "Don't say 'poor Alice!' I'm all
+right."
+
+"You MUST be!" her mother cried, clutching her. "You've just GOT
+to be! ONE of us has got to be all right--surely God wouldn't
+mind just ONE of us being all right--that wouldn't hurt Him----"
+
+"Hush, hush, mother! Hush!"
+
+But Mrs. Adams only clutched her the more tightly. "He seemed
+SUCH a nice young man, dearie! He may not see this in the
+paper--Mr. Lohr said it was just a little bit of an item--he MAY
+not see it, dearie----"
+
+Then her anguish went back to Walter again; and to his needs as a
+fugitive--she had meant to repair his underwear, but had
+postponed doing so, and her neglect now appeared to be a detail
+as lamentable as the calamity itself. She could neither be
+stilled upon it, nor herself exhaust its urgings to self-
+reproach, though she finally took up another theme temporarily.
+Upon an unusually violent outbreak of her husband's, in
+denunciation of the runaway, she cried out faintly that he was
+cruel; and further wearied her broken voice with details of
+Walter's beauty as a baby, and of his bedtime pieties throughout
+his infancy.
+
+So the hot night wore on. Three had struck before Mrs. Adams
+was got to bed; and Alice, returning to her own room, could hear
+her father's bare feet thudding back and forth after that. "Poor
+papa!" she whispered in helpless imitation of her mother. "Poor
+papa! Poor mama! Poor Walter! Poor all of us!"
+
+She fell asleep, after a time, while from across the hall the
+bare feet still thudded over their changeless route; and she woke
+at seven, hearing Adams pass her door, shod. In her wrapper she
+ran out into the hallway and found him descending the stairs.
+
+"Papa!"
+
+"Hush," he said, and looked up at her with reddened eyes. "Don't
+wake your mother."
+
+"I won't," she whispered. "How about you? You haven't slept any
+at all!"
+
+"Yes, I did. I got some sleep. I'm going over to the works now.
+I got to throw some figures together to show the bank. Don't
+worry: I'll get things fixed up. You go back to bed. Good-bye."
+
+"Wait!" she bade him sharply.
+
+"What for?"
+
+"You've got to have some breakfast."
+
+"Don't want 'ny."
+
+"You wait!" she said, imperiously, and disappeared to return
+almost at once. "I can cook in my bedroom slippers," she
+explained, "but I don't believe I could in my bare feet!"
+
+Descending softly, she made him wait in the dining-room until she
+brought him toast and eggs and coffee. "Eat!" she said. "And
+I'm going to telephone for a taxicab to take you, if you think
+you've really got to go."
+
+"No, I'm going to walk--I WANT to walk."
+
+She shook her head anxiously. "You don't look able. You've
+walked all night."
+
+"No, I didn't," he returned. "I tell you I got some sleep. I
+got all I wanted anyhow."
+
+"But, papa----"
+
+"Here!" he interrupted, looking up at her suddenly and setting
+down his cup of coffee. "Look here! What about this Mr.
+Russell? I forgot all about him. What about him?"
+
+Her lip trembled a little, but she controlled it before she
+spoke. "Well, what about him, papa?" she asked, calmly enough.
+
+"Well, we could hardly----" Adams paused, frowning heavily. "We
+could hardly expect he wouldn't hear something about all this."
+
+"Yes; of course he'll hear it, papa."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Well, what?" she asked, gently.
+
+"You don't think he'd be the--the cheap kind it'd make a
+difference with, of course."
+
+"Oh, no; he isn't cheap. It won't make any difference with him."
+
+Adams suffered a profound sigh to escape him. "Well--I'm glad of
+that, anyway."
+
+"The difference," she explained--"the difference was made without
+his hearing anything about Walter. He doesn't know about THAT
+yet."
+
+"Well, what does he know about?"
+
+"Only," she said, "about me."
+
+"What you mean by that, Alice?" he asked, helplessly.
+
+"Never mind," she said. "It's nothing beside the real trouble
+we're in--I'll tell you some time. You eat your eggs and toast;
+you can't keep going on just coffee."
+
+"I can't eat any eggs and toast," he objected, rising. "I
+can't."
+
+"Then wait till I can bring you something else."
+
+"No," he said, irritably. "I won't do it! I don't want any dang
+food! And look here"--he spoke sharply to stop her, as she went
+toward the telephone--"I don't want any dang taxi, either! You
+look after your mother when she wakes up. I got to be at WORK!"
+
+And though she followed him to the front door, entreating, he
+could not be stayed or hindered. He went through the quiet
+morning streets at a rickety, rapid gait, swinging his old straw
+hat in his hands, and whispering angrily to himself as he went.
+His grizzled hair, not trimmed for a month, blew back from his
+damp forehead in the warm breeze; his reddened eyes stared hard
+at nothing from under blinking lids; and one side of his face
+twitched startlingly from time to time;--children might have run
+from him, or mocked him.
+
+When he had come into that fallen quarter his industry had partly
+revived and wholly made odorous, a negro woman, leaning upon her
+whitewashed gate, gazed after him and chuckled for the benefit of
+a gossiping friend in the next tiny yard. "Oh, good Satan!
+Wha'ssa matter that ole glue man?"
+
+"Who? Him?" the neighbour inquired. "What he do now?"
+
+"Talkin' to his ole se'f!" the first explained, joyously. "Look
+like gone distracted--ole glue man!"
+
+Adams's legs had grown more uncertain with his hard walk, and he
+stumbled heavily as he crossed the baked mud of his broad lot,
+but cared little for that, was almost unaware of it, in fact.
+Thus his eyes saw as little as his body felt, and so he failed to
+observe something that would have given him additional light upon
+an old phrase that already meant quite enough for him.
+
+There are in the wide world people who have never learned its
+meaning; but most are either young or beautifully unobservant who
+remain wholly unaware of the inner poignancies the words convey:
+"a rain of misfortunes." It is a boiling rain, seemingly
+whimsical in its choice of spots whereon to fall; and, so far as
+mortal eye can tell, neither the just nor the unjust may hope to
+avoid it, or need worry themselves by expecting it. It had
+selected the Adams family for its scaldings; no question.
+
+The glue-works foreman, standing in the doorway of the brick
+shed, observed his employer's eccentric approach, and doubtfully
+stroked a whiskered chin.
+
+"Well, they ain't no putticular use gettin' so upset over it," he
+said, as Adams came up. "When a thing happens, why, it happens,
+and that's all there is to it. When a thing's so, why, it's so.
+All you can do about it is think if there's anything you CAN do;
+and that's what you better be doin' with this case."
+
+Adams halted, and seemed to gape at him. "What--case?" he said,
+with difficulty. "Was it in the morning papers, too?"
+
+"No, it ain't in no morning papers. My land! It don't need to
+be in no papers; look at the SIZE of it!"
+
+"The size of what?"
+
+"Why, great God!" the foreman exclaimed. "He ain't even seen it.
+Look! Look yonder!"
+
+Adams stared vaguely at the man's outstretched hand and pointing
+forefinger, then turned and saw a great sign upon the facade of
+the big factory building across the street. The letters were
+large enough to be read two blocks away.
+
+ "AFTER THE FIFTEENTH OF NEXT MONTH
+ THIS BUILDING WILL BE OCCUPIED BY
+ THE J. A. LAMB LIQUID GLUE CO. INC."
+
+
+A gray touring-car had just come to rest before the principal
+entrance of the building, and J. A. Lamb himself descended from
+it. He glanced over toward the humble rival of his projected
+great industry, saw his old clerk, and immediately walked across
+the street and the lot to speak to him.
+
+"Well, Adams," he said, in his husky, cheerful voice, "how's your
+glue-works?"
+
+Adams uttered an inarticulate sound, and lifted the hand that
+held his hat as if to make a protective gesture, but failed to
+carry it out; and his arm sank limp at his side. The foreman,
+however, seemed to feel that something ought to be said.
+
+"Our glue-works, hell!" he remarked. "I guess we won't HAVE no
+glue-works over here not very long, if we got to compete with the
+sized thing you got over there!"
+
+Lamb chuckled. "I kind of had some such notion," he said. "You
+see, Virgil, I couldn't exactly let you walk off with it like
+swallering a pat o' butter, now, could I? It didn't look exactly
+reasonable to expect me to let go like that, now, did it?"
+
+Adams found a half-choked voice somewhere in his throat. "Do
+you--would you step into my office a minute, Mr. Lamb?"
+
+"Why, certainly I'm willing to have a little talk with you," the
+old gentleman said, as he followed his former employee indoors,
+and he added, "I feel a lot more like it than I did before I got
+THAT up, over yonder, Virgil!"
+
+Adams threw open the door of the rough room he called his office,
+having as justification for this title little more than the fact
+that he had a telephone there and a deal table that served as a
+desk. "Just step into the office, please," he said.
+
+Lamb glanced at the desk, at the kitchen chair before it, at the
+telephone, and at the partition walls built of old boards, some
+covered with ancient paint and some merely weatherbeaten, the
+salvage of a house-wrecker; and he smiled broadly. "So these are
+your offices, are they?" he asked. "You expect to do quite a
+business here, I guess, don't you, Virgil?"
+
+Adams turned upon him a stricken and tortured face. "Have you
+seen Charley Lohr since last night, Mr. Lamb?"
+
+"No; I haven't seen Charley."
+
+"Well, I told him to tell you," Adams began;-- "I told him I'd
+pay you----"
+
+"Pay me what you expect to make out o' glue, you mean, Virgil?"
+
+"No," Adams said, swallowing. "I mean what my boy owes you.
+That's what I told Charley to tell you. I told him to tell you
+I'd pay you every last----"
+
+"Well, well!" the old gentleman interrupted, testily. "I don't
+know anything about that."
+
+"I'm expecting to pay you," Adams went on, swallowing again,
+painfully. "I was expecting to do it out of a loan I thought I
+could get on my glue-works."
+
+The old gentleman lifted his frosted eyebrows. "Oh, out o' the
+GLUE-works? You expected to raise money on the glue-works, did
+you?"
+
+At that, Adams's agitation increased prodigiously. "How'd you
+THINK I expected to pay you?" he said. "Did you think I expected
+to get money on my own old bones?" He slapped himself harshly
+upon the chest and legs. "Do you think a bank'll lend money on a
+man's ribs and his broken-down old knee-bones? They won't do it!
+You got to have some BUSINESS prospects to show 'em, if you
+haven't got any property nor securities; and what business
+prospects have I got now, with that sign of yours up over yonder?
+Why, you don't need to make an OUNCE o' glue; your sign's fixed
+ME without your doing another lick! THAT'S all you had to do;
+just put your sign up! You needn't to----"
+
+"Just let me tell you something, Virgil Adams," the old man
+interrupted, harshly. "I got just one right important thing to
+tell you before we talk any further business; and that's this:
+there's some few men in this town made their money in off-colour
+ways, but there aren't many; and those there are have had to be a
+darn sight slicker than you know how to be, or ever WILL know how
+to be! Yes, sir, and they none of them had the little gumption
+to try to make it out of a man that had the spirit not to let
+'em, and the STRENGTH not to let 'em! I know what you thought.
+'Here,' you said to yourself, 'here's this ole fool J. A. Lamb;
+he's kind of worn out and in his second childhood like; I can put
+it over on him, without his ever----'"
+
+"I did not!" Adams shouted. "A great deal YOU know about my
+feelings and all what I said to myself! There's one thing I want
+to tell YOU, and that's what I'm saying to myself NOW, and what
+my feelings are this MINUTE!"
+
+He struck the table a great blow with his thin fist, and shook
+the damaged knuckles in the air. "I just want to tell you,
+whatever I did feel, I don't feel MEAN any more; not to-day, I
+don't. There's a meaner man in this world than _I_ am, Mr.
+Lamb!"
+
+"Oh, so you feel better about yourself to-day, do you, Virgil?"
+
+"You bet I do! You worked till you got me where you want me; and
+I wouldn't do that to another man, no matter what he did to me!
+I wouldn't----"
+
+"What you talkin' about! How've I 'got you where I want you?'"
+
+"Ain't it plain enough?" Adams cried. "You even got me where I
+can't raise the money to pay back what my boy owes you! Do you
+suppose anybody's fool enough to let me have a cent on this
+business after one look at what you got over there across the
+road?"
+
+"No, I don't."
+
+"No, you don't," Adams echoed, hoarsely. "What's more, you knew
+my house was mortgaged, and my----"
+
+"I did not," Lamb interrupted, angrily. "What do _I_ care about
+your house?"
+
+"What's the use your talking like that?" Adams cried. "You got
+me where I can't even raise the money to pay what my boy owes the
+company, so't I can't show any reason to stop the prosecution and
+keep him out the penitentiary. That's where you worked till you
+got ME!"
+
+"What!" Lamb shouted. "You accuse me of----"
+
+"'Accuse you?' What am I telling you? Do you think I got no
+EYES?" And Adams hammered the table again. "Why, you knew the
+boy was weak----"
+
+"I did not!"
+
+"Listen: you kept him there after you got mad at my leaving the
+way I did. You kept him there after you suspected him; and you
+had him watched; you let him go on; just waited to catch him and
+ruin him!"
+
+"You're crazy!" the old man bellowed. "I didn't know there was
+anything against the boy till last night. You're CRAZY, I say!"
+
+Adams looked it. With his hair disordered over his haggard
+forehead and bloodshot eyes; with his bruised hands pounding the
+table and flying in a hundred wild and absurd gestures, while his
+feet shuffled constantly to preserve his balance upon staggering
+legs, he was the picture of a man with a mind gone to rags.
+
+"Maybe I AM crazy!" he cried, his voice breaking and quavering.
+"Maybe I am, but I wouldn't stand there and taunt a man with it
+if I'd done to him what you've done to me! Just look at me: I
+worked all my life for you, and what I did when I quit never
+harmed you--it didn't make two cents' worth o' difference in your
+life and it looked like it'd mean all the difference in the world
+to my family--and now look what you've DONE to me for it! I tell
+you, Mr. Lamb, there never was a man looked up to another man
+the way I looked up to you the whole o' my life, but I don't look
+up to you any more! You think you got a fine day of it now,
+riding up in your automobile to look at that sign--and then over
+here at my poor little works that you've ruined. But listen to
+me just this one last time!" The cracking voice broke into
+falsetto, and the gesticulating hands fluttered uncontrollably.
+"Just you listen!" he panted. "You think I did you a bad turn,
+and now you got me ruined for it, and you got my works ruined,
+and my family ruined; and if anybody'd 'a' told me this time last
+year I'd ever say such a thing to you I'd called him a dang liar,
+but I DO say it: I say you've acted toward me like--like a--a
+doggone mean--man!"
+
+His voice, exhausted, like his body, was just able to do him this
+final service; then he sank, crumpled, into the chair by the
+table, his chin down hard upon his chest.
+
+"I tell you, you're crazy!" Lamb said again. "I never in the
+world----" But he checked himself, staring in sudden perplexity
+at his accuser. "Look here!" he said. "What's the matter of
+you? Have you got another of those----?" He put his hand upon
+Adams's shoulder, which jerked feebly under the touch.
+
+The old man went to the door and called to the foreman.
+
+"Here!" he said. "Run and tell my chauffeur to bring my car over
+here. Tell him to drive right up over the sidewalk and across
+the lot. Tell him to hurry!"
+
+So, it happened, the great J. A. Lamb a second time brought his
+former clerk home, stricken and almost inanimate.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+About five o'clock that afternoon, the old gentleman came back to
+Adams's house; and when Alice opened the door, he nodded, walked
+into the "living-room" without speaking; then stood frowning as
+if he hesitated to decide some perplexing question.
+
+"Well, how is he now?" he asked, finally.
+
+"The doctor was here again a little while ago; he thinks papa's
+coming through it. He's pretty sure he will."
+
+"Something like the way it was last spring?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Not a bit of sense to it!" Lamb said, gruffly. "When he was
+getting well the other time the doctor told me it wasn't a
+regular stroke, so to speak--this 'cerebral effusion' thing.
+Said there wasn't any particular reason for your father to expect
+he'd ever have another attack, if he'd take a little care of
+himself. Said he could consider himself well as anybody else
+long as he did that."
+
+"Yes. But he didn't do it!"
+
+Lamb nodded, sighed aloud, and crossed the room to a chair. "I
+guess not," he said, as he sat down. "Bustin' his health up over
+his glue-works, I expect."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I guess so; I guess so." Then he looked up at her with a
+glimmer of anxiety in his eyes. "Has he came to yet?"
+
+"Yes. He's talked a little. His mind's clear; he spoke to mama
+and me and to Miss Perry." Alice laughed sadly. "We were lucky
+enough to get her back, but papa didn't seem to think it was
+lucky. When he recognized her he said, 'Oh, my goodness, 'tisn't
+YOU, is it!'"
+
+"Well, that's a good sign, if he's getting a little cross. Did
+he--did he happen to say anything--for instance, about me?"
+
+This question, awkwardly delivered, had the effect of removing
+the girl's pallor; rosy tints came quickly upon her cheeks.
+"He--yes, he did," she said. "Naturally, he's troubled
+about--about----" She stopped.
+
+"About your brother, maybe?"
+
+"Yes, about making up the----"
+
+"Here, now," Lamb said, uncomfortably, as she stopped again.
+"Listen, young lady; let's don't talk about that just yet. I
+want to ask you: you understand all about this glue business, I
+expect, don't you?"
+
+"I'm not sure. I only know----"
+
+"Let me tell you," he interrupted, impatiently. "I'll tell you
+all about it in two words. The process belonged to me, and your
+father up and walked off with it; there's no getting around THAT
+much, anyhow."
+
+"Isn't there?" Alice stared at him. "I think you're mistaken,
+Mr. Lamb. Didn't papa improve it so that it virtually belonged
+to him?"
+
+There was a spark in the old blue eyes at this. "What?" he
+cried. "Is that the way he got around it? Why, in all my life I
+never heard of such a----" But he left the sentence unfinished;
+the testiness went out of his husky voice and the anger out of
+his eyes. "Well, I expect maybe that was the way of it," he
+said. "Anyhow, it's right for you to stand up for your father;
+and if you think he had a right to it----"
+
+"But he did!" she cried.
+
+"I expect so," the old man returned, pacifically. "I expect so,
+probably. Anyhow, it's a question that's neither here nor there,
+right now. What I was thinking of saying--well, did your father
+happen to let out that he and I had words this morning?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Well, we did." He sighed and shook his head. "Your
+father--well, he used some pretty hard expressions toward me,
+young lady. They weren't SO, I'm glad to say, but he used 'em to
+me, and the worst of it was he believed 'em. Well, I been
+thinking it over, and I thought I'd just have a kind of little
+talk with you to set matters straight, so to speak."
+
+"Yes, Mr. Lamb."
+
+"For instance," he said, "it's like this. Now, I hope you won't
+think I mean any indelicacy, but you take your brother's case,
+since we got to mention it, why, your father had the whole thing
+worked out in his mind about as wrong as anybody ever got
+anything. If I'd acted the way your father thought I did about
+that, why, somebody just ought to take me out and shoot me! Do
+YOU know what that man thought?"
+
+"I'm not sure."
+
+He frowned at her, and asked, "Well, what do you think about it?"
+
+"I don't know," she said. "I don't believe I think anything at
+all about anything to-day."
+
+"Well, well," he returned; "I expect not; I expect not. You kind
+of look to me as if you ought to be in bed yourself, young lady."
+
+"Oh, no."
+
+"I guess you mean 'Oh, yes'; and I won't keep you long, but
+there's something we got to get fixed up, and I'd rather talk to
+you than I would to your mother, because you're a smart girl and
+always friendly; and I want to be sure I'm understood. Now,
+listen."
+
+"I will," Alice promised, smiling faintly.
+
+"I never even hardly noticed your brother was still working for
+me," he explained, earnestly. "I never thought anything about
+it. My sons sort of tried to tease me about the way your
+father--about his taking up this glue business, so to speak--and
+one day Albert, Junior, asked me if I felt all right about your
+brother's staying there after that, and I told him--well, I just
+asked him to shut up. If the boy wanted to stay there, I didn't
+consider it my business to send him away on account of any
+feeling I had toward his father; not as long as he did his work
+right--and the report showed he did. Well, as it happens, it
+looks now as if he stayed because he HAD to; he couldn't quit
+because he'd 'a' been found out if he did. Well, he'd been
+covering up his shortage for a considerable time--and do you know
+what your father practically charged me with about that?"
+
+"No, Mr. Lamb."
+
+In his resentment, the old gentleman's ruddy face became ruddier
+and his husky voice huskier. "Thinks I kept the boy there
+because I suspected him! Thinks I did it to get even with HIM!
+Do I look to YOU like a man that'd do such a thing?"
+
+"No," she said, gently. "I don't think you would."
+
+"No!" he exclaimed. "Nor HE wouldn't think so if he was himself;
+he's known me too long. But he must been sort of brooding over
+this whole business-- I mean before Walter's trouble he must been
+taking it to heart pretty hard for some time back. He thought I
+didn't think much of him any more--and I expect he maybe wondered
+some what I was going to DO--and there's nothing worse'n that
+state of mind to make a man suspicious of all kinds of meanness.
+Well, he practically stood up there and accused me to my face of
+fixing things so't he couldn't ever raise the money to settle for
+Walter and ask us not to prosecute. That's the state of mind
+your father's brooding got him into, young lady--charging me with
+a trick like that!"
+
+"I'm sorry," she said. "I know you'd never----"
+
+The old man slapped his sturdy knee, angrily. "Why, that dang
+fool of a Virgil Adams!" he exclaimed. "He wouldn't even give me
+a chance to talk; and he got me so mad I couldn't hardly talk,
+anyway! He might 'a' known from the first I wasn't going to let
+him walk in and beat me out of my own--that is, he might 'a'
+known I wouldn't let him get ahead of me in a business
+matter--not with my boys twitting me about it every few minutes!
+But to talk to me the way he did this morning--well, he was out
+of his head; that's all! Now, wait just a minute," he
+interposed, as she seemed about to speak. "In the first place,
+we aren't going to push this case against your brother. I
+believe in the law, all right, and business men got to protect
+themselves; but in a case like this, where restitution's made by
+the family, why, I expect it's just as well sometimes to use a
+little influence and let matters drop. Of course your brother'll
+have to keep out o' this state; that's all."
+
+"But--you said----" she faltered.
+
+"Yes. What'd I say?"
+
+"You said, 'where restitution's made by the family.' That's what
+seemed to trouble papa so terribly, because--because restitution
+couldn't----"
+
+"Why, yes, it could. That's what I'm here to talk to you about."
+
+"I don't see----"
+
+"I'm going to TELL you, ain't I?" he said, gruffly. "Just hold
+your horses a minute, please." He coughed, rose from his chair,
+walked up and down the room, then halted before her. "It's like
+this," he said. "After I brought your father home, this morning,
+there was one of the things he told me, when he was going for me,
+over yonder--it kind of stuck in my craw. It was something about
+all this glue controversy not meaning anything to me in
+particular, and meaning a whole heap to him and his family.
+Well, he was wrong about that two ways. The first one was, it
+did mean a good deal to me to have him go back on me after so
+many years. I don't need to say any more about it, except just
+to tell you it meant quite a little more to me than you'd think,
+maybe. The other way he was wrong is, that how much a thing
+means to one man and how little it means to another ain't the
+right way to look at a business matter."
+
+"I suppose it isn't, Mr. Lamb."
+
+"No," he said. "It isn't. It's not the right way to look at
+anything. Yes, and your father knows it as well as I do, when
+he's in his right mind; and I expect that's one of the reasons he
+got so mad at me--but anyhow, I couldn't help thinking about how
+much all this thing HAD maybe meant to him;--as I say, it kind of
+stuck in my craw. I want you to tell him something from me, and
+I want you to go and tell him right off, if he's able and willing
+to listen. You tell him I got kind of a notion he was pushed
+into this thing by circumstances, and tell him I've lived long
+enough to know that circumstances can beat the best of us--you
+tell him I said 'the BEST of us.' Tell him I haven't got a bit of
+feeling against him--not any more--and tell him I came here to
+ask him not to have any against me."
+
+"Yes, Mr. Lamb."
+
+"Tell him I said----" The old man paused abruptly and Alice was
+surprised, in a dull and tired way, when she saw that his lips
+had begun to twitch and his eyelids to blink; but he recovered
+himself almost at once, and continued: "I want him to remember,
+'Forgive us our transgressions, as we forgive those that
+transgress against us'; and if he and I been transgressing
+against each other, why, tell him I think it's time we QUIT such
+foolishness!"
+
+He coughed again, smiled heartily upon her, and walked toward the
+door; then turned back to her with an exclamation: "Well, if I
+ain't an old fool!"
+
+"What is it?" she asked.
+
+"Why, I forgot what we were just talking about! Your father
+wants to settle for Walter's deficit. Tell him we'll be glad to
+accept it; but of course we don't expect him to clean the matter
+up until he's able to talk business again."
+
+Alice stared at him blankly enough for him to perceive that
+further explanations were necessary. "It's like this," he said.
+"You see, if your father decided to keep his works going over
+yonder, I don't say but he might give us some little competition
+for a time, 'specially as he's got the start on us and about
+ready for the market. Then I was figuring we could use his
+plant--it's small, but it'd be to our benefit to have the use of
+it--and he's got a lease on that big lot; it may come in handy
+for us if we want to expand some. Well, I'd prefer to make a
+deal with him as quietly as possible---no good in every Tom, Dick
+and Harry hearing about things like this--but I figured he could
+sell out to me for a little something more'n enough to cover the
+mortgage he put on this house, and Walter's deficit, too--THAT
+don't amount to much in dollars and cents. The way I figure it,
+I could offer him about ninety-three hundred dollars as a
+total--or say ninety-three hundred and fifty--and if he feels
+like accepting, why, I'll send a confidential man up here with
+the papers soon's your father's able to look 'em over. You tell
+him, will you, and ask him if he sees his way to accepting that
+figure?"
+
+"Yes," Alice said; and now her own lips twitched, while her eyes
+filled so that she saw but a blurred image of the old man, who
+held out his hand in parting. "I'll tell him. Thank you."
+
+He shook her hand hastily. "Well, let's just keep it kind of
+quiet," he said, at the door. "No good in every Tom, Dick and
+Harry knowing all what goes on in town! You telephone me when
+your papa's ready to go over the papers--and call me up at my
+house to-night, will you? Let me hear how he's feeling?"
+
+"I will," she said, and through her grateful tears gave him a
+smile almost radiant. "He'll be better, Mr. Lamb. We all
+will."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+One morning, that autumn, Mrs. Adams came into Alice's room, and
+found her completing a sober toilet for the street; moreover, the
+expression revealed in her mirror was harmonious with the
+business-like severity of her attire. "What makes you look so
+cross, dearie?" the mother asked. "Couldn't you find anything
+nicer to wear than that plain old dark dress?"
+
+"I don't believe I'm cross," the girl said, absently. "I believe
+I'm just thinking. Isn't it about time?"
+
+"Time for what?"
+
+"Time for thinking--for me, I mean?"
+
+Disregarding this, Mrs. Adams looked her over thoughtfully. "I
+can't see why you don't wear more colour," she said. "At your
+age it's becoming and proper, too. Anyhow, when you're going on
+the street, I think you ought to look just as gay and lively as
+you can manage. You want to show 'em you've got some spunk!"
+
+"How do you mean, mama?"
+
+"I mean about Walter's running away and the mess your father made
+of his business. It would help to show 'em you're holding up
+your head just the same."
+
+"Show whom!"
+
+"All these other girls that----"
+
+"Not I!" Alice laughed shortly, shaking her head. "I've quit
+dressing at them, and if they saw me they wouldn't think what you
+want 'em to. It's funny; but we don't often make people think
+what we want 'em to, mama. You do thus and so; and you tell
+yourself, 'Now, seeing me do thus and so, people will naturally
+think this and that'; but they don't. They think something
+else--usually just what you DON'T want 'em to. I suppose about
+the only good in pretending is the fun we get out of fooling
+ourselves that we fool somebody."
+
+"Well, but it wouldn't be pretending. You ought to let people
+see you're still holding your head up because you ARE. You
+wouldn't want that Mildred Palmer to think you're cast down
+about--well, you know you wouldn't want HER not to think you're
+holding your head up, would you?"
+
+"She wouldn't know whether I am or not, mama." Alice bit her
+lip, then smiled faintly as she said:
+
+"Anyhow, I'm not thinking about my head in that way--not this
+morning, I'm not."
+
+Mrs. Adams dropped the subject casually. "Are you going
+down-town?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What for?"
+
+"Just something I want to see about. I'll tell you when I come
+back. Anything you want me to do?"
+
+"No; I guess not to-day. I thought you might look for a rug, but
+I'd rather go with you to select it. We'll have to get a new rug
+for your father's room, I expect."
+
+"I'm glad you think so, mama. I don't suppose he's ever even
+noticed it, but that old rug of his--well, really!"
+
+"I didn't mean for him," her mother explained, thoughtfully.
+"No; he don't mind it, and he'd likely make a fuss if we changed
+it on his account. No; what I meant--we'll have to put your
+father in Walter's room. He won't mind, I don't expect--not
+much."
+
+"No, I suppose not," Alice agreed, rather sadly. "I heard the
+bell awhile ago. Was it somebody about that?"
+
+"Yes; just before I came upstairs. Mrs. Lohr gave him a note to
+me, and he was really a very pleasant-looking young man. A VERY
+pleasant-looking young man," Mrs. Adams repeated with increased
+animation and a thoughtful glance at her daughter. "He's a Mr.
+Will Dickson; he has a first-rate position with the gas works,
+Mrs. Lohr says, and he's fully able to afford a nice room. So
+if you and I double up in here, then with that young married
+couple in my room, and this Mr. Dickson in your father's, we'll
+just about have things settled. I thought maybe I could make one
+more place at table, too, so that with the other people from
+outside we'd be serving eleven altogether. You see if I have to
+pay this cook twelve dollars a week--it can't be helped, I
+guess--well, one more would certainly help toward a profit. Of
+course it's a terribly worrying thing to see how we WILL come
+out. Don't you suppose we could squeeze in one more?"
+
+"I suppose it COULD be managed; yes."
+
+Mrs. Adams brightened. "I'm sure it'll be pleasant having that
+young married couple in the house and especially this Mr. Will
+Dickson. He seemed very much of a gentleman, and anxious to get
+settled in good surroundings. I was very favourably impressed
+with him in every way; and he explained to me about his name; it
+seems it isn't William, it's just 'Will'; his parents had him
+christened that way. It's curious." She paused, and then, with
+an effort to seem casual, which veiled nothing from her daughter:
+"It's QUITE curious," she said again. "But it's rather
+attractive and different, don't you think?"
+
+"Poor mama!" Alice laughed compassionately. "Poor mama!"
+
+"He is, though," Mrs. Adams maintained. "He's very much of a
+gentleman, unless I'm no judge of appearances; and it'll really
+be nice to have him in the house."
+
+"No doubt," Alice said, as she opened her door to depart. "I
+don't suppose we'll mind having any of 'em as much as we thought
+we would. Good-bye."
+
+But her mother detained her, catching her by the arm. "Alice,
+you do hate it, don't you!"
+
+"No," the girl said, quickly. "There wasn't anything else to
+do."
+
+Mrs. Adams became emotional at once: her face cried tragedy, and
+her voice misfortune. "There MIGHT have been something else to
+do! Oh, Alice, you gave your father bad advice when you upheld
+him in taking a miserable little ninety-three hundred and fifty
+from that old wretch! If your father'd just had the gumption to
+hold out, they'd have had to pay him anything he asked. If he'd
+just had the gumption and a little manly COURAGE----"
+
+"Hush!" Alice whispered, for her mother's voice grew louder.
+"Hush! He'll hear you, mama."
+
+"Could he hear me too often?" the embittered lady asked. "If
+he'd listened to me at the right time, would we have to be taking
+in boarders and sinking DOWN in the scale at the end of our
+lives, instead of going UP? You were both wrong; we didn't need
+to be so panicky--that was just what that old man wanted: to
+scare us and buy us out for nothing! If your father'd just
+listened to me then, or if for once in his life he'd just been
+half a MAN----"
+
+Alice put her hand over her mother's mouth. "You mustn't! He
+WILL hear you!"
+
+But from the other side of Adams's closed door his voice came
+querulously. "Oh, I HEAR her, all right!"
+
+"You see, mama?" Alice said, and, as Mrs. Adams turned away,
+weeping, the daughter sighed; then went in to speak to her
+father.
+
+He was in his old chair by the table, with a pillow behind his
+head, but the crocheted scarf and Mrs. Adams's wrapper swathed
+him no more; he wore a dressing-gown his wife had bought for him,
+and was smoking his pipe. "The old story, is it?" he said, as
+Alice came in. "The same, same old story! Well, well! Has she
+gone?"
+
+"Yes, papa."
+
+"Got your hat on," he said. "Where you going?"
+
+"I'm going down-town on an errand of my own. Is there anything
+you want, papa?"
+
+"Yes, there is." He smiled at her. "I wish you'd sit down a
+while and talk to me unless your errand----"
+
+"No," she said, taking a chair near him. "I was just going down
+to see about some arrangements I was making for myself. There's
+no hurry."
+
+"What arrangements for yourself, dearie?"
+
+"I'll tell you afterwards--after I find out something about 'em
+myself."
+
+"All right," he said, indulgently. "Keep your secrets; keep your
+secrets." He paused, drew musingly upon his pipe, and shook his
+head. "Funny--the way your mother looks at things! For the
+matter o' that, everything's pretty funny, I expect, if you stop
+to think about it. For instance, let her say all she likes, but
+we were pushed right spang to the wall, if J. A. Lamb hadn't
+taken it into his head to make that offer for the works; and
+there's one of the things I been thinking about lately, Alice:
+thinking about how funny they work out."
+
+"What did you think about it, papa!"
+
+"Well, I've seen it happen in other people's lives, time and time
+again; and now it's happened in ours. You think you're going to
+be pushed right up against the wall; you can't see any way out,
+or any hope at all; you think you're GONE--and then something you
+never counted on turns up; and, while maybe you never do get back
+to where you used to be, yet somehow you kind of squirm out of
+being right SPANG against the wall. You keep on going--maybe you
+can't go much, but you do go a little. See what I mean?"
+
+"Yes. I understand, dear."
+
+"Yes, I'm afraid you do," he said. "Too bad! You oughtn't to
+understand it at your age. It seems to me a good deal as if the
+Lord really meant for the young people to have the good times,
+and for the old to have the troubles; and when anybody as young
+as you has trouble there's a big mistake somewhere."
+
+"Oh, no!" she protested.
+
+But he persisted whimsically in this view of divine error: "Yes,
+it does look a good deal that way. But of course we can't tell;
+we're never certain about anything--not about anything at all.
+Sometimes I look at it another way, though. Sometimes it looks
+to me as if a body's troubles came on him mainly because he
+hadn't had sense enough to know how not to have any--as if his
+troubles were kind of like a boy's getting kept in after school
+by the teacher, to give him discipline, or something or other.
+But, my, my! We don't learn easy!" He chuckled mournfully. "Not
+to learn how to live till we're about ready to die, it certainly
+seems to me dang tough!"
+
+"Then I wouldn't brood on such a notion, papa," she said.
+
+"'Brood?' No!" he returned. "I just kind o' mull it over." He
+chuckled again, sighed, and then, not looking at her, he said,
+"That Mr. Russell--your mother tells me he hasn't been here
+again--not since----"
+
+"No," she said, quietly, as Adams paused. "He never came again."
+
+"Well, but maybe----"
+
+"No," she said. "There isn't any 'maybe.' I told him good-bye
+that night, papa. It was before he knew about Walter--I told
+you."
+
+"Well, well," Adams said. "Young people are entitled to their
+own privacy; I don't want to pry." He emptied his pipe into a
+chipped saucer on the table beside him, laid the pipe aside, and
+reverted to a former topic. "Speaking of dying----"
+
+"Well, but we weren't!" Alice protested.
+
+"Yes, about not knowing how to live till you're through
+living--and THEN maybe not!" he said, chuckling at his own
+determined pessimism. "I see I'm pretty old because I talk this
+way--I remember my grandmother saying things a good deal like all
+what I'm saying now; I used to hear her at it when I was a young
+fellow--she was a right gloomy old lady, I remember. Well,
+anyhow, it reminds me: I want to get on my feet again as soon as
+I can; I got to look around and find something to go into."
+
+Alice shook her head gently. "But, papa, he told you----"
+
+"Never mind throwing that dang doctor up at me!" Adams
+interrupted, peevishly. "He said I'd be good for SOME kind of
+light job--if I could find just the right thing. 'Where there
+wouldn't be either any physical or mental strain,' he said.
+Well, I got to find something like that. Anyway, I'll feel
+better if I can just get out LOOKING for it."
+
+"But, papa, I'm afraid you won't find it, and you'll be
+disappointed."
+
+"Well, I want to hunt around and SEE, anyhow."
+
+Alice patted his hand. "You must just be contented, papa.
+Everything's going to be all right, and you mustn't get to
+worrying about doing anything. We own this house it's all
+clear--and you've taken care of mama and me all our lives; now
+it's our turn."
+
+"No, sir!" he said, querulously. "I don't like the idea of being
+the landlady's husband around a boarding-house; it goes against
+my gizzard. _I_ know: makes out the bills for his wife Sunday
+mornings--works with a screw-driver on somebody's bureau drawer
+sometimes--'tends the furnace maybe--one the boarders gives him a
+cigar now and then. That's a FINE life to look forward to! No,
+sir; I don't want to finish as a landlady's husband!"
+
+Alice looked grave; for she knew the sketch was but too
+accurately prophetic in every probability. "But, papa," she
+said, to console him, "don't you think maybe there isn't such a
+thing as a 'finish,' after all! You say perhaps we don't learn
+to live till we die but maybe that's how it is AFTER we die,
+too--just learning some more, the way we do here, and maybe
+through trouble again, even after that."
+
+"Oh, it might be," he sighed. "I expect so."
+
+"Well, then," she said, "what's the use of talking about a
+'finish?' We do keep looking ahead to things as if they'd finish
+something, but when we get TO them, they don't finish anything.
+They're just part of going on. I'll tell you--I looked ahead all
+summer to something I was afraid of, and I said to myself, 'Well,
+if that happens, I'm finished!' But it wasn't so, papa. It did
+happen, and nothing's finished; I'm going on, just the same
+only----" She stopped and blushed.
+
+"Only what?" he asked.
+
+"Well----" She blushed more deeply, then jumped up, and, standing
+before him, caught both his hands in hers. "Well, don't you
+think, since we do have to go on, we ought at least to have
+learned some sense about how to do it?"
+
+He looked up at her adoringly.
+
+"What _I_ think," he said, and his voice trembled;--"I think
+you're the smartest girl in the world! I wouldn't trade you for
+the whole kit-and-boodle of 'em!"
+
+But as this folly of his threatened to make her tearful, she
+kissed him hastily, and went forth upon her errand.
+
+Since the night of the tragic-comic dinner she had not seen
+Russell, nor caught even the remotest chance glimpse of him; and
+it was curious that she should encounter him as she went upon
+such an errand as now engaged her. At a corner, not far from
+that tobacconist's shop she had just left when he overtook her
+and walked with her for the first time, she met him to-day. He
+turned the corner, coming toward her, and they were face to face;
+whereupon that engaging face of Russell's was instantly reddened,
+but Alice's remained serene.
+
+She stopped short, though; and so did he; then she smiled
+brightly as she put out her hand.
+
+"Why, Mr. Russell!"
+
+"I'm so--I'm so glad to have this--this chance," he stammered.
+"I've wanted to tell you--it's just that going into a new
+undertaking--this business life--one doesn't get to do a great
+many things he'd like to. I hope you'll let me call again some
+time, if I can."
+
+"Yes, do!" she said, cordially, and then, with a quick nod, went
+briskly on.
+
+She breathed more rapidly, but knew that he could not have
+detected it, and she took some pride in herself for the way she
+had met this little crisis. But to have met it with such easy
+courage meant to her something more reassuring than a momentary
+pride in the serenity she had shown. For she found that what she
+had resolved in her inmost heart was now really true: she was
+"through with all that!"
+
+She walked on, but more slowly, for the tobacconist's shop was
+not far from her now--and, beyond it, that portal of doom,
+Frincke's Business College. Already Alice could read the
+begrimed gilt letters of the sign; and although they had spelled
+destiny never with a more painful imminence than just then, an
+old habit of dramatizing herself still prevailed with her.
+
+There came into her mind a whimsical comparison of her fate with
+that of the heroine in a French romance she had read long ago and
+remembered well, for she had cried over it. The story ended with
+the heroine's taking the veil after a death blow to love; and the
+final scene again became vivid to Alice, for a moment. Again, as
+when she had read and wept, she seemed herself to stand among the
+great shadows in the cathedral nave; smelled the smoky incense on
+the enclosed air, and heard the solemn pulses of the organ. She
+remembered how the novice's father knelt, trembling, beside a
+pillar of gray stone; how the faithless lover watched and
+shivered behind the statue of a saint; how stifled sobs and
+outcries were heard when the novice came to the altar; and how a
+shaft of light struck through the rose-window, enveloping her in
+an amber glow.
+
+It was the vision of a moment only, and for no longer than a
+moment did Alice tell herself that the romance provided a
+prettier way of taking the veil than she had chosen, and that a
+faithless lover, shaking with remorse behind a saint's statue,
+was a greater solace than one left on a street corner protesting
+that he'd like to call some time--if he could! Her pity for
+herself vanished more reluctantly; but she shook it off and tried
+to smile at it, and at her romantic recollections--at all of
+them. She had something important to think of.
+
+She passed the tobacconist's, and before her was that dark
+entrance to the wooden stairway leading up to Frincke's Business
+College--the very doorway she had always looked upon as the end
+of youth and the end of hope.
+
+How often she had gone by here, hating the dreary obscurity of
+that stairway; how often she had thought of this obscurity as
+something lying in wait to obliterate the footsteps of any girl
+who should ascend into the smoky darkness above! Never had she
+passed without those ominous imaginings of hers: pretty girls
+turning into old maids "taking dictation"--old maids of a dozen
+different types, yet all looking a little like herself.
+
+Well, she was here at last! She looked up and down the street
+quickly, and then, with a little heave of the shoulders, she went
+bravely in, under the sign, and began to climb the wooden steps.
+Half-way up the shadows were heaviest, but after that the place
+began to seem brighter. There was an open window overhead
+somewhere, she found; and the steps at the top were gay with
+sunshine.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Alice Adams, by Booth Tarkington
+
diff --git a/old/aladm10.zip b/old/aladm10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..90a4dd8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/aladm10.zip
Binary files differ