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| Produced by Charles Franks, Charles Aldarondo, and the | |
| Online Distributed Proofreading Team | |
| SAMUEL THE SEEKER | |
| By Upton Sinclair | |
| CHAPTER I | |
| “Samuel,” said old Ephraim, “Seek, and ye shall find.” | |
| He had written these words upon the little picture of Samuel's mother, | |
| which hung in that corner of the old attic which served as the boy's | |
| bedroom; and so Samuel grew up with the knowledge that he, too, was one | |
| of the Seekers. Just what he was to seek, and just how he was to seek | |
| it, were matters of uncertainty--they were part of the search. Old | |
| Ephraim could not tell him very much about it, for the Seekers had moved | |
| away to the West before he had come to the farm; and Samuel's mother had | |
| died very young, before her husband had a chance to learn more than the | |
| rudiments of her faith. So all that Samuel knew was that the Seekers | |
| were men and women of fervor, who had broken with the churches because | |
| they would not believe what was taught--holding that it was every man's | |
| duty to read the Word of God for himself and to follow where it led him. | |
| Thus the boy learned to think of life, not as something settled, but as | |
| a place for adventure. One must seek and seek; and in the end the way of | |
| truth would be revealed to him. He could see this zeal in his mother's | |
| face, beautiful and delicate, even in the crude picture; and Samuel | |
| did not know that the picture was crude, and wove his dreams about it. | |
| Sometimes at twilight old Ephraim would talk about her, and the tears | |
| would steal down his cheeks. The one year that he had known her had | |
| sufficed to change the course of his life; and he had been a man past | |
| middle life, too, a widower with two children. He had come into the | |
| country as the foreman of a lumber camp back on the mountain. | |
| Samuel had always thought of his father as an old man; Ephraim had been | |
| hurt by a vicious horse, and had aged rapidly after that. He had given | |
| up lumbering; it had not taken long to clear out that part of the | |
| mountains. Now the hills were swept bare, and the population had found a | |
| new way of living. | |
| Samuel's childhood life had been grim and stern. The winter fell early | |
| upon the mountain wilderness; the lake would freeze over, and the roads | |
| block up with snow, and after that they would live upon what they | |
| had raised in the summer, with what Dan and Adam--Samuel's | |
| half-brothers--might bring in from the chase. But now all this was | |
| changed and forgotten; for there was a hotel at the end of the lake, and | |
| money was free in the country. It was no longer worth while to reap the | |
| hay from the mountain meadows; it was better to move the family into the | |
| attic, and “take boarders.” Some of the neighbors even turned their old | |
| corncribs into sleeping shacks, and advertised in the city papers, and | |
| were soon blossoming forth in white paint and new buildings, and were on | |
| the way to having “hotels” of their own. | |
| Old Ephraim lacked the cunning for that kind of success. He was lame | |
| and slow, tending toward stoutness, and having a film over one eye; and | |
| Samuel knew that the boarders made fun of him, even while they devoured | |
| his food and took advantage of him. This was the first bitterness of | |
| Samuel's life; for he knew that within old Ephraim's bosom was the heart | |
| of a king. Once the boy had heard him in the room beneath his attic, | |
| talking with one of the boarders, a widow with a little daughter of whom | |
| the old man was fond. “I've had a feeling, ma'am,” he was saying, “that | |
| somehow you might be in trouble. And I wanted to say that if you can't | |
| spare this money, I would rather you kept it; for I don't need it now, | |
| and you can send it to me when things are better with you.” That was | |
| Ephraim Prescott's way with his boarders; and so he did not grow in | |
| riches as fast as he grew in soul. | |
| Ephraim's wife had taught him to read the Bible. He read it every night, | |
| and on Sundays also; and if what he was reading was sublime poetry, and | |
| a part of the world's best literature, the old man did not know it. He | |
| took it all as having actual relationship to such matters as trading | |
| horses and feeding boarders. And he taught Samuel to take it that way | |
| also; and as the boy grew up there took root within him a great dismay | |
| and perplexity, that these moral truths which he read in the Book seemed | |
| to count for so little in the world about him. | |
| Besides the Bible and his mother, Ephraim taught his son one other great | |
| thing; that was America. America was Samuel's country, the land where | |
| his fathers had died. It was a land set apart from all others, for the | |
| working out of a high and wonderful destiny. It was the land of Liberty. | |
| For this whole armies of heroic men had poured out their heart's blood; | |
| and their dream was embodied in institutions which were almost as sacred | |
| as the Book itself. Samuel learned hymns which dealt with these things, | |
| and he heard great speeches about them; every Fourth of July that he | |
| could remember he had driven out to the courthouse to hear one, and he | |
| was never in the least ashamed when the tears came into his eyes. | |
| He had seen tears even in the summer boarders' eyes; once or twice | |
| when on a quiet evening it chanced that the old man unlocked the secret | |
| chambers of his soul. For Ephraim Prescott had been through the War. | |
| He had marched with the Seventeenth Pennsylvania from Bull Run to Cold | |
| Harbor, where he had been three times wounded; and his memory was a | |
| storehouse of mighty deeds and thrilling images. Heroic figures strode | |
| through it; there were marches and weary sieges, prison and sickness and | |
| despair; there were moments of horror and of glory, visions of blood | |
| and anguish, of flame and cannon smoke; there were battle flags, torn | |
| by shot and shell, and names of precious memory, which stirred the deep | |
| places of the soul. These men had given their lives for Freedom; they | |
| had lain down to make a pathway before her--they had filled up a bloody | |
| chasm so that she might pass upon her way. And that was the heritage | |
| they handed to their children, to guard and cherish. That was what it | |
| meant to be an American; that one must hold himself in readiness to go | |
| forth as they had done, and dare and suffer whatever the fates might | |
| send. | |
| Such were the things out of which Samuel's life was made; besides these | |
| he had only the farm, with its daily tasks, and the pageant of Nature | |
| in the wilderness--of day and night, and of winter and summer upon the | |
| mountains. The books were few. There was one ragged volume which Samuel | |
| knew nearly by heart, which told the adventures of a castaway upon a | |
| desert island, and how, step by step, he solved his problem; Samuel | |
| learned from that to think of life as made by honest labor, and to find | |
| a thrill of romance in the making of useful things. And then there | |
| was the story of Christian, and of his pilgrimage; the very book for | |
| a Seeker--with visions of glory not too definite, leaving danger of | |
| premature success. | |
| And then, much later, some one left at the place a volume of the “Farm | |
| Rhymes” of James Whitcomb Riley; and before Samuel's eyes there opened a | |
| new vision of life. He had been happy; but now suddenly he realized | |
| it. He had loved the blue sky above him, and the deep woods and the | |
| sparkling lake; but now he had words to tell about them--and the common | |
| tasks of his life were transfigured with the glory of song. So one might | |
| milk the cow with stirrings of wonder, and mow in the meadows to the | |
| rhythm of “Knee-deep in June.” | |
| From which you may divine that Samuel was what is called an Enthusiast. | |
| He was disposed to take rosy views of things, and to believe what he | |
| was told--especially if it was something beautiful and appealing. He was | |
| given to having ideals and to accepting theories. He would be stirred | |
| by some broad new principle; and he would set to work to apply it with | |
| fervor. But you are not to conclude from this that Samuel was a fool. | |
| On the contrary, when things went wrong he knew it; and according to his | |
| religion, he sought the reason, and he sought persistently, and with all | |
| his might. If all men would do as much, the world might soon be quite a | |
| different place. | |
| CHAPTER II | |
| Such was Samuel's life until he was seventeen, and then a sad experience | |
| came to the family. | |
| It was because of the city people. They brought prosperity to the | |
| country, everyone said, but old Ephraim regretted their coming, none the | |
| less. They broke down the old standards, and put an end to the old ways | |
| of life. What was the use of grubbing up stumps in a pasture lot, | |
| when one could sell minnows for a penny apiece? So all the men became | |
| “guides” and camp servants, and the girls became waitresses. They wore | |
| more stylish clothes and were livelier of speech; but they were also | |
| more greedy and less independent. They had learned to take tips, for | |
| instance; and more than one of the girls went away to the city to | |
| nameless and terrible destinies. | |
| These summer boarders all had money. Young and old, it flowed from them | |
| in a continuous stream. They did not have to plow and reap--they bought | |
| what they wanted; and they spent their time at play--with sailboats and | |
| fishing tackle, bicycles and automobiles, and what not. How all this | |
| money came to be was a thing difficult to imagine; but it came from the | |
| city--from the great Metropolis, to which one's thoughts turned with | |
| ever livelier interest. | |
| Then, one August, came a man who opened the gates of knowledge a little. | |
| Manning was his name--Percival Manning, junior partner in the firm | |
| of Manning & Isaacson, Bankers and Brokers--with an address which had | |
| caused the Prescott family to start and stare with awe. It was Wall | |
| Street! | |
| Mr. Percival Manning was round and stout, and wore striped shirts, | |
| and trousers which were like a knife blade in front; also, he fairly | |
| radiated prosperity. His talk was all of financial wizardry by which | |
| fortunes were made overnight. The firm of Manning & Isaacson was one of | |
| the oldest and most prosperous in the street, so he said; and its junior | |
| partner was in the confidence of some of the greatest powers in the | |
| financial affairs of the country. And, alas! for the Prescott family, | |
| which did not read the magazines and had never even heard of a | |
| “bucket-shop”! | |
| Adam, the oldest brother, took Mr. Manning back to Indian Pond on a | |
| fishing trip; and Samuel went along to help with the carries. And all | |
| the way the talk was of the wonders of city life. Samuel learned that | |
| his home was a God-forsaken place in winter--something which had never | |
| been hinted at in any theological book which he had read. Manning | |
| wondered that Adam didn't get out to some place where a man had a | |
| chance. Then he threw away a half-smoked cigar and talked about the | |
| theaters and the music halls; and after that he came back to the | |
| inexhaustible topic of Wall Street. | |
| He had had interesting news from the office that day; there was a big | |
| deal about to be consummated--the Glass Bottle Trust was ready for | |
| launching. For nearly a year old Harry Lockman--“You've heard of him, no | |
| doubt--he built up the great glass works at Lockmanville?” said Manning. | |
| No, Adam confessed that he had never heard of Lockman, that shrewd | |
| and crafty old multi-millionaire who had gone on a still hunt for | |
| glass-bottle factories, and now had the country in the grip of the | |
| fourteen-million-dollar “Glass Bottle Securities Company.” No one knew | |
| it, as yet; but soon the enterprise would be under full sail--“And won't | |
| the old cormorant take in the shekels, though!” chuckled Manning. | |
| “That might be a good sort of thing for a man to invest in,” said Adam | |
| cautiously. | |
| “Well, I just guess!” laughed the other. “If he's quick about it.” | |
| “Do you suppose you could find out how to get some of that stock?” was | |
| the next question. | |
| “Sure,” said Manning--“that's what we're in business for.” | |
| And then, as luck would have it, a city man bought the old Wyckman farm, | |
| and the trustees of the estate came to visit Ephraim in solemn state | |
| and paid down three crisp one-thousand-dollar bills and carried off the | |
| canceled mortgage. And the old man sat a-tremble holding in his hands | |
| the savings of his whole lifetime, and facing the eager onslaught of his | |
| two eldest sons. | |
| “But, Adam!” he protested. “It's gambling!” | |
| “It's nothing of the kind,” cried the other. “It's no more gambling than | |
| if I was to buy a horse because I knowed that horses would be scarce | |
| next spring. It's just business.” | |
| “But those factories make beer bottles and whisky bottles!” exclaimed | |
| the old man. “Does it seem right to you to get our money that way?” | |
| “They make all kinds of bottles,” said Adam; “how can they help what | |
| they're used for?” | |
| “And besides,” put in Dan, with a master-stroke of diplomacy, “it will | |
| raise the prices on 'em, and make 'em harder to git.” | |
| “There's been fortunes lost in Wall Street,” said the father. “How can | |
| we tell?” | |
| “We've got a chance to get in on the inside,” said Adam. “Such chances | |
| don't happen twice in a lifetime.” | |
| “Just read this here circular!” added Dan. “If we let a chance like this | |
| go we'll deserve to break our backs hoeing corn the rest of our days.” | |
| That was the argument. Old Ephraim had never thought of a broken back in | |
| connection with the hoeing of corn. There were four acres in the field, | |
| and every spring he had plowed and harrowed it and planted it and | |
| replanted what the crows had pulled up; and all summer long he had | |
| hoed and tended it, and in the fall he had cut it, stalk by stalk, | |
| and stacked it; and then through October, sitting on the bare bleak | |
| hillside, he had husked it, ear by ear, and gathered it in baskets--if | |
| the season was good, perhaps a hundred dollars' worth of grain. That | |
| was the way one worked to create a hundred dollars' worth of Value; and | |
| Manning had paid as much for the fancy-mounted shotgun which stood in | |
| the corner of his room! And here was the great fourteen-million-dollar | |
| Glass Bottle Trust, with properties said to be worth twenty-five | |
| million, and the control of one of the great industries of the | |
| country--and stock which might easily go to a hundred and fifty in a | |
| single week! | |
| “Boys,” said the old man, sadly, “it won't be me that will spend this | |
| money. And I don't want to stand in your way. If you're bent on doing | |
| it--” | |
| “We are!” cried Adam. | |
| “What do you say, Samuel?” asked the father. | |
| “I don't know what to say,” said Samuel. “It seems to me that three | |
| thousand dollars is a lot of money. And I don't see why we need any | |
| more.” | |
| “Do you want to stand in the way?” demanded Adam. | |
| “No, I don't want to stand in the way,” said Samuel. | |
| And so the decision was made. When they came to give the order they | |
| found themselves confronted with a strange proposition; they did not | |
| have to buy the whole stock, it seemed--they might buy only the increase | |
| in its value. And the effect of this marvelous device would be that they | |
| would make ten times as much as they had expected to make! So, needless | |
| to say, they bought that way. | |
| And they took a daily paper and watched breathlessly, while “Glass | |
| Bottle Securities” crept up from sixty-three and an eighth to sixty-four | |
| and a quarter. And then, late one evening, old Hiram Johns, the | |
| storekeeper, drove up with a telegram from Manning and Isaacson, telling | |
| them that they must put up more “margin”--“Glass Bottle Securities” was | |
| at fifty-six and five eighths. They sat up all night debating what this | |
| could mean and trying to lay the specters of horror. The next day Adam | |
| set out to go to the city and see about it; but he met the mail on the | |
| way and came home again with a letter from the brokers, regretfully | |
| informing them that it had been necessary to sell the stock, which | |
| was now below fifty. In the news columns of the paper they found the | |
| explanation of the calamity--old Henry Lockman had dropped dead of | |
| apoplexy at the climax of his career, and the bears had played havoc | |
| with “Glass Bottle Securities.” | |
| Their three thousand dollars was gone. It took them three days to | |
| realize it--it was so utterly beyond belief, that they had to write to | |
| the brokers and receive another letter in which it was stated in black | |
| and white and beyond all misunderstanding that there was not a dollar | |
| of their money left. Adam raged and swore like a madman, and Dan vowed | |
| savagely that he would go down to the city and kill Manning. As for the | |
| father, he wrote a letter of agonized reproach, to which Mr. Manning | |
| replied with patient courtesy, explaining that he had had nothing to | |
| do with the matter; that he was a broker and had bought as ordered, and | |
| that he had been powerless to foresee the death of Lockman. “You will | |
| remember,” he said, “that I warned you of the uncertainties of the | |
| market, and of the chances that you took.” Ephraim did not remember | |
| anything of the sort, but he realized that there was nothing to be | |
| gained by saying so. | |
| Samuel did not care much about the loss of his share of the money; but | |
| he did care about the grief of his father, which was terrible to see. | |
| The blow really killed him; he looked ten years older after that week | |
| and he failed all through the winter. And then late in the spring he | |
| caught a cold, and took to his bed; and it turned to pneumonia, and | |
| almost before anyone had had time to realize it, he was gone. | |
| He went to join Samuel's mother. He had whispered this as he clutched | |
| the boy's hand; and Samuel knew that it was true, and that therefore | |
| there was no occasion for grief. So he was ashamed for the awful waves | |
| of loneliness and terror which swept over him; and he gulped back | |
| his feelings and forced himself to wear a cheerful demeanor--much too | |
| cheerful for the taste of Adam and Dan, who were more concerned with | |
| what their neighbors would think than they were with the subtleties of | |
| Samuel's faith. | |
| The boy had been doing a great deal of thinking that winter; and after | |
| the funeral he called a council of the family. | |
| “Brothers,” he said, “this farm is too small for three men. Dan wants | |
| to marry already; and we can't live here always. It's just as Manning | |
| said--” | |
| “I don't want to hear what that skunk said!” growled Adam. | |
| “Well, he was right that time. People stay on the land and they divide | |
| it up and get poorer and poorer. So I've made up my mind to break away. | |
| I'm going to the city and get a start.” | |
| “What can you do in the city?” asked Dan. | |
| “I don't know,” said Samuel. “I'll do my best. I don't expect to go to | |
| Wall Street and make my fortune.” | |
| “You needn't be smart!” growled Dan. | |
| But the other was quite innocent of sarcasm. “What I mean is that I'll | |
| have to work,” said he. “I'm young and strong, and I'm not afraid to | |
| try. I'll find somebody to give me a chance; and then I'll work hard and | |
| learn and I'll get promoted. I've read of boys that have done that.” | |
| “It's not a bad idea,” commented Adam. | |
| “Go ahead,” said Dan. | |
| “The only thing is,” began Samuel, hesitatingly, “I shall have to have a | |
| little money for a start.” | |
| “Humph!” said Adam. “Money's a scarce thing here.” | |
| “How much'll ye want?” asked the other. | |
| “Well,” said the boy, “I want enough to feel safe. For if I go, I | |
| promise you I shall stay till I succeed. I shan't play the baby.” | |
| “How do you expect to raise it?” was the next question. | |
| “I thought,” replied Samuel, “that we might make some kind of a | |
| deal--let me sell out my share in the farm.” | |
| “You can't sell your share,” said Adam, sharply. “You ain't of age.” | |
| “Maybe I'm not,” was the answer; “but all the same you know me. And if I | |
| was to make a bargain I'd keep it. You may be sure I'll never come back | |
| and bother you.” | |
| “Yes, I suppose not,” said Adam, doubtfully. “But you can't tell--” | |
| “How much do you expect to git?” asked Dan warily. | |
| “Well, I thought maybe I could get a hundred dollars,” said the other | |
| and then he stopped, hesitating. | |
| Adam and Dan exchanged a quick glance. | |
| “Money's mighty scarce hereabouts,” said Adam. | |
| “Still,” said Dan, “I don't know, I'll go to the village tomorrow and | |
| see what I can do.” | |
| So Dan drove away and came back in the evening and there was another | |
| council; he produced eight new ten-dollar bills. | |
| “It was the best I could do,” he said. “I'm sorry if it ain't | |
| enough”--and then he stopped. | |
| “I'll make that do,” said Samuel. | |
| And so his brother produced a long and imposing-looking document; Samuel | |
| was too polite to read it but signed at once, and so the bargain was | |
| closed. And that night Samuel packed his few belongings in a neat | |
| newspaper bundle and before sunrise the next morning he set out upon his | |
| search. | |
| CHAPTER III | |
| He had his bundle slung over his back and his eighty dollars pinned | |
| tightly in an inside pocket. Underneath it his heart beat fast and high; | |
| he was young and he was free--the open road stretched out before him, | |
| and perpetual adventure beckoned to him. Every pilgrimage that he had | |
| ever read of helped to make up the thrill that stirred him, as he stood | |
| on the ridge and gazed at the old farmhouse, and waved his hand, and | |
| turned and began his journey. | |
| The horse was needed for the plowing, and so Samuel walked the six | |
| miles to the village, and from there the mail stage took him out to | |
| the solitary railroad station. He had three hours to wait here for the | |
| train, and so he decided that he would save fifteen cents by walking on | |
| to the next station. Distance was nothing to Samuel just then. | |
| Halfway to his destination there was a fire in a little clearing by the | |
| track, and a young man sat toasting some bread on a stick. | |
| “Hello!” he said. “You're hittin' her lively.” | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel. The stranger was not much older than he, but his | |
| clothing was dirty and he had a dissipated, leering face. | |
| “You're new at this game, aren't you?” said he. | |
| “What game?” asked Samuel. | |
| The other laughed. “Where ye goin'?” | |
| “To New York.” | |
| “Goin' to hoof it all the way?” | |
| “No!” gasped the boy. “I'm just walking to the next station.” | |
| “Oh, I see! What's the fare?” | |
| “Six thirty-seven, I think.” | |
| “Humph! Got the price, hey!” | |
| “Yes--I've got the price.” Samuel said this without pride. | |
| “Well, you won't have it long if you live at that rate,” commented the | |
| stranger. “Why don't you beat your way?” | |
| “How do you mean?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Nobody but a duffer pays fare,” said the other. “There'll be a freight | |
| along pretty soon, and she stops at the water tank just below here. Why | |
| don't you jump her?” | |
| Samuel hesitated. “I wouldn't like to do that,” he said. | |
| “Come,” said the other, “sit down.” | |
| And he held out a piece of his toast, which Samuel accepted for | |
| politeness' sake. This young fellow had run away from school at the age | |
| of thirteen; and he had traveled all over the United States, following | |
| the seasons, and living off the country. He was on his way now from a | |
| winter's holiday in Mexico. And as Samuel listened to the tale of his | |
| adventures, he could not keep the thought from troubling him, how large | |
| a part of eighty dollars was six thirty-seven. And all in a single day. | |
| “Come,” said the young fellow; and they started down the track. The | |
| freight was whistling for brakes, far up the grade. And Samuel's heart | |
| thumped with excitement. | |
| They crouched in the bushes, not far beyond the tank. But the train did | |
| not stop for water; it only slowed down for a curve, and it thundered by | |
| at what seemed to Samuel an appalling rate of speed. “Jump!” shouted the | |
| other, and started to run by the track. He made a leap, and caught, and | |
| was whirled on, half visible in a cloud of dust. | |
| Samuel's nerve failed him. He waited, while car after car went by. But | |
| then he caught hold of himself. If anyone could do it, so could he. For | |
| shame. | |
| He started to run. There came a box-car, empty, with the door open, and | |
| he leaped and clutched the edge of the door. He was whirled from his | |
| feet, his arms were nearly jerked out of him. He was half blinded by the | |
| dust, but he hung on desperately, and pulled himself up. A minute more | |
| and he lay gasping and trembling upon the floor of the car. He was on | |
| his way to the city. | |
| After a while, Samuel began to think; and then scruples troubled him. | |
| He was riding free; but was he not really stealing? And would his father | |
| have approved of his doing it? He had begun his career by yielding to | |
| temptation! And this at the suggestion of a young fellow who boasted of | |
| drinking and thieving! Simply to start such questions was enough, with | |
| Samuel; and he made up his mind that when he reached the city the first | |
| thing he would do would be to visit the office of the railroad, and | |
| explain what he had done, and pay his fare. | |
| Perhaps an hour later the train came to a stop, and he heard some one | |
| walking by the track. He hid in a corner, ashamed of being there. Some | |
| one stopped before the car, and the door was rolled shut. Then the | |
| footsteps went on. There came clankings and jarrings, as of cars being | |
| shifted, and then these ceased and silence fell. | |
| Samuel waited for perhaps an hour. Then, becoming restless, he got up | |
| and tried the door. It was fast. | |
| The boy was startled and rather dazed. He sat down to think it out. “I | |
| suppose I'm locked in till we reach New York,” he reflected. But then, | |
| why didn't they go? | |
| “Perhaps we're on a siding, waiting for the passenger train to pass,” | |
| was his next thought; and he realized regretfully that he would have | |
| been on that train. But then, as hour after hour passed, and they | |
| did not go on, a terrible possibility dawned upon him. He was left | |
| behind--on a siding. | |
| Two or three trains went by, and each time he waited anxiously. But they | |
| did not stop. Silence came again, and he sat in the darkness and waited | |
| and wondered and feared. | |
| He had no means of telling the time; and doubtless an hour seemed an age | |
| in such a plight. He would get up and pace back and forth, like a caged | |
| animal; and then he would lie down by the door, straining his ears for | |
| a sound--thinking that some one might pass, unnoticed through the thick | |
| wall of the car. | |
| By and by he became hungry and he ate the scanty meal he had in his | |
| bundle. Then he became thirsty--and he had no water. | |
| The realization of this made his heart thump. It was no joking matter | |
| to be shut in, at one could not tell what lonely place, to suffer from | |
| thirst. He sprang up and began to pound and kick upon the door in a | |
| frenzy. | |
| But he soon tired of that and crouched on the floor again listening and | |
| shivering, half with fear and half with cold. It was becoming chillier, | |
| so he judged it must be night; up here in the mountains there was still | |
| frost at night. | |
| There came another train, a freight, he knew by the heavy pounding and | |
| the time it took to pass. He kicked on the door and shouted, but he soon | |
| realized that it was of no use to shout in that uproar. | |
| The craving for water was becoming an obsession. He tried not to think | |
| about it, but that only made him think about it the more; he would think | |
| about not thinking about it and about not thinking about that--and all | |
| the time he was growing thirstier. He wondered how long one could live | |
| without water; and as the torment grew worse he began to wonder if he | |
| was dying. He was hungry, too, and he wondered which was worse, of which | |
| one would die the sooner. He had heard that dying men remembered | |
| all their past, and so he began to remember his--with extraordinary | |
| vividness, and with bursts of strange and entirely new emotions. He | |
| remembered particularly all the evil things that he had ever done; | |
| including the theft of a ride, for which he was paying the penalty. And | |
| meantime, with another part of his mind, he was plotting and seeking. He | |
| must not die here like a rat in a hole. There must be some way. | |
| He tried every inch of the car--of the floor and ceiling and walls. | |
| But there was not a loose plank nor a crack--the car was new. And that | |
| suggested another idea--that he might suffocate before he starved. He | |
| was beginning to feel weak and dizzy. | |
| If only he had a knife. He could have cut a hole for air and then | |
| perhaps enlarged it and broken out a board. He found a spike on the | |
| floor and began tapping round the walls for a place that sounded thin; | |
| but they all sounded thick--how thick he had no idea. He began picking | |
| splinters away at the juncture of two planks. | |
| Meantime hunger and thirst continued to gnaw at him. At long intervals | |
| he would pause while a train roared by, or because he fancied he had | |
| heard a sound. Then he would pound and call until he was hoarse, and | |
| then go on picking at the splinters. | |
| And so on, for an unknown number of hours, but certainly for days and | |
| nights. And Samuel was famished and wild and weak and gasping; when at | |
| last it dawned upon his senses that a passing train had begun to | |
| make less noise--that the thumping was growing slower. The train was | |
| stopping. | |
| He leaped up and began to pound. Then he realized that he must control | |
| himself--he must save his strength until the train had stopped. But | |
| suppose it went on without delay? He began to pound again and to shout | |
| like a madman. | |
| The train stopped and there was silence; then came sounds of cars being | |
| coupled--and meantime Samuel was kicking and beating upon the wall. He | |
| was almost exhausted and in despair--when suddenly from outside came a | |
| muffled call--“Hello!” | |
| For a moment he could not speak. Then “Help! Help!” he shrieked. | |
| “What's the matter?” asked the voice. | |
| “I'm locked in,” he called. . | |
| “How'd you get in?” | |
| “They locked me in by accident. I'm nearly dead.” | |
| “Who are you?” | |
| “I was riding in the car.” | |
| “A tramp, hey? Serves ye right! Better stay there!” | |
| “No! No!” screamed the boy, in terror. “I'm starving--I've been here for | |
| days. For heaven's sake let me out--I'll never do it again.” | |
| “If I let you out,” said the voice, “it's my business to arrest you.” | |
| “All right,” cried Samuel. “Anything--but don't leave me here.” | |
| There was a moment's silence. “Have you got any money?” asked the voice. | |
| “Yes. Yes--I've got money.” | |
| “Don't yell so loud. How much?” | |
| “Why--what?” | |
| “How much?” | |
| “I've got eighty dollars.” | |
| “All right. Give it to me and I'll let you out.” | |
| Frantic as he was, this staggered Samuel. “I can't give you all my | |
| money,” he cried. | |
| “All right then,” said the other. “Stay there.” | |
| “No, no!” he protested. “Wait! Leave me just a little.” | |
| “I'll leave you five dollars,” said the voice. “Speak up! Quick!” | |
| “All right,” said Samuel faintly. “I'll give it to you.” | |
| “Mind! No nonsense now!” | |
| “No. Let me out!” | |
| “I'll bat you over the head if you try it,” growled the voice; and | |
| the boy stood trembling while the hasp was unfastened and the door was | |
| pushed back a little. The light of a lantern flashed in through the | |
| crack, blinding him. | |
| “Now hand out the money,” said the stranger, standing at one side for | |
| safety. | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel, fumbling with the pin in his waistcoat. “But I can't | |
| see to count it.” | |
| “Be quick! I'll count it!” | |
| And so he shoved out the wad. Fingers seized it; and then the light | |
| vanished, and he heard the sound of footsteps running. | |
| For a moment he did not understand. Then, “Give me my five dollars!” he | |
| yelled, and rolled back the door and leaped out. He was just in time to | |
| see the figure with the lantern vanish among the cars up the track. | |
| He started to run up the track and tripped over a tie and fell headlong | |
| into a ditch. When he scrambled to his feet again the long train was | |
| beginning to move, and the light of the lantern was nowhere to be seen. | |
| CHAPTER IV | |
| Samuel's money was gone, but he was suffering too keenly from hunger and | |
| thirst to worry about it for more than a minute. Then the thought came | |
| to him--he was here in a lonely place at night, and the train was going! | |
| If he were left he might still starve. | |
| He ran over and caught the iron ladder of one of the freight cars and | |
| drew himself up and clung there. Later on he climbed on top of the car; | |
| but the wind was too cold--he could not stand it, and had to climb | |
| down again. And then he realized that he had left the bundle of his | |
| belongings in the empty car. | |
| Fortunately for him the train began to slow up at the end of an hour or | |
| so, and peering out Samuel saw lights ahead. Also there were lights here | |
| and there in the landscape, and he realized that he had come to a large | |
| town. The east was just beginning to turn gray, and faint shadows of | |
| buildings were visible. | |
| Samuel got off and walked up the track very carefully, for he was stiff | |
| as well as weak. There was a light in one of the offices at the depot, | |
| and he looked in at the window and saw a man seated at a desk writing | |
| busily. He knocked at the door. | |
| “Come in,” said a voice, and he entered. | |
| “Please, may I have a drink of water?” he asked. | |
| “Over there in the corner,” said the man, scarcely looking up from his | |
| papers. | |
| There was a bucket and dipper, and Samuel drank. The taste of the water | |
| was a kind of ecstasy to him--he drank until he could drink no more. | |
| Then he stood waiting. “I beg pardon, sir,” he began timidly. | |
| “Hey?” said the man. | |
| “I'm nearly starved, sir. I've had nothing to eat for I don't know how | |
| long.” | |
| “Oh!” exclaimed the other. “So that's it. Get out!” | |
| “You don't understand,” began Samuel, perplexed. | |
| “Get out!” cried the man. “That don't go in here. No beggars allowed!” | |
| Beggars! The word struck Samuel like a whip-lash. | |
| “I'm no beggar!” he cried wildly. “I--” And then he stopped. He had been | |
| going to say, “I will pay for it.” | |
| He went out burning with shame, and on the spot he took his | |
| resolution--come what might, he would never beg. He would not put a | |
| morsel of food into his mouth until he had earned it. | |
| Across from the depot was a public square, and a broad street with | |
| trolley tracks. Samuel walked down the street; and then, feeling weak | |
| and seeing a dark doorway, he went in and crouched in a corner. For a | |
| while he dozed; and then it was daylight. People were passing. | |
| He got more water at a fountain and felt better. He went down one of | |
| the poorer streets where a man was opening a shop. There was food in the | |
| window--fruit and bread--and the sight made him ravenous. But he asked | |
| for work and the man shook his head. | |
| Samuel went on. Shops were opened here and there; and everywhere he | |
| asked for a job--for any little thing to do--and always it was No. Now | |
| and then he caught a whiff of some one's breakfast--bacon frying, and | |
| coffee or hot bread in a bake shop. But each time he gripped his hands | |
| together and set his teeth. He would not beg. He would find work. | |
| And so on through the morning. He went into stores, big and little. | |
| Sometimes they answered politely--sometimes gruffly; but no one | |
| hesitated a moment. He went past warehouses, where men were loading | |
| wagons--surely there would be work here. | |
| He spoke to a busy foreman in his shirt sleeves. | |
| “How often must I tell you no?” cried the man. | |
| “But you never told me before,” protested Samuel with great earnestness. | |
| “Get out!” said the man. “There are so many of you--how the devil can I | |
| tell?” | |
| There were so many! And suddenly Samuel realized that he had passed a | |
| good many poor-looking men upon the streets. And were they all hunting | |
| jobs and not finding them? Perhaps some were even begging and getting | |
| nothing by that. | |
| He went on with a blank terror in his soul. He gazed at the people he | |
| passed on the street; some of them had kindly faces--surely they would | |
| have helped him had they known. But there was no way for him to let them | |
| know--no way but to be a beggar! | |
| He came to the suburbs and asked at the houses. But no one wanted | |
| anything done. It was noon and people were at luncheon--he caught odors | |
| as doors were opened. He went back into the city, because he could not | |
| stand it. He was feeling weaker, and he was afraid with a ghastly fear. | |
| Pretty soon he might not be able to work! | |
| It was a new idea to Samuel, that a man might starve in the midst of | |
| civilization. He could hardly believe it, and grew half-delirious as he | |
| thought about it. What would happen at the end? Would they let him lie | |
| down and die in the street? Or was there some place where starving men | |
| went to die? | |
| So the day passed, and he found nothing. Several people advised him | |
| to get out of town--this was no place to look for work, they said. | |
| Apparently something was the matter with the place, but they did not | |
| stop to tell him what. | |
| This was the first large town Samuel had ever seen, and under other | |
| circumstances he would have gazed at it with wonder. He passed great | |
| buildings of brick and stone, and trolley cars, and a fire-engine house, | |
| and many other strange sights. He came to a great high fence, inclosing | |
| many acres of buildings, dingy and black with smoke; there were tall | |
| chimneys, and rows of sheds, and railroad tracks running in. He passed | |
| other factories, huge brick buildings with innumerable windows; and many | |
| blocks of working-men's houses, small and dirty frame structures, with | |
| pale-faced children in the doorways. The roads and sidewalks here were | |
| all of black cinders, and it was hot even in May. | |
| And then he came to a steel bridge and crossed a river and the road | |
| broadened out, and he climbed a hill and found himself walking upon | |
| a macadamized avenue lined with trees, and with beautiful residences | |
| overlooking the ridge. Rich people lived here, evidently; and Samuel | |
| stared, marveling at the splendor. He came to a great estate with a | |
| stone gateway and iron railings ten feet high, and an avenue of stately | |
| elm trees; there were bright green lawns with peacocks and lyre birds | |
| strutting about, and a great colonial mansion with white pillars in the | |
| distance. “Fairview,” read the name upon the gates. | |
| And then again Samuel remembered his appetite. Surely amid all this | |
| luxury there would be some chance for him! He started up the path! | |
| He had got about halfway to the house when a man who was tending the | |
| flowers caught sight of him and came toward him. “What are you doing | |
| here?” he called, before he had come halfway. | |
| “I'm looking for some work,” began Samuel. | |
| “Do you want to get your head punched?” shouted the man. “What do you | |
| mean by coming in here?” | |
| “Why, what's the matter?” asked the boy perplexed. | |
| “Get out, you loafer!” cried the other. | |
| And Samuel turned and went quickly. A loafer! | |
| So for the first time it occurred to him to look at his clothes, which | |
| were muddy from his tumble in the ditch. And no doubt his face and hands | |
| were dirty also, and his hair unkempt, and his aspect unprepossessing | |
| enough for an applicant for labor. At any rate it was clear that this | |
| was not the part of the town to seek it in; so he went back across the | |
| bridge. | |
| Twilight had fallen and the stores were shutting up. Soon everything | |
| would be closed; and that night he felt that he would perish. And so at | |
| last desperation seized him. | |
| He bolted into the first lighted place he saw. | |
| It was a saloon--empty, save for a man in white behind the bar. | |
| “I'm no beggar!” shouted Samuel. | |
| “Hey?” said the man. | |
| “I say I'm no beggar! I'll come back and pay you. I'm starving. I must | |
| have something to eat.” | |
| “Gee whiz!” said the man. | |
| “I was never in a saloon in my life before,” added Samuel, as he | |
| realized the character of the place. “But please--please give me | |
| something to eat.” | |
| “Hully gee, young feller!” exclaimed the bar-keeper. “You do it great. | |
| You ought to be an actor. Step up and feed your face.” | |
| “What?” stammered Samuel, perplexed. | |
| “EAT!” said the other, and pointed. “Maybe you understand that.” | |
| And Samuel turned and saw a lot of food set out upon a counter. He | |
| rushed to it and began. At the first taste a kind of madness seized him, | |
| and he ate like a wild beast, gulping things. | |
| For several minutes he did this, while the other watched curiously. Then | |
| he remarked, “Say, you'd better quit.” | |
| “What?” asked Samuel, seizing more food. | |
| “I say quit,” said the man. “Just for your own good. I see your story's | |
| true, an' a little rest won't hurt you.” | |
| Samuel gazed longingly at the food, desiring more handfuls. “Come over | |
| here,” said the man. “What happened to you?” | |
| “I was locked in an empty freight car.” | |
| “Humph! That's a new one! How long?” | |
| “What day is this?” | |
| “Friday.” | |
| “I was locked in Wednesday morning. It seemed longer.” | |
| “It's long enough,” commented the barkeeper. | |
| “I was robbed,” Samuel went on. “A man took all my money.” And then the | |
| old shame started up in him. “Don't think I'm a beggar. I'll work and | |
| pay for this.” | |
| “That's all right,” said the barkeeper. “Be easy.” | |
| “Haven't you anything I can do? Some wood to split?” | |
| “We don't burn wood.” | |
| “Or some cleaning up?” Samuel looked round. The place did not seem very | |
| neat to him. “I'll scrub the floors for you,” he said. | |
| “We have 'em scrubbed in the early morning,” replied the man. | |
| “Well, let me come and do it,” said Samuel. | |
| “Go on!” said the other. “You'll be ready for more feed then.” | |
| “I'll come, just the same, sir.” | |
| “If you take my advice,” the bartender observed, “you'll get out of this | |
| town. Lockmanville's a poor place to hunt jobs in.” | |
| Samuel started. “Lockmanville!” he gasped. | |
| “Yes,” said the other. “Don't you know where you are?” | |
| “I didn't know,” said the boy. “Lockmanville! The one where the big | |
| glass works are?” | |
| “That's the one.” | |
| “And where old Henry Lockman lived!” | |
| “What about it?” asked the other. | |
| “Nothing,” said Samuel, “only my father invested all his money in | |
| Lockman's company, and lost it.” | |
| “Gee!” said the bartender. | |
| “Maybe if I told them,” said the boy, “they'd give me some work here.” | |
| “Maybe,” said the other--“only the works is shut down.” | |
| “Shut down!” cried Samuel; and then added, “On account of his death?” | |
| “No--they always close in summer. But this year they closed in March. | |
| Times is bad.” | |
| “Oh,” said Samuel. | |
| “So there's plenty of men looking for jobs in Lockmanville,”. the other | |
| continued, “an' some of the other factories is closed, too--the cotton | |
| mill is only runnin' half time.” | |
| “I see.” | |
| “Old Lockman used to say there was too many glass works,” the barkeeper | |
| added. “An' the fellers he bought out went an' built more. So there you | |
| are.” | |
| There was a pause. “I'm coming back in the morning,” said Samuel | |
| doggedly. | |
| “All right,” said the other, with a smile--“if you don't forget it.” | |
| Then a couple of customers entered. “Run along now,” said he. | |
| And Samuel went--the more readily because he realized that he had been | |
| all this time in a saloon, a place of mystery and wickedness to him. | |
| He started down the street again. A fine cold rain had begun to fall. | |
| What was he to do? | |
| He felt warm, having feasted. But there was no use in getting wet. He | |
| glanced into the doorways as he passed, and seeing a dark and empty one, | |
| crouched inside. | |
| Lockmanville! What a curious coincidence! And there were hundreds in the | |
| town out of work. It seemed a strange and terrible thing. Could it be | |
| that they let people starve as he was starving--people they knew? Could | |
| it be that they went on about their business and paid no attention to | |
| such a thing? | |
| He must get out, they told him. But how? Would the railroad take him, if | |
| he explained? Or would the people on the way give him work? He had got | |
| some food at last, but only by begging. And was he expected to beg? | |
| There came footsteps outside. A man strode into the doorway and took | |
| hold of the door and tried it. Then he turned to go out. Samuel moved | |
| his foot out of the way. | |
| “Hello!” said the man. “Who's that?” | |
| “Only me,” said Samuel. | |
| “Get up there,” commanded the other. | |
| He got up and a hand seized him by the collar. “Who are you?” | |
| He was jerked into the light before he had a chance to reply. “More | |
| bums!” growled the voice; and Samuel, terrified, saw that he was in the | |
| grasp of a policeman. | |
| “Please, sir, I'm not doing any harm,” he began. | |
| “Come,” said the policeman. | |
| “Where to?” he cried. | |
| But the other merely jerked him along. A sudden wild horror seized | |
| Samuel. “You're not going to arrest me!” he exclaimed. | |
| “Sure,” said the other. “Why not?” | |
| “But,” he exclaimed, “I've not done anything. I can't help it. I--” | |
| He started to drag back, and the man twisted a huge hand, in his collar, | |
| choking him. “Do you want to be hit?” he growled. | |
| So Samuel went on. But sobs shook him, convulsive sobs of terror and | |
| despair, and tears of shame rolled down his cheeks. He was going to | |
| jail! | |
| “What's the matter with you?” said the policeman after a bit. “Why don't | |
| you be quiet?” | |
| “You've no business to arrest me,” wailed the boy. “I haven't done | |
| anything, and I couldn't help it. I've no place to go and no money. And | |
| it's not my fault.” | |
| “You can tell that to the judge,” replied the other. | |
| “But--but what have I done? Why--” | |
| “Shut up!” said the officer, and gave another twist at his throat. And | |
| after that Samuel was quiet. | |
| CHAPTER V | |
| In the station-house a fat sergeant sat dozing upon his throne. “Another | |
| vagrant,” said the policeman, as if to say there was no special need to | |
| rouse himself. | |
| “What was he doing?” the sergeant asked. | |
| “Sleeping in a doorway,” was the reply. | |
| By this time Samuel had come to realize the futility of protest. | |
| He accepted his fate with dumb despair. He gave the information the | |
| sergeant asked for--Samuel Prescott, aged seventeen, native born, from | |
| Euba Corners, occupation farmer, never arrested before. | |
| “All right,” said the man, and went back to his nap; and Samuel was led | |
| away, and after a pretense at a search was shoved into a cell and heard | |
| the iron door clang upon him. | |
| He was alone now, and free to sob out his grief. It was the culmination | |
| of all the shame and horror that he could ever have imagined; first, to | |
| have to beg, and then to be locked up in jail. He knew now what they did | |
| with men who were out of work and starving. | |
| He lay there weeping, and then suddenly he sat up transfixed. From the | |
| cell next to him had come a cry, a horrible blood-curdling screech, more | |
| like the scream of a wild cat than any human sound. Samuel listened, his | |
| heart pounding. | |
| There came the voice of a man from across the corridor--“Shut up, you | |
| hag!” And after that bedlam broke loose. The woman--Samuel realized at | |
| last that the scream had come from a woman--broke forth into a | |
| torrent of yells and curses. Such hideous obscenities, such revolting | |
| blasphemies he had never heard in his life before--he had never dreamed | |
| that life contained within it the possibility of such depravity. It was | |
| like an explosion from some loathsome sewer; and its source was the lips | |
| of a woman. | |
| For ten minutes or so the tirade continued until it seemed to the boy | |
| that every beautiful and sacred thing he had ever heard of in his life | |
| had been defiled forever. Then a jailer strolled down the corridor, and | |
| with a few vigorous and judicious oaths contrived to quell the uproar. | |
| Samuel lay down again; and now he had a chance to make another | |
| discovery. He had felt sharp stinging sensations which caused him to | |
| scratch himself frantically. Then suddenly he realized that he was lying | |
| upon a mattress infested with vermin. | |
| The discovery sent him bounding to the middle of the floor. It set | |
| him wild with rage. Such a thing had never happened to him in his life | |
| before, for his home was a decent and clean one. This was the crowning | |
| infamy--that they should have taken him, helpless as he was, and shut | |
| him up in a filthy hole to be devoured by bedbugs and lice. | |
| In the morning they brought him bread and coffee; and after a couple of | |
| hours' more waiting he was taken to court. | |
| It was a big bare room with whitewashed walls. There were a few | |
| scattered spectators, a couple of policemen and several men writing at | |
| tables. Seated within an inclosure were a number of prisoners, dull | |
| and listless looking. One by one they stepped up before the railing and | |
| faced the judge; there would be a few muttered words and they would move | |
| on. Everything went as a matter of routine, which had been going that | |
| way for ages. The judge, who was elderly and gray haired, looked like a | |
| prosperous business man in a masquerade costume. | |
| Samuel's turn came and he stood before the bar. His name was read, and | |
| the charge--vagrancy. | |
| “Well?” said the judge mechanically. “What have you to say for | |
| yourself?” | |
| Samuel caught his breath. “It's not my fault, sir,” he began. | |
| “Your honor,” prompted the policeman who stood at his elbow. | |
| “Your honor,” said Samuel, “I lost all my money. And I've been trying to | |
| find work, your honor.” | |
| “Have you any friends in town?” | |
| “No, your honor.” | |
| “How long have you been here?” | |
| “Only since yesterday, your honor.” | |
| “How did you get here?” | |
| “I came in on a freight train, your honor.” | |
| “I see,” said the judge. “Well, you came to the wrong place. We're going | |
| to put an end to vagrancy in Lockmanville. Thirty days. Next case.” | |
| Samuel caught his breath. “Your honor,” he gasped. | |
| “Next case,” repeated the judge. | |
| The policeman started to lead Samuel away. “Your honor,” he cried | |
| frantically. “Don't send me to jail.” And fighting against the | |
| policeman's grip, he rushed on, “It's not my fault--I'm an honest boy | |
| and I tried to find work. I haven't done anything. And you'll kill me if | |
| you send me to jail. Have mercy! Have mercy!” | |
| The policeman shook him roughly. But there was something so genuine in | |
| Samuel's wail that the judge said, “Wait.” | |
| “How could I help it if I was robbed?” the boy rushed on, taking | |
| advantage of his chance. “And what could I do but ask for work? I was | |
| brought up honest, your honor. It would have killed my father if he'd | |
| thought I'd be sent to jail. He brought me up to earn my living.” | |
| “Who was your father?” asked the judge. | |
| “His name was Ephraim Prescott, and he was a farmer. You can ask anyone | |
| at Euba Corners what sort of a man he was. He'd fought all through the | |
| war--he was wounded four times. And if he could be here he'd tell you | |
| that I don't deserve to go to jail.” | |
| There was a moment's pause. “What regiment was your father in?” asked | |
| the magistrate. | |
| “He was in the Seventeenth Pennsylvania, your honor.” | |
| “Be careful, boy,” said the other sternly. “Don't try to deceive me.” | |
| “I don't want to deceive you, your honor,” protested Samuel. | |
| “What brigade was the Seventeenth Pennsylvania in?” | |
| “In the Third Brigade, your honor.” | |
| “And who commanded it?” | |
| “General Anderson--that is, until he was killed at the battle of | |
| Chancellorsville. My father was there.” | |
| “I was there, too,” said the judge. | |
| “My father used to tell me about it,” exclaimed Samuel with sudden | |
| eagerness. “His brigade was in the right wing and they had a double line | |
| of trenches. And the rebels charged the line with cavalry. They charged | |
| a dozen times during the day, and there were big trees cut down by the | |
| bullets. My father said the rebels never fought harder than they did | |
| right there.” | |
| “Yes,” said his honor, “I know. I was one of them.” | |
| Everyone within hearing laughed; and Samuel turned crimson. | |
| “I beg pardon, your honor,” he said. | |
| “That's all right,” said the judge. And then he added gravely, “Very | |
| well, Samuel, we'll give you another chance for your father's sake. But | |
| don't let me see you here again.” | |
| “No, your honor,” said Samuel. Then he added quickly. “But what can I | |
| do?” | |
| “Get out of Lockmanville,” said the other. | |
| “But how? When I've no money. If your honor could only help me to some | |
| work.” | |
| “No,” said the judge. “I'm sorry, but I've found jobs for three men this | |
| week, and I don't know any more.” | |
| “But then--” began Samuel. | |
| “I'll give you a dollar out of my own pocket,” the other added. | |
| “Your honor,” cried Samuel startled, “I don't want to take money!” | |
| “You can send it back to me when you get a job,” said the judge, holding | |
| out a bill. “Take it. Prisoner discharged. Next case.” | |
| Samuel took the money and was turning away, when a man who had been | |
| sitting in a chair near the magistrate suddenly leaned forward. | |
| “Judge,” he said, “if I may interrupt--” | |
| “Why, surely, professor,” said the other pleasantly. | |
| “I may possibly be able to find something for the boy to do.” | |
| “Ah, that will be fine!” | |
| “He seems to be a capable young fellow and might be worth helping.” | |
| “The very thing, professor. Samuel, this is Professor Stewart, of | |
| Lockman College.” | |
| Samuel was very glad to meet the professor. He was a trim little | |
| gentleman, with a carefully cut black beard and gold-rimmed eyeglasses. | |
| “Here is my card,” he said; “and if you'll come to see me to-morrow | |
| morning at my house, we'll see what we can do.” | |
| “Thank you very much,” said the boy, and put the card in his pocket. | |
| Then, realizing suddenly that the policeman had let go of his arm, and | |
| that he was free, he turned and made his way through the gate. | |
| “A diverting episode,” said the professor. | |
| “Yes,” said the judge, with a smile. “We have them now and then, you | |
| see.” | |
| Samuel went out with a glow in his heart. At last he had got a start. | |
| He had got underneath the world's tough hide and found kindness and | |
| humanity after all. It had been a harrowing experience, but it would not | |
| happen again. | |
| He had now one definite purpose in mind. He walked straight out of town | |
| and down the river road until he came to a sufficiently solitary place. | |
| Then he took off his clothes and sat down on the bank and performed a | |
| most elaborate toilet. For half an hour at least he scrubbed his head | |
| with sand and water, and combed his hair out with his fingers. And then | |
| he went over his clothing inch by inch. At least he would be through | |
| with one hideous reminder of his imprisonment. | |
| After which he dressed again and went back to town and found the saloon | |
| where he had eaten. | |
| “Hello!” said his friend Finnegan, the bar-keeper. “Back again!” | |
| “I came to explain about this morning,” said Samuel. “I couldn't come | |
| because they put me in jail.” | |
| “Gee!” said the other; but then he added, with a laugh, “Well, it was a | |
| wet night.” | |
| Samuel did not reply. “I'll come to-morrow morning,” he said. | |
| “You'd better get out of town, sonny,” advised the other. | |
| “I'm all right. The judge gave me a dollar.” | |
| “Humph! A dollar won't last forever.” | |
| “No. But I've got the promise of a job. There was a gentleman | |
| there--Professor Stewart, from the college.” | |
| “Hully gee!” said Finnegan. “I know that guy. A little runt with a black | |
| beard?” | |
| “I guess so,” said Samuel dubiously. | |
| “I seen his pitcher in the paper,” said the other. “He's one of them | |
| reformers--always messin' into things.” | |
| “Maybe that's why he was at the court,” observed Samuel. | |
| “Sure thing! He's a professor of sociology an' such things, an' he | |
| thinks he knows all about politics. But we handed him a few last | |
| election--just you bet!” | |
| “Who's 'we'?” asked Samuel. | |
| “The organization,” said Finnegan; “the Democrats, o' course. Them | |
| reformers is always Republicans--the 'better element,' an' all that. | |
| That means the rich guys--that have their own little grafts to work. | |
| This perfessor was a great friend of old Henry Lockman--an' the old man | |
| used to run this town with his little finger. But they had a big strike | |
| here three years ago, and too many men got hit over the head. So it'll | |
| be a long day before there's any more 'reform' in Lockmanville.” | |
| “I see,” said Samuel. | |
| “They make a great howl about the saloons an' all the rest,” added the | |
| barkeeper. “But when the Republicans ran things, my boss paid his little | |
| rake-off just the same, you can bet. But you needn't tell that to the | |
| perfessor.” | |
| “I won't,” said the boy. | |
| “What you goin' to do now?” asked the other. | |
| “I don't know. I guess I'll have to get something to eat first.” | |
| “You'll find the cheapest way is to buy a glass of beer and then feed | |
| over there.” | |
| “No,” said Samuel, startled. “I--I think I'd rather not do that.” | |
| “Well, so long,” said Finriegan, with a laugh. | |
| “You'll see me to-morrow morning,” said Samuel, as he went out. | |
| CHAPTER VI | |
| Samuel went to a bake shop and bought a loaf of bread and sat on the | |
| bench of the public square and devoured it bit by bit. It was the | |
| cheapest thing he could think of, and quantity was what counted just | |
| then. | |
| Next he had to find a room to spend the night. He knew nothing about | |
| hotels and lodging-houses--he walked through the workingmen's quarter of | |
| the town, scanning the cottages hesitatingly. At last in the doorway of | |
| one he noticed a woman standing, an elderly woman, very thin and weary | |
| looking, but clean, and with a kindly face. So he stopped. | |
| “Please,” said he, “could you tell me any place where I could hire a | |
| room?” | |
| The woman looked at him. “For how long?” she asked. | |
| “I'm not quite sure,” he said. “I want it for one night, and then if I | |
| get a job, I may want it longer.” | |
| “A job in Lockmanville?” said the woman. | |
| “Well, I've the promise of one,” he replied. | |
| “There can't be very many,” said she. “I've two rooms I've always | |
| rented,” she added, “but when the glass works shut down the men went | |
| away. One of them owed me three dollars, too.” | |
| “I--I'm not able to pay very much,” said Samuel. | |
| “Come in,” responded the woman; and he sat down and told her his story. | |
| And she told him hers. | |
| Mrs. Stedman was her name, and her husband had been a glass blower. He | |
| earned good wages--five dollars a day in the busy season. But he worked | |
| in front of a huge tank of white-hot glass and that was hard on a man. | |
| And once on a hot day he had gone suddenly dizzy, and fallen upon a mass | |
| of hot slag, and been frightfully burned in the face. They had carried | |
| him to the hospital and taken out one eye. And then, because of his | |
| family and the end of the season being near, he had gone to work | |
| too soon, and his wound had gone bad, and in the end he had died of | |
| blood-poisoning. | |
| “That was two years ago,” said Mrs. Stedman. “And I got no damages. | |
| We've barely got along--this year's been worse than ever. It's the | |
| panic, they say. It seemed as if everything was shutting down.” | |
| “It must be very hard on people here,” said Samuel. | |
| “I've got three children--all girls,” said Mrs. Stedman, “and only one | |
| old enough to work. That's Sophie--she's in the cotton mill, and that | |
| only started again last month. And they say it may run on half time | |
| all the year. I do sewing and whatever I can to help, but there's never | |
| enough.” | |
| Samuel forgot his own troubles in talking with this woman. His family | |
| had been poor on the farm, but they had never known such poverty as | |
| this. And here were whole streets full of people living the same sort of | |
| life; hanging over the abyss of destruction, and with no prospect save | |
| to struggle forever. Mrs. Stedman talked casually about her friends and | |
| neighbors, and new glimpses came to make the boy catch his breath. Next | |
| door was Mrs. Prosser, whose husband was dying of cancer; he had been | |
| two years dying, and they had five small children. And on the other | |
| side were the Rapinskys, a Polish family; they had been strong in the | |
| possession of three grown sons, and had even bought a phonograph. And | |
| now not one of them had done a stroke of work for three months. | |
| To have been robbed and put in jail seemed a mere incident in comparison | |
| with such bitter and I lifelong suffering; and Samuel was ashamed of | |
| having made so much fuss. He had stated, with some trepidation, that he | |
| was just out of jail; but Mrs. Stedman had not seemed to mind that. | |
| Her husband had been in jail once, during the big glass strike, and for | |
| nothing more than begging another man not to take his job. | |
| It was arranged that Samuel was to pay her thirty-five cents for his | |
| supper and bed and breakfast, and if he wished to stay longer she would | |
| board him for four dollars a week, or he might have the room alone for a | |
| dollar. | |
| The two young children came in from school; they were frail and | |
| undersized little girls, with clothing that was neatly but pitifully | |
| patched. And shortly after them came Sophie. | |
| Samuel gave a start of dismay when he saw her. He had been told that she | |
| worked in the cotton mill and was the mainstay of the family; and he | |
| had pictured a sturdy young woman, such as he had seen at home. Instead, | |
| here was a frail slip of a child scarcely larger than the others. Sophie | |
| was thirteen, as he learned afterwards; but she did not look to be ten | |
| by his standards. She was grave and deliberate in her movements, and she | |
| gazed at the stranger with a pair of very big brown eyes. | |
| “This is Samuel Prescott,” said her mother. “He is going to spend the | |
| night, and maybe board with us.” | |
| “How do you do?” said Sophie, and took off the shawl from her head and | |
| sat down in a corner. The boy thought that this was shyness upon her | |
| part, but later on he realized that it was lassitude. The child rested | |
| her head upon her hand every chance that she got, and she never did | |
| anything that she did not have to. | |
| The next morning, bright and early, Samuel was on hand at the saloon, | |
| greatly to the amusement of his friend Finnegan. He got down on his | |
| hands and knees and gave the place such a scrubbing as it had never had | |
| before since it was built. And in return Finnegan invited him to some | |
| breakfast, which Samuel finally accepted, because it would enable him to | |
| take less from the Stedmans. | |
| Professor Stewart had not specified any hour in his invitation. He lived | |
| in the aristocratic district across the bridge and Samuel presented | |
| himself at his door a little before eight. | |
| “Professor Stewart told me to come and see him,” he said to the maid. | |
| “Professor Stewart is out of town,” said she. | |
| “Out of town!” he echoed. | |
| “He's gone to New York,” said she. “He was called away unexpectedly last | |
| night.” | |
| “When will he be back?” | |
| “He said he'd try to be back the day after tomorrow; but he wasn't | |
| sure.” | |
| Samuel stared at her in consternation. | |
| “What did you want?” she asked. | |
| “He promised me a job.” | |
| “Oh!” said she. “Well, can't you come back later on?” And then, seeing | |
| that Samuel had nothing better to do than to stare at her dumbly, she | |
| closed the door and went about her business. | |
| Samuel walked back in a daze. It gave him a new sense of the world's | |
| lack of interest in him. Probably the great man had forgotten him | |
| altogether. | |
| There was nothing to do but to wait; and meantime he had only sixty | |
| cents. He could not stay with Mrs. Stedman, that was certain. But when | |
| he came to tell her, she recurred to a suggestion he had made. There | |
| were a few square yards of ground behind her house, given up mostly to | |
| tomato cans. If he would plant some garden seed for her she would board | |
| him meanwhile. And so Samuel went to work vigorously with a borrowed | |
| spade. | |
| Two days passed, and another day, and still the professor had not | |
| returned. It was Saturday evening and Samuel was seated upon the steps | |
| of the house, resting after a hard day's work. Sophie was seated near | |
| him, leaning back against the house with her eyes closed. The evening | |
| was warm and beautiful, and gradually the peace of it stole over her. | |
| And so at last she revealed herself to Samuel. | |
| “Do you like music?” she asked. | |
| “Very much indeed,” said he. | |
| “Not everybody does,” she remarked--“I mean real music, such as | |
| Friedrich plays.” | |
| “I don't know,” said Samuel. “Who is Friedrich?” | |
| “He's a friend of mine,” Sophie answered. “He's a German boy. His | |
| father's the designer at the carpet works. And he plays the violin.” | |
| “I should like to hear him,” said he. | |
| “I'll take you,” she volunteered. “I generally go to see them on Sunday | |
| afternoons. It's the only time I have.” | |
| So the next day Samuel met the Bremers. Their cottage was a little way | |
| out in the country, and they had a few trees about it and a flower bed. | |
| But the house was not large, and it was well filled with a family of | |
| nine children. Johann, the father, was big and florid, with bristling | |
| hair. He was marked in the town because he called himself a “Socialist,” | |
| but Samuel did not know that. His wife was a little mite of a woman, | |
| completely swamped by child-bearing. Most interesting to Samuel was | |
| Friedrich, who played the violin; a pale ascetic-looking boy of fifteen, | |
| with wavy hair and beautiful eyes. | |
| Music was a serious rite with the Bremers. The father played the piano, | |
| and the next oldest son to Friedrich was struggling with a 'cello; and | |
| when they played, the whole family sat in the parlor, even the tiny | |
| tots, round-eyed and silent. | |
| Samuel knew some “patriotic songs,” and a great number of hymns, and a | |
| few tunes that one heard at country dances. But such music as this was a | |
| new revelation of the possibilities of life. He listened in a transport | |
| of wonder and awe. Such wailing grief, such tumultuous longing, such | |
| ravishing and soul-tormenting beauty! Friedrich had only such technique | |
| as his father had been able to give him, together with what he had | |
| invented for himself; his bowings were not always correct, and he was | |
| weak on the high notes; but Samuel knew nothing of this--he was thinking | |
| of the music. And he needed no one to tell him about it--he needed | |
| no criticisms and no commentaries. Across the centuries the souls | |
| of Schubert and Beethoven spoke to him, telling their visions of the | |
| wonderful world of the spirit, toward which humanity is painfully | |
| groping. | |
| It was impossible for him to keep from voicing his excitement, and this | |
| greatly delighted the Bremers, who craved for comprehension in a lonely | |
| place. His sympathy gave wings to their fervor, and they played the | |
| whole afternoon through, and then Johann invited them to stay to supper, | |
| so that they might play some more in the evening. | |
| “You should haf been a musician,” he said to Samuel. “You vas made for | |
| it.” | |
| They had a supper such as the boy had missed for some time; a great | |
| platter of cold boiled meat, and a bowl of hot gravy, and another bowl | |
| of mashed potatoes, with no end of bread and butter. Also there was some | |
| kind of a German pudding, and to the stranger's dismay, a pitcher of | |
| beer in front of Johann. After offering some to his guests, he drank it | |
| all, and also he ate a vast supper. Afterwards he dozed, while Friedrich | |
| played yet more wonderful music, and this gave Samuel a new insight | |
| into the life of the family, and into the wild and terrible longing that | |
| poured itself out in Friedrich's tones. The father was good-natured and | |
| sentimental, but sunk in grossness; and the mother was worn out with the | |
| care of her brood, and beneath all this burden the soul of the boy was | |
| crying frantically for life. | |
| The exigencies of trade demanded endless variety of designs in carpets | |
| and rugs, and so all day Johann Bremer stood in front of a great sheet | |
| of cardboard, marked off in tiny numbered squares, on which he painted | |
| with many colors. For this he received thirty dollars a week, and his | |
| son received twelve dollars as his assistant--painting in the same | |
| colors upon all the squares of certain numbers, and so completing a | |
| symmetrical design. It was a very good job, and Johann prodded his son | |
| to devote his energies to the evolving of new designs. But the boy hated | |
| it all--thinking only of his music. And his music meant to him, not | |
| sentimental dreaming, but a passionate clutch into the infinite, a | |
| battle for deliverance from the bondage of the world. So Johann himself | |
| had been in his youth, when he had become a revolutionist, and before | |
| beer and gravy and domesticity had tamed him. | |
| No one said a word about these things. It was all in the playing. And | |
| now and then Samuel stole a glance about the room and discovered yet | |
| another soul's tragedy. Sophie, too, was drinking in the music, and life | |
| had crept into her face, and her breath came quick and fast, and now and | |
| then she furtively brushed away a tear. | |
| Afterwards, as they walked home, she said to Samuel, “I don't know if | |
| it's good for me to listen to music like that.” | |
| “Why not?” he asked--“if it makes you happy.” | |
| “But it makes me unhappy afterwards. It makes me want things. And I get | |
| restless--and when I go back to the factory it's so much harder.” | |
| “What do you do in the factory?” asked Samuel. | |
| “I'm what they call a bobbin-girl--I tie the threads on the bobbins when | |
| they are empty.” | |
| “Is it very hard work?” | |
| “No, you mightn't think so. But you have to stand up all day; and it's | |
| doing the same thing all the time--the same thing the whole day long. | |
| You get dull--you never think about anything. And then the air is full | |
| of dust and the machinery roars. You get used to it, but I'm sure its | |
| bad for you.” | |
| They walked for a while in silence. “Do you like to imagine things?” | |
| asked Sophie suddenly. | |
| “Yes,” said he. | |
| “I used to,” said she--“when I was younger.” It was so strange to Samuel | |
| to notice that this slip of a child always spoke of herself as old. | |
| “Why don't you do it now?” he asked. | |
| “I'm too tired, I think. But I've a lot of pictures up in my room--that | |
| I cut out of magazines that people gave me. Pictures of beautiful | |
| things--birds and flowers, and old castles, and fine ladies and | |
| gentlemen. And I used to make up stories about them, and imagine that I | |
| was there, and that all sorts of nice things were happening to me. Would | |
| you like to see my pictures?” | |
| “Very much,” said Samuel. | |
| “I think of things like that when I listen to Friedrich. I've a picture | |
| of Sir Galahad--he's very beautiful, and he stands at his horse's head | |
| with a sword in his hand. I used to dream that somebody like that might | |
| come and carry me off to a place where there aren't any mills. But I | |
| guess it's no use any more.” | |
| “Why not?” asked the other. | |
| “It's too late. There is something the matter with me. I never say | |
| anything, because it would make mother unhappy; but I'm always tired | |
| now, and every day I have a headache. And I'm so very sleepy, and yet | |
| when I lie down I can't sleep--I keep hearing the mill.” “Oh!” cried | |
| Samuel involuntarily. | |
| “I don't mind it so much,” said the child. “There's no help, so what's | |
| the use. It's only when I hear Friedrich play--then I get all stirred | |
| up.” | |
| They walked on for a while again. | |
| “He's very unhappy,” she said finally. | |
| “I suppose so,” replied Samuel. “Tell me,” he asked suddenly. “Isn't | |
| there some other work that you could do?” | |
| “What? I'm not strong enough for hard work. And where could I make three | |
| dollars a week?” | |
| “Is that what they pay you?” | |
| “Yes--that is--when we are on full time.” | |
| “Does it make all the girls sick?” he inquired. “There's that girl who | |
| came in this afternoon--she seems well and strong.” | |
| “Bessie, you mean? But it's just play for her, you see. She lives with | |
| her parents and stops whenever she feels like it. She just wants to buy | |
| dresses and go to the theater.” | |
| “But that girl we passed on the street to-day!” | |
| “Helen Davis. Ah, yes--but she's different again. She's bad.” | |
| “Bad?” echoed Samuel perplexed. | |
| There was a brief pause. It was not easy for him to adjust himself to | |
| a world in which the good were of necessity frail and ill, and the bad | |
| were rosy-cheeked and merry. “How do you mean?” he asked at last. | |
| And Sophie answered quite simply, “She lives with a fellow.” | |
| The blood leaped into Samuel's face. Such a blunder for him to have | |
| made. | |
| But then the flush passed, giving place to a feeling of horrified | |
| wonder. For Sophie was not in the least embarrassed--she spoke in the | |
| most matter-of-fact tone. And this from a child of thirteen, who did not | |
| look to be ten. | |
| “I see,” said he in a faint voice. | |
| “A good many of the girls do it,” she added. “You see, they move about | |
| so much--the mills close, and so a girl has no hope of marrying. But | |
| mothers says it's wrong, just the same.” | |
| And Samuel walked home the rest of the way in silence, and thinking no | |
| more about the joys of music. | |
| CHAPTER VII | |
| On Monday morning Samuel found that Professor Stewart had returned, and | |
| he sat in the great man's study and waited until he had finished his | |
| breakfast. | |
| It was a big room, completely walled with crowded bookshelves; in the | |
| center was a big work-table covered with books and papers. Samuel had | |
| never dreamed that there were so many books in the world, and he | |
| gazed about him with awe, feeling that he had come to the sources of | |
| knowledge. | |
| That was Samuel's way. Both by nature and training, he had a profound | |
| respect for all authority. He believed in the majesty of the law--that | |
| was why it had shocked him so to be arrested. He thought of the church | |
| as a divine institution, whose ministers were appointed as shepherds of | |
| the people. And up here on the heights was this great College, a temple | |
| of learning; and this professor was one who had been selected by those | |
| in the seats of authority, and set apart as one of its priests. So | |
| Samuel was profoundly grateful for the attention which was given to him, | |
| and was prepared to pick up whatever crumbs of counsel might be dropped. | |
| “Ah, yes,” the professor said, wiping his glasses with a silk | |
| handkerchief. “Samuel--let me see--Samuel--” | |
| “Prescott, sir.” | |
| “Yes--Samuel Prescott. And how have you been?” | |
| “I've been very well, sir.” | |
| “I meant to leave a message for you, but I overlooked it. I had so many | |
| things to attend to in the rush of departure. I--er--I hope you didn't | |
| wait for me.” | |
| “I had nothing else to do, sir,” said Samuel. | |
| “The truth is,” continued the other, “I'm afraid I shan't be able to do | |
| for you what I thought I could.” | |
| Samuel's heart went down into his boots. | |
| “You see,” said the professor a trifle embarrassed, “my sister wanted | |
| a man to look after her place, but I found she had already engaged some | |
| one.” | |
| There was a pause. Samuel simply stared. | |
| “Of course, as the man is giving satisfaction--you see--it wouldn't do | |
| for her to send him away.” | |
| And Samuel continued to stare, dumb with terror and dismay. | |
| “I'm very sorry,” said the other--“no need to tell you that. But I don't | |
| know of any other place.” | |
| “But what am I to do?” burst out Samuel. | |
| “It's really too bad,” remarked the other. | |
| And again there was a silence. | |
| “Professor Stewart,” said Samuel in a low voice, “what is a man to do | |
| who is out of work and starving?” | |
| “God knows,” said the professor. | |
| And yet again there was silence. Samuel could have said that himself--he | |
| had the utmost faith in God. | |
| And after a while the professor himself seemed to realize that the reply | |
| was inadequate. “You see,” he went on, “there is a peculiar condition | |
| here in Lockmanville. There was an attempt to corner the glass industry, | |
| and that caused the building of too many factories, and so there is | |
| overproduction. And then, besides that, they've just invented a machine | |
| that blows as many bottles as a dozen men.” | |
| “But then what are the men to do?” asked Samuel. | |
| “The condition readjusts itself,” said the other. “The men have to go | |
| into some other trade.” | |
| “But then--the cotton mills are on half time, too!” | |
| “Yes, there are too many cotton mills.” | |
| “But then--in the end there will be too many everything.” | |
| “That is the tendency,” said the professor. | |
| “There are foreign markets, of course. But the difficulty really goes | |
| deeper than that.” | |
| Professor Stewart paused and looked at Samuel wondering, perhaps, if | |
| he were not throwing away his instruction. But the boy looked very much | |
| interested, even excited. | |
| “Most of our economists are disposed to blink the truth,” said he. “But | |
| the fact is, there are too many men.” | |
| Samuel started. It was precisely that terrible suspicion which had been | |
| shaping itself in his own mind. | |
| “There is a law,” went on the other, “which was clearly set forth by | |
| Malthus, that population tends continually to outrun the food supply. | |
| And then the surplus people have to be removed.” | |
| “I see,” said Samuel, awestricken. “But isn't it rather hard?” | |
| “It seems so--to the individual. To the race it is really of the very | |
| greatest benefit. It is the process of life.” | |
| “Please tell me,” Samuel's look seemed to say. | |
| “If you will consider Nature,” Professor Stewart continued, “you will | |
| observe that she always produces many times more individuals than can | |
| possibly reach maturity. The salmon lays millions of eggs, and thousands | |
| of young trees spring up in every thicket. And these individuals | |
| struggle for a chance to live, and those survive which are strongest and | |
| best fitted to meet the conditions. And precisely the same thing is true | |
| among men--there is no other way by which the race could be improved, or | |
| even kept at its present standard. Those who perish are sacrificed for | |
| the benefit of the race.” | |
| Now, strange as it may seem, Samuel had never before heard the phrase, | |
| “the survival of the fittest.” And so now he was living over the | |
| experience of the thinking world of fifty or sixty years ago. What a | |
| marvelous generalization it was! What a range of life it covered! And | |
| how obvious it seemed--one could think of a hundred things, perfectly | |
| well known, which fitted into it. And yet he had never thought of it | |
| himself! The struggle for existence! The survival of the fittest! | |
| A few days ago Samuel had discovered music. And now he was discovering | |
| science. What an extraordinary thing was the intellect of man, which | |
| could take all the infinitely varied facts of life and interpret them in | |
| the terms of one vast law. | |
| Samuel was all aglow with excitement at the revelation. “I see,” he | |
| said, again and again--“I see!” | |
| “It is the law of life,” said the professor. “No one can escape from | |
| it.” | |
| “And then,” said Samuel, “when we try to change things--when we give out | |
| charity, for instance--we are working against Nature, and we really make | |
| things worse.” | |
| “That is it,” replied the other. | |
| And Samuel gave a great sigh. How very simple was the problem, when | |
| one had seen it in the light of science. Here he had been worrying and | |
| tormenting his brain about the matter; and all the time he was in the | |
| hands of Nature--and all he had to do was to lie back and let Nature | |
| solve it. “Nature never makes mistakes,” said Professor Stewart. | |
| Of course, in this new light Samuel's own case became plain. “Those who | |
| are out of work are those who have failed in the struggle,” he said. | |
| “Precisely,” said the professor. | |
| “And that is because they are unfit.” | |
| “Precisely,” said the professor again. “As Herbert Spencer has phrased | |
| it, 'Inability to catch prey must be regarded as a falling short of | |
| conduct from its ideal.' And, of course, in an industrial community, the | |
| 'prey' is a job.” | |
| “Who is Herbert Spencer?” asked Samuel. | |
| “He is recognized as the authority in such matters,” said the other. | |
| “And then,” pondered Samuel, “those who have jobs must be the fit. And | |
| the very rich people--the ones who make the millions and millions--they | |
| are the fittest of all.” | |
| “Er--yes,” said the professor. | |
| “And, of course, that makes my problem clear--I'm out of a job, and so I | |
| must die.” | |
| The professor gazed at Samuel sharply. But it was impossible to mistake | |
| the boy's open-eyed sincerity. He had no thought about himself--he was | |
| discovering the laws of life. | |
| “I'm so glad you explained it to me,” he went on. “But all these | |
| thousands of men who are starving to death--they ought to be told it, | |
| too.” | |
| “What good would it do?” asked the other. | |
| “Why, they ought to understand. They suffer, and it seems to them | |
| purposeless and stupid. But if you were to explain to them that they | |
| are being sacrificed for the benefit of the race--don't you see what a | |
| difference it would make?” | |
| “I don't believe they would take the suggestion kindly,” said the | |
| professor with a faint attempt to smile. | |
| “But why not?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Wouldn't it sound rather hypocritical, so to speak--coming from a man | |
| who had succeeded?” | |
| “Not at all! You have a right to your success, haven't you?” | |
| “I hope so.” | |
| “You have a job”--began Samuel and then hesitated. “I don't know how a | |
| professor comes to get his job,” he said. “But I suppose that the | |
| men who make the great fortunes--the ones who are wisest and best of | |
| all--they give the money for the colleges, don't they?” | |
| “Yes,” said Professor Stewart. | |
| “And then,” said Samuel, “I suppose it is they who have chosen you?” | |
| Again the professor darted a suspicious glance at his questioner. | |
| “Er--one might put it that way,” he said. | |
| “Well, then, that is your right to teach; and you could explain it. | |
| Then you could say to these men: 'There are too many of you; you aren't | |
| needed; and you must be removed.'” | |
| But the professor only shook his head. “It wouldn't do,” he said. And | |
| Samuel, pondering and seeking as ever, came to a sudden comprehension. | |
| “I see,” he exclaimed. “What is needed is action!” | |
| “Action?” | |
| “Yes--it's for us who are beaten to teach it; and to teach it in our | |
| lives. It's a sort of revival that is needed, you see.” | |
| “But I don't see the need,” laughed the other, interested in spite of | |
| himself. | |
| “That's because you aren't one of us!” cried Samuel vehemently. “Nobody | |
| else can understand--nobody! It's easy to be one of the successes of | |
| life. You have a comfortable home and plenty to eat and all. But when | |
| you've failed--when you're down and out--then you have to bear hunger | |
| and cold and sickness. And there is grief and fear and despair--you can | |
| have no idea of it! Why, I've met a little girl in this town. She works | |
| in the cotton mill, and it's just killed her by inches, body and soul. | |
| And even so, she can only get half a day's work; and the mother is | |
| trying to support the little children by sewing--and they're all just | |
| dying of slow starvation. This very morning they asked me to stay to | |
| breakfast, and I refused, because I knew they had only some bread and | |
| a few potatoes, and it wasn't enough for one person. You see, it's so | |
| slow--it's such a terribly long process--this starving people off | |
| by inches. And keeping them always tormented by hope. Don't you see, | |
| Professor Stewart? And just because you don't come out honestly and | |
| teach them the truth. Because you won't say to them: 'The world is too | |
| full; and you've got to get out of the way, so as to give us a chance.' | |
| Why, look, sir--you defeat your own purposes! These people stay, and | |
| they keep on having more children, and everything gets worse instead | |
| of better; and they have diseases and vices--they ruin the whole | |
| world. What's the use of having a world if it's got to be like this | |
| town--crowded with hovels full of dirty people, and sick people, and | |
| starving and miserable people? I can't see how you who live up here on | |
| the heights can enjoy yourselves while such things continue.” | |
| “Um--no,” said Professor Stewart; and he gazed at Samuel with knitted | |
| brows--unable, for the life of him, to feel certain whether he ought to | |
| feel amused, or to feel touched, or to feel outraged. | |
| As for Samuel, he realized that he was through with the professor. The | |
| professor had taught him all that he had to teach. He did not really | |
| understand this matter at all--that was because he belonged to the | |
| other world, the world of successful and fit people. They had their own | |
| problems to solve, no doubt! | |
| This non-comprehension was made quite clear by the professor's next | |
| remark. “I'm sorry to have disappointed you,” he said. “If a little | |
| money will help you--” | |
| “No,” said the other quickly. “You mustn't offer me money. How can that | |
| be right? That would be charity.” | |
| “Ahem!” said the professor. “Yes. But then--you mentioned that you | |
| hadn't had any breakfast. Hadn't you better go into the kitchen and let | |
| them give you something?” | |
| “But what is the use of putting things off?” cried Samuel wildly. “If | |
| I'm going to preach this new idea, I've got to begin.” | |
| “But you can't preach very long on an empty stomach,” objected the | |
| other. | |
| To which Samuel answered, “The preaching has to be by deeds.” | |
| And so he took his departure; and Professor Stewart turned back to his | |
| work-table, upon which lay the bulky manuscript of his monumental work, | |
| which was entitled: “Methods of Relief; A Theory and a Programme.” | |
| Some pages lay before him; the top one was headed: “Chapter | |
| LXIII--Unemployment and Social Responsibility.” And Professor Stewart | |
| sat before this title, and stared, and stared. | |
| CHAPTER VIII | |
| Samuel meantime was walking down the broad macadam avenue debating | |
| his problem. The first glow of excitement was over, and he was finding | |
| difficulties. The theory still held; but in the carrying out of it there | |
| were complications. | |
| For one thing, it would be so hard to spread this doctrine. For if one | |
| tried to teach it by words, he seemed a hypocrite, as the professor had | |
| said; and on the other hand, if one simply practiced it, who would ever | |
| know? Suppose, for instance, that he starved to death during the next | |
| few days? That would be only one person removed, and apparently there | |
| were millions of the superfluous. | |
| The truth was that Samuel, in discussing the theory, had applied it only | |
| to himself. But now he pictured himself going home to tell Mrs. Stedman | |
| that she must give up her futile effort, and take herself and her three | |
| children out of the way of the progress of the race. And he realized | |
| that he could never do it--he was not equal to the task. Doubtless, it | |
| was because he was one of the unfit. It would need some one who did | |
| not know them, some one who could approach the matter from the purely | |
| scientific standpoint. | |
| Then there was another difficulty graver yet. Did not this doctrine | |
| really point to suicide? Would it not be the simplest solution of his | |
| problem if he were to climb down to the river, and tie a stone about | |
| his neck, and jump in? Samuel wished that he had thought to ask the | |
| professor about this. For the idea frightened him; he had a distinct | |
| impression of having been taught that it was a dreadful sin to take | |
| one's own life. | |
| The trouble seemed to lie in the dull and unromantic nature of the life | |
| about him. If only there had been some way to die nobly and heroically | |
| for the good of others. If only there was a war, for instance, and a | |
| call for men to perish on the ramparts! Or a terrible pestilence, so | |
| that one could be a nurse! But there was nothing at all but this low | |
| starving to death--and while other people lived in plenty. Samuel | |
| thought of the chance of finding some work which involved grave peril | |
| to life or limb; but apparently even the danger posts were filled. The | |
| world did not need him, either in life or death! | |
| So there was nothing for it but the starving. Having eaten nothing that | |
| day, Samuel was ready to begin at once; he tightened his belt and set | |
| his teeth for the grapple with the gaunt wolf of hunger. | |
| And so he strode on down the road, pining for a chance to sacrifice | |
| himself--and at the very hour that the greatest peril of his life was | |
| bearing down upon him. | |
| He had passed “Fairview,” the great mansion with the stately gates and | |
| the white pillars. He had passed beyond its vast grounds, and had got | |
| out into the open country. He was walking blindly--it made no great | |
| difference where he went. And then suddenly behind him there was a | |
| clatter of hoofs; and he turned, and up the road he saw a cloud of dust, | |
| and in the midst of it a horse galloping furiously. Samuel stared; there | |
| was some kind of a vehicle behind it, and there was a person in the | |
| vehicle. A single glance was enough for him to realize--it was a | |
| runaway! | |
| To Samuel the thing came as a miracle--it was an answer to his prayer. | |
| And it found him ready. The chance was offered him, and he would not | |
| fail--not he! He did not falter for a second. He knew just what he had | |
| to do, and he was ready--resolute, and alert, and tense. | |
| He moved into the center of the road. The horse came on, galloping at | |
| top speed; it was a blooded horse, swift and frantic with fear, and | |
| terrible to see. Samuel spread out his arms; and then in a flash the | |
| creature was upon him. | |
| It swerved to pass him; and the boy wheeled, leaped swiftly, and flung | |
| himself at the bridle. | |
| He caught it; his arms were wrenched, but he hung on, and jerked himself | |
| up. The horse flung him to one side; but with a swift clutch, Samuel | |
| caught him by the nostrils with one hand, and gripped fast. Then he | |
| drew himself up close and hung grimly, his eyes shut, with a grasp like | |
| death. | |
| And he was still hanging there when the run-away stopped, and the | |
| occupant leaped from the vehicle and rushed to help him. “My God!” he | |
| cried, “but that was nerve!” | |
| He was a young fellow, white as a sheet and trembling in every muscle. | |
| “How did you do it?” he panted. | |
| “I just held on,” said Samuel. | |
| “God, but I'm thankful to you!” exclaimed the other. “You've saved my | |
| life!” | |
| Samuel still clung to the horse, which was quivering with nervousness. | |
| “He'd never have got away from me, but one rein broke. See here!”--And | |
| he held up the end. | |
| “What started him?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Nothing,” said the other--“a piece of paper, likely. He's a | |
| fool--always was.” And he shook his fist in the horse's face, | |
| exclaiming, “By God, I'll tame you before I finish with you!” | |
| “Look out!” said Samuel. “You'll start him again!” And again he clutched | |
| the horse, which started to plunge. | |
| “I've got him now,” said the other. “He'll quiet down.” | |
| “Hold fast,” Samuel continued; and then he put his hand to his forehead, | |
| and swayed slightly. “I--I'll have to sit down a moment, I'm afraid. I | |
| feel sort of dizzy.” | |
| “Are you hurt?” cried the stranger anxiously. | |
| “No,” he said--“no, but I haven't had anything to eat to-day, and I'm a | |
| little weak.” | |
| “Nothing to eat!” cried the other. “What's the matter?” | |
| “Why, I've been out of a job.” | |
| “Out of a job? Good heavens, man, have you been starving?” | |
| “Well,” said Samuel with a wan smile, “I had begun to.” | |
| He sat down by the roadside, and the other stared at him. “Do you live | |
| in Lockmanville?” he asked. | |
| “No, I just came here. I left my home in the country to go to New York, | |
| and I was robbed and lost all my money. And I haven't been able to find | |
| anything to do, and I'd just about given up and got ready to die.” | |
| “My God!” cried the other in dismay. | |
| “Oh, it's all right,” said Samuel. “I didn't mind.” | |
| The stranger gazed at him in perplexity. And Samuel returned the gaze, | |
| being curious to see who it was he had rescued. It was a youth not more | |
| than a year or two older than himself. The color had now come back into | |
| his face, and Samuel thought that he was the most beautiful human being | |
| he had ever seen. He had a frank, open face, and laughing eyes, and | |
| golden hair like a girl's. He wore outing costume, a silk shirt and | |
| light flannels--things which Samuel had learned to associate with the | |
| possession of wealth and ease. Also, his horse was a thoroughbred; | |
| and with a rubber-tired runabout and a silver-mounted harness, the | |
| expensiveness of the rig was evident. Samuel was glad of this, because | |
| it meant that he had rescued some one of consequence--some one of the | |
| successful and fit people. | |
| “Just as soon as you're able, come hold the horse,” said the stranger, | |
| “and then I'll fix this rein, and take you back and get you something to | |
| eat.” | |
| “Oh, no!” said Samuel. “Don't bother. That's all right.” | |
| “Hell, man!” cried the other. “Don't you suppose I'm going to do | |
| anything for you?” | |
| “Well, I hadn't thought--” began Samuel. | |
| “Cut it out!” exclaimed the other. “I'll set you up, and find you a job, | |
| and you can have a decent start.” | |
| Find him a job! Samuel's heart gave a great throb. For a moment he | |
| hardly knew how to take this--how it would fit into his new philosophy. | |
| But surely it was all right for him to take a job. Yes, he had earned | |
| it. Even if some one else had to be turned out--even so, he had proven | |
| his fitness. He had won in the struggle. He had a place among the | |
| successful, and he could help Sophie and her mother. | |
| He got up with eagerness, and held the horse. “Do you think you can | |
| manage him?” he asked. | |
| “Oh, yes,” said the other. “I'll chance it, anyhow.” | |
| And he leaped into the runabout and took the reins. “Now,” he said; and | |
| Samuel got in, and they sped away, back toward town. | |
| “Don't say anything about this accident, please,” said the young man | |
| suddenly. | |
| “I won't,” said Samuel. | |
| “My friends are always teasing me because I drive horses,” he explained. | |
| “Why not?” asked the other. | |
| “Well, everybody drives motors nowadays. But my father stood by horses, | |
| and I learned to be fond of them.” | |
| “We never had but one horse on the farm,” observed Samuel. “But I was | |
| fond of him.” | |
| “What is your name?” inquired the stranger; and Samuel told him. Also | |
| he told him where he had come from and what had happened to him. He | |
| took particular pains to tell about the jail, because he did not want | |
| to deceive anyone. But his companion merely called it “an infernal | |
| outrage.” | |
| “Where were you going now?” he asked. | |
| “I'd just left Professor Stewart's,” replied Samuel. | |
| “What! Old Stew? How do you come to know him?” | |
| “He was at the court. And he said he'd get me a job, and then he found | |
| he couldn't. Do you know him?” | |
| “Oh, yes, I had him at college, you know.” | |
| “Oh, do you go to the college?” | |
| “I used to--till my father died. Then I quit. I hate study.” | |
| Samuel was startled. “I suppose you don't need to,” he said after a | |
| pause. | |
| “No,” said the other. “My father thought the world of Old Stew,” he | |
| added; “but he used to bore the life out of me. How'd you find him?” | |
| “Well,” answered Samuel, “you see, I haven't had any of your advantages. | |
| I found what he told me very wonderful.” | |
| “What did he tell you?” | |
| “Well, he explained to me how it was I was out of a job. There are too | |
| many people in the world, it seems, and I was one of the unfit. I had | |
| failed in the struggle for existence, and so I had to be exterminated, | |
| he said.” | |
| “The devil he did!” exclaimed the stranger. | |
| Samuel wished that the young man would not use so many improper words; | |
| but he presumed that was one of the privileges of the successful. “I | |
| was very grateful to him,” he went on, “because, you see, I hadn't | |
| understood what it meant. But when I realized it was for the good of the | |
| race, then I didn't mind any more.” | |
| His companion stole a glance at him out of the corner of his eye. “Gee!” | |
| he said. | |
| “I had quite an argument with him. I wanted him to see that he ought | |
| to teach the people. There are thousands of people starving here in | |
| Lockmanville; and would you want to starve without knowing the reason?” | |
| “No,” said the other, “I don't think I should.” And again he looked at | |
| his companion. | |
| But the conversation was interrupted there. For some time they had been | |
| passing the place with the ten-foot iron railing; and now they came to | |
| the great stone entrance with the name “Fairview” carved upon it. To | |
| Samuel's surprise they turned in. | |
| “Where are you going?” he asked. | |
| “Home,” said the other. | |
| And Samuel started. “Do you live here?” he gasped. | |
| “Yes,” was the reply. | |
| Samuel stared at the familiar driveway with the stately elms, and the | |
| lawns with the peacocks and lyre birds. “This is one of the places where | |
| I asked for work,” he said. “They ordered me out.” | |
| “The deuce they did!” exclaimed the other. “Well, they won't order you | |
| out now.” | |
| There was a pause. “You haven't told me your name,” put in Samuel | |
| suddenly. | |
| “I thought you'd guess,” said the other with a laugh. | |
| “How could I?” | |
| “Why--don't you know what place this is?” | |
| “No,” said Samuel. “What?” | |
| And his companion replied, “It's the Lockman place.” | |
| Samuel caught his breath and clutched at the seat. | |
| “The Lockman place!” he panted; and then again, “The Lockman place!” | |
| He stared ahead at the great building, with the broad porticos and the | |
| snow-white columns. He could hardly credit his ears. | |
| “I'm the old man's son,” added the stranger genially. “Albert's my name. | |
| They call me Bertie.” | |
| CHAPTER IX | |
| Properly to understand the thrill which this revelation brought to | |
| Samuel, one would have to consider the state of his mind. With all the | |
| power of his being Samuel was seeking for excellence; and a great and | |
| wise man had explained to him what were the signs by which this quality | |
| was known. And in the “struggle for existence” old Henry Lockman had | |
| succeeded more than any other man of whom Samuel had ever heard in his | |
| life. He owned these huge glass works, and many others all over the | |
| country. He owned the trolley roads, and the gas works, and the water | |
| works; the place had been named after him, and the great college also. | |
| For many years he had even run the government of the town, so Finnegan | |
| had stated. And here was this huge estate, his home--a palace fit for | |
| a king. How great must have been the excellence of such a man! And what | |
| benefits he must have conferred upon the world, to have been rewarded | |
| with all this power and glory! | |
| And here was his son--a youth in aspect fitting perfectly to | |
| Samuel's vision; a very prince of the blood, yet genial and | |
| free-hearted--noblesse oblige! To him had descended these virtues and | |
| excellences--and all the estates and powers as the sign and symbol | |
| thereof. And now had come a poor ignorant country boy, and it had fallen | |
| to his fortune to save the life of this extraordinary being. And he was | |
| to have a chance to be near him, and to serve him--to see how he lived, | |
| and to find out the secret of his superior excellence. There was no | |
| snobbery in Samuel's attitude; he felt precisely as another and far | |
| greater Samuel had felt when his sovereign had condescended to praise | |
| his dictionary, and the tears of gratitude had started into his eyes. | |
| They drove up before the palace, and a groom came hurrying up. | |
| “Phillips,” said young Lockman, “look at that rein!” | |
| The groom stared aghast. | |
| “Take it and show it to Sanderson,” the other continued. “Ask him if I | |
| don't pay enough for my harness that he gets me stuff like that.” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said the groom. | |
| They alighted and crossed the broad piazza, which was covered with easy | |
| chairs and tables and rugs. In the entrance hall stood a man in livery. | |
| “Peters,” said the young man, “this is Samuel Prescott. I had some | |
| trouble with my horse and he helped me. He hasn't had anything to eat | |
| today, and I want him to have a good meal.” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said the man. “Where shall I serve it, sir?” | |
| “In the morning room. We'll wait there. And mind you, bring him a | |
| plenty.” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said Peters, and went off. | |
| Meantime Samuel had time for a glance about him. Never had he heard or | |
| dreamed of such magnificence. It was appalling, beyond belief! The great | |
| entrance hall went up to the roof; and there was a broad staircase of | |
| white marble, with galleries of marble, and below a marble fireplace, | |
| big enough to hold a section of a tree. Beyond this was a court with | |
| fountains splashing, and visions of palms and gorgeous flowers; and | |
| on each side were vistas of rooms with pictures and tapestries and | |
| furniture which Samuel thought must be of solid gold. | |
| “Come,” said his companion, and they ascended the staircase. | |
| Halfway up, however, Samuel stopped and caught his breath. Before him | |
| there was a painting. There is no need to describe it in detail--suffice | |
| it to say that it was a life-size painting of a woman, entirely naked; | |
| and that Samuel had never seen such a thing in his life before. He | |
| dropped his eyes as he came near to it. | |
| They went along the gallery and entered a room, dazzlingly beautiful and | |
| bright. It was all done in white satin, the front being of glass, and | |
| opening upon a wide balcony. There were flowers and singing birds, | |
| and in the panels most beautiful paintings, representing wood nymphs | |
| dancing. These airy creatures, also, were innocent of anything save | |
| filmy veils; but they were all about the room, and so poor Samuel had no | |
| way to escape them. He sought for light within his mind; and suddenly he | |
| recollected the illustrated Bible at home. Perhaps the peerless beings | |
| who lived in such palaces had returned to a state of guiltlessness, such | |
| as had existed before the serpent came. | |
| Young Lockman flung himself into an easy chair and proceeded to | |
| cross-question his companion. He wanted to know all about the interview | |
| with “Old Stew”; and afterwards, having managed to divine Samuel's | |
| attitude to himself, he led him to talk about that, which Samuel | |
| did with the utmost frankness. “Gee, but you're a queer duffer!” was | |
| Lockman's comment; but Samuel didn't mind that. | |
| The butler came with the meal--carrying it on a big tray, and with | |
| another man to carry a folding table, and yet another to help. Such a | |
| display of silver and cut glass! Such snowy linen, and such unimaginable | |
| viands! There were piles of sandwiches, each one half a bite for a | |
| fairly hungry man. There was jellied game, and caviar, and a pate | |
| of something strange and spicy. Nothing was what one would have | |
| expected--there were eggs inside of baked potatoes, and ice cream in | |
| some sort of crispy cake. The crackers looked like cakes, and the cakes | |
| like crackers, and the cheese was green and discouraging. But a bowl of | |
| strawberries and cream held out a rich promise at the end, and Samuel | |
| took heart. | |
| “Fall to,” said the host; and then divining the other's state of mind, | |
| he remarked, “You needn't serve, Peters,” and the men went away, to | |
| Samuel's vast relief. | |
| “Don't mind me,” added Lockman laughing. “And if there's any question | |
| you want to ask, all right.” | |
| So Samuel tasted the food of the gods; a kind of food which human skill | |
| and ingenuity had labored for centuries to invent, and for days and even | |
| weeks to prepare. Samuel wondered vaguely where all these foods had come | |
| from, and how many people had had a hand in their preparation; also | |
| he wondered if all those who ate them would become as beautiful and as | |
| dazzling as his young friend. | |
| The friend meanwhile was vastly diverted, and was bent upon making the | |
| most of his find. “I suppose you'd like to see the place?” he said. | |
| “I should, indeed,” said Samuel. | |
| “Come and I'll show it to you--that is, If you're able to walk after the | |
| meal.” | |
| The meal did not trouble Samuel, and they went out and took a stroll. | |
| And so the boy met with yet another revelation of the possibilities of | |
| existence. | |
| If there was anything in the world he would have supposed he understood, | |
| it was farming; but here at “Fairview” was farming as it was done by the | |
| methods of Science. At home they had had some lilac bushes and a row of | |
| peonies; here were acres of greeneries, filled with flowers of gorgeous | |
| and unimaginable splendor, and rare plants from every part of the world. | |
| At home it had been Samuel's lot to milk the cow, and he had found it a | |
| trying job on cold and dark winter mornings; and here was a model dairy, | |
| with steam heat and electric light, and tiled walls and nickel plumbing, | |
| and cows with pedigrees in frames, and attendants with white uniforms | |
| and rubber gloves. Then there was a row of henhouses, each for a fancy | |
| breed of fowl--some of them red and lean as herons, and others white | |
| as snow and as fat and ungainly as hogs. And then out in front, at one | |
| corner of the lawn, was the aviary, with houses for the peacocks and | |
| lyre birds, and for parrots and magpies and innumerable strange birds | |
| from the tropics. Also there were dog kennels with many dozens of | |
| strange breeds. | |
| “Father got those for me,” said young Lockman. “He thought I'd be | |
| interested in agriculture.” | |
| “Well, aren't you?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Not very much,” said the other carelessly. “Here's Punch--what do you | |
| think of him?” | |
| The occasion for this was a dog, the most hideously ugly object that | |
| Samuel had ever seen in his life. “I--I don't think I'd care for him,” | |
| he said hesitatingly. | |
| “He's a Japanese bulldog,” observed the other. “He cost three thousand | |
| dollars.” | |
| “Three thousand dollars!” gasped the boy in horror. “Why should anyone | |
| pay so much for a dog?” | |
| “That's what he's worth,” said the other with a laugh. | |
| They went to see the horses, which were housed in a palace of their own. | |
| There were innumerable rows of stalls, and a running track and endless | |
| acres of inclosures. “Why do you have so many horses?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Father ran a stock farm,” said the other. “I don't have much time to | |
| give to it myself.” | |
| “But who rides the horses?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Well, I go in for sport,” replied Lockman. “I'm supposed to be quite a | |
| dab at polo.” | |
| “I see,” said the boy--though to tell the truth he did not see at all, | |
| not having the least idea what polo was. | |
| “If you're interested in horses, I'll have them find you something to do | |
| here,” Lockman went on. | |
| “Oh, thank you,” said the boy with a thrill. “That will be fine!” | |
| He could have spent all day in gazing at the marvels of this place, but | |
| his host was tired now and started back to the house. “It's lunch time,” | |
| he said. “Perhaps you are hungry again!” | |
| They came out upon the piazza and sat down. And then suddenly they heard | |
| a clatter of hoofs and looked up. “Hello!” exclaimed the host. “Here's | |
| Glad!” | |
| A horse was coming up the road at a lively pace. The rider was seated | |
| a-straddle, and so Samuel was slow to realize that it was a woman. It | |
| was only when he saw her wave her hand and call to them that he was | |
| sure. | |
| She reined up her horse, and a groom who followed her took the rein, and | |
| she stepped off upon the piazza and stood looking at them. She was young | |
| and of extraordinary beauty. She was breathing fast, and her hair was | |
| blown about her forehead, and the glow of health was in her cheeks; and | |
| Samuel thought that she was the most beautiful object that he had ever | |
| beheld in all his life. He stared transfixed; he had never dreamed that | |
| anything so wonderful could exist in the world. He realized in a sudden | |
| glow of excitement what it was that confronted him. She was the female | |
| of this higher species; she was the superior and triumphant woman. | |
| “Hello, Bertie!” she said. | |
| “Hello!” the other replied, and then added. “This is my cousin, Miss | |
| Wygant. Glad, this is Samuel Prescott.” | |
| The girl made a slight acknowledgment, and stared at Samuel with a look | |
| in which curiosity and hauteur were equally mingled. She was a brunette | |
| with dark hair, and an almost Oriental richness of coloring. She was | |
| lithe and gracefully built, and quick in her motions. There was eager | |
| alertness in her whole aspect; her glance was swift and her voice | |
| imperious. One could read her at a glance for a person accustomed to | |
| command--impatient and adventurous, passionate and proud. | |
| “I've had an adventure,” said her cousin by way of explanation. “Samuel, | |
| here, saved my life.” | |
| And Samuel thrilled to see the sudden look of interest which came into | |
| the girl's face. | |
| “What!” she cried. | |
| “Yes,” said the other. “Spitfire ran away with me.” | |
| “You don't mean it, Bertie!” | |
| “Yes. The rein broke. He started near the gate here and ran three or | |
| four miles with me.” | |
| “Bertie!” cried the girl. “And what happened?” | |
| “Samuel stopped him.” | |
| “How?” | |
| “It was splendid, Glad--the nerviest thing I ever saw. He just flung | |
| himself at the rein and caught it and hung on. He saved my life, beyond | |
| question.” | |
| And now Samuel, burning up with embarrassment, faced the full blaze | |
| of the girl's impetuous interest. “How perfectly fine!” she exclaimed; | |
| then, “Where do you come from?” she asked. | |
| “He's just off a farm,” said Lockman. “He was on his way to New York to | |
| make his fortune. And think of it, Glad, he'd been robbed, and he'd been | |
| wandering about town begging for work, and he was nearly starving.” | |
| “You don't say so!” gasped the girl. | |
| She took a chair and indicated to Samuel to sit in front of her. “Tell | |
| me all about yourself,” she said; and proceeded to cross-question him | |
| about his life and his adventures. | |
| Poor Samuel was like a witness in the hands of a prosecutor--he became | |
| hopelessly confused and frightened. But that made no difference to the | |
| girl, who poured a ceaseless fire of questions upon him, until she had | |
| laid his whole life bare. She even made him tell about Manning, the | |
| stockbroker, and how the family had lost its money in the collapse of | |
| Glass Bottle Securities. And then her cousin put in a word about his | |
| adventure with “Old Stew,” and Samuel had to tell that all over again, | |
| and to set forth his sociological convictions--Miss Wygant and her | |
| cousin meantime exchanging glances of wonder and amusement. | |
| At last, however, they tired of him and fell to talking of a dance they | |
| were to attend and a tennis tournament in which they were to play. And | |
| so Samuel had a chance to gaze at Miss Wygant and to feast his eyes upon | |
| her beauty. He could have dreamed of no greater joy in all this world | |
| than to watch her for hours--to study every detail of her features and | |
| her costume, and to see the play of laughter about her mouth and eyes. | |
| But then came the butler announcing luncheon; and Samuel rose in a | |
| panic. He had a sudden vision of himself being asked to the table, to | |
| sit under Miss Wygant's merciless survey. “I think I'd better go now,” | |
| he said. | |
| “All right,” said young Lockman. “Will you come to-morrow morning, and | |
| we'll fix things up?” | |
| “I'll come,” said Samuel. | |
| “What are you going to do with him?” asked the girl. | |
| “He likes to take care of horses,” said Lockman. | |
| “No,” exclaimed the other promptly, “that won't do.” | |
| “Why not?” asked he. | |
| “Because, Bertie, you don't want to make a stable boy out of him. He has | |
| too many possibilities. For one thing, he's good looking.” | |
| Samuel flushed scarlet and dropped his eyes. He felt again that | |
| penetrating gaze. | |
| “All right,” said Lockman. “What can you suggest?” | |
| “I don't know, I'm sure. But something decent.” | |
| “He doesn't know enough to be a house servant, Glad--” | |
| “No--but something outside. Couldn't he learn gardening? Are you fond of | |
| flowers, Samuel?” | |
| “Yes, ma'am,” said Samuel quickly. | |
| “Well, then, make a gardener out of him,” said Miss Wygant; and that | |
| settled Samuel's destiny. | |
| The boy took his departure and went home, almost running in his | |
| excitement. He was transported into a distant heaven of bliss; he had | |
| been seated among the gods--he was to dwell there forever after! | |
| His new patron had given him a five-dollar bill; and before he reached | |
| the Stedman home he stopped in a grocery store and loaded up his arms | |
| with bundles. And then, seized by a sudden thought, he went into a | |
| notion store and set down his bundles and purchased a clean, white linen | |
| collar, and a necktie of royal purple and brilliant green--already tied, | |
| so that it would always be perfect in shape. | |
| Then he went into the Stedmans, and the widow and the youngest children | |
| sat round and listened open-eyed to his tale. And then came Sophie, and | |
| he had to tell it all over again. | |
| The girl's eyes opened wide with excitement when he came to the end of | |
| his recital. “Miss Wygant!” she exclaimed. “Miss Gladys Wygant?” | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel. “You've heard of her?” | |
| “I've seen her!” exclaimed Sophie eagerly. “Twice!” | |
| “You don't mean it,” he said. | |
| “Yes. Once she came to our church festival at Christmas.” | |
| “Does she belong to your church?” | |
| “It's the mission. Great folks like her wouldn't want us in the church | |
| with them. She goes to St. Matthew's, you know--up there on the hill. | |
| But she came to the festival at the mission and helped to give out the | |
| presents. And she was dressed all in red--something filmy and soft, like | |
| you'd see in a dream. And, oh, Samuel--she was so beautiful! She had a | |
| rose in her hair--and such a sweet perfume--you could hardly bear it! | |
| And she stood there and smiled at all the children and gave them the | |
| presents. She gave me mine, and it was like seeing a princess. I wanted | |
| to fall down and kiss her feet.” | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel understandingly. | |
| “And to think that you've met her!” cried Sophie in ecstasy. “And talked | |
| with her! Oh, how could you do it?” | |
| “I--I don't think I did it very well,” said Samuel. | |
| “What did you say to her?” | |
| “I don't remember much of it.” | |
| “I never heard her voice,” said Sophie. “She was talking, the other time | |
| I saw her, but the machinery drowned it out. That was in the mill--she | |
| came there with some other people and walked about, looking at | |
| everything. We were all so excited. You know, her father owns the mill.” | |
| “No, I didn't know it,” replied Samuel. | |
| “He owns all sorts of things in Lockmanville. They're very, very rich. | |
| And she's his only daughter, and so beautiful--everybody worships her. | |
| I've got two pictures of her that were in the newspapers once. Come--you | |
| must see them.” | |
| And so the two rushed upstairs; and over the bed were two faded | |
| newspaper clippings, one showing Miss Gladys in an evening gown, and the | |
| other in dimity en princesse, with a bunch of roses in her arms. | |
| “Did you ever see anything so lovely?” asked the girl. “I made her my | |
| fairy godmother. And she used to say such lovely things to me. She must | |
| be very kind, you know--no one could be so beautiful who wasn't very, | |
| very good and kind.” | |
| “No,” said Samuel. “She must be, I'm sure.” | |
| And then a sudden idea came to him. “Sophie!” he exclaimed--“she said I | |
| was good looking! I wonder if I am.” | |
| And Sophie shot a quick glance at him. “Why, of course you are!” she | |
| cried. “You stupid boy!” | |
| Samuel went to the cracked mirror which hung upon the wall and looked at | |
| himself with new and wandering interest. | |
| “Don't you see how fine and strong you are?” said Sophie. “And what a | |
| bright color you've got?” | |
| “I never thought of it,” said he, and recollected the green and purple | |
| necktie. | |
| “And to think that you've talked with her!” exclaimed Sophie, turning | |
| back to the pictures; and she added in a sudden burst of generosity, “I | |
| tell you what I'll do, Samuel--I'll give you these, and you can put them | |
| in your room!” | |
| “You mustn't do that!” he protested. | |
| But the girl insisted. “No, no! I know them by heart, so it won't make | |
| any difference. And they'll mean so much more to you, because you've | |
| really met her!” | |
| CHAPTER X | |
| Samuel presented himself the next morning and was turned over to the | |
| head gardener and duly installed as an assistant. “Let me know how | |
| you're getting along,” was young Lockman's last word to him. “And if | |
| there's anything else I can do for you come and tell me.” | |
| “Thank you very much, sir,” said the boy gratefully; but without | |
| realizing how these magic words, pronounced in the gardener's hearing, | |
| would make him a privileged character about the place--an object of | |
| mingled deference and envy to the other servants. | |
| It was a little world all in itself, the “Fairview” menage. Without | |
| counting the stable hands, and the employees of the different farms, it | |
| took no less than twenty-three people to minister to the personal wants | |
| of Bertie Lockman. And they were divided into ranks and classes, with | |
| a rigid code of etiquette, upon which they insisted with vehemence. A | |
| housekeeper's assistant looked with infinite scorn upon a kitchen maid, | |
| and there had to be no less than four dining rooms for the various | |
| classes of servants who would not eat at the same table. All this was | |
| very puzzling to the stranger; but after a while he came to see how the | |
| system had grown up. It was just like a court; and the privileged beings | |
| who waited upon the sovereign necessarily were esteemed according to the | |
| importance of the service they performed for him and the access which | |
| they attained to his person. | |
| A good many of these servants were foreigners, and Samuel was pained | |
| to discover that they were for the most part without any ennobling | |
| conception of their calling. They were much given to gluttony and | |
| drinking; and there was an unthinkable amount of scandal and backbiting | |
| and jealousy. But it was only by degrees that he realized this, for he | |
| had one great motive in common with them--they were all possessed with a | |
| sense of the greatness of the Lockmans, and none of them wanted anything | |
| better than to talk for hours about the family and its wealth and power, | |
| and the habits and tastes of its members and their friends. | |
| It was Katie Reilly, a bright little Irish damsel, the housekeeper's | |
| sewing girl, who first captured Samuel with her smile; she carried him | |
| off for a walk, in spite of the efforts of the second parlor maid, and | |
| Samuel drank up eagerly the stream of gossip which poured from her lips. | |
| Master Albert--that was what they all called him--was said to have an | |
| income of over seven hundred thousand dollars a year. What he did with | |
| such a sum no one could imagine; he had lived quite alone since his | |
| father's death. The house had always been run by Miss Aurelia, old Mr. | |
| Lockman's sister, a lady with the lumbago and a terrible temper; but she | |
| had died a couple of years ago. Mr. Lockman had taken great interest | |
| in his stock farm, but very little in his house; and Master Albert | |
| took even less, spending most of his time in New York. Consequently | |
| everything was at sixes and sevens, and he was being robbed most | |
| terribly. But in spite of all his relatives' suggestions, he would not | |
| have anyone to come and live with him. | |
| Master Albert was still a minor, and his affairs were managed by Mr. | |
| Hickman, the family lawyer, and also by his uncle, Mr. Wygant. The | |
| latter was a manufacturer and capitalist--also a great scholar, so Katie | |
| said. It was he Samuel had seen that afternoon in the automobile, a tall | |
| and very proud-looking man with an iron-gray mustache. He lived in the | |
| big white house just after you climbed the ridge; and Miss Gladys was | |
| his only daughter. She had been old Mr. Lockman's favorite niece, and he | |
| had left her a great deal of money. People were always planning a match | |
| between her and Master Albert, but that always made Miss Gladys very | |
| angry. They both declared they were not in love with each other, and | |
| Katie was inclined to think this was true. Miss Gladys had been away to | |
| a rich boarding school, and she wanted to visit some friends at | |
| Newport; but her father wanted her to stay with him, and that made her | |
| discontented. She was very beautiful, and everybody was her slave. “But | |
| oh, I tell you, when she's angry!” said Katie with a shake of her head. | |
| This little Irish girl was a rare find for Samuel, because her brother | |
| was the “fellow” to Miss Gladys's maid, and so there was nothing she | |
| could not tell Samuel about his divinity. He learned about Miss Gladys's | |
| beautiful party dresses, and about her wonderful riding horse, and about | |
| her skill at tennis, and even her fondness for chocolate fudge. Miss | |
| Gladys had been to Paris the summer before; and her family had a camp in | |
| the Adirondacks, and they went there every August in an automobile | |
| and flew about on a mountain lake in a motor-boat the shape of a knife | |
| blade. Katie wanted to talk about Samuel a part of the time, and even, | |
| perhaps, about herself; but Samuel plied her with questions about Miss | |
| Wygant. | |
| He had her two pictures folded away in his vest pocket; and all the | |
| time that he trimmed the hedges he listened for the sound of her horse's | |
| hoofs or for the chug of her motor. And then, one blissful morning, when | |
| he was carrying in an armful of roses for the housekeeper, he ran full | |
| upon her in the hall. | |
| His heart leaped so that it hurt him; and instead of passing straight | |
| on, as he should have done, he stood stock still, and almost spilled his | |
| roses on the floor. | |
| Miss Gladys's face lighted with pleasure. | |
| “Why, it's Samuel!” she exclaimed. | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys,” said he. | |
| “And how do you like your position?” | |
| “Very well, Miss Gladys,” he replied; and then, feeling the inadequacy | |
| of this, he added with fervor, “I'm so happy I can't tell you.” | |
| “I'm very glad to hear it,” she said. “And I'm sure you fill it very | |
| well.” | |
| “I've done the best I can, Miss Gladys,” said he. | |
| There was a moment's pause. “You find there is a good deal to learn?” | |
| she inquired. | |
| “Yes,” he answered. “But you see, it's about flowers, and I was always | |
| interested in flowers.” | |
| And again there was a pause; and then suddenly Miss Wygant flung a | |
| question at him--“Samuel, why do you look at me like that?” | |
| Samuel was almost knocked over. | |
| “Why--why--” he gasped. “Miss Gladys! I don't--!” | |
| “Ah!” she said, “but you do.” | |
| Poor Samuel was in an agony of horror. “I--I--really--” he stammered. “I | |
| didn't mean it--I wouldn't for the world---” | |
| He stopped, utterly at a loss; and Miss Wygant kept her merciless gaze | |
| upon him. “Am I so very beautiful?” she asked. | |
| This startled Samuel into lifting his eyes. He stared at her, | |
| transfixed; and at last he whispered, faintly, “Yes.” | |
| “Tell me about it,” she said, and her look shook him to the depths of | |
| his soul. | |
| He stood there, trembling; he could feel the blood pouring in a warm | |
| flood about his throat and neck. “Tell me,” she said again. | |
| “You--you are more beautiful than anyone I have ever seen,” he panted. | |
| “You are not used to women, Samuel!” | |
| “No,” said he. “I'm just a country boy.” | |
| She stood waiting for him to continue. “The girls there”--he | |
| whispered--“they are pretty--but you--you---” | |
| And then suddenly the words came to him. “You are like a princess!” he | |
| cried. | |
| “Ah, if you ever find your tongue!” she said with a smile; and then | |
| after a pause she added, “You don't know how different you are, Samuel.” | |
| “Different?” he echoed. | |
| “Yes. You are so fresh--so young. You would do anything for me, wouldn't | |
| you?” | |
| “Yes,” he said. | |
| “You'd risk your life for me, as you did for Bertie?” | |
| And Samuel answered her with fervor that left no room for doubt. | |
| “I wish there was a chance,” she laughed. “But there's only this dull | |
| every-day round!” | |
| There was a pause; the boy dropped his eyes and stood trembling. | |
| “Where are you going with the roses?” she asked. | |
| “I'm to take them to the housekeeper.” | |
| “Let me have one.” | |
| She took one from the bunch, and he stood watching while she pinned it | |
| to her dress. “You may bring me some, now and then,” she said with one | |
| of her marvelous smiles. “Don't forget.” And then, as she went on, she | |
| touched him upon the hand. | |
| At the touch of her warm, living fingers such a thrill passed through | |
| the boy as made him reel. It was something blind and elemental, outside | |
| of anything that he had dreamed of in his life. She went on down the | |
| hall and left him there, and he had to lean against a table for support. | |
| And all that day he was in a daze--with bursts of rapture sweeping over | |
| him. She was interested in him! She had smiled upon him! She had touched | |
| his hand! | |
| He went home that evening on purpose to tell Sophie; and the two of them | |
| talked about it for hours. He told the story over and over again. And | |
| Sophie listened, with her eyes shining and her hands clasped in an | |
| ecstasy of delight. | |
| “Oh, Samuel!” she whispered. “I knew it--I knew she'd appreciate you! | |
| She was so beautiful--I knew she must be kind and good!” | |
| CHAPTER XI | |
| A week passed, and Samuel did not see his divinity again. He lived upon | |
| the memory of their brief interview, and while he trimmed the hedges | |
| he was dreaming the most extravagant dreams of rescues and perilous | |
| escapes. For the first time he began to find that his work was tedious; | |
| it offered so few possibilities of romance! If only he had been her | |
| chauffeur, now! Or the guide who escorted her in her tramps about the | |
| wilderness! Or the man who ran the wonderful motor-boat that was shaped | |
| like a knife blade! | |
| Samuel continued to ponder, and was greatly worried lest the commonplace | |
| should ingulf him. So little he dreamed how near was a change! | |
| Bertie Lockman had been away for a few days, visiting some friends, and | |
| he came back unexpectedly one afternoon. Samuel knew that he had not | |
| been expected, for always there were great bunches of flowers to be | |
| placed in his room. The gardener happened to be away at the time the | |
| motor arrived, and so Samuel upon his own responsibility cut the flowers | |
| and took them into the house. He left them in the housekeeper's workroom | |
| and then set out to find that functionary, and tell her what he had | |
| done. So, in the entrance to the dining room, he stumbled upon his young | |
| master, giving some orders to Peters, the butler. | |
| As an humble gardener's boy, Samuel should have stepped back and | |
| vanished. Instead he came forward, and Bertie smiled pleasantly and | |
| said, “Hello, Samuel.” | |
| “Good afternoon, Master Albert,” said Samuel. | |
| “And how do you like your work?” the other asked. | |
| “I like it very well, sir,” he replied; and then added apologetically, | |
| “I was bringing some flowers.” | |
| The master turned to speak to Peters again; and Samuel turned to retire. | |
| But at that instant there came the sound of a motor in front of the | |
| house. | |
| “Hello,” said Bertie. “Who's that?” and turned to look through the | |
| entrance hall. Peters went forward to the door; and so Samuel was left | |
| standing and watching. | |
| A big red touring car had drawn up in front of the piazza. It was | |
| filled with young people, waving their hands and shouting, “Bertie! Oh, | |
| Bertie!” | |
| The other appeared to be startled. “Well, I'll be damned!” he muttered | |
| as he went to meet them. | |
| Of course Samuel had no business whatever to stand there. He should have | |
| fled in trepidation. But he, as a privileged person, had not yet been | |
| drilled into a realization of his “place.” And they were such marvelous | |
| creatures--these people of the upper world--and he was so devoured with | |
| the desire to know about them. | |
| There were two young men in the motor, of about his master's age, and | |
| nearly as goodly to look at. And there were four young women, of a | |
| quite extraordinary sort. They were beautiful, all of them--nearly | |
| as beautiful as Miss Gladys; and perhaps it was only the automobile | |
| costumes, but they struck one as even more alarmingly complex. | |
| They were airy, ethereal creatures, with delicate peach blow | |
| complexions, and very small hands and feet. They seemed to favor all | |
| kinds of fluffy and flimsy things; they were explosions of all the | |
| colors of the springtime. There were leaves and flowers and fruits and | |
| birds in their hats; and there were elaborate filmy veils to hold the | |
| hats on. They descended from the motor, and Samuel had glimpses of | |
| ribbons and ruffles, of shapely ankles and daintily slippered feet. They | |
| came in the midst of a breeze of merriment, with laughter and bantering | |
| and little cries of all sorts. | |
| “You don't seem very glad to see us, Bertie!” one said. | |
| “Cheer up, old chap--nobody'll tell on us!” cried one of the young men. | |
| “And we'll be good and go home early!” added another of the girls. | |
| One of the party Samuel noticed particularly, because she looked more | |
| serious, and hung back a little. She was smaller than the others, | |
| a study in pink and white; her dress and hat were trimmed with pink | |
| ribbons, and she had the most marvelously pink cheeks and lips, and the | |
| most exquisite features Samuel had ever seen in his life. | |
| Now suddenly she ran to young Lockman and flung her arms about his neck. | |
| “Bertie,” she exclaimed, “it's my fault. I made them come! I wanted to | |
| see you so badly! You aren't mad with us, are you?” | |
| “No,” said Bertie, “I'm not mad.” | |
| “Well, then, be glad!” cried the girl, and kissed him again. “Be a good | |
| boy--do!” | |
| “All right,” said Bertie feebly. “I'll be good, Belle.” | |
| “We wanted to surprise you,” added one of the young fellows. | |
| “You surprised me all right,” said Bertie--a reply which all of them | |
| seemed to find highly amusing, for they laughed uproariously. | |
| “He doesn't ask us in,” said one of the girls. “Come on, Dolly--let's | |
| see this house of his.” | |
| And so the party poured in. Samuel waited just long enough to catch the | |
| rustle of innumerable garments, and a medley of perfumes which might | |
| have been blown from all the gardens of the East. Then he turned and | |
| fled to the regions below. | |
| One of the young men, he learned from the talk in the servants' hall, | |
| was Jack Holliday, the youngest son of the railroad magnate; it was his | |
| sister who was engaged to marry the English duke. The other boy was the | |
| heir of a great lumber king from the West, and though he was only twenty | |
| he had got himself involved in a divorce scandal with some actor | |
| people. Who the young ladies were no one seemed to know, but there were | |
| half-whispered remarks about them, the significance of which was quite | |
| lost upon Samuel. | |
| Presently the word came that the party was to stay to dinner. And | |
| then instantly the whole household sprang into activity. Above stairs | |
| everything would move with the smoothness of clockwork; but downstairs | |
| in the servants' quarters it was a serious matter that an elaborate | |
| banquet for seven people had to be got ready in a couple of hours. Even | |
| Samuel was pressed into service at odd jobs--something for which he was | |
| very glad, as it gave him a chance to remain in the midst of events. | |
| So it happened that he saw Peters emerging from the wine cellar, | |
| followed by a man with a huge basket full of bottles. And this set | |
| Samuel to pondering hard, the while he scraped away at a bowl of | |
| potatoes. It was the one thing which had disconcerted him in the life | |
| of this upper world--the obvious part that drinking played in it. There | |
| were always decanters of liquor upon the buffet in the dining room; and | |
| liquor was served to guests upon any--and every pretext. And the women | |
| drank as freely as the men--even Miss Gladys drank, a thing which was | |
| simply appalling to Samuel. | |
| Of course, these were privileged people, and they knew what they wanted | |
| to do. But could it be right for anyone to drink? As in the case of | |
| suicide, Samuel found his moral convictions beginning to waver. Perhaps | |
| it was that drink did not affect these higher beings as it did ordinary | |
| people! Or perhaps what they drank was something that cheered without | |
| inebriating! Certain it was that the servants got drunk; and Samuel had | |
| seen that they took the stuff from the decanters used by the guests. | |
| It was something over which he labored with great pain of soul. But, of | |
| course, all his hesitations and sophistries were for the benefit of his | |
| master--that it could be right for Samuel himself to touch liquor was | |
| something that could not by any chance enter his mind. | |
| The dinner had begun; and Samuel went on several errands to the room | |
| below the butler's pantry, and so from the dumb-waiter shafts he could | |
| hear the sounds of laughter and conversation. And more wine went up--it | |
| was evidently a very merry party. The meal was protracted for two or | |
| three hours, and the noise grew louder and louder. They were shouting | |
| so that one could hear them all over the house. They were singing | |
| songs--wild rollicking choruses which were very wonderful to listen | |
| to, and yet terribly disturbing to Samuel. These fortunate successful | |
| ones--he would grant them the right to any happiness--it was to be | |
| expected that they should dwell in perpetual merriment and delight. But | |
| he could hear the champagne corks popping every few minutes. And COULD | |
| it be right for them to drink! | |
| It grew late, and still the revelry went on. A thunderstorm had come up | |
| and was raging outside. The servants who were not at work, had gone to | |
| bed, but there was no sleep for Samuel; he continued to prowl about, | |
| restless and tormented. The whole house was now deserted, save for | |
| the party in the dining room; and so he crept up, by one of the rear | |
| stairways, and crouched in a doorway, where he could listen to the wild | |
| uproar. | |
| He had been there perhaps ten minutes. He could hear the singing and | |
| yelling, though he could not make out the words because of the noise | |
| of the elements. But then suddenly, above all the confusion, he heard a | |
| woman's shrieks piercing and shrill; and he started up and sprang into | |
| the hall. Whether they were cries of anger, or of fear, or of pain, | |
| Samuel could not be certain; but he knew that they were not cries of | |
| enjoyment. | |
| He stood trembling. There rose a babel of shouts, and then again came | |
| the woman's voice--“No, no--you shan't, I say!” | |
| “Sit down, you fool!” Samuel heard Bertie Lockman shout. | |
| And then came another woman's voice--“Shut up and mind your business!” | |
| “I'll tear your eyes out, you devil!” shrilled the first voice, and | |
| there followed a string of furious curses. The other woman replied in | |
| kind and Samuel made out that there was some kind of a quarrel, and that | |
| some of the party wanted to interfere, and that others wanted it to | |
| go on. All were whooping and shrieking uproariously, and the two women | |
| yelled like hyenas. | |
| It was like the nightmare sounds he had heard from his cell in the | |
| police station, and Samuel listened appalled. There came a crash of | |
| breaking glass; and then suddenly, in the midst of the confusion, he | |
| heard his young master cry, “Get out of here!”--and the dining room door | |
| was flung open, and the uproar burst full upon him. | |
| A terrible sight met his eyes. It was the beautiful and radiant creature | |
| who had kissed Bertie Lockman; her face was now flushed with drink and | |
| distorted with rage--her hair disheveled and her aspect wild; and she | |
| was screaming in the voice which had first startled Samuel. Bertie had | |
| grappled with her and was trying to push her out of the room, while she | |
| fought frantically, and screamed: “Let me go! Let me go!” | |
| “Get out of here, I say!” cried Bertie, “I mean it now.” | |
| “I won't! Let me be!” exclaimed the girl. | |
| “Hurrah!” shouted the others, crowding behind them. Young Holliday | |
| was dancing about, waving a bottle and yelling like a maniac, “Go it, | |
| Bertie! Give it to him, Belle!” | |
| “This is the end of it!” cried Bertie. “I'm through with you. And you | |
| get out of here!” | |
| “I won't! I won't!” screamed the girl again and again. “Help!” And she | |
| flung one arm about his neck and caught at the doorway. | |
| But he tore her loose and dragged her bodily across the entrance hall. | |
| “Out with you!” he exclaimed. “And don't ever let me see your face | |
| again!” | |
| “Bertie! Bertie!” she protested. | |
| “I mean it!” he said. “Here Jack! Open the door for me.” | |
| “Bertie! No!” shrieked the girl; but then with a sudden effort he half | |
| threw her out into the darkness. There was a brief altercation outside, | |
| and then he sprang back, and flung to the heavy door, and bolted it | |
| fast. | |
| “Now, by God!” he said, “you'll stay out.” | |
| The girl beat and kicked frantically upon the door. But Bertie turned | |
| his back and staggered away, reeling slightly. “That'll settle it, I | |
| guess,” he said, with a wild laugh. | |
| And amidst a din of laughter and cheers from the others, he went back | |
| to the dining room. One of the other women flung her arms about him | |
| hilariously, and Jack Holliday raised a bottle of wine on high, and | |
| shouted: “Off with the old love--on with the new!” | |
| And so Bertie shut the door again, and the scene was hid from Samuel's | |
| eyes. | |
| CHAPTER XII | |
| For a long while, Samuel stood motionless, hearing the swish of the rain | |
| and the crashing of the thunder as an echo of the storm in his own soul. | |
| It was as if a chasm had yawned beneath his feet, and all the castles | |
| of his dreams had come down in ruins. He stood there, stunned and | |
| horrified, staring at the wreckage of everything he had believed. | |
| Then suddenly he crossed the drawing-room and opened one of the French | |
| windows which led to the piazza. The rain was driving underneath the | |
| shelter of the roof; but he faced it, and ran toward the door. | |
| The girl was lying in front of it, and above the noise of the wind and | |
| rain he heard her sobbing wildly. He stood for a minute, hesitating; | |
| then he bent down and touched her. | |
| “Lady,” he said. | |
| She started. “Who are you?” she cried. | |
| “I'm just one of the servants, ma'am.” | |
| She caught her breath. “Did he send you?” she demanded. | |
| “No,” said he, “I came to help you.” | |
| “I don't need any help. Let me be.” | |
| “But you can't stay here in the rain,” he protested. “You'll catch your | |
| death.” | |
| “I want to die!” she answered. “What have I to live for?” | |
| Samuel stood for a moment, perplexed. Then, as he touched her wet | |
| clothing again, common sense asserted itself. “You mustn't stay here,” | |
| he said. “You mustn't.” | |
| But she only went on weeping. “He's cast me off!” she exclaimed. “My | |
| God, what shall I do?” | |
| Samuel turned and ran into the house again and got an umbrella in the | |
| hall. Then he took the girl by the arm and half lifted her. “Come,” he | |
| said. “Please.” | |
| “But where shall I go?” she asked. | |
| “I know some one in the town who'll help you,” he said. “You can't stay | |
| here--you'll catch cold.” | |
| “What's there left for me?” she moaned. “What am I good for? He's thrown | |
| me over--and I can't live without him!” | |
| Samuel got the umbrella up and held it with one hand; then with his | |
| other arm about the girl's waist, he half carried her down the piazza | |
| steps. “That she-devil was after him!” she was saying. “And it was Jack | |
| Holliday set her at it, damn his soul! I'll pay him for it!” | |
| She poured forth a stream of wild invective. | |
| “Please stop,” pleaded Samuel. “People will hear you.” | |
| “What do I care if they do hear me? Let them put me in jail--that's all | |
| I'm fit for. I'm drunk, and I'm good for nothing--and he's tired of me!” | |
| So she rushed on, all the way toward town. Then, as they came to the | |
| bridge, she stopped and looked about. “Where are you taking me?” she | |
| asked. | |
| “To a friend's house,” he said, having in mind the Stedmans. | |
| “No,” she replied. “I don't want to see anyone. Take me to some hotel, | |
| can't you?” | |
| “There's one down the street here,” he said. “I don't know anything | |
| about it.” | |
| “I don't care. Any place.” | |
| The rain had slackened and she stopped and gathered up her wet and | |
| straggled hair. | |
| There was a bar underneath the hotel, and a flight of stairs led up to | |
| the office. They went up, and a man sitting behind the desk stared at | |
| them. | |
| “I want to get a room for this lady,” said Samuel. “She's been caught in | |
| the rain.” | |
| “Is she your wife?” asked the man. | |
| “Mercy, no,” said he startled. | |
| “Do you want a room, too?” | |
| “No, no, I'm going away.” | |
| “Oh!” said the man, and took down a key. “Register, please.” | |
| Samuel took the pen, and then turned to the girl. “I beg pardon,” he | |
| said, “but I don't know your name.” | |
| “Mary Smith,” she answered, and Samuel stared at her in surprise. “Mary | |
| Smith,” she repeated, and he wrote it down obediently. | |
| The man took them upstairs; and Samuel, after helping the girl to a | |
| chair, shut the door and stood waiting. And she flung herself down upon | |
| the bed and burst into a paroxysm of weeping. Samuel had never even | |
| heard the word hysterics, and it was terrifying to him to see her--he | |
| could not have believed that so frail and slender a human body could | |
| survive so frightful a storm of emotion. | |
| “Oh, please, please stop!” he cried wildly. | |
| “I can't live without him!” she wailed again and again. “I can't live | |
| without him! What am I going to do?” | |
| Samuel's heart was wrung. He went to the girl, and put his hand upon her | |
| arm. “Listen to me,” he said earnestly. “Let me try to help you.” | |
| “What can you do?” she demanded. | |
| “I'll go and see him. I'll plead with him--perhaps he'll listen to me.” | |
| “All right!” she cried. “Anything! Tell him I'll kill myself! I'll kill | |
| him and Dolly both, before I'll ever let her have him! Yes, I mean it! | |
| He swore to me he'd never leave me! And I believed him--I trusted him!” | |
| And Samuel clenched his hands with sudden resolution. “I'll see him | |
| about it,” he said. “I'll see him to-night.” | |
| And leaving the other still shaking with sobs, he turned and left the | |
| room. | |
| He stopped in the office to tell the man that he was going. But there | |
| was nobody there; and after hesitating a moment he went on. | |
| The storm was over and the moon was out, with scud of clouds flying | |
| past. Samuel strode back to “Fairview,” with his hands gripped tightly, | |
| and a blaze of resolution in his soul. | |
| He was just in time to see the automobile at the door, and the company | |
| taking their departure. They passed him, singing hilariously; and then | |
| he found himself confronting his young master. | |
| “Who's that?” exclaimed Bertie, startled. | |
| “It's me, sir,” said Samuel. | |
| “Oh! Samuel! What are you doing here?” | |
| “I've been with the young lady, sir.” | |
| “Oh! So that's what became of her!” | |
| “I took her to a hotel, sir.” | |
| “Humph!” said Bertie. “I'm obliged to you.” | |
| The piazza lights were turned up, and by them Samuel could see the | |
| other's face, flushed with drink, and his hair and clothing in disarray. | |
| He swayed slightly as he stood there. | |
| “Master Albert,” said Samuel very gravely, “May I have a few words with | |
| you?” | |
| “Sure,” said Bertie. He looked about him for a chair and sank into it. | |
| “What is it?” he asked. | |
| “It's the young lady, Master Albert.” | |
| “What about her?” | |
| “She's very much distressed, sir.” | |
| “I dare say. She'll get over it, Samuel.” | |
| “Master Albert,” exclaimed the boy, “you've not treated her fairly.” | |
| The other stared at him. “The devil!” he exclaimed. | |
| “You must not desert her, sir! It would be a terrible thing to have on | |
| your conscience. You have ruined and betrayed her.” | |
| “WHAT!” cried the other, and gazed at him in amazement. “Did she give | |
| you that kind of a jolly?” | |
| “She didn't go into particulars”--said the boy. | |
| “My dear fellow!” laughed Bertie. “Why, I've been the making of that | |
| girl. She was an eighteen-dollar-a-week chorus girl when I took her up.” | |
| “That might be, Master Albert. But if she was an honest girl--” | |
| “Nonsense, Samuel--forget it. She'd had three or four lovers before she | |
| ever laid eyes on me.” | |
| There was a pause, while the boy strove to get these facts into his | |
| mind. “Even so,” he said, “you can't desert her and let her starve, | |
| Master Albert.” | |
| “Oh, stuff!” said the other. “What put that into your head? I'll give | |
| her all the money she needs, if that's what's troubling her. Did she say | |
| that?” | |
| “N--no,” admitted Samuel disconcerted. “But, Master Albert, she loves | |
| you.” | |
| “Yes, I know,” said Bertie, “and that's where the trouble comes in. She | |
| wants to keep me in a glass case, and I've got tired of it.” | |
| He paused for a moment; and then a sudden idea flashed over him. | |
| “Samuel!” he exclaimed “Why don't you marry her?” | |
| Samuel started in amazement. “What!” he gasped. | |
| “It's the very thing!” cried Bertie. “I'll set you up in a little | |
| business, and you can have an easy time.” | |
| “Master Albert!” panted the boy shocked to the depths of his soul. | |
| “She's beautiful, Samuel--you know she is. And she's a fine girl, | |
| too--only a little wild. I believe you'd be just the man to hold her | |
| in.” | |
| Bertie paused a moment, and then, seeing that the other was unconvinced, | |
| he added with a laugh, “Wait till you've known her a bit. Maybe you'll | |
| fall in love with her.” | |
| But Samuel only shook his head. “Master Albert,” he said, in a low | |
| voice, “I'm afraid you've not understood the reason I've come to you.” | |
| “How do you mean?” | |
| “This--all this business, sir--it's shocked me more than I can tell you. | |
| I came here to serve you, sir. You don't know how I felt about it. I was | |
| ready to do anything--I was so grateful for a chance to be near you! | |
| You were rich and great, and everything about you was so beautiful--I | |
| thought you must be noble and good, to have deserved so much. And now, | |
| instead, I find you are a wicked man!” | |
| The other sat up. “The dickens!” he exclaimed. | |
| “And it's a terrible thing to me,” went on Samuel. “I don't know just | |
| what to make of it-- | |
| “See here, Samuel!” demanded the other angrily. “Who sent you here to | |
| lecture me?” | |
| “I don't see how it can be!” the boy exclaimed. “You are one of the fit | |
| people, as Professor Stewart explained it to me; and yet I know some who | |
| are better than you, and who have nothing at all.” | |
| And Bertie Lockman, after another stare into the boy's solemn eyes, | |
| sank back in his chair and burst into laughter. “Look here, Samuel!” he | |
| exclaimed. “You aren't playing the game!” | |
| “How do you mean, sir?” | |
| “If I'm one of the fit ones, what right have you got to preach at me?” | |
| Samuel was startled. “Why sir--” he stammered. | |
| “Just look!” went on Bertie. “I'm the master, and you're the servant. | |
| I have breeding and culture--everything--and you're just a country | |
| bumpkin. And yet you presume to set your ideas up against mine! You | |
| presume to judge me, and tell me what I ought to do!” | |
| Samuel was taken aback by this. He could not think what to reply. | |
| “Don't you see?” went on Bertie, following up his advantage. “If you | |
| really believe what you say, you ought to submit yourself to me. If I | |
| say a thing's right, that makes it right. If I had to come to you | |
| to have you approve it, wouldn't that make you the master and me the | |
| servant?” | |
| “No, no--Master Albert!” protested Samuel. “I didn't mean quite that!” | |
| “Why, I might just as well give you my money and be done with it,” | |
| insisted the other. | |
| “Then you could fix everything up to suit yourself.” | |
| “That isn't what I mean at all!” cried the boy in great distress. “I | |
| don't know how to answer you, sir--but there's a wrong in it.” | |
| “But where? How?” | |
| “Master Albert,” blurted Samuel--“it can't be right for you to get | |
| drunk!” | |
| Bertie's face clouded. | |
| “It can't be right, sir!” repeated Samuel. | |
| And suddenly the other sat forward in his chair. “All right,” he | |
| said--“Maybe it isn't. But what are you going to do about it?” | |
| There was anger in his voice, and Samuel was frightened into silence. | |
| There was a pause while they stared at each other. | |
| “I'm on top!” exclaimed Bertie. “I'm on top, and I'm going to stay | |
| on top--don't you see? The game's in my hands; and if I please to get | |
| drunk, I get drunk. And you will take your orders and mind your own | |
| business. And what have you to say to that?” | |
| “I presume, sir,” said Samuel, his voice almost a whisper, “I can leave | |
| your service.” | |
| “Yes,” said the other--“and then either you'll starve, or else you'll go | |
| to somebody else who has money, and ask him to give you a job. And then | |
| you'll take your orders from him, and keep your opinions to yourself. | |
| Don't you see?” | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel, lowering his eyes--“I see.” | |
| “All right,” said Bertie; and he rose unsteadily to his feet. “Now, if | |
| you please,” said he, “you'll go back to Belle, wherever you've left | |
| her, and take her a message for me.” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said Samuel. | |
| “Tell her I'm through with her, and I don't want to see her again. I'll | |
| have a couple of hundred dollars a month sent to her so long as she | |
| lets me alone. If she writes to me or bothers me in any way, she'll get | |
| nothing. And that's all.” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said Samuel. | |
| “And as for you, this was all right for a joke, but it wouldn't bear | |
| repeating. From now on, you're the gardener's boy, and you'll not forget | |
| your place again.” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said Samuel once more, and stood watching while his young | |
| master went into the house. | |
| Then he turned and went down the road, half dazed. | |
| Those had been sledge-hammer blows, and they had landed full and hard. | |
| They had left him without a shred of all his illusions. His work, that | |
| he had been so proud of--he hated it, and everything associated with it. | |
| And he was overwhelmed with perplexity and pain--just as before when he | |
| had found himself in jail, and it had dawned upon him that the Law, an | |
| institution which he had revered, might be no such august thing at all, | |
| but an instrument of injustice and oppression. | |
| In that mood he came to the hotel. Again there was no one in the office, | |
| so he went directly to the room and knocked. There was no answer; he | |
| knocked again, more heavily. | |
| “I wonder if she's gone,” he thought, and looked again at the number, to | |
| make sure he was at the right room. Then, timidly, he tried the door. | |
| It opened. “Lady,” he said, and then louder, “Lady.” | |
| There was no response, and he went in. Could she be asleep? he thought. | |
| No--that was not likely. He listened for her breathing. There was not a | |
| sound. | |
| And finally he went to the bed, and put his hand upon it. Then he | |
| started back with a cry of terror. He had touched something warm and | |
| moist and sticky. | |
| He rushed out into the hall, and as he looked at his hand he nearly | |
| fainted. It was a mass of blood! | |
| “Help! Help!” the boy screamed; and he turned and rushed down the stairs | |
| into the office. | |
| The proprietor came running in. “Look!” shouted Samuel. “Look what she's | |
| done!” | |
| “Good God!” cried the man. And he rushed upstairs, the other following. | |
| With trembling fingers the man lit the gas; and Samuel took one look, | |
| and then turned away and caught at a table, sick with horror. The girl | |
| was lying in the midst of a pool of blood; and across her throat, from | |
| ear to ear, was a great gaping slit. | |
| “Oh! oh!” gasped Samuel, and then--“I can't stand it!” And holding out | |
| one hand from him, he hid his face with the other. | |
| Meantime the proprietor was staring at him. “See here, young fellow,” he | |
| said. | |
| “What is it?” asked Samuel. | |
| “When did you find out about this?” | |
| “Why, just now. When I came in.” | |
| “You've been out?” | |
| “Why of course. I went out just after we came.” | |
| “I didn't see you.” | |
| “No. I stopped in the office, but you weren't there.” | |
| “Humph!” said the man, “maybe you did and maybe you didn't. You can tell | |
| it to the police.” | |
| “The police!” echoed Samuel; and then in sudden horror--“Do you think | |
| _I_ did it?” | |
| “I don't know anything about it,” replied the other. “I only know you | |
| brought her here, and that you'll stay here till the police come.” | |
| By this time several people had come into the room, awakened by the | |
| noise. Samuel, without a word more, went and sank down into a chair and | |
| waited. And half an hour later he was on his way to the station house | |
| again--this time with a policeman on either side of him, and gripping | |
| him very tightly. And now the charge against him was murder! | |
| CHAPTER XIII | |
| The same corpulent official was seated behind the desk at the police | |
| station; but on this occasion he woke up promptly. “The chief had better | |
| handle this,” he said, and went to the telephone. | |
| “Where's this chap to go?” asked one of the policemen. | |
| “We're full up,” said the sergeant. “Put him in with Charlie Swift. The | |
| chief'll be over in a few minutes.” | |
| So once more Samuel was led into a cell, and heard the door clang upon | |
| him. | |
| He was really not much alarmed this time, for he knew it was not his | |
| fault, and that he could prove it. But he was sick with horror at the | |
| fate of the unhappy girl. He began pacing back and forth in his cell. | |
| Then suddenly from one corner growled a voice: “Say, when are you going | |
| to get quiet?” | |
| “Oh, I beg pardon,” said Samuel. “I didn't know you were here.” | |
| “What are you in for?” asked the voice. | |
| “For murder,” said Samuel. | |
| And he heard the cot give a sudden creak as the man sat up. “What!” he | |
| gasped. | |
| “I didn't do it,” the boy explained hastily. “She killed herself.” | |
| “Where was this?” asked the man. | |
| “At the Continental Hotel.” | |
| “And what did you have to do with it?” | |
| “I took her there.” | |
| “Who was she?” | |
| “Why--she called herself Mary Smith.” | |
| “Where did you meet her?” | |
| “Up at 'Fairview.'” | |
| “At 'Fairview'!” exclaimed the other. | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel. “The Lockman place.” | |
| “ALBERT Lockman's place?” | |
| “Yes.” | |
| “How did she come to be there?” | |
| “Why, she was--a friend of his. She was there to dinner.” | |
| “What!” gasped the man. “How do you know it?” | |
| “I work there,” replied Samuel. | |
| “And how did she come to go to the hotel?” | |
| “Master Albert turned her out,” said Samuel. “And it was raining, and so | |
| I took her to a hotel.” | |
| “For the love of God!” exclaimed the other; and then he asked quickly, | |
| “Did you tell the sergeant that?” | |
| “No,” said the boy. “He didn't ask me anything.” | |
| The man sprang up and ran to the grated door and shook it. “Hello! Hello | |
| there!” he cried. | |
| “What's the matter?” growled a policeman down the corridor. | |
| “Come here! quick!” cried the other; and then through the grating he | |
| whispered, “Say, tell the cap to come here for a moment, will you?” | |
| “What do you want?” demanded the policeman. | |
| “Look here, O'Brien,” said the other. “You know Charlie Swift is no | |
| fool. And there's something about this fellow you've put in here that | |
| the cap ought to know about quick.” | |
| The sergeant came. “Say,” said Charlie. “Did you ask this boy any | |
| questions?” | |
| “No,” said the sergeant, “I'm waiting for the chief.” | |
| “Well, did you know that girl came from Albert Lockman's place?” | |
| “Good God, no!” | |
| “He says she was there to dinner and Lockman turned her out of the | |
| house. This boy says he works for Lockman.” | |
| “Well, I'm damned!” exclaimed the sergeant. And so Samuel was led into a | |
| private room. | |
| A minute or two later “the chief” strode in. McCullagh was his name and | |
| he was huge and burly, with a red face and a protruding jaw. He went at | |
| Samuel as if he meant to strike him. “What's this you're givin' us?” he | |
| cried. | |
| “Why--why--” stammered Samuel, in alarm. | |
| “You're tryin' to tell me that girl came from Lockman's?” roared the | |
| chief. | |
| “Yes, sir!” | |
| “And you expect me to believe that?” | |
| “It's true, sir!” | |
| “What're you tryin' to give me, anyhow?” demanded the man. | |
| “But it's true, sir!” declared Samuel again. | |
| “You tell me she was there at dinner?” | |
| “Yes, sir!” | |
| “Come! Quit your nonsense, boy!” | |
| “But she was, sir!” | |
| “What do you expect to make out of this, young fellow?” | |
| “But she was, sir!” | |
| Apparently the chief's method was to doubt every statement that Samuel | |
| made, and repeat his incredulity three times, each time in a louder tone | |
| of voice and with a more ferocious expression of countenance. Then, if | |
| the boy stuck it out, he concluded that he was telling the truth. By | |
| this exhausting method the examination reached its end, and Samuel was | |
| led back to his cell. | |
| “Did you stick to your story?” asked his cellmate. | |
| “Of course,” said he. | |
| “Well, if it is true,” remarked the other, “there'll be something doing | |
| soon.” | |
| And there was. About an hour later the sergeant came again and entered. | |
| He drew the two men into a corner. | |
| “See here, young fellow,” he said to Samuel in a low voice. “Have you | |
| got anything against young Lockman?” | |
| “No,” replied Samuel. “Why?” | |
| “If we let you go, will you shut up about this?” | |
| “Why, yes,” said the boy, “if you want me to.” | |
| “All right,” said the sergeant. “And you, Charlie--we've got you dead, | |
| you know.” | |
| “Yes,” said the other, “I know.” | |
| “And there's ten years coming to you, you understand?” | |
| “Yes, I guess so.” | |
| “All right. Then will you call it a bargain?” | |
| “I will,” said Charlie. “You'll skip the town, and hold your mouth?” | |
| “I will.” | |
| “Very well. Here's your own kit--and you ought to get through them bars | |
| before daylight. And here's fifty dollars. You take this young fellow to | |
| New York and lose him. Do you see?” | |
| “I see,” said Charlie. | |
| “All right,” went on the sergeant. “And mind you don't play any monkey | |
| tricks!” | |
| “I'm on,” said Charlie with a chuckle. | |
| And without more ado he selected a saw from his bag and set to work at | |
| the bars of the window. The sergeant retired; and Samuel sat down on the | |
| floor and gasped for breath. | |
| For about an hour the man worked without a word. Then he braced himself | |
| against the wall and wrenched out one of the bars; then another wrench, | |
| and another bar gave way; after which he packed up his kit and slipped | |
| it into a pocket under his coat. “Now,” he said, “come on.” | |
| He slipped through the opening and dropped to the ground, and Samuel | |
| followed suit. “This way,” he whispered, and they darted down an alley | |
| and came out upon a dark street. For perhaps a mile they walked on in | |
| silence, then Charlie turned into a doorway and opened the door with a | |
| latch key, and they went up two flights of stairs and into a rear room. | |
| He lit the gas, and took off his coat and flung it on the bed. “Now, | |
| make yourself at home,” he said. | |
| “Is this your room?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Yes,” was the reply. “The bulls haven't found it, either!” | |
| “But I thought we were to go out of town!” exclaimed the other. | |
| “Humph!” laughed Charlie. “Young fellow, you're easy!” | |
| “Do you mean you're not going?” cried Samuel. | |
| “What! When I've got a free license to work the town?” | |
| Samuel stared at him, amazed. “You mean they wouldn't arrest you?” | |
| “Not for anything short of murder, I think.” | |
| “But--but what could you do?” | |
| “Just suppose I was to tip off some newspaper with that story? Not here | |
| in Lockmanville--but the New York Howler, we'll say?” | |
| “I see!” gasped Samuel. | |
| Charlie had tilted back in his chair and was proceeding to fill his | |
| pipe. “Gee, sonny,” he said, “they did me the greatest turn of my life | |
| when they poked you into that cell. I'll get what's coming to me now!” | |
| “How will you get it?” asked the boy. | |
| “I'm a gopherman,” said the other. | |
| “What's that?” asked Samuel. | |
| “You'll have to learn to sling the lingo,” said Charlie with a laugh. | |
| “It's what you call a burglar.” | |
| Samuel looked at the man in wonder. He was tall and lean, with a pale | |
| face and restless dark eyes. He had a prominent nose and a long neck, | |
| which gave him a peculiar, alert expression that reminded Samuel of a | |
| startled partridge. | |
| “Scares you, hey?” he said. “Well, I wasn't always a gopherman.” | |
| “What were you before that?” | |
| “I was an inventor.” | |
| “An inventor!” exclaimed Samuel. | |
| “Yes. Have you seen the glass-blowing machines here in town?” | |
| “No, I haven't.” | |
| “Well, I invented three of them. And old Henry Lockman robbed me of | |
| them.” | |
| “Robbed you!” gasped the boy amazed. | |
| “Yes,” said the other. “Didn't he rob everybody he ever came near?” | |
| “I didn't know it,” replied Samuel. | |
| “Guess you never came near him,” laughed the man. “Say--where do you | |
| come from, anyhow? Tell me about yourself.” | |
| So Samuel began at the beginning and told his story. Pretty soon he came | |
| to the episode of “Glass Bottle Securities.” | |
| “My God!” exclaimed the other. “I thought you said old Lockman had never | |
| robbed you!” | |
| “I did,” answered Samuel. | |
| “But don't you see that he robbed you then?” | |
| “Why, no. It wasn't his fault. The stock went down when he died.” | |
| “But why should it have gone down when he died, except that he'd | |
| unloaded it on the public for a lot more than it was worth?” | |
| Samuel's jaw fell. “I never thought of that,” he said. | |
| “Go on,” said Charlie. | |
| Then Samuel told how he was starving, and how he had gone to Professor | |
| Stewart, and how the professor had told him he was one of the unfit. His | |
| companion had taken his pipe out of his mouth and was staring at him. | |
| “And you swallowed all that?” he gasped. | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel. | |
| “And you tried to carry it out! You went away to starve!” | |
| “But what else was there for me to do?” asked the boy. | |
| “But the Lord!” ejaculated the other. “When it came time for ME to | |
| starve, I can promise you I found something else to do!” | |
| “Go on,” he said after a pause; and Samuel told how he had saved young | |
| Lockman's life, and what happened afterwards. | |
| “And so he was your dream!” exclaimed the other. “You were up against a | |
| brace game, Sammy!” | |
| “But how was I to know?” protested the boy. | |
| “You should read the papers. That kid's been cutting didoes in the | |
| Tenderloin for a couple of years. He wasn't worth the risking of your | |
| little finger--to say nothing of your life.” | |
| “It seems terrible,” said Samuel dismayed. | |
| “The trouble with you, Sammy,” commented the other, “is that you're | |
| too good to live. That's all there is to your unfitness. You take old | |
| Lockman, for instance. What was all his 'fitness'? It was just that he | |
| was an old wolf. I was raised in this town, and my dad went to school | |
| with him. He began by cheating his sisters out of their inheritance. | |
| Then he foreclosed a mortgage on a glass factory and went into the | |
| business. He was a skinflint, and he made money--they say he burned the | |
| plant down for the insurance, but I don't know. Anyway, he had rivals, | |
| and he made a crooked deal with some of the railroad people--gave them | |
| stock you know--and got rebates. And he had some union leaders on his | |
| pay rolls, and he called strikes on his rivals, and when he'd ruined | |
| them he bought them out for a song. And when he had everything in his | |
| hands, and got tired of paying high wages, he fired some of the union | |
| men and forced a strike. Then he brought in some strike-breakers and | |
| hired some thugs to slug them, and turned the police loose on the | |
| men--and that was the end of the unions. Meanwhile he'd been running the | |
| politics of the town, and he'd given himself all the franchises--there | |
| was nobody could do anything in Lockmanville unless he said so. And | |
| finally, when he'd got the glass trade cornered, he formed the Trust, | |
| and issued stock for about five times what the plants had cost, and | |
| dumped it on the market for suckers like you to buy. And that's the | |
| way he made his millions--that's the meaning of his palace and all the | |
| wonders you saw up there. And now he's dead, and all his fortune belongs | |
| to Master Albert, who never did a stroke of work in his life, and isn't | |
| 'fit' enough to be a ten-dollar-a-week clerk. And you come along and | |
| lie down for him to walk on, and the more nails he has in his boots the | |
| better you like it! And there's the whole story for you!” | |
| Samuel had been listening awe-stricken. The abysmal depths of his | |
| ignorance and folly! | |
| “Now he's got his money,” said the other--“and he means to keep it. So | |
| there are the bulls, to slam you over the head if you bother him. That's | |
| called the Law! And then he hires some duffer to sit up and hand you | |
| out a lot of dope about your being 'unfit'; and that's called a College! | |
| Don't you see?” | |
| “Yes,” whispered Samuel. “I see!” | |
| His companion stabbed at him with his finger. “All that was wrong with | |
| you, Sammy,” he said, “was that you swallowed the dope! That's where | |
| your 'unfitness' came in! Why--take his own argument. Suppose you hadn't | |
| given up. Suppose you'd fought and won out. Then you'd have been as | |
| good as any of them, wouldn't you? Suppose, for instance, you'd hit that | |
| son-of-a-gun over the head with a poker and got away with his watch and | |
| his pocketbook--then you'd have been 'fitter' than he, wouldn't you?” | |
| Samuel had clutched at the arms of his chair and was staring with | |
| wide-open eyes. | |
| “You never thought of that, hey, Sammy? But that's what I found myself | |
| facing a few years ago. They'd got every cent I had, and I was ready for | |
| the scrap heap. But I said, 'Nay, nay, Isabel!' I'd played their game | |
| and lost--but I made a new game--and I made my own rules, you can bet!” | |
| “You mean stealing!” cried the boy. | |
| “I mean War,” replied the other. “And you see--I've survived! I'm not | |
| pretty to look at and I don't live in a palace, but I'm not starving, | |
| and I've got some provisions salted away.” | |
| “But they had you in jail!” | |
| “Of course. I've done my bit--twice. But that didn't kill me; and I can | |
| learn things, even in the pen.” | |
| There was a pause. Then Charlie Swift stood up and shook the ashes | |
| out of his pipe. “Speaking of provisions,” he said, “these midnight | |
| adventures give you an appetite.” And he got out a box of crackers and | |
| some cheese and a pot of jam. “Move up,” he said, “and dip in. You'll | |
| find that red stuff the real thing. My best girl made it. One of the | |
| things that bothered me in jail was the fear that the bulls might get | |
| it.” | |
| Samuel was too much excited to eat. But he sat and watched, while his | |
| companion stowed away crackers and cheese. | |
| “What am I going to do now?” he said half to himself. | |
| “You come with me,” said Charlie. “I'll teach you a trade where you'll | |
| be your own boss. And I'll give you a quarter of the swag until you've | |
| learned it.” | |
| “What!” gasped Samuel in horror. “Be a burglar!” | |
| “Sure,” said the other. “What else can you do?” | |
| “I don't know,” said the boy. | |
| “Have you got any money?” | |
| “Only a few pennies. I hadn't got my wages yet.” | |
| “I see. And will you go and ask Master Albert for them?” | |
| “No,” said Samuel quickly. “I'll never do that!” | |
| “Then you'll go out and hunt for a job again, I suppose? Or will you | |
| start out on that starving scheme again?” | |
| “Don't!” cried the boy wildly. “Let me think!” | |
| “Come! Don't be a summer-boarder!” exclaimed the other. “You've got the | |
| professor's own warrant for it, haven't you? And you've got a free field | |
| before you--you can help yourself to anything you want in Lockmanville, | |
| and the bulls won't dare to lift a finger! You'll be a fool if you let | |
| go of such a chance.” | |
| “But it's wrong!” protested Samuel. “You know it's wrong!” | |
| “Humph!” laughed Charlie. And he shut the top of the cracker box with | |
| a bang and rose up. “You sleep over it,” he said. “You'll be hungry | |
| to-morrow morning.” | |
| “That won't make any difference!” cried the boy. | |
| “Maybe not,” commented the other; and then he added with a grin: “Don't | |
| you ask me for grub. For that would be charity; and if you're really one | |
| of the unfit, it's not for me to interfere with nature!” | |
| And so all the next day Samuel sat in Charlie's room and faced the | |
| crackers and cheese and the pot of jam, and wrestled with the problem. | |
| He knew what it would mean to partake of the food, and Charlie knew what | |
| it would mean also; and feeling certain that Samuel would not partake | |
| upon any other terms, he left the covers off the food, so that the odors | |
| might assail the boy's nostrils. | |
| Of course Samuel might have gone out and bought some food with the | |
| few pennies he had in his pocket. But that would have been merely to | |
| postpone the decision, and what was the use of that? And to make matters | |
| ten times worse, he owed money to the Stedmans--for he had lived upon | |
| the expectation of his salary! | |
| In the end it was not so much hunger that moved him, as it was pure | |
| reason. For Samuel, as we know, was a person who took an idea seriously; | |
| and there was no answer to be found to Charlie's argument. Doubtless the | |
| reader will find a supply of them, but Samuel racked his wits in vain. | |
| If, as the learned professor had said, life is a struggle for existence, | |
| and those who have put money in their purses are the victors; and if | |
| they have nothing to do for the unemployed save to let them starve or | |
| put them in jail; then on the other hand, it would seem to be up to the | |
| unemployed to take measures for their own survival. And apparently the | |
| only proof of their fitness would be to get some money away from those | |
| who had it. Had not Herbert Spencer, the authority in such matters, | |
| stated that “inability to catch prey shows a falling short of conduct | |
| from its ideal”? And if the good people let themselves be starved to | |
| death by the wicked, would that not mean that only the wicked would be | |
| left alive? It was thoughts like this that were driving Samuel--he had | |
| Bertie Lockman's taunts ringing in his ears, and for the life of him he | |
| could not see why he should vacate the earth in favor of Bertie Lockman! | |
| So breakfast time passed, and dinner time passed, and supper time came. | |
| And his friend spread out the contents of his larder again, and then | |
| leaned over the table and said, “Come and try it once and see how you | |
| like it!” | |
| And Samuel clenched his hands suddenly and answered--“All right, I'll | |
| try it!” | |
| Then he started upon a meal. But in the middle of it he stopped, and set | |
| down an untasted cracker, and gasped within himself--“Merciful Heaven! | |
| I've promised to be a burglar!” | |
| The other was watching him narrowly. “Ain't going to back out?” he | |
| asked. | |
| “No,” said Samuel. “I won't back out! But it seems a little queer, | |
| that's all.” | |
| CHAPTER XIV | |
| The meal over, Charlie Swift took out a pencil and paper. “Now,” said | |
| he. “To business!” | |
| Samuel pulled up his chair and the other drew a square. “This is a house | |
| I've been studying. It's on a corner--these are streets, and here's an | |
| alley. This is the side door that I think I can open. There's a door | |
| here and one in back here. Fix all that in your mind.” | |
| “I have it,” said the boy. | |
| “You go in, and here's the entrance hall. The front stairs are here. | |
| What I'm after is the family plate, and it's up on the second floor. | |
| I'll attend to that. The only trouble is that over here beyond the | |
| library there's a door, and, somebody sleeps in that room. I don't know | |
| who it is. But I want you to stay in the hall, and if there's anyone | |
| stirs in that room you're to dart upstairs and give one whistle at the | |
| top. Then I'll come.” | |
| “And what then?” | |
| “This is the second floor,” said Charlie, drawing another square. “And | |
| here's the servant's stairway, and we can get down to this entrance in | |
| the rear, that I'll open before I set to work. On the other hand, if you | |
| hear me whistle upstairs, then you're to get out by the way we came. If | |
| there's any alarm given, then it's each for himself.” | |
| “I see,” said Samuel; and gripped his hands so that his companion might | |
| not see how he was quaking. | |
| Charlie got out his kit and examined it to make sure that the police | |
| had kept nothing. Then he went to a bureau drawer and got a revolver, | |
| examined it and slipped it into his pocket. “They kept my best one,” he | |
| said. “So I've none to lend you.” | |
| “I--I wouldn't take it, anyway,” stammered the other in horror. | |
| “You'll learn,” said the burglar with a smile. | |
| Then he sat down again and drew a diagram of the streets of | |
| Lockmanville, so that Samuel could find his way back in case of trouble. | |
| “We don't want to take any chances,” said he. “And mind, if I get | |
| caught, I'll not mention you--wild horses couldn't drag it out of me. | |
| And you make the same promise.” | |
| “I make it,” said Samuel. | |
| “Man to man,” said Charlie solemnly; and Samuel repeated the words. | |
| “How did you come to know so much about the house?” he asked after a | |
| while. | |
| “Oh! I've lived here and I've kept my eyes open. I worked as a plumber's | |
| man for a couple of months and I made diagrams.” | |
| “But don't the police get to know you?” | |
| “Yes--they know me. But I skip out when I've done a job. And when I come | |
| back it's in disguise. Once I grew a beard and worked in the glass works | |
| all day and did my jobs at night; and again I lived here as a woman.” | |
| “A woman!” gasped the boy. | |
| “You see,” said the other with a laugh, “there's more ways than one | |
| to prove your fitness.” And he went on, narrating some of his | |
| adventures--adventures calculated to throw the glamour of romance about | |
| the trade of burglar. Samuel listened breathless with wonder. | |
| “We'd better get a bit of sleep now,” said Charlie later on. “We'll | |
| start about one.” And he stretched himself out on the bed, while the | |
| other sat motionless in the chair, pondering hard over his problem. | |
| There was no sleeping for Samuel that night. | |
| He would carry out his bargain--that was his decision. But he would not | |
| take his share of the plunder, except just enough to pay Mrs. Stedman. | |
| And he would never be a burglar again! | |
| At one o'clock he awakened his companion, and they set out through the | |
| deserted streets. They crossed the bridge to the residential part of | |
| town; and then, at a corner, Charlie stopped. “There's the place,” he | |
| said, pointing to a large house set back within a garden. | |
| They gazed about. The coast was clear; and they darted into the door | |
| which had been indicated in the diagram. Samuel crouched in the doorway, | |
| motionless, while the other worked at the lock. Samuel's knees were | |
| trembling so that he could hardly stand up. | |
| The door was opened without a sound having been made, and they stole | |
| into the entrance. They listened--the house was as still as death. | |
| Then Charlie flashed his lantern, and Samuel had quick glimpses of | |
| a beautiful and luxuriously furnished house. It was nothing like | |
| “Fairview,” of course; but it was finer than Professor Stewart's home. | |
| There was a library, with great leather armchairs; and in the rear | |
| a dining room, where mirrors and cut glass flashed back the far-off | |
| glimmer of the light. | |
| “There's your door over there,” whispered Charlie. “And you'd better | |
| stay behind those curtains.” | |
| So Samuel took up his post; the light vanished and his companion started | |
| for the floor above. Several times the boy heard the stairs creaking, | |
| and his heart leaped into his throat; but then the sounds ceased and all | |
| was still. | |
| The minutes crawled by--each one seemed an age. He stood rooted to the | |
| spot, staring into the darkness--half-hypnotized by the thought of | |
| the door which he could not see, and of the person who might be asleep | |
| behind it. Surely this was a ghastly way for a man to have to gain his | |
| living--it were better to perish than to survive by such an ordeal! | |
| Samuel was appalled by the terrors which took possession of him, and the | |
| tremblings and quiverings which he could not control. Any danger in the | |
| world he would have faced for conscience' sake; but this was wrong--he | |
| knew it was wrong! And so all the glow of conviction was gone from him. | |
| What could be the matter? Why should Charlie be so long? Surely he had | |
| had time enough to ransack the whole house! Could it be that he had got | |
| out by the other way--that he had planned to skip town, and leave Samuel | |
| there in the lurch? | |
| And then again came a faint creaking upon the stairs. He was coming | |
| back! Or could it by any chance be another person? He dared not venture | |
| to whisper; he stood, tense with excitement, while the sounds came | |
| nearer--it was as if some monster were creeping upon him in the | |
| darkness, and folding its tentacles about him! | |
| He heard a sound in the hall beside him. Why didn't Charlie speak? What | |
| was the matter with him? What-- | |
| And then suddenly came a snapping sound, and a blinding glare of light | |
| flashed up, flooding the hallway and everything about him. Samuel | |
| staggered back appalled. There was some one standing there before him! | |
| He was caught! | |
| Thus for one moment of dreadful horror. And then he realized that the | |
| person confronting him was a little girl! | |
| She was staring at him; and he stared at her. She could not have been | |
| more than ten years old, and wore a nightgown trimmed with lace. She had | |
| bright yellow hair, and her finger was upon the button which controlled | |
| the lights. | |
| For fully a minute neither of them moved. Then Samuel heard a voice | |
| whispering: “Are you a burglar?” | |
| He could not speak, but he nodded his head. And then again he heard the | |
| child's voice: “Oh, I'm so glad!” | |
| “I'm so glad!” she repeated again, and her tone was clear and sweet. | |
| “I'd been praying for it! But I'd almost given up hope!” | |
| Samuel found voice enough to gasp, “Why?” | |
| “My mamma read me a story,” said the child. “It was about a little girl | |
| who met a burglar. And ever since I've been waiting for one to come.” | |
| There was a pause. “Are you a really truly burglar?” the child | |
| whispered. | |
| “I--I think so,” replied Samuel. | |
| “You look very young,” she said. | |
| And the other bethought himself. “I'm only a beginner,” he said. “This | |
| is really my first time.” | |
| “Oh!” said the child with a faint touch of disappointment. “But still | |
| you will do, won't you?” | |
| “Do for what?” asked the boy in bewilderment. | |
| “You must let me reform you,” exclaimed the other. “That's what the | |
| little girl did in the story. Will you?” | |
| “Why--why, yes”--gasped Samuel. “I--I really meant to reform.” | |
| Then suddenly he thought he heard a sound in the hall above. He glanced | |
| up, and for one instant he had a glimpse of the face of Charlie peering | |
| down at him. | |
| “What are you looking at?” asked the child. | |
| “I thought--that is--there's some one with me,” stammered Samuel, | |
| forgetting his solemn vow. | |
| “Oh! two burglars!” cried the child in delight. “And may I reform him, | |
| too?” | |
| “I think you'd better begin with me,” said Samuel. | |
| “Will he go away, do you think?” | |
| “Yes--I think he's gone now.” | |
| “But you--you won't go yet, will you?” asked the child anxiously. | |
| “You'll stay and talk to me?” | |
| “If you wish”--gasped the boy. | |
| “You aren't afraid of me?” she asked. | |
| “Not of you,” said he. “But if some one else should waken.” | |
| “No, you needn't think of that. Mamma and grandma both lock their doors | |
| at night. And papa's away.” | |
| “Who sleeps there?” asked Samuel, pointing to the door he had been | |
| watching. | |
| “That's papa's room,” said the child; and the other gave a great gasp of | |
| relief. | |
| “Come,” said the little girl; and she seated herself in one of the big | |
| leather armchairs. “Now,” she continued, “tell me how you came to be a | |
| burglar.” | |
| “I had no money,” said Samuel, “and no work.” | |
| “Oh!” exclaimed the child; and then, “What is your work?” | |
| “I lived on a farm all my life,” said he. “My father died and then I | |
| wanted to go to the city. I was robbed of all my money, and I was here | |
| without any friends and I couldn't find anything to do at all. I was | |
| nearly starving.” | |
| “Why, how dreadful!” cried the other. “Why didn't you come to see papa?” | |
| “Your father?” said he. “I didn't want to beg--” | |
| “It wouldn't have been begging. He'd have been glad to help you.” | |
| “I--I didn't know about him,” said Samuel. “Why should he---” | |
| “He helps everyone,” said the child. “That's his business.” | |
| “How do you mean?” | |
| “Don't you know who my father is?” she asked in surprise. | |
| “No,” said he, “I don't.” | |
| “My father is Dr. Vince,” she said; and then she gazed at him with | |
| wide-open eyes. “You've never heard of him!” | |
| “Never,” said Samuel. | |
| “He's a clergyman,” said the little girl. | |
| “A clergyman!” echoed Samuel aghast. Somehow it seemed far worse to have | |
| been robbing a clergyman. | |
| “And he's so good and kind!” went on the other. “He loves everyone, and | |
| tries to help them. And if you had come to him and told him, he'd have | |
| found some work for you.” | |
| “There are a great many people in Lockmanville out of work,” said Samuel | |
| gravely. | |
| “Oh! but they don't come to my papa!” said the child. “You must come and | |
| let him help you. You must promise me that you will.” | |
| “But how can I? I've tried to rob him!” | |
| “But that won't make any difference! You don't know my papa. If you | |
| should tell him that you had done wrong and that you were sorry--you are | |
| sorry, aren't you?” | |
| “Yes, I'm very sorry.” | |
| “Well, then, if you told him that, he'd forgive you--he'd do anything | |
| for you, I know. If he knew that I'd helped to reform you, he'd be so | |
| glad!--I did help a little, didn't I?” | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel. “You helped.” | |
| “You--you weren't very hard to reform, somehow,” said the child | |
| hesitatingly. “The little girl in the story had to talk a good deal | |
| more. Are you sure that you are going to be good now?” | |
| Samuel could not keep back a smile. “Truly I will,” he said. | |
| “I guess you were brought up to be good,” reflected the other. “I don't | |
| think you were very bad, anyway. It must be very hard to be starving.” | |
| “It is indeed,” said the boy with conviction. | |
| “I never heard of anyone starving before,” went on the other. “If that | |
| happened to people often, there'd be more burglars, I guess.” | |
| There was a pause. “What is your name?” asked the little girl. “Mine | |
| is Ethel. And now I'll tell you what we'll do. My papa's on his way | |
| home--his train gets here early in the morning. And you come up after | |
| breakfast--I'll make him wait for you. And then you can tell it all to | |
| him, and then you won't have any more troubles. Will you do that?” | |
| “You think he won't be angry with me?” asked Samuel. | |
| “No, I'm sure of it.” | |
| “And he won't want to have me arrested?” | |
| “Oh, dear me!” exclaimed Ethel with an injured look. “Why, my papa goes | |
| to see people in prison, and tries to help them get out! I'll promise | |
| you, truly.” | |
| “Very well,” said Samuel, “I'll come.” | |
| And so they parted. And Samuel found himself out upon the street again, | |
| with the open sky above him, and a great hymn of relief and joy in his | |
| soul. He was no longer a burglar! | |
| CHAPTER XV | |
| Samuel walked the streets all that night. For he fully meant to do what | |
| he had promised the child, and he did not care to go back to Charlie | |
| Swift, and face the latter's protests and ridicule. | |
| At eight the next morning, tired but happy, he rang the bell of Dr. | |
| Vince's house. Ethel herself opened the door; and at the sight of him | |
| her face lighted up with joy, and she turned, crying out, “Here he is!” | |
| And she ran halfway down the hall, exclaiming: “He's come! I told you | |
| he'd come! Papa!” | |
| A man appeared at the dining room door, and stood staring at Samuel. | |
| “There he is, papa!” cried Ethel beside herself with delight. “There's | |
| my burglar!” | |
| Dr. Vince came down the hall. He was a stockily built gentleman with a | |
| rather florid complexion and bushy beard. “Good morning,” he said. | |
| “Good morning, sir,” said Samuel. | |
| “And are you really the young man who was here last night?” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said Samuel. | |
| The worthy doctor was obviously disconcerted. “This is quite | |
| extraordinary!” he exclaimed. “Won't you come in?” | |
| They sat down in the library. “I don't want you to think, sir,” said | |
| Samuel quickly, “that I come to beg. Your little girl asked me---” | |
| “Don't mention that,” said the other. “If the story you told Ethel is | |
| really true, I should be only too glad to do anything that I could.” | |
| “Thank you, sir,” said Samuel. | |
| “And so you really broke into my house last night!” exclaimed the other. | |
| “Well! well! And it is the first time you have ever done anything of the | |
| sort in your life?” | |
| “The very first,” said the boy. | |
| “But what could have put it into your head?” | |
| “There was another person with me,” said Samuel--“you will understand | |
| that I would rather not talk about him.” | |
| “I see,” said the other. “He led you to it?” | |
| “Yes, sir.” | |
| “And you have never done anything dishonest before?” | |
| “No, sir.” | |
| “You have never even been a thief?” | |
| “No!” exclaimed Samuel indignantly. | |
| The other noticed the tone of his voice. “But why did you begin now?” he | |
| asked. | |
| “I was persuaded that it was right,” said Samuel. | |
| “But how could that be? Had you never been taught about stealing?” | |
| “Yes, sir,” replied the boy--“but it's not as simple as it seems. I had | |
| met Professor Stewart--” | |
| “Professor Stewart!” echoed the other. | |
| “Yes, sir--the professor at the college.” | |
| “But what did he have to do with it?” | |
| “Why, sir, he told me about the survival of the fittest, and how I had | |
| to starve to death because I was one of the failures. And then you see, | |
| sir, I met Master Albert--” | |
| “Master Albert?” | |
| “Albert Lockman, sir. And the professor had said that he was one of the | |
| fit; and I saw that he got drunk, sir, and did other things that were | |
| very wicked, and so it did not seem just right that I should starve. I | |
| can see now that it was very foolish of me; but I thought that I | |
| ought to fight, and try to survive if I possibly could. And then I met | |
| Char--that is, a bad man who offered to show me how to be a burglar.” | |
| The other had been listening in amazement. “Boy,” he said, “are you | |
| joking with me?” | |
| “Joking!” echoed Samuel, his eyes opening wide. And then the doctor | |
| caught his breath and proceeded to question him. He went back to the | |
| beginning, and made Samuel lay bare the story of his whole life. But | |
| when he got to the interview with Professor Stewart, the other could | |
| contain himself no longer. “Samuel!” he exclaimed, “this is the most | |
| terrible thing I have ever heard in my life.” | |
| “How do you mean, sir?” | |
| “You have been saved--providentially saved, as I firmly believe. But you | |
| were hanging on the very verge of a life of evil; and all because men | |
| in our colleges are permitted to teach these blasphemous and godless | |
| doctrines. This is what they call science! This is our modern | |
| enlightenment!” | |
| The doctor had risen and begun to pace the floor in his agitation. “I | |
| have always insisted that the consequence of such teaching would be the | |
| end of all morality. And here we have the thing before our very eyes! A | |
| young man of decent life is actually led to the commission of a crime, | |
| as a consequence of the teachings of Herbert Spencer!” | |
| Samuel was listening in consternation. “Then it isn't true what Herbert | |
| Spencer says!” he exclaimed. | |
| “True!” cried the other. “Why, Samuel, don't you KNOW that it isn't | |
| true? Weren't you brought up to read the Bible? And do you read anything | |
| in the Bible about the struggle for existence? Were you taught there | |
| that your sole duty was to fight with other men for your own selfish | |
| ends? Was it not rather made clear to you that you were not to concern | |
| yourself with your own welfare at all, but to struggle for the good of | |
| others, and to suffer rather than do evil? Why Samuel, what would your | |
| father have said, if he could have seen you last night--his own dear | |
| son, that he had brought up in the way of the Gospel?” | |
| “Oh, sir!” cried Samuel, struck to the heart. | |
| “My boy!” exclaimed the other. “Our business in this world is not that | |
| we should survive, but that the good should survive. We are to live for | |
| it and to die for it, if need be. We are to love and serve others--we | |
| are to be humble and patient--to sacrifice ourselves freely. The | |
| survival of the fittest! Why, Samuel, the very idea is a denial of | |
| spirituality--what are we that we should call ourselves fit? To think | |
| that is to be exposed to all the base passions of the human heart--to | |
| greed and jealousy and hate! Such doctrines are the cause of all the | |
| wickedness, of all the materialism of our time--of crime and murder and | |
| war! My boy, do you read that Jesus went about, worrying about His own | |
| survival, and robbing others because they were less fit than He? Only | |
| think how it would have been with you had you been called to face Him | |
| last night?” | |
| The shame of this was more than Samuel could bear. “Oh, stop, stop, | |
| sir!” he cried, and covered his face with his hands. “I see it all! I | |
| have been very wicked!” | |
| “Yes!” exclaimed the other. “You have been wicked.” | |
| The tears were welling into Samuel's eyes. “I can't see how I did it, | |
| sir,” he whispered. “I have been blind--I have been lost. I am a strayed | |
| sheep!” And then suddenly his emotion overcame him, and he burst into a | |
| paroxysm of weeping. “I can't believe it of myself!” he exclaimed again | |
| and again. “I have been out of my senses!” | |
| The doctor watched him for a few moments. “Perhaps it was not altogether | |
| your fault,” he said more gently. “You have been led astray--” | |
| “No, no!” cried the boy. “I am bad. I see it--it must be! I could | |
| never have been persuaded, if I had not been bad! It began at the very | |
| beginning. I yielded to the first temptation when I stole a ride upon | |
| the train. And everything else came from that--it has been one long | |
| chain!” | |
| “Let us be glad that it is no longer,” said Dr. Vince--“and that you | |
| have come to the end of it.” | |
| “Ah, but have I?” cried the boy wildly. | |
| “Why not? Surely you will no longer be led by such false teaching!” | |
| “No, sir. But see what I have done! Why I am liable to be sent to | |
| jail--for I don't know how long.” | |
| “You mean for last night?” asked the doctor. “But no one will ever know | |
| about that. You may start again and live a true life.” | |
| “Ah,” cried Samuel, “but the memory of it will haunt me--I can never | |
| forgive myself!” | |
| “We are very fortunate,” said the other gravely, “if we have only a few | |
| things in our lives that we cannot forget, and that we cannot forgive | |
| ourselves.” | |
| The worthy doctor had been anticipating a long struggle to bring the | |
| young criminal to see the error of his ways; but instead, he found that | |
| he had to use his skill in casuistry to convince the boy that he was not | |
| hopelessly sullied. And when at last Samuel had been persuaded that he | |
| might take up his life again, there was nothing that would satisfy him | |
| save to go back where he had been before, and take up that struggle with | |
| starvation. | |
| “I must prove that I can conquer,” he said--“I yielded to the temptation | |
| once, and now I must face it.” | |
| “But, Samuel,” protested the doctor, “it is no man's duty to starve. You | |
| must let me help you, and find some useful work for you, and some people | |
| who will be your friends.” | |
| “Don't think I am ungrateful,” cried the boy--“but why should I be | |
| favored? There are so many others starving, right here in this town. And | |
| if I am going to love them and serve them, why should I have more than | |
| they have? Wouldn't that be selfish of me? Why, sir, I'd be making | |
| profit out of my repentance!” | |
| “I don't quite see that,” said the other-- | |
| “Why, sir! Isn't it just because I've been so sorry that you are willing | |
| to help me? There are so many others who have not been helped--some I | |
| know, sir, that need it far more than I do, and have deserved it more, | |
| too!” | |
| “It seems to me, my boy, that is being too hard upon yourself--and on | |
| me. I cannot relieve all the distress in the world. I relieve what I | |
| find out about. And so I must help you. And don't you see that I wish | |
| to keep you near me, so that I can watch after your welfare? And | |
| perhaps--who knows--you can help me. The harvest is plenty, you have | |
| heard, and the laborers are few. There are many ways in which you could | |
| be of service in my church.” | |
| “Ah, sir!” cried Samuel, overwhelmed with gratitude--“if you put it that | |
| way--” | |
| “I put it that way most certainly,” said Dr. Vince. “You have seen a | |
| new light--you wish to live a new life. Stay here and live it in | |
| Lockmanville--there is no place in the world where it could be more | |
| needed.” | |
| All this while the little girl had been sitting in silence drinking in | |
| the conversation. Now suddenly she rose and came to Samuel, putting her | |
| hand in his. “Please stay,” she said. | |
| And Samuel answered, “Very well--I'll stay.” | |
| So then they fell to discussing his future, and what Dr. Vince was going | |
| to do for him. The good doctor was inwardly more perplexed about it than | |
| he cared to let Samuel know. | |
| “I'll ask Mr. Wygant,” he said--“perhaps he can find you a place in one | |
| of his factories.” | |
| “Mr. Wygant?” echoed Samuel. “You mean Miss Gladys's father?” | |
| “Yes,” said the doctor. “Do you know Miss Gladys?” | |
| “I have met her two or three times,” said the boy. | |
| “They are parishioners of mine,” remarked the other. | |
| And Samuel gave a start. “Why!” he exclaimed. “Then you--you must be the | |
| rector of St. Matthew's.” | |
| “Yes,” was the reply. “Didn't you know that?” | |
| The boy was a little awed. He had seen the great brownstone temple | |
| upon the hill--a structure far more splendid than anything he had ever | |
| dreamed of. | |
| “Have you never attended?” asked the doctor. | |
| “I went to the mission once,” said Samuel--referring to the little | |
| chapel in the poor quarters of the town. “A friend of mine goes | |
| there--Sophie Stedman. She works in Mr. Wygant's cotton mill.” | |
| “I should be glad to have you come to the church,” said the other. | |
| “I'd like to very much,” replied the boy. “I didn't know exactly if I | |
| ought to, you know.” | |
| “I am sorry you got that impression,” said Dr. Vince. “The church holds | |
| out its arms to everyone.” | |
| “Well,” began Samuel apologetically, “I knew that all the rich people | |
| went to St. Matthew's---” | |
| “The church does not belong to the rich people,” put in the doctor very | |
| gravely; “the church belongs to the Lord.” | |
| And so Samuel, overflowing with gratitude and happiness, joined St. | |
| Matthew's forthwith; and all the while in the deeps of his soul a voice | |
| was whispering to him that it was Miss Gladys' church also! And he would | |
| see his divinity again! | |
| CHAPTER XVI | |
| Samuel went back in great excitement to the Stedmans', to tell them of | |
| his good fortune. And the family sat about in a circle and listened to | |
| the recital in open-eyed amazement. It was a wonderful thing to have an | |
| adventurer like Samuel in one's house! | |
| But the boy noticed that Sophie did not seem as much excited as he had | |
| anticipated. She sat with her head resting in her hands. And when the | |
| others had left the room--“Oh, Samuel,” she said. “I feel so badly | |
| to-day! I don't see how I'm going to go on.” | |
| “Listen, Sophie,” he said quickly. “That's one of the first things I | |
| thought about--I can give you a chance now.” | |
| “How do you mean?” | |
| “I can get Dr. Vince to help you find some better work.” | |
| “Did he say he would?” asked the child. | |
| “No,” was the reply--“but he is so good to everyone. And all the rich | |
| people go to his church, you know. He said he wanted me to help him; so | |
| I shall find out things like that for him to do.” | |
| And Samuel went on, pouring out his praises of the kind and gentle | |
| clergyman, and striving to interest Sophie by his pictures of the | |
| new world that was to open before her. “I'm going to see him again | |
| to-morrow,” he said. “Then you'll see.” | |
| “Samuel,” announced the doctor when he called the next morning, “I have | |
| found a chance for you.” And Samuel's heart gave a great leap of joy. | |
| It appeared that the sexton of St. Matthew's was growing old. They did | |
| not wish to change, but there must be some one to help him. The pay | |
| would not be high; but he would have a chance to work in the church, and | |
| to be near his benefactor. The tears of gratitude started into his eyes | |
| as he heard this wonderful piece of news. | |
| “I'll see more of Miss Gladys!” the voice within him was whispering | |
| eagerly. | |
| “Doctor,” he said after a pause, “I've some good news for you also.” | |
| “What is it?” asked the other. | |
| “It's a chance for you to help some one.” | |
| “Oh!” said the doctor. | |
| “It's little Sophie Stedman,” said Samuel; and he went on to tell how he | |
| had met the widow, and about her long struggle with starvation, and then | |
| of Sophie's experiences in the cotton mill. | |
| “But what do you want me to do?” asked the other, with a troubled look. | |
| “Why,” said Samuel, “we must save her. We must find her some work that | |
| will not kill her.” | |
| “But, Samuel!” protested the other. “There are so many in her | |
| position--and how can I help it?” | |
| “But, doctor! She can't stand it!” | |
| “I know, my boy. It is a terrible thing to think of. Still, I can't | |
| undertake to find work for everyone.” | |
| “But she will die!” cried the boy. “Truly, it is killing her! And, | |
| doctor, she has never had a chance in all her life! Only think--how | |
| would you feel if Ethel had to work in a cotton mill?” | |
| There was a pause. “I honestly can't see--” began the bewildered | |
| clergyman. | |
| “It will be quite easy for you to help her,” put in the boy; “because, | |
| you see, Mr. Wygant belongs to your church!” | |
| “But what has that to do with it?” | |
| “Why--it's Mr. Wygant's mill that she works in.” | |
| “Yes,” said the doctor. “But--I---” | |
| “Surely,” exclaimed Samuel, “you don't mean that he wouldn't want to | |
| know about it!” | |
| “Ahem!” said the other; and again there was a pause. | |
| It was broken by Ethel, who had come in and was listening to the | |
| conversation. “Papa!” she exclaimed, “wouldn't Miss Gladys be the one to | |
| ask?” | |
| Samuel gave a start. “The very thing!” he said. | |
| And Dr. Vince, after pondering for a moment, admitted that it might be a | |
| good idea. | |
| “You will come to church with me to-morrow,” said Ethel. “And if she is | |
| there we'll ask her.” | |
| And so Samuel was on hand, trembling with excitement, and painfully | |
| conscious of his green and purple necktie. He sat in the Vince's pew, | |
| at Ethel's invitation; and directly across the aisle was Miss Wygant, | |
| miraculously resplendent in a springtime costume, yet with a touch of | |
| primness, becoming to the Sabbath. She did not see her adorer until | |
| after the service, when they met face to face. | |
| “Why, Samuel!” she exclaimed. “You are here?” | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys,” he said. “I'm to work in the church now.” | |
| “You don't tell me!” she responded. | |
| “I'm to help the sexton,” he added. | |
| “And he belongs to the church, too,” put in little Ethel. “And oh, Miss | |
| Gladys, won't you please let him tell you about Sophie!” | |
| “About Sophie?” said the other. | |
| “She's a little girl who works in your papa's mill, Miss Gladys. And her | |
| family's very poor, and she is sick, and Samuel says she may die.” | |
| “Why, that's too bad!” exclaimed Miss Gladys. “Tell me about her, | |
| Samuel.” | |
| And Samuel told the story. At the end a sudden inspiration came to him, | |
| and he mentioned how Sophie had received her Christmas present from Miss | |
| Gladys, and how she had kept her pictures in her room. | |
| And, of course, Miss Wygant was touched. “I will see what I can do for | |
| her,” she said. “What would you suggest?” | |
| “I thought,” said he boldly, “that maybe there might be some place for | |
| her at your home. That would make her so happy, you know.” | |
| “I will see,” said the other. “Will you bring her to see me to-morrow, | |
| Samuel?” | |
| “I will,” said he; and then he chanced to look into her face, and he | |
| caught again that piercing gaze which made the blood leap into his | |
| cheeks, and the strange and terrible emotions to stir in him. He turned | |
| his eyes away again, and his knees were trembling as he passed on down | |
| the aisle. | |
| He stood and watched Miss Gladys enter her motor. Then he bade good-by | |
| to Ethel and her mother, and hurried back into the vestry room to tell | |
| Dr. Vince of his good fortune. | |
| The good doctor had just slipped out of his vestments, and was putting | |
| on his cuffs. “I am so glad to hear it!” he said. “It was the very thing | |
| to do!” | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel. “And, doctor, I've thought of something else.” | |
| “What is that, Samuel?” | |
| “I'll have to have a minute or two to tell you about it.” | |
| “I'm just going to dinner now”--began the doctor. | |
| “I'll walk with you, if I may,” said Samuel. “It's really very | |
| important.” | |
| “All right,” responded the doctor in some trepidation. | |
| “I thought of this in the middle of the night,” explained the boy, | |
| when they had started down the street. “It kept me awake for hours. Dr. | |
| Vince, I think we ought to convert Master Albert Lockman!” | |
| “Convert him?” echoed the other perplexed. | |
| “Yes, sir,” said the boy. “He is leading a wild life, and he's in a very | |
| bad way.” | |
| “Yes, Samuel,” said the clergyman. “It is terrible, I know--” | |
| “We must labor with him!” exclaimed Samuel. “He must not be allowed to | |
| go on like that!” | |
| “Unfortunately,” said Dr. Vince hastily, “it wouldn't do for me to try | |
| it. You see, the Lockmans have always been Presbyterians, and so Bertie | |
| is under Dr. Handy's care.” | |
| “But is Dr. Handy doing anything about it?” persisted the other. | |
| “I really don't know, Samuel.” | |
| “Because if he isn't, we ought to, Dr. Vince! Something must be done.” | |
| “My boy,” said the doctor, “perhaps it wouldn't be easy for you to | |
| understand it. But there is a feeling--would it be quite good taste for | |
| me to try to take away a very rich parishioner from another church?” | |
| “But what have his riches to do with it?” asked the boy. | |
| “Unfortunately, Samuel, it costs money to build churches; and most | |
| clergymen are dependent upon their salaries, you know.” | |
| The good doctor was trying to make a jest of it; but Samuel was in | |
| deadly earnest. “I hope,” he said, “that you are not dependent upon the | |
| money of anyone like Master Albert.” | |
| “Um--no,” said the doctor quickly. | |
| “Understand me, please,” went on the other. “It's not simply that Master | |
| Albert is wrecking his own life. I suppose that's his right, if he wants | |
| to. But it's what he can do to other people! It's his money, Dr. Vince! | |
| Just think of it, he has seven hundred thousand dollars a year! And | |
| he never earned a cent of it; and he doesn't know what to do with it! | |
| Doctor, you KNOW that isn't right!” | |
| “No,” said the clergyman, “it's very wrong indeed. But what can you do | |
| about it?” | |
| “I don't know, doctor. I haven't had time to think about it--I've only | |
| just begun to realize it. But I thought if somebody like yourself--some | |
| one he respects--could point it out to him, he might use his money to | |
| some good purpose. If he won't, why then he ought to give it up.” | |
| The other smiled. “I'm afraid, Samuel, he'd hardly do that!” | |
| “But, doctor, things can't go on as they are! Right here in this town | |
| are people dying of starvation. And he has seven hundred thousand | |
| dollars a year! Can that continue?” | |
| “No, I trust not, my boy. It will be better some day. But it must be | |
| left to evolution--” | |
| “Evolution!” echoed Samuel perplexed. “Do you believe in evolution?” | |
| “Why,” said the other embarrassed--“what I mean is, that there are vast | |
| social forces at work--great changes taking place. But they move very | |
| slowly--” | |
| “But why do they move so slowly?” objected the boy. “Isn't it just | |
| because so many people, don't care?” | |
| “Why, Samuel--” | |
| “If everyone would take an interest in them--then they would happen | |
| quickly!” | |
| The two walked on for a minute in silence. Finally, the clergyman | |
| remarked, “Samuel, you take a great interest in social questions.” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said the boy. “You see, I have been down at the bottom, and | |
| I know how it feels. Nobody else can possibly understand--not even you, | |
| sir, with all your kind heart. You don't know what it means, sir--you | |
| don't know what it means!” | |
| “Perhaps not, my boy,” said the other. “But my conscience is far from | |
| easy, I assure you. The only thing is, we must not be too impatient--we | |
| must learn to wait--” | |
| “But, doctor!” exclaimed Samuel. “Will the people wait to starve?” | |
| That question was a poser; and perhaps it was just as well that Dr. | |
| Vince was nearing the steps of his home. “I must go in now, Samuel,” he | |
| said. “But we will talk about these questions another time.” | |
| “Yes, sir,” said Samuel, “we will.” | |
| And the other glanced at him quickly. But the boy's face wore its old | |
| look of guileless eagerness. | |
| CHAPTER XVII | |
| Samuel walked away, still pondering at the problem. Something must be | |
| done about Master Albert, that was certain. Before he went in to his | |
| dinner he had thought of yet another plan. He would appeal to Miss | |
| Gladys about it! He would get her to labor with the prodigal! | |
| At eight o'clock the next morning, he and Sophie called at Miss Wygant's | |
| home. They went to the servants' entrance, and the maid who opened | |
| the door sent them away, saying that Miss Gladys never rose until ten | |
| o'clock and would not see anyone until eleven. | |
| So they went home again and came at eleven; and they were taken to a | |
| sitting room upon the second floor and there Miss Gladys met them, clad | |
| in a morning gown of crimson silk. | |
| “And so this is Sophie!” she exclaimed. “Why you poor, poor child!” And | |
| she gazed at the little mill girl with her stunted figure and pinched | |
| cheeks, and her patched and threadbare dress; and Sophie, in her turn, | |
| gazed at the wonderful princess, tall and stately, glowing with health | |
| and voluptuous beauty. | |
| “And you work in our cotton mill!” she cried. | |
| “How perfectly terrible! And do you mean to tell me that this child is | |
| thirteen years old, Samuel?” | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys,” said he. | |
| She turned quickly and pressed a button on the wall. “Send Mrs. Harris | |
| here,” she said to the man who answered. | |
| “Mrs. Harris is our housekeeper,” she added to Samuel. “I will consult | |
| her about it.” | |
| The “consulting” was very brief. “Mrs. Harris, this is Sophie Stedman, | |
| a little girl I want to help. I don't know what she can do, but you will | |
| find out. I want her to have some sort of a place in the house--and it | |
| mustn't be hard work.” | |
| “But, Miss Gladys,” said the other in perplexity, “I don't know of | |
| anything at all!” | |
| “You can find something,” was the young lady's reply. “I want her to | |
| have a chance to learn. Take her downstairs and have a talk with her | |
| about it.” | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys,” said Mrs. Harris; and so Samuel was left alone with | |
| his goddess. | |
| He sat with his eyes upon the floor. He was just about to open the great | |
| subject he had in his mind, when suddenly Miss Gladys herself brought it | |
| up. “Samuel,” she asked, “why did you leave my cousin's?” | |
| Samuel hesitated. “I--I don't like to say, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “Please tell me,” she insisted. | |
| “I left it,” he replied in a low voice, “because I found that he got | |
| drunk.” | |
| “Oh!” said the girl, “when was this?” | |
| “It was last Wednesday night, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “Tell me all about it, Samuel.” | |
| “I--I don't like to,” he stammered. “It's not a story to tell to a | |
| lady.” | |
| “I already know something about it from my maid,” said she. “Jack | |
| Holliday was there, wasn't he?” | |
| “Yes, ma'am.” | |
| “And some women?” | |
| “Yes, ma'am.” | |
| “How many, Samuel?” | |
| “Four, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “Tell me about them, Samuel. What sort of women were they?” | |
| It was very hard for Samuel to answer these questions. He blushed as he | |
| talked; but Miss Gladys appeared not at all disconcerted--in fact she | |
| was greedy for the details. | |
| “You say her name was Belle. I wonder if it was that girl from 'The | |
| Maids of Mandelay.' Was she a dancer, Samuel?” | |
| “I don't know, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “And what became of her?” | |
| “I took her to a hotel, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “And what then?” | |
| Samuel stopped short. “I really couldn't tell you,” he said. | |
| “But why not?” | |
| “Because I promised.” | |
| “Whom did you promise?” | |
| “I promised the sergeant, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “The sergeant! A policeman, you mean?” | |
| “Yes, ma'am.” | |
| “But what--what did the police have to do with it?” | |
| “They took me to jail, Miss Gladys. They thought that I did it.” | |
| “Did what?” | |
| And again the boy shut his lips. | |
| “Listen, Samuel,” pleaded the other. “You know that I am Bertie's | |
| cousin. And he's all alone. And I'm responsible for him--” | |
| “Oh, Miss Gladys!” cried the boy. “If you only would try to help him! I | |
| meant to ask you--” | |
| “But how can I help him if you keep me in ignorance?” | |
| And so Samuel blurted out the whole story. And Miss Gladys sat dumb with | |
| horror. “She killed herself! She killed herself!” she gasped again and | |
| again. | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys,” said Samuel. “And it was awful! You can't imagine | |
| it!” | |
| “I read of the suicide in the paper. But I never dreamed of Bertie!” | |
| There was a moment's pause. “It must be a dreadful thing for him to have | |
| on his conscience”--began the boy. | |
| “He must have been frightened to death!” said she. And then she added | |
| quickly, “Samuel, you haven't told anyone about this!” | |
| “Not a soul, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “You are sure?” | |
| “I'm sure, ma'am.” | |
| “You didn't tell Dr. Vince?” | |
| “I just told him that I had left because Master Albert got drunk, Miss | |
| Gladys. That was the truth.” | |
| “Yes,” said she; and then, “You always tell the truth, don't you, | |
| Samuel?” | |
| “I try to,” he replied. | |
| “You are very good, aren't you?” she added. | |
| Samuel blushed. “No,” he said gravely. “I'm not good at all.” | |
| The other looked at him for a moment, and then a smile crossed her face. | |
| “I've heard a saying,” she remarked--“'Be good and you'll be happy, but | |
| you'll miss a lot of fun.'” | |
| Samuel pondered. “I think that is a very terrible saying,” he declared | |
| earnestly. | |
| Miss Gladys laughed. And she went on to cross-question him as to the | |
| suicide--satisfying her curiosity as to the last hideous detail. | |
| Then she looked at Samuel and asked suddenly, “Why do you wear that | |
| hideous thing?” | |
| Samuel started. “What thing?” he asked. | |
| “That tie!” | |
| “Why!” he said--“I got that specially--” | |
| He stopped, embarrassed; and the other's peal of laughter rang through | |
| the room. “Take it off!” she said. | |
| She got up and came to him, saying, “I couldn't stand it.” | |
| With trembling fingers he removed the tie. And she took off the | |
| beautiful red ribbon that was tied about her waist, and cut it to the | |
| right length. “Put that on,” she said, “and I'll show you how to tie | |
| it.” | |
| And Samuel stood there, rapt in a sudden nightmare ecstasy. She was | |
| close to him, her quick fingers were playing about his throat. Her | |
| breath was upon his face, and the intoxicating perfume of her filled his | |
| nostrils. The blood mounted into his face, and the veins stood out upon | |
| his forehead, and strange and monstrous things stirred in the depths of | |
| him. | |
| “There,” she said, “that's better”--and stepped back to admire the | |
| result. She smiled upon him radiantly. “You have no taste, Samuel,” she | |
| said. “I shall have to educate you.” | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys,” he responded in a low voice. | |
| “And listen,” she went on, “you will come to see Sophie now and then, | |
| won't you?” | |
| “Yes, yes,” he said quickly. | |
| “And come some time when I am here.” | |
| He caught his breath and gripped his hands and answered yet again, | |
| “Yes!” | |
| “Don't be afraid of me,” added the girl gently. “You don't appreciate | |
| yourself half enough, Samuel.” | |
| Then there came voices in the hall, and Miss Gladys turned, and the | |
| housekeeper and Sophie came in. “Well?” she asked. | |
| “She doesn't know anything at all,” said Mrs. Harris. “But if you want | |
| her taught--I suppose she could run errands and do sewing--” | |
| “Very good,” said the other. “And pay her well. Will you like that, | |
| Sophie?” | |
| “Yes, Miss,” whispered the child in a faint voice. She was gazing in awe | |
| and rapture at this peerless being, and she could hardly find utterance | |
| for two words. | |
| “All right, then,” said Miss Gladys, “that will do very well. You come | |
| to-morrow, Sophie. And good-by, Samuel. I must go for my ride now.” | |
| “Good-by, Miss Gladys,” said Samuel. “And please don't forget what you | |
| were going to say to Master Albert!” | |
| CHAPTER XVIII | |
| Samuel went home walking upon air. He had found a place for himself and | |
| a place for Sophie. And he had got the reforming of Bertie Lockman under | |
| way! Truly, the church was a great institution--the solution of all the | |
| puzzles and problems of life. And fortunate was Samuel to be so close to | |
| the inner life of things! | |
| Then suddenly, on a street corner, he stopped short. A sign had caught | |
| his eye--“John Callahan, Wines and Liquors--Bernheimer Beer.” “Do you | |
| know what that place is?” he said to Sophie. | |
| “That's where my friend Finnegan works.” | |
| “Who's Finnegan?” asked the child. | |
| “He's the barkeeper who gave me something to eat when I first came to | |
| town. He's a good man, even if he is a barkeeper.” | |
| Samuel had often found himself thinking of Finnegan; for it had been | |
| altogether against his idea of things that a man so obviously well | |
| meaning should be selling liquor. And now suddenly a brilliant idea | |
| flashed across his mind. Why should he continue selling liquor? And | |
| instantly Samuel saw a new duty before him. He must help Finnegan. | |
| And forgetting that it was time for his dinner, he bade good-by to | |
| Sophie and went into the saloon. | |
| “Well, young feller!” exclaimed the Irishman, his face lighting up with | |
| pleasure; and then, seeing the boy's new collar and tie, “Gee, you're | |
| moving up in the world!” | |
| “I've got a job,” said Samuel proudly. “I'm the assistant sexton at St. | |
| Matthew's Church.” | |
| “You don't say! Gone up with the sky pilots, hey!” | |
| Samuel did not notice this irreverent remark. He looked around the | |
| place and saw that they were alone. Then he said, very earnestly, “Mr. | |
| Finnegan, may I have a few minutes' talk with you?” | |
| “Sure,” said Finnegan perplexed. “What is it?” | |
| “It's something I've been thinking about very often,” said Samuel. “You | |
| were so kind to me, and I saw that you were a good-hearted man. And so | |
| it has always seemed to me too bad that you should be selling drink.” | |
| The other stared at him. “Gee!” he said, “are you going to take me up in | |
| your airship?” | |
| “Mr. Finnegan,” said the boy, “I wish you wouldn't make fun of me. For | |
| I'm talking to you out of the bottom of my heart.” | |
| And Samuel gazed with so much yearning in his eyes that the man was | |
| touched, in spite of the absurdity of it. “Go on,” he said. “I'll | |
| listen.” | |
| “It's just this,” said Samuel. “It's wrong to sell liquor! Think what | |
| drink does to men? I saw a man drunk the other night and it led to what | |
| was almost murder. Drink makes men cruel and selfish. It takes away | |
| their self-control. It makes them unfit for their work. It leads to vice | |
| and wickedness. It enslaves them and degrades them. Don't you know that | |
| is true, Mr. Finnegan?” | |
| “Yes,” admitted Finnegan, “I reckon it is. I never touch the stuff | |
| myself.” | |
| “And still you sell it to others?” | |
| “Well, my boy, I don't do it because I hate them.” | |
| “But then, why DO you do it?” | |
| “I do it,” said Finnegan, “because I have to live. It's my trade--it's | |
| all I know.” | |
| “It seems such a terrible trade!” exclaimed the boy. | |
| “Maybe,” said the other. “But take notice, it ain't a princely one. I'm | |
| on the job all day and a good part of the night, and standing up all the | |
| time. And I don't get no holidays either--and I only get twelve a week. | |
| And I've a wife and a new baby. So what's a man to do?” | |
| Now, strange as it may seem, this unfolded a new view to Samuel. He had | |
| always supposed that bartenders and saloonkeepers were such from innate | |
| depravity. Could it really be that they were driven to the trade? | |
| The bare idea was enough to set his zeal in a blaze. “Listen,” he said. | |
| “Suppose I were to find you some kind of honest work, so that you could | |
| earn a living. Would you promise to reform?” | |
| “Do you mean would I quit Callahan's? Why, sure I would.” | |
| “Ah!” exclaimed the boy in delight. | |
| “But it'd have to be a steady job,” put in the other. “I can take no | |
| chances with the baby.” | |
| “That's all right,” said Samuel. “I'll get you what you want.” | |
| “Gee, young feller!” exclaimed Finnegan. “Do you carry 'em round in your | |
| pockets?” | |
| “No,” said Samuel, “but Dr. Vince asked me to help him; and I'm going to | |
| tell him about you.” | |
| And so, forthwith, he made his way to the doctor's house, and was | |
| ushered into the presence of the unhappy clergyman. He stated his case; | |
| and the other threw up his hands in despair. | |
| “Really,” he exclaimed, “this is too much, Samuel! I can't find | |
| employment for everyone in Lockmanville.” | |
| “But, doctor!” protested Samuel, “I don't think you understand. This man | |
| wants to lead a decent life, and he can't because there's no way for him | |
| to earn a living.” | |
| “I understand all that Samuel.” | |
| “But, doctor, what's the use of trying to reform men if they're chained | |
| in that way?” | |
| There was a pause. | |
| “I'm afraid it's hopeless to explain to you,” said the clergyman. “But | |
| you'll have to make up your mind to it, Samuel--there are a great many | |
| men in the world who want jobs, and it seems to be unfortunately true | |
| that there are fewer jobs than men.” | |
| “Yes,” said the other, “but that's what Professor Stewart taught men. | |
| And you said it was wicked of him.” | |
| “Um--” said the doctor, taken aback. | |
| “Don't you see?” went on Samuel eagerly. “It puts you right back with | |
| Herbert Spencer! If there are more men than there are jobs, then the men | |
| have to fight for them. And so you have the struggle for existence, and | |
| the survival of the greedy and the selfish. If Finnegan wouldn't be a | |
| barkeeper, then he and his family would starve, and somebody else would | |
| survive who was willing to be that bad.” | |
| The boy waited. “Don't you see that, Dr. Vince?” he persisted. | |
| “Yes, I see that,” said the doctor. | |
| “And you told me that the only way to escape from that was to live for | |
| others--to serve them and help them. And isn't that what I'm trying to | |
| do?” | |
| “Yes, my boy, that is so. But what can we do?” | |
| “Why, doctor, aren't you the head of the church? And the people come to | |
| you to be taught. You must point out these things to them, so that there | |
| can be a change.” | |
| “But WHAT change, Samuel?” | |
| “I don't know, sir. I'm groping around and trying to find out. But I'm | |
| sure of one thing--that some people have got too much money. Why, Dr. | |
| Vince, there are people right in your church who have more than they | |
| could spend in hundreds of years.” | |
| “Perhaps so,” said the other. “But what harm does that do?” | |
| “Why--that's the reason that so many others have nothing! Only realize | |
| it--right at this very moment there are people starving to death--and | |
| here in Lockmanville! They want to work, and there is no work for them! | |
| I could take you to see them, sir--girls who want a job in Mr. Wygant's | |
| cotton mill, and he won't give it to them!” | |
| “But, my boy--that isn't Mr. Wygant's fault! It's because there is too | |
| much cloth already.” | |
| “I've been thinking about that,” said Samuel earnestly. “And it doesn't | |
| sound right to me. There are too many people who need good clothes. Look | |
| at poor Sophie, for instance!” | |
| “Yes,” said the other, “of course. But they haven't money to buy the | |
| cloth---” | |
| And Samuel sat forward in his excitement. “Yes, yes!” he cried. “And | |
| isn't that just what I said before? They have no money, because the rich | |
| people have it all!” | |
| There was no reply; and after a moment Samuel rushed on: “Surely it is | |
| selfish of Mr. Wygant to shut poor people out of his mill, just because | |
| they have no money. Why couldn't he let them make cloth for themselves?” | |
| “Samuel!” protested the other. “That is absurd!” | |
| “But why, sir?” | |
| “Because, my boy--in a day they could make more than they could wear in | |
| a year.” | |
| “So much the better, doctor! Then they could give the balance to other | |
| people who needed it--and the other people could make things for them. | |
| Take Sophie. She not only needs clothing, she needs shoes, and above | |
| all, she needs enough to eat. And if it's a question of there not being | |
| enough food, look at what's wasted in a place like Master Albert's! And | |
| there's land enough at 'Fairview' to raise food for the whole town--I | |
| know what I'm talking about there, because I'm a farmer. And it's used | |
| to keep a lot of race horses that nobody ever rides.” | |
| “Samuel,” said the clergyman gravely, “that is true--and that is very | |
| wrong. But what can _I_ do?” | |
| And Samuel stared at him. “Doctor!” he exclaimed. “I can't tell you how | |
| it hurts me to have you talk to me like that!” | |
| “How do you mean, Samuel?” asked the other in bewilderment. | |
| And the boy clasped his hands together in his agitation. “You told me | |
| that we must sacrifice ourselves, and help others! You said that was our | |
| sole duty! And I believed you--I was ready to go with you. And here I | |
| am--I want to follow you, and you won't lead!” | |
| Those words were like a stab. The doctor winced visibly. | |
| And Samuel winced also--his heart was wrung. “It hurts me more than | |
| I can tell you!” he cried. “But think of the people who are | |
| suffering--nobody spares them! And how can you be silent, doctor--how | |
| can the shepherd of Christ be silent while some of his flock are living | |
| in luxury and others are starving to death?” | |
| There was a long pause. Dr. Vince sat rigid, clutching the arms of his | |
| chair. | |
| “Samuel,” he said, “you are right. I will preach on this unemployed | |
| question next Sunday.” | |
| “Ah, thank you, sir--thank you!” exclaimed Samuel, with tears of | |
| gratitude in his eyes. And he took his friend's hand and wrung it. | |
| Then, suddenly, a new thought came to him. “And meantime, doctor,” said | |
| he, “what am I to tell Finnegan?” | |
| CHAPTER XIX | |
| One who has all the cares of humanity upon his shoulders, as Samuel had, | |
| is apt to find that it claims a good deal of time. Samuel did his best | |
| to keep his mind upon the weighty problems which he had to solve; but he | |
| found that he was continually distracted by the thought of Miss Gladys. | |
| Again and again her image would sweep over him, driving everything | |
| else from his mind. The vision of her beauty haunted him, sending his | |
| imagination upon all sorts of strange excursions and adventures. | |
| She had told him to come again; and he wondered how long he should wait. | |
| He was supposed to come to see Sophie--but that, of course, was absurd, | |
| for he saw Sophie every night at home. | |
| He waited three days; and then he could wait no longer. The hunger to | |
| see her was like a fire smoldering in him. | |
| In the morning, at eleven o'clock, he went to the house and Sophie came | |
| to the door. “I'll tell her you're here,” said she, understanding at | |
| once. She ran upstairs, and came back telling him to come. “And she's | |
| glad, Samuel!” exclaimed the child. | |
| “Won't you come, too?” he asked blunderingly. | |
| “No, she told me not to,” was Sophie's reply. | |
| So he went upstairs to Miss Wygant's own sitting room, and found her in | |
| a morning gown, even more beautiful than the one she had worn before. | |
| “You don't know how glad I am to see you,” she said. | |
| Samuel admitted that he didn't know; and he added, “And I don't know why | |
| you should be, Miss Gladys.” | |
| Miss Gladys stood looking at him. “You find things interesting, don't | |
| you?” she asked. | |
| “Why, yes, Miss Gladys,” he replied. | |
| “And I find things so tiresome.” | |
| “Tiresome!” gasped the boy. “Here--in this house!” | |
| “It seems strange to you, does it?” said she. | |
| “Why you have everything in the world!” he cried. | |
| “Yes, and I'm tired of everything.” | |
| The boy was looking at her in wonder. “It's true,” she said. “Everybody | |
| I meet is uninteresting--they live such dull and stupid lives. I'm shut | |
| up here in this town--I've got to spend a whole month here this summer!” | |
| Samuel gazed at her, and a wave of pity swept over him. He had felt for | |
| some time that she was not happy. So here was one more duty for him--he | |
| must help this beautiful young lady to a realization of her own good | |
| fortune. | |
| The thought set him athrill. “Ah, but Miss Gladys!” he exclaimed. “Think | |
| how much good you do!” | |
| “Good?” said she. “In what way?” | |
| “Why--think of Sophie! How happy you've made her.” | |
| “Yes,” she said dully. “I suppose so.” | |
| “And me!” he exclaimed. | |
| “Have I made you happy?” she inquired. | |
| And he answered, “I have never been so happy in my life.” | |
| All the wonder that was in his soul shone in his eyes, and arrested | |
| her gaze. They stood looking at each other; and then she came to him | |
| laughing. “Samuel,” she said, “you haven't got that tie right.” | |
| And once more her fingers touched him, and her breath was upon him, and | |
| the glory of her set him on fire. A new wave of feeling swept over him, | |
| and this time it swamped him completely. His heart was pounding, his | |
| brain was reeling; and blindly, like a drunken man--almost without | |
| knowing what he was doing--he put out his arms and caught her to him. | |
| And then, in an instant, horror seized him. What had he done? She would | |
| repel him--she would drive him from her! He had ruined everything! | |
| But another instant sufficed to show him that this was not the case. And | |
| the tide of his feeling swept back redoubled. From the hidden regions of | |
| his soul there came new emotions, suddenly awakened--things tremendous | |
| and terrifying--never guessed by him before. His manhood came suddenly | |
| to consciousness--he lost all his shyness and fear of her. She was | |
| his--to do what he pleased with! And he pressed her to him, he half | |
| crushed her in his embrace. She closed her eyes, and he kissed her | |
| upon the cheeks and upon the lips; then he heard her voice, faint and | |
| trembling--“Samuel, I love you!” And within him it was like a great | |
| fanfare of trumpets, for wonder and triumph and delirious joy. | |
| Suddenly there came a step in the hall outside. They sprang apart. The | |
| door of the room was open; and for an instant he saw wild terror in her | |
| eyes. | |
| Then she sank down upon her knees. “Oh, Samuel!” she exclaimed. “My | |
| ring!” | |
| “Your ring!” he echoed, dazed. | |
| “My ring!” she said again; then he heard the voice of Mrs. Harris in the | |
| doorway. “Your ring, Miss Gladys?” | |
| “I dropped it,” she said; and Samuel sank down upon his knees also. | |
| They sought under the table. “It fell here,” she said. “It's my | |
| solitaire.” | |
| “It must have rolled,” said Mrs. Harris, beginning to search. | |
| “Put your head down and look about, Samuel,” commanded Miss Gladys, and | |
| Samuel obeyed; but he did not find any ring. | |
| They continued the search for a minute. Mrs. Harris had come back to the | |
| table; and suddenly she exclaimed, “Here it is!” | |
| “What!” cried the other. “Why, I looked there!” | |
| “It was under the leg of the table,” explained the housekeeper. | |
| “Ah!” said the other, and put the precious ring back upon her finger. | |
| Samuel was overwhelmed with astonishment; but it was nothing to what | |
| he felt a moment later. His goddess turned to him. “No,” she said. “I'm | |
| sorry, Samuel, but it's impossible for me to do what you ask me.” | |
| He stared at her perplexed. | |
| “I have found a place for Sophie,” she went on, “and that is positively | |
| all I can do.” | |
| “Miss Gladys!” he exclaimed. | |
| “Really,” she said, “I think you ought not to ask me to do any more. I | |
| understand that there is a good deal of suffering among the mill people, | |
| and I do what I can to relieve it. But as for taking all the employees | |
| into my father's household--that is simply absurd.” | |
| The boy could not find words. He could only stare at her. “That's all,” | |
| said Miss Gladys. “And about those flower seeds--do what you can to | |
| find them. I want them in a few days, if I'm to use them at all. Do you | |
| understand?” | |
| “Y-yes, Miss Gladys,” he stammered. He had seen her dart a swift glance | |
| at the housekeeper, and he was beginning at last to comprehend. | |
| “Bring them to me yourself,” she added. “Good-by.” | |
| “Good-by, Miss Gladys,” he said, and went out. | |
| He went downstairs, marveling. But before he was halfway down the first | |
| flight of steps he had forgotten everything except those incredible | |
| words--“Samuel, I love you!” They rang in his head like a trumpet call. | |
| He could not hold himself in. He could not carry away such a secret. | |
| Sophie went to the door with him; and he took her outside and whispered | |
| it to her. | |
| The child stared at him, with awe in her eyes. “Samuel!” she whispered, | |
| “she must mean to marry you!” | |
| The boy started in dismay. “Marry me!” he gasped. “Marry me!” | |
| “Why, yes!” said Sophie. “What else can she mean?” | |
| That was a poser. “But--but--” he cried. “It's absurd!” | |
| “It's not, Samuel! She loves you!” | |
| “But I'm nothing but a poor boy!” | |
| “But, Samuel, she has plenty of money!” | |
| It had not occurred to Samuel that way; but he had to admit that it was | |
| true. “But I'm not good enough,” he protested. | |
| “You are good enough for anyone!” cried Sophie. “You are noble and | |
| beautiful--and she has found it out. And she means to stoop and lift you | |
| up to her.” | |
| The boy was silent, stricken with awe. “Oh, Samuel, it is just like in | |
| the fairy stories!” whispered the child. “You are to be the prince!” | |
| So she went on, pouring out the wonder of it to him, and thrilling his | |
| soul to yet new flights. | |
| He left her at last and walked down the street half dazed. He was to | |
| marry Miss Gladys! Yes, it must be true, for she had told him that she | |
| loved him! And then, presumably, he would come to live in that great | |
| palace. How could he ever stand it? What would he do? | |
| And he would be a rich man! A great surge of triumph came to him. What | |
| would the people at home say--what would his brothers think when he went | |
| to pay them a visit, and perhaps to buy the old place? | |
| But he put these thoughts away from him. He must not think of such | |
| things--it was selfish and ignoble. He must think of the good that he | |
| would be able to do with all the money. He might help the poor at last. | |
| He and Miss Gladys would devote their lives to this. Perhaps some day he | |
| might even own the mill where the children worked, and he would be able | |
| to send them all to school! And he would be a member of the Lockman | |
| family, in a way--he might even have some influence over Master Albert! | |
| And Ethel and Dr. Vince--how happy they would be when they heard of his | |
| good fortune! | |
| In the end his thoughts left all these things, and came back to Miss | |
| Gladys. After all, what counted but that? She loved him! She was his! | |
| And like a swiftly spreading fire there came over him the memory of what | |
| he had done to her; he walked on, trembling with wonder and fear. It | |
| was a kind of madness in his blood. It had taken possession of his whole | |
| being--he would never again be the same! He stretched out his arms as he | |
| walked down the street, because his emotions were greater than he could | |
| bear. | |
| Then suddenly, in the midst of the turmoil, a sight met his eyes which | |
| brought him back to the world. Approaching him, about to pass him, | |
| was an old man with a gray beard, stooping as he walked and carrying | |
| a peddler's basket. The disguise was excellent, but it did not deceive | |
| Samuel for an instant. He stood stock-still and cried in amazement: | |
| “Charlie Swift!” | |
| The peddler shot a quick glance at him. “Shut up!” he muttered; and then | |
| he passed on, and left Samuel staring. | |
| So with a sudden rush, a new set of emotions overwhelmed the boy. He | |
| was only a week away from the burglary; and yet it was an age. And how | |
| terrible it seemed--how almost incredible! And here was he, about to | |
| marry the daughter of a millionaire--while his friend and confederate | |
| was still skulking in the shadows, hiding from the police. | |
| Of all the distressed people whom Samuel had met in the course of his | |
| adventures, Charlie Swift was the only one whom he had not benefited. | |
| And simply to set eyes upon him was to hear in his soul a new call. How | |
| could he pursue his own gratifications while Charlie was left a prey to | |
| wickedness? | |
| The figure almost passed from sight while Samuel stood wrestling with | |
| the problem. He shrunk from the task before him; he was afraid of | |
| Charlie Swift, afraid of his cynical smile, and of his merciless | |
| sneering. But his duty was clear before him--as clear as that of any | |
| soldier, who in the midst of love and pleasure hears the bugle call. He | |
| might not be able to do anything for Charlie. But he must try! | |
| And so he turned and followed the old peddler to his home. | |
| CHAPTER XX | |
| “So you've let them turn you into a mission stiff!” said Charlie Swift, | |
| when the two were seated in his room. | |
| “A what?” exclaimed Samuel perplexed. | |
| “A mission stiff,” repeated the other. “One of the guys that gets | |
| repentance!” | |
| Samuel experienced a sudden chilling of the ardor with which he had | |
| come into the room. The old grin was upon the other's face; and the boy | |
| realized with a sudden sinking of the heart how hard and savage he was. | |
| Finnegan was a babe in arms compared with Charlie Swift. | |
| To convert him would be a real task, a test of one's fervor and vision. | |
| Samuel resolved suddenly upon diplomacy. | |
| “They've been very good to me,” he said. | |
| “I dare say,” responded the other indifferently. | |
| “And Dr. Vince is really a very good man,” he went on. | |
| “Humph!” commented the burglar; and then he added quickly, “You haven't | |
| been telling him anything about me?” | |
| “Oh, no!” exclaimed the boy. | |
| “Not a word?” | |
| “Have you forgotten that I promised you?” | |
| “That's all right,” said Charlie, “only I just wanted to warn you. You | |
| can tie up with the church guys if you feel like it--only don't mention | |
| your lost brothers down in the pit. Just you remember that I got some of | |
| the doctor's silver.” | |
| The boy gave a start. “Oh!” he exclaimed. | |
| “Didn't you know that?” laughed the other. | |
| “No, I didn't know it.” | |
| “What did you suppose I was doing all that time while you were | |
| watching?” | |
| Samuel said nothing for a minute. “Why did you pick out Dr. Vince?” he | |
| asked suddenly. | |
| “Him? Why not? I knew his house.” | |
| “But a clergyman! Does it seem quite fair?” | |
| “Oh, that's all right,” laughed the other. “He's got a-plenty. It don't | |
| have to come out of his salary, you know.” | |
| “Why not?” | |
| “Because, he's got a rich wife. You didn't suppose he lived in that | |
| palace of a house on his own salary, did you?” | |
| “I hadn't thought anything about it.” | |
| “Well, he's all right--he married one of the richest girls in town. And | |
| she'll keep his nest feathered.” | |
| There was a pause. “Don't you think that Dr. Vince is a good man?” asked | |
| Samuel. | |
| “I don't know,” said the other. “I've got no quarrel with him. But I | |
| don't like his trade.” | |
| “Doesn't he do a great deal of good to people?” | |
| “Maybe,” said the other, shrugging his shoulders. | |
| “To poor people?” persisted Samuel. | |
| “I dare say,” admitted Charlie. “But you'll notice it takes all the sand | |
| out of them--makes them into beggars. And I ain't that sort.” | |
| “Why do you think he tries to help them?” | |
| “Well, he gets paid for it, don't he?” | |
| “But the other people in the church--the ones who pay the money. Why do | |
| you think they do it?” | |
| The burglar thought for a moment. “I reckon they do it to make | |
| themselves feel good,” he said. | |
| “To make themselves feel good,” repeated the other perplexed. | |
| “Sure!” said the man. “You take one of those rich women--she's got a | |
| lot of money that she never earned, and she spends all her life amusing | |
| herself and ordering servants about. And all the time she knows that | |
| most of the people--the people that do the work--are suffering and | |
| dying. And she don't want to let that make her feel bad, so she hires | |
| some fellow like your friend, the doctor, to preach to 'em--and maybe | |
| give 'em a turkey at Christmas. And that takes the trouble off her mind. | |
| Don't you see?” | |
| “Yes,” said the other weakly. “I see.” | |
| “Or else,” added Charlie, “take some of those smooth grafters they've | |
| got up there--the men, I mean. They spend six days in the week cutting | |
| other people's throats, and robbing the public. Don't you think | |
| it's handy for them to know they can come on Sunday and drop a | |
| five-dollar-bill in the plate, and square the whole account?” | |
| Samuel sought for a reply to these cruel taunts. “I don't think you put | |
| it quite fairly,” he protested. | |
| “Why not?” demanded the other. | |
| “In the first place, men like that wouldn't go to church--” | |
| Charlie stared at him. “What!” he exclaimed. | |
| “No,” said the boy. | |
| “Why not?” | |
| “Well, why should they care to go? And they wouldn't be welcome--” | |
| Charlie burst into laughter. “You poor kid!” he exclaimed. “What have | |
| you been doing up there at St. Matthew's, anyhow?” | |
| “I'm the sexton's assistant,” said Samuel gravely. | |
| “Yes,” said the other. “Evidently a sexton's assistant doesn't see much | |
| of the congregation.” | |
| “I wish you'd explain,” remarked the boy after a pause. | |
| “I hardly know where to begin,” replied the other. “They've such a | |
| choice collection of crooks up there. Did you ever notice a little | |
| pot-bellied fellow with mutton-chop whiskers--looks as if he was eating | |
| persimmons all the time?” | |
| “You mean Mr. Hickman?” | |
| “Yes, that's the chap. He's one of the pillars of the church, isn't he?” | |
| “I suppose so,” said Samuel. “He's one of the vestrymen.” | |
| “And did you ever hear of Henry Hickman before?” | |
| “I know he's a famous lawyer; and I was told that he managed the Lockman | |
| estate.” | |
| “Yes,” said Charlie, “and I suppose you don't know what that means!” | |
| “No,” admitted Samuel, “I don't.” | |
| “It means,” went on the other, “that he was old Lockman's right-hand | |
| man, and had his finger in every dirty job that the old fellow ever did | |
| for thirty years. And it means that he runs the business now, and does | |
| all the crooked work that has to be done for it.” | |
| There was a pause. “For instance, what?” asked Samuel in a low voice. | |
| “For instance, politics,” said the other. “Steering the grafters off | |
| the Lockman preserve. Getting the right men named by the machine, and | |
| putting up the dough to elect them. Last year the Democrats got in, in | |
| spite of all he could do; and he had to buy the city council outright.” | |
| “What!” gasped the boy in horror. | |
| “Sure thing,” laughed Charlie--“there was an independent water company | |
| trying to break in, and the Democrats were pledged to them. They say it | |
| cost Hickman forty-five thousand dollars.” | |
| “But do you KNOW that?” cried the other. | |
| “Know it, Sammy? Why everybody in town knows it. It was a rotten steal, | |
| on the face of it.” | |
| Samuel was staring at him. “I can't believe it!” he exclaimed. | |
| “Nonsense!” laughed the other. “Ask round a bit!” And then he added | |
| quickly, “Why, see here--didn't you tell me you knew Billy Finnegan--the | |
| barkeeper?” | |
| “Yes, I know him.” | |
| “Well, then, you can go right to headquarters and find out. His boss, | |
| John Callahan, was one of the supervisors--he got the dough. Go and ask | |
| Finnegan.” | |
| “But will he tell?” exclaimed Samuel. | |
| “I guess he'll tell,” said Charlie, “if you go at him right. It's no | |
| great secret--the whole town's been laughing about it.” | |
| Samuel was almost too shocked for words. “Do you suppose Dr. Vince knows | |
| it?” he cried. | |
| “He don't know much if he doesn't,” was the other's reply. | |
| “A member of his church!” gasped the boy. | |
| “Oh, pshaw!” laughed the other. “You're too green, Sammy! What's the | |
| church got to do with business? Why, look--there's old Wygant--another | |
| of the vestrymen!” | |
| “Miss Gladys' father, you mean?” | |
| “Yes; old Lockman's brother-in-law. He's the other trustee of the | |
| estate. And do you suppose there's any rascality he doesn't know about?” | |
| “But he's a reformer!” cried the boy wildly. | |
| “Sure!” laughed Charlie. “He made a speech at the college commencement | |
| about representative government; I suppose you read it in the Express. | |
| But all the same, when the Democrats got in, his nibs came round and | |
| made his terms with Slattery, the new boss; and they get along so well | |
| it'll be his money that will put them in again next year.” | |
| “But WHY?” cried Samuel dazed. | |
| “For one thing,” said Charlie, “because he's got to have his man in the | |
| State legislature, to beat the child-labor bill.” | |
| “The child-labor bill!” | |
| “Surely. You knew he was fighting it, didn't you? They wanted to prevent | |
| children under fourteen from working in the cotton mills. Wygant sent | |
| Jack Pemberton up to the Capital for nothing at all but to beat that | |
| law.” Samuel sat with his hands clenched tightly. Before him there had | |
| come the vision of little Sophie Stedman with her wan and haggard face! | |
| “But why does he want the children in his mill?” he cried. | |
| “Why?” echoed Charlie. “Good God! Because he can pay them less and work | |
| them harder. Did you suppose he wanted them there for their health?” | |
| There was a long pause. The boy was wrestling with the most terrible | |
| specter that had yet laid hold upon him. “I don't believe he knows it!” | |
| he whispered half to himself. “I don't believe it!” | |
| “Who?” asked the other. | |
| “Dr. Vince!” said the boy. And he rose suddenly to his feet. “I will go | |
| and see him about it,” he said. | |
| “Go and see him!” echoed Charlie. | |
| “Yes. He will tell me!” | |
| Charlie was gazing at him with a broad grin. “I dare you!” he cried. | |
| “I am going,” said the boy simply; and the burglar slapped his thigh in | |
| delight. | |
| “Go on!” he chuckled. “Sock it to him, Sammy! And come back and tell me | |
| about it!” | |
| CHAPTER XXI | |
| “Dr. Vince is at lunch,” said the maid who answered the bell. | |
| “Please tell him I must see him at once,” said Samuel. “It's something | |
| very important.” | |
| He went in and sat down in the library, and the doctor came, looking | |
| anxious. “What is it now?” he asked. | |
| And Samuel turned to him a face of anguish. “Doctor,” he said, “I've | |
| just had a terrible experience.” | |
| “What is it, Samuel?” | |
| “I hardly know how to tell you,” said the boy. “I know a man--a very | |
| wicked man; and I went to him to try to convert him, and to bring him | |
| into the church. And he laughed at me, and at the church, too. He said | |
| there are wicked men in it--in St. Matthew's, Dr. Vince! He told me who | |
| they are, and what they are doing! And, doctor--I can't believe that you | |
| know about it--that you would let such things go on!” | |
| The other was staring at him in alarm. “My dear boy,” he said, “there | |
| are many wicked men in the world, and I cannot know everything.” | |
| “Ah, but this is terrible, doctor! You will have to find out about | |
| it--you cannot let such men stay in the church.” | |
| The other rose and closed the door of his study. Then he drew his chair | |
| close to Samuel. “Now,” he said, “what is it?” | |
| “It's Mr. Wygant,” said Samuel. | |
| “Mr. Wygant!” cried the other in dismay. | |
| “Yes, Dr. Vince.” | |
| “What has he done?” | |
| “Did you know that it was he who beat the child-labor bill--that he | |
| named the State senator on purpose to do it?” | |
| The doctor was staring at him. “The child-labor bill!” he gasped. “Is | |
| THAT what you mean?” | |
| “Yes, Dr. Vince,” said Samuel. “Surely you didn't know that!” | |
| “Why, I know that Mr. Wygant is very much opposed to the bill. He has | |
| opposed it openly. He has a perfect right to do that, hasn't he?”' | |
| “But to name the State senator to beat it, doctor!” | |
| “Well, my boy, Mr. Wygant is very much interested in politics; and, of | |
| course, he would use his influence. Why not?” | |
| “But, Dr. Vince--it was a wicked thing! Think of Sophie!” | |
| “But, my boy--haven't we found Sophie a place in Mr. Wygant's own home?” | |
| “Yes, doctor! But there are all the others! Think of the suffering and | |
| misery in that dreadful mill! And Mr. Wygant pays such low wages. And he | |
| is such a rich man--he might help the children if he would.” | |
| “Really, Samuel--” began the doctor. | |
| But the boy, seeing the frown of displeasure on his face, rushed on | |
| swiftly. “That's only the beginning! Listen to me! There's Mr. Hickman!” | |
| “Mr. Hickman!” | |
| “Mr. Henry Hickman, the lawyer. He has done even worse things--” | |
| And suddenly the clergyman clenched his hands. “Really, Samuel!” he | |
| cried. “This is too much! You are exceeding all patience!” | |
| “Doctor!” exclaimed the boy in anguish. | |
| “It seems to me,” the doctor continued, “that you owe it to me to | |
| consider more carefully. You have been treated very kindly here--you | |
| have been favored in more ways than one.” | |
| “But what has that to do with it?” cried the other wildly. | |
| “It is necessary that you should remember your place. It is certainly | |
| not becoming for you, a mere boy, and filling a subordinate position, to | |
| come to me with gossip concerning the vestry of my church.” | |
| “A subordinate position!” echoed Samuel dazed. “But what has my position | |
| to do with it?” | |
| “It has a great deal to do with it, Samuel.” | |
| The boy was staring at him. “You don't understand me!” he cried. “I am | |
| not doing this for myself! I am not setting myself up! I am thinking of | |
| the saving of the church!” | |
| “What do you mean--saving the church?” | |
| “Why, doctor--just see! I went to reform a man; and he sneered at me. He | |
| would not have anything to do with the church, because such wicked men | |
| as Mr. Hickman were in it. He said it was their money that saved them | |
| from exposure--he said--” | |
| “What has Mr. Hickman done?” demanded the other quickly. | |
| “He bribed the city council, sir! He bribed it to beat the water bill.” | |
| Dr. Vince got up from his chair and began to pace the floor nervously. | |
| “Tell me, doctor!” cried Samuel. “Please tell me! Surely you didn't know | |
| that!” | |
| The other turned to him suddenly. “I don't think you quite realize | |
| the circumstances,” said he. “You come to me with this tale about Mr. | |
| Hickman. Do you know that he is my brother-in-law?” | |
| Samuel clutched the arms of his chair and stared aghast. “Your | |
| brother-in-law!” he gasped. | |
| “Yes,” said the other. “He is my wife's only brother.” | |
| Samuel was dumb with dismay. And the doctor continued to pace the floor. | |
| “You see,” he said, “the position you put me in.” | |
| “Yes,” said the boy. “I see. It's very terrible.” But then he rushed | |
| on in dreadful anxiety: “But, doctor, you didn't know it. Oh, I'm | |
| sure--please tell me that you didn't know it!” | |
| “I didn't know it!” exclaimed the doctor. “And what is more, I don't | |
| know it now! I have heard these rumors, of course. Mr. Hickman is a man | |
| of vast responsibilities, and he has many enemies. Am I to believe every | |
| tale that I hear about him?” | |
| “No,” said Samuel, taken aback. “But this is something that everyone | |
| knows.” | |
| “Everyone!” cried the other. “Who is everyone? Who told it to you?” | |
| “I--I can't tell,” stammered the boy. | |
| “How does he know it?” continued the doctor. “And what sort of a man is | |
| he? Is he a good man?” | |
| “No,” admitted Samuel weakly. “I am afraid he is not.” | |
| “Is he a man who loves and serves others? A man who never speaks | |
| falsehood--whom you would believe in a matter that involved your dearest | |
| friends? Would believe him if he told you that I was a briber and a | |
| scoundrel?” | |
| Samuel was obliged to admit that Charlie Swift was not a man like that. | |
| “Dr. Vince,” he said quickly, “I admit that I am at fault. I have come | |
| to you too soon. I will find out about these things; and if they are | |
| true, I will prove them to you. If they are not, I will go away in | |
| shame, and never come to trouble you again as long as I live.” | |
| Samuel said this very humbly; and yet there was a note of grim | |
| resolution in his voice--which the doctor did not fail to note. “But, | |
| Samuel!” he protested. “Why--why should you meddle in these things?” | |
| “Meddle in them!” exclaimed the other. “Surely, if they are true, I | |
| have to. You don't mean that if they were proven, you would let such men | |
| remain in your church?” | |
| “I don't think,” said the doctor gravely, “that I can say what I should | |
| do in case of anything so terrible.” | |
| “No,” was Samuel's reply, “you are right. The first thing is to find out | |
| the truth.” | |
| And so Samuel took his departure. | |
| He went straight to his friend Finnegan. | |
| “Hello!” exclaimed Finnegan. Then, “What about that job of mine?” he | |
| asked with a broad grin. | |
| “Dr. Vince says he will look out for you,” was the boy's reply. “But I'm | |
| not ready to talk about that yet. There's something else come up.” | |
| He waited until his friend had attended to the wants of a customer, and | |
| until the customer had consumed a glass of beer and departed. Then he | |
| called the bartender into a corner. | |
| “Mr. Finnegan,” he said, “I want to know something very important.” | |
| “What is it?” asked the other. | |
| “Do you know Mr. Hickman--Henry Hickman, the lawyer?” | |
| “He's not on my calling list,” said Finnegan. “I know him by sight.” | |
| “I've heard it said that he had something to do with beating a water | |
| bill in the city council. Did he?” | |
| “You bet your life he did!” said the bartender with a grin. | |
| “Is it true that he bought up the council?” | |
| “You bet your life it's true!” | |
| “And is it true that Mr. Callahan got some of the money?” | |
| Finnegan glanced at the other suspiciously. “Say,” he said, “what's all | |
| this about, anyhow?” | |
| “Listen,” said Samuel gravely. “You know that Mr. Hickman is a member | |
| of my church. And he's Dr. Vince's brother-in-law, which makes it more | |
| complicated yet. Dr. Vince has heard these terrible stories, and you | |
| can see how awkward it is for him. He cannot let such evil-doers go | |
| unrebuked.” | |
| “Gee!” said the other. “What's he going to do?” | |
| “I don't know,” said Samuel. “He hasn't told me that. First, you see, | |
| he has to be sure that the thing is true. And, of course, Mr. Hickman | |
| wouldn't tell.” | |
| “No,” said Finnegan. “Hardly!” | |
| “And it isn't easy for the doctor to find out. You see--he's a | |
| clergyman, and he only meets good people. But I told him I would find | |
| out for him.” | |
| “I see,” said Finnegan. | |
| “What I want,” said the boy, “is to be able to tell him that I heard it | |
| from the lips of one of the men who got the money. I won't have to say | |
| who it is--he'll take my word for that. Do you suppose Mr. Callahan | |
| would talk about it?” | |
| The bartender thought for a moment. “You wait here,” he said. “The boss | |
| has only stepped round the corner; and perhaps I can get the doctor what | |
| he wants.” | |
| So Samuel sat down and waited; and in a few minutes John Callahan came | |
| in. He was a thick-set and red-faced Irishman, good-natured and pleasant | |
| looking-not at all like the desperado Samuel had imagined. | |
| “Say, John,” said Finnegan. “This boy here used to work for Bertie | |
| Lockman; and he's got a girl works for the Wygants.” | |
| “So!” said Callahan. | |
| “And what do you think,” went on the other, “He heard old Henry Hickman | |
| talking--he says you fellows held him up on that water bill.” | |
| “Go on!” said Callahan. “Did he say that?” | |
| “He did,” said Finnegan, without giving Samuel a chance to reply. | |
| “Well,” said the other, “he's a damned liar, and he knows it. It was a | |
| dead straight proposition, and we hadn't a thing to do with it. There | |
| was an independent water company that wanted a franchise--and it would | |
| have given the city its water for just half. Every time I pay my water | |
| bill I am sorry I didn't hold out. It would have been cheaper for me in | |
| the end.” | |
| “He says it cost him sixty thousand,” remarked Finnegan. | |
| “Maybe,” said the other. “You can't tell what the organization got. All | |
| I know is that ten of us fellows in the council got two thousand apiece | |
| out of it.” | |
| There was a pause. Samuel was listening with his hands clenched tightly. | |
| “Did he pay it to you himself?” asked Finnegan. | |
| “Who, Hickman? No, he paid it to Slattery, and Slattery came here from | |
| his office. Why, is he trying to crawl out of that part of it?” | |
| “No, not exactly. But he makes a great fuss about being held up.” | |
| “Yes!” said Callahan. “I dare say! He's got his new franchise, and he | |
| and the Lockman estate are clearing about ten thousand a month out of | |
| it. And my two thousand was gone the week I got it--it had cost me twice | |
| that to get elected--and without counting the free drinks. It's a great | |
| graft, being a supervisor, ain't it?” | |
| “Why did you do it then?” asked Samuel in a faint voice. | |
| “I'll never do it again, young fellow,” said the saloon keeper. “I'm the | |
| Honorable John for the rest of my life, and I guess that'll do me. And | |
| the next time old Henry Hickman wants his dirty work done, he can hunt | |
| up somebody that needs the money more than me!” | |
| Then the Honorable John went on to discuss the politics of Lockmanville, | |
| and to lay bare the shameless and grotesque corruption in a town where | |
| business interests were fighting. The trouble was, apparently, that the | |
| people were beginning to rebel--they were tired of being robbed in so | |
| many different ways, and they went to the polls to find redress. And | |
| time and again, after they had elected new men to carry out their will, | |
| the great concerns had stepped in and bought out the law-makers. The | |
| last time it had been the unions that made the trouble; and three of the | |
| last supervisors had been labor leaders--“the worst skates of all,” as | |
| Callahan phrased it. | |
| Samuel listened, while one by one the last of his illusions were torn | |
| to shreds. There had been a general scramble to get favors from the new | |
| government of the town; and the scramblers seemed to include every | |
| pious and respectable member of St. Matthew's whose name Samuel had ever | |
| heard. There was old Mr. Curtis, another of the vestrymen, who passed | |
| the plate every Sunday morning, and looked like a study of the | |
| Olympian Jove. He wanted to pile boxes on the sidewalks in front of his | |
| warehouse, and he had come to Slattery and paid him two hundred dollars. | |
| “And Mr. Wygant!” exclaimed Samuel, as a sudden thought came to him. “Is | |
| it true that he is back of the organization?” | |
| “Good God!” laughed Callahan. “Did you hear him say that?” | |
| “Some one else told me,” was the reply. | |
| “Well,” said the other, “the truth is that Wygant got cold feet before | |
| the election, and he came to Slattery and fixed it. I know that, for | |
| Slattery told me. We had him bluffed clean--I don't think we'd ever have | |
| got in at all if it hadn't been for his money.” | |
| “I see!” whispered the boy. | |
| “Oh, he's a smooth guy!” laughed the saloon keeper. “Look at that new | |
| franchise got for his trolley road--ninety-nine years, and anything | |
| he wants in the meantime! And then to hear him making reform speeches! | |
| That's what makes me mad about them fellows up on the hill. They get a | |
| thousand dollars for every one we get; but they are tip-top swells, and | |
| they wouldn't speak to one of us low grafters on the street. And they're | |
| eminent citizens and pillars of the church--wouldn't it make you sick?” | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel in a low voice, “that's just what it does. It makes | |
| me sick!” | |
| CHAPTER XXII | |
| Samuel now had his evidence; and he went straight back to Dr. Vince. | |
| “Doctor,” he said, “I am able to tell you that I know. I have heard it | |
| from one of the men who got the money.” | |
| “Who is he?” asked the doctor. | |
| “I could not tell you that,” said the boy--“it would not be fair. But | |
| you know that I am telling the truth. And this man told me with his | |
| own lips that Mr. Hickman paid twenty thousand dollars to Slattery, the | |
| Democratic boss, to be paid to ten of the supervisors to vote against | |
| the other company's water bill.” | |
| There was a long pause; the doctor sat staring in front of him. “What do | |
| you want me to do?” he asked faintly. | |
| “I don't know,” said Samuel. “Is it for me to tell you what is right?” | |
| And again there was a pause. | |
| “My boy,” said the doctor, “this is a terrible thing for me. Mr. Hickman | |
| is my wife's brother, and she loves him very dearly. And he is a very | |
| good friend of mine--I depend on him in all the business matters of the | |
| church. | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel. “But he bribed the city council.” | |
| “This thing would make a frightful scandal if it were known,” the other | |
| went on. “Think what a terrible thing it would be for St. Matthew's!” | |
| “It is much worse as it is,” said the boy. “For people hear the story, | |
| and they say that the church is sheltering evil doers.” | |
| “Think what a burden you place upon me!” cried the clergyman in | |
| distress. “A member of my own family!” | |
| “It is just as hard for me,” said Samuel quickly. | |
| “In what way?” | |
| “On account of Mr. Wygant, sir.” | |
| “What of that?” | |
| Samuel had meant to say--“He is to be my father-in-law.” But at the last | |
| moment some instinct told him that it might be best to let Miss Gladys | |
| make that announcement at her own time. So instead he said, “I am | |
| thinking of Sophie.” | |
| “It is not quite the same,” said the doctor; and then he repeated his | |
| question, “What do you want me to do?” | |
| “Truly, I don't know!” protested the boy. “I am groping about to find | |
| what is right.” | |
| “But you must have some idea in coming to me!” exclaimed the other | |
| anxiously. “Do you want me to expose my brother-in-law and drive him | |
| from the church?” | |
| “I suppose,” said Samuel gravely, “that he would be sent to prison. | |
| But I certainly don't think that he should be driven from the church at | |
| least not unless he is unrepentant. First of all we should labor with | |
| him, I think.” | |
| “And threaten him with exposure?” | |
| “I'll tell you, doctor,” said the boy quickly. “I've been thinking about | |
| this very hard; and I don't think it would do much good to expose | |
| and punish any one. That only leads to bitterness and hatred--and we | |
| oughtn't to hate any person, you know.” | |
| “Ah!” said the doctor with relief. | |
| “The point is, the wicked thing that's been done. It's this robbing | |
| of the people that must be stopped! And it's the things that have been | |
| stolen!--Let me give you an example. To-day I met the man who came here | |
| with me to rob your house; and I learned for the first time that he had | |
| carried off some of your silver.” | |
| “Yes,” said the other. | |
| “And the man asked me to say nothing about what he had done, and I | |
| promised. I felt about him just as you do about your brother-in-law--I | |
| wouldn't denounce him and put him in jail. But I saw right away that I | |
| must do one thing--I must make him return the things he had stolen! That | |
| was right, was it not, doctor?” | |
| “Yes,” said Dr. Vince promptly, “that was right.” | |
| “Very well,” said the boy; “and the same thing is true about Mr. | |
| Hickman. He has robbed the people. He has got a franchise that enables | |
| him and the Lockman estate to make about ten thousand dollars a month | |
| out of the public. And they must give up that franchise! They must give | |
| up every dollar that they have made out of it! That is the whole story | |
| as I see it--nothing else counts but that. You can make all the fuss | |
| you want about bribery and graft, but you haven't accomplished anything | |
| unless you get back the stolen money.” | |
| There was a pause. “Don't you see what I mean, doctor?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Yes,” was the reply, “I see.” | |
| “Well?” said Samuel. | |
| “It would be no use to try it,” said the doctor. “They would never do | |
| it.” | |
| “They wouldn't?” | |
| “No. Nothing in the world could make them do it.” | |
| “Not even if we threatened to denounce them?” | |
| “No; not even then.” | |
| “Not even if we put them in jail?” | |
| Dr. Vince made no reply. The other sat waiting. And then suddenly he | |
| said in a low voice, “Doctor, I mean to MAKE them give it up. I see it | |
| quite clearly now--that is my duty. They must give it up!” | |
| Again there was silence. | |
| “Dr. Vince,” cried the boy in a voice of pain, “you surely mean to help | |
| me!” | |
| And suddenly the doctor shut his lips together tightly. “No, Samuel,” he | |
| said. “I do not!” | |
| The boy sat dumb. He felt a kind of faintness come over him. “You will | |
| leave me all alone?” he said in a weak voice. | |
| The other made no reply. | |
| “Am I not right?” cried the boy wildly. “Have I not spoken the truth?” | |
| “I don't know,” the doctor answered. “It is too hard a question for | |
| me to answer. I only know that I do not feel such things to be in my | |
| province; and I will not have anything to do with them.” | |
| “But, doctor, you are the representative of the church!” | |
| “Yes. And I must attend to the affairs of the church.” | |
| “But is it no affair of the church that the people are being robbed?” | |
| There was no reply. | |
| “You give out charity!” protested Samuel. | |
| “You pretend to try to help the poor! And I bring you cases, and you | |
| confess that you can't help them--because there are too many. And you | |
| couldn't tell how it came to be. But here I show you--I prove to you | |
| what makes the people poor! They are being robbed--they are being | |
| trampled upon! Their own government has been stolen from them, and is | |
| being used to cheat them! And you won't lift your voice to help!” | |
| “There is nothing that I can do, Samuel!” cried the clergyman wildly. | |
| “But there is! There is! You won't try! You might at least withdraw your | |
| help from these criminals!” | |
| “My HELP!” | |
| “Yes, sir! You help them! You permit them to stay in the church, and | |
| that gives them your sanction! You shelter them, and save them from | |
| attack! If I were to go out to-morrow and try to open the eyes of | |
| the people, no one would listen to me, because these men are so | |
| respectable--because they are members of the church, and friends and | |
| relatives of yours!” | |
| “Samuel!” exclaimed the clergyman. | |
| “And worse than that, sir! You take their money--you let the church | |
| become dependent upon them! You told me that yourself, sir! And you give | |
| their money to the poor people--the very people they have robbed! And | |
| that blinds the people--they are grateful, and they don't understand! | |
| And so you help to keep them in their chains! Don't you see that, Dr. | |
| Vince?--why, it's just the same as if you were hired for that purpose!” | |
| Dr. Vince had risen in agitation. “Really, Samuel!” he cried. “You have | |
| exceeded the limit of endurance. This cannot go on! I will not hear | |
| another word of it!” | |
| Samuel sat, heart broken. “Then you are going to desert me!” he | |
| exclaimed. “You are going to make me do it alone.” | |
| The other stared. “What are you going to do?” he demanded. | |
| “First,” said Samuel, “I am going to see these men. I am going to give | |
| them a chance to see the error of their ways.” | |
| “Boy!” cried the doctor. “You are mad!” | |
| “Perhaps I am,” was the reply. “But how can I help that?” | |
| “At least,” exclaimed the other, “if you take any such step, you will | |
| make it clear to them that _I_ have not sent you, and that you have no | |
| sanction from me.” | |
| For a long time Samuel made no reply to this. Somehow it seemed the most | |
| unworthy thing that his friend had said yet. It meant that Dr. Vince was | |
| a coward! | |
| “No, sir,” he said at last, “you may rest easy about that. I will take | |
| the whole burden on my own shoulders. There's no reason why I should | |
| trouble you any more, I think.” | |
| And with that he rose, and went out from the house. | |
| CHAPTER XXIII | |
| After Samuel had left Dr. Vince, a great wave of desolation swept over | |
| him. He was alone again, and all the world was against him! | |
| For a moment he had an impulse to turn back. After all, he was only a | |
| boy; and who was he, to set himself up against the wise and great? But | |
| then like a stab, came again the thought which drove him always--the | |
| thought of the people, suffering and starving! Truly it was better | |
| to die than to live in a world in which there was so much misery and | |
| oppression! That was the truth, he would rather die than let these | |
| things go on unopposed. And so there could be no turning back-there was | |
| nothing for him save to do what he could. | |
| Where should he begin? He thought of Mr. Hickman--a most unpromising | |
| person to work with. Samuel had been afraid of him from the first time | |
| he had seen him. | |
| Then he thought of Mr. Wygant; should he begin with him? This brought | |
| to his mind something which had been driven away by the rush of events. | |
| Miss Gladys! How would she take these things? And what would she think | |
| when she learned about her father's wickedness? | |
| A new idea came to Samuel. Why should he not take Miss Gladys into his | |
| confidence? She would be the one to help him. She had helped him with | |
| Sophie; and she had promised to help with Master Albert. And surely | |
| it was her right to know about matters which concerned her family | |
| so nearly. She would know what was best, so far as concerned her own | |
| father; he would take her advice as to how to approach him. | |
| He went to the house and asked for Sophie. | |
| “Tell Miss Gladys that I want to see her,” he said; “and that it's | |
| something very, very important.” | |
| So Sophie went away, and returning, took him upstairs. | |
| “Samuel,” said his divinity, “it isn't safe for you to come to see me in | |
| the afternoons.” | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys,” said he. “But this is something very serious. It's | |
| got nothing to do with myself.” | |
| “What is it?” she asked. | |
| “It's your father, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “My father?” | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys. It's a long story. I shall have to begin at the | |
| beginning.” | |
| So he told the story of his coming to the church, and of the fervor | |
| which had seized upon him, and how he had set to work to bring converts | |
| into the fold; and how he had met a wicked man who had resisted his | |
| faith, and of all the dreadful things which this man had said. When he | |
| came to what Charlie Swift had told about her own father, Samuel was | |
| disposed to expurgate the story; but Miss Gladys would have it all, and | |
| seemed even to be disappointed that he had not more details to give her. | |
| “And Hickman!” she exclaimed gleefully. “I always knew he was an old | |
| scamp! I'll wager you haven't found out the hundredth part about him, | |
| Samuel!” | |
| Samuel went on to tell about the revelation at Callahan's. | |
| “And you took that to Dr. Vince!” she cried amazed. | |
| “Yes,” said he. | |
| “And what did he say?” | |
| “He wouldn't have anything to do with it. And so it's all left to me.” | |
| “And what are you going to do now?” | |
| “I don't know, Miss Gladys. For one thing, I think I shall have to see | |
| your father.” | |
| “See my father!” gasped the girl. | |
| “Yes, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “But what for?” | |
| “To try to get him to see how wicked these things are.” | |
| The other was staring at him with wide-open, startled eyes. “Do you | |
| mean,” she cried, “that you want to go to my father and talk to him | |
| about what he's doing in politics?” | |
| “Why, yes, Miss Gladys--what else can I do?” | |
| And Miss Gladys took out her handkerchief, and leaned down upon the | |
| table, hiding her face. She was overcome with some emotion, the nature | |
| of which was not apparent. | |
| The boy was naturally alarmed. “Miss Gladys!” he cried. “You aren't | |
| angry with me?” | |
| She answered, in a muffled voice, “No, Samuel--no!” | |
| Then she looked up, her face somewhat red. “Go and see him, Samuel!” she | |
| said. | |
| “You don't mind?” he cried anxiously. | |
| “No, not in the least,” she said. “Go right ahead and see what you can | |
| do. He's a very bad, worldly man; and if you can soften his heart, it | |
| will be the best thing for all of us.” | |
| “And it won't make any difference in our relationship?” he asked. | |
| “In our relationship?” she repeated; and then, “Not in the least. But | |
| mind, of course, don't say anything about that to him. Don't give him | |
| any idea that you know me!” | |
| “Of course not, Miss Gladys.” | |
| “Tell him that you come from the church. And give it to him good and | |
| hard, Samuel--for I'm sure he's done everything you told me, and lots | |
| that is worse.” | |
| “Miss Gladys!” gasped the other. | |
| “And mind, Samuel!” she added. “Come and tell me about it afterwards. | |
| Perhaps I can advise you what to do next.” | |
| There was a pause, while the two looked at each other. And then in a | |
| sudden burst of emotion Miss Gladys exclaimed, “Oh, Samuel, you are an | |
| angel!” | |
| And she broke into a peal of laughter; and swiftly, like a bird upon the | |
| wing, she leaned toward him, and touched his cheek with her lips. And | |
| then, like a flash, she was gone; and Samuel was left alone with his | |
| bewilderment. | |
| Samuel set out forthwith for Mr. Wygant's office. But just before he | |
| came to the bridge Mr. Wygant's automobile flashed past him; and so he | |
| turned and went back to the house. | |
| This time he went to the front door. “I am Samuel Prescott, from St. | |
| Matthew's Church,” he said to the butler. “And I want to see Mr. Wygant | |
| upon important business.” | |
| Mr. Wygant sat in a great armchair by one of the windows in his library. | |
| About him was the most elaborate collection of books that Samuel had | |
| yet seen; and in the luxurious room was an atmosphere of profound | |
| and age-long calm. Mr. Wygant himself was tall and stately, with an | |
| indescribable air of exclusiveness and reserve. | |
| Samuel clenched his hands and rushed at once to the attack. “I am Samuel | |
| Prescott, the sexton's boy at the church,” he said; “and I have to talk | |
| to you about something very, VERY serious.” | |
| “Well?” said Mr. Wygant. | |
| Then Samuel told yet again how he had been led into evil ways, and how | |
| he had been converted by Dr. Vince. He told the story in detail, so that | |
| the other might comprehend his fervor. Then he told of the converts he | |
| had made, and how at last he had encountered Charlie Swift. “And this | |
| man would not come into the church,” he wound up, “because of the wicked | |
| people who are in it.” | |
| The other had been listening with perplexed interest. “Who are these | |
| people?” he asked. | |
| “Yourself for one,” said Samuel. | |
| Mr. Wygant started. “Myself!” he exclaimed. “What have I done?” | |
| “For one thing,” replied Samuel, “you work little children in your mill, | |
| and you named the State senator to beat the child-labor bill. And for | |
| another, you make speeches and pose as a political reformer, while you | |
| are paying money to Slattery, so that he will give you franchises.” | |
| There was a silence, while Mr. Wygant got back his breath. “Young man,” | |
| he cried at last, “this is a most incredible piece of impertinence!” | |
| And suddenly the boy started toward him, stretching out his arms. “Mr. | |
| Wygant!” he cried. “You are going to be angry with me! But I beg you not | |
| to harden your heart! I have come here for your own good! I came because | |
| I couldn't bear to know that such things are done by a member of St. | |
| Matthew's Church!” | |
| For a moment or two Mr. Wygant sat staring. “Let me ask you one thing,” | |
| he said. “Does Dr. Vince know about this?” | |
| “I went to Dr. Vince about it first,” replied Samuel. “And he wouldn't | |
| do anything about it. He said that if I came to you, I must make it | |
| clear that he did not approve of it. I have come of my own free will, | |
| sir.” | |
| There was another pause. “You are going to be angry with me!” cried | |
| Samuel, again. | |
| “No,” said the other, “I will not be angry--because you are nothing but | |
| a child, and you don't know what you are doing.” | |
| “Oh!” said Samuel. | |
| “You are very much in need of a little knowledge of life,” added the | |
| other. | |
| “But, Mr. Wygant,” exclaimed the boy, “the things I have said are true!” | |
| “They are true--after a fashion,” was the reply. | |
| “And they are very wrong things!” | |
| “They seem so to you. That is because you know so little about such | |
| matters.” | |
| “You are corrupting the government of your country, Mr. Wygant!” | |
| “The government of my country, as you call it, consisting of a number | |
| of blackmailing politicians, who exist to prey upon the business I | |
| represent.” | |
| There was a pause. “You see, young man,” said Mr. Wygant, “I have many | |
| responsibilities upon my shoulders--many interests looking to me for | |
| protection. And it is as if I were surrounded by a pack of wolves.” | |
| “But meantime,” cried Samuel, “what is becoming of free government?” | |
| “I do not know,” the other replied. “I sometimes think that unless the | |
| people reform, free government will soon come to an end.” | |
| “But what are the people to do, sir?” | |
| “They are to elect honest men, with whom one can do business--instead | |
| of the peasant saloon keepers and blatherskite labor leaders whom they | |
| choose at present.” | |
| Samuel thought for a moment. “Men with whom one can do business,” he | |
| said--“but what kind of business do you want to do?” | |
| “How do you mean?” asked the other. | |
| “You went to those politicians and got a franchise that will let you tax | |
| the people whatever you please for ninety-nine years. And do you think | |
| that was good business for the people?” | |
| There was no reply to this. | |
| “And how much of the property you are protecting was made in such ways | |
| as that, sir?” | |
| A frown had come upon Mr. Wygant's forehead. But no one could gaze into | |
| Samuel's agonized face and remain angry. | |
| “Young man,” said he. “I can only tell you again that you do not know | |
| the world. If I should step out, would things be any different? | |
| The franchises would go to some other crowd--that is all. It is the | |
| competition of capital.” | |
| “The competition of capital,” reflected the boy. “In other words, there | |
| is a scramble for money, and you get what you can!” | |
| “You may put it that way, sir.” | |
| “And you think that your responsibility ends when you've got a share for | |
| your crowd!” | |
| “Yes--I suppose that is it.” | |
| There was a pause. “I see perfectly,” said Samuel, in a low voice. | |
| “There's only one thing I can't understand.” | |
| “What is that?” | |
| “Why you should belong to the church, sir? What has this money scramble | |
| to do with the teaching of Jesus?” | |
| And then Samuel saw that he had overstepped the mark. “Really, young | |
| man,” said Mr. Wygant, “I cannot see what is to be gained by pursuing | |
| this conversation.” | |
| “But, sir, you are degrading the church!” | |
| “The subject must be dropped!” said Mr. Wygant sternly. “You are | |
| presuming upon my good nature. You are forgetting your place.” | |
| “I have been reminded of my place before,” said Samuel, in a suppressed | |
| voice. “But I do not know what my place is.” | |
| “That is quite evident,” responded the other. “It is your place to do | |
| your work, and be respectful to your superiors, and keep your opinions | |
| to yourself.” | |
| “I see that you will get angry with me,” said the boy, “I can't make | |
| you understand--I am only trying to find the truth. I want to do what's | |
| right, Mr. Wygant!” | |
| “I suppose you do,” began the other-- | |
| “I want to understand, sir--just what is it that makes another person my | |
| superior?” | |
| “People who are older than you, and who are wiser--” | |
| “But is it age and wisdom, Mr. Wygant? I worked for Master Albert | |
| Lockman, and he's hardly any older than I. And yet he was my superior!” | |
| “Yes,” admitted the other-- | |
| “And in spite of the wicked life that he's leading, sir!” | |
| “What!” | |
| “Yes, Mr. Wygant--he's drinking, and going with bad women. And yet he is | |
| my superior.” | |
| “Ahem!” said Mr. Wygant. | |
| “Isn't it simply that he has got a lot of money?” pursued Samuel | |
| relentlessly. | |
| Mr. Wygant did not reply. | |
| “And isn't my 'place' simply the fact that I haven't any money at all?” | |
| Again there was no reply. | |
| “And yet, I see the truth, and I have to speak it! And how can I get to | |
| a 'place' where I may?” | |
| “Really,” said Mr. Wygant coldly, “you will have to solve that problem | |
| for yourself.” | |
| “Apparently, I should have to take part in the scramble for money--if | |
| it's only money that counts.” | |
| “Young man,” said the other, “I feel sorry for you--you will get some | |
| hard knocks from the world before you get through. You will have to | |
| learn to take life as you find it. Perhaps many of us would make it | |
| different, if we could have our way. But you will find that life is a | |
| hard battle. It is a struggle for existence, and the people who survive | |
| are the ones who are best fitted--” | |
| And suddenly Samuel raised his hand. “I thank you, Mr. Wygant,” he said | |
| gravely, “but I have been all through that part of it before.” | |
| “What do you mean?” asked the other. | |
| “I couldn't explain,” said he. “You wouldn't understand me. I see that | |
| you are another of the followers of Herbert Spencer. And that's all | |
| right--only WHY do you belong to the church? Why do you pretend to | |
| follow Jesus---” | |
| And suddenly Mr. Wygant rose to his feet. “This is quite too much,” he | |
| said. “I must ask you to leave my house.” | |
| “But, sir!” cried Samuel. | |
| “Not another word!” exclaimed the other. “Please leave the house!” | |
| And so the conversation came to an end. | |
| CHAPTER XXIV | |
| Samuel had had nothing to eat since morning, but he did not feel hungry. | |
| He was faint from grief and despair. To encounter a man of the world | |
| like Mr. Wygant, cold and merciless and masterful--that was a terrible | |
| ordeal for him. The man seemed to him like some great fortress of evil; | |
| and what could he do, save to gaze at it in impotent rage? | |
| He went home, and Sophie met him at the door. “I thought you wanted an | |
| early supper, Samuel,” said she. | |
| “Why?” he asked dully. | |
| “You had something to do at the church tonight!” | |
| “Yes,” he recollected, “there's to be a vestry meeting, and I have to | |
| light up. But I'm tired of the church work.” | |
| “Tired of the church work!” gasped the child. “Yes,” he said. And then | |
| to the amazed and terrified family, he told the story of his day's | |
| experiences. | |
| Sophie listened, thrilling with excitement. “And you went to see Mr. | |
| Wygant!” she cried in awe. “Oh, Samuel, how brave of you!” | |
| “He ordered me out of his house,” said the boy bitterly. “And Dr. Vince | |
| has gone back on me--I have no one at all to help.” | |
| Sophie came to him and flung her arms about him. “You have us, Samuel!” | |
| she exclaimed. “We will stand by you--won't we mother?” | |
| “Yes,” said Mrs. Stedman--“but what can poor people like us do?” | |
| “And then you have Miss Gladys!” cried Sophie after a moment. | |
| “Miss Gladys!” he echoed. “Will she take my part against her own | |
| father?” | |
| “She told you that she loved you, Samuel,” said the child. “And she | |
| knows that you are in the right.” | |
| “I will have to go and see her,” said Samuel after a little. “I promised | |
| that I would come and tell what happened.” | |
| “And I will see her, too!” put in the other. “Oh, I'm sure she'll stand | |
| by you!” | |
| The child's face was aglow with excitement; and Samuel looked at | |
| her, and for the first time it occurred to him that Sophie was really | |
| beautiful. Her face had filled out and her color had come back, since | |
| she had been getting one meal every day at the Wygant's. “Don't you | |
| think Miss Gladys will help, mother?” she asked. | |
| “I don't know,” said Mrs. Stedman dubiously. | |
| “It's very terrible--I can't see why such things have to be.” | |
| “You think that Samuel did right, don't you?” cried the child. | |
| “I--I suppose so,” she answered. “It's hard to say--it will make so much | |
| trouble. And if Miss Gladys were angry, then you might lose your place!” | |
| “Oh, mother!” cried Sophie. And the two young people gazed at each other | |
| in sudden dismay. That was something they had never thought of. | |
| “You mustn't do it, Sophie!” cried the boy. “You must leave it to me!” | |
| “But why should you make all the sacrifices?” replied Sophie. “If it's | |
| right for you, isn't it right for me?” | |
| “But, Sophie!” wailed Mrs. Stedman. “If you lost this place we should | |
| all starve!” | |
| And again they stared at each other with terror in their eyes. “Sophie,” | |
| said Samuel, “I forbid you to have anything to do with it!” | |
| But in his heart he knew that he might as well not have said this. And | |
| Mrs. Stedman knew it, too, and turned white with fear. | |
| The boy ate a few hurried mouthfuls, and then went off to his work at | |
| the church. But he did not go with the old joy in his soul. Before this | |
| it had been the work of the Lord that he had been doing; but now he was | |
| only serving the Wygants--and the Hickmans--apparently one always served | |
| them, no matter where or how he worked in this world. | |
| “You are late,” said old Mr. Jacobs, the sexton, when he arrived. | |
| “Yes, sir,” said Samuel. | |
| “Dr. Vince left word that he wanted to see you as soon as you came.” | |
| The boy's heart gave a leap. Had the doctor by any chance repented? | |
| “Where is he?” he asked. | |
| “In the vestry room,” said the other; and the boy went there. | |
| The instant he entered, Dr. Vince sprang to his feet. “Samuel,” he cried | |
| vehemently, “this thing has got to stop!” | |
| “What thing, Dr. Vince?” | |
| “Your conduct is beyond endurance, boy--you are driving me to | |
| distraction!” | |
| “What have I done now, sir?” | |
| “My brother-in-law has just been here, making a terrible disturbance. | |
| You have been defaming him among the congregation of the church!” | |
| “But, Dr. Vince!” cried Samuel, in amazement. “I have done nothing of | |
| the sort!” | |
| “But you must have! Everyone is talking about it!” | |
| “Doctor,” said the boy solemnly, “you are mistaken. I went to see Mr. | |
| Wygant, as I told you I would. Besides that, I have not spoken to a | |
| single soul about it, except just now to Sophie and Mrs. Stedman.--Oh, | |
| yes,” he added quickly--“and to Miss Gladys!” | |
| “Ah!” exclaimed the other. “There you have it! Miss Gladys is a school | |
| friend of Mr. Hickman's daughter; and, of course, she went at once to | |
| tell her. And, of course, she will tell everyone else she knows--the | |
| whole congregation will be gossiping about it to-morrow!” | |
| “I am very sorry, sir.” | |
| “You see the trouble you cause me! And I must tell you plainly, Samuel, | |
| that this thing cannot go on another minute. Unless you are prepared | |
| to give up these absurd ideas of yours and attend to your duties as the | |
| sexton's boy, it will be necessary for you to leave the church.” | |
| Samuel was staring at him aghast. “Leave the church!” he cried. | |
| “Most assuredly!” declared the other. | |
| “Dr. Vince!” exclaimed the other. “Do you mean that you would actually | |
| try to turn me out of the church?” | |
| “I would, sir!” | |
| “But, doctor, have you the right to do that?” | |
| “The right? Why not?” | |
| “You have the right to take away my work. But to turn me out of the | |
| church?” | |
| “Samuel,” cried the distracted clergyman, “am I not the rector of this | |
| church?” | |
| “But, doctor,” cried Samuel, “it is the church of God!” | |
| There was a long pause. | |
| Finally, Samuel took up the conversation again. “Tell me, Dr. Vince,” | |
| he said. “When Mr. Hickman came to see you, did he deny that he had | |
| committed that crime?” | |
| “I did not ask him,” replied the other. | |
| “You didn't ask him!” exclaimed the boy in dismay. “You didn't even care | |
| that much?” | |
| Again there was a pause. “I asked Mr. Wygant,” said Samuel in a low | |
| voice. “And he confessed that he was guilty.” | |
| “What!” cried the other. | |
| “He confessed it--his whole conversation was a confession of it. He said | |
| everybody did those things, because that was the way to make money, and | |
| everybody wanted to make money. He called it competition. And then I | |
| asked him why he came to the church of Jesus, and he ordered me out of | |
| his house.” | |
| Dr. Vince was listening with knitted brows. “And what do you propose to | |
| do now,” he asked. | |
| “I don't know, sir. I suppose I shall have to expose him.” | |
| “Samuel,” exclaimed the clergyman, “in all this wild behavior of yours, | |
| does it never occur to you that you owe some gratitude to me?” | |
| “Oh, doctor!” cried the boy, clasping his hands in agony. “Don't say | |
| anything like that to me!” | |
| “I do say it!” persisted the other. “I saved you and helped you; and now | |
| you are causing me most terrible suffering!” | |
| “Doctor,” protested Samuel, “I would do anything in the world for you--I | |
| would die for you. But you ask me to be false to my duty; and how can I | |
| do that?” | |
| “But does it never occur to you that older and wiser people may be | |
| better able to judge than you are?” | |
| “But the facts are so plain, sir! And you have never answered me! You | |
| simply command me to be silent!” | |
| The other did not reply. | |
| “When I came to you,” went on Samuel, “you taught me about love and | |
| brotherhood--about self-sacrifice and service. And I took you at your | |
| word, sir. As God is my witness, I have done nothing but try to apply | |
| what you told me! I have tried to help the poor and oppressed. And how | |
| could I know that you did not really mean what you said?” | |
| “Samuel,” protested the other, “you have no right to say that! I am | |
| doing all that I can. I preach upon these things very often.” | |
| “Yes!” exclaimed the boy, “but what do you preach? Do you tell the truth | |
| to these rich people who come to your church? Do you say to them: 'You | |
| are robbing the poor. You are the cause of all the misery which exists | |
| in this town--you carry the guilt of it upon your souls. And you must | |
| cease from robbery and oppression--you must give up this wealth that you | |
| have taken from the people!' No--you don't say that--you know that you | |
| don't! And can't you see what that means, Dr. Vince--it means that | |
| the church is failing in its mission! And there will have to be a new | |
| church--somewhere, somehow! For these things exist! They are right here | |
| in our midst, and something must be done!” | |
| And the boy sprang forward in his excitement, stretching out his arms. | |
| “The people are starving! Right here about us--here in Lockmanville! | |
| They are starving! starving! starving! Don't you understand, Dr. Vince? | |
| Starving!” | |
| The doctor wrung his hands in his agitation. “Boy,” he exclaimed, “this | |
| thing cannot go on. I cannot stand it any longer!” | |
| “But what am I to do, sir?” | |
| “You are to submit yourself to my guidance. I ask you, once for all, | |
| Will you give up these wild courses of yours?” | |
| “Dr. Vince,” cried Samuel, “I cannot! I cannot!” | |
| “Then I tell you it will be necessary for us to part. You will give up | |
| your position, and you will leave the church.” | |
| The tears started into Samuel's eyes. “Doctor,” he cried frantically, | |
| “don't cast me out! Don't! I beg you on my knees, sir!” | |
| “I have spoken,” said the other, clenching his hands. | |
| “But think what you are doing!” protested the boy. “You are casting out | |
| your own soul! You are turning your back upon the truth!” | |
| “I tell you you must go!” exclaimed the doctor. | |
| “But think of it! It means the end of the church. For don't you see--I | |
| shall have to fight you! I shall have to expose you! And I shall prevail | |
| over you, because I have the truth with me--because you have cast it | |
| out! Think what you are doing when you cast out the truth!” | |
| “I will hear no more of this!” cried Dr. Vince wildly. “You are raving. | |
| I tell you to go! I tell you to go! Go now!” | |
| And Samuel turned and went, sobbing meanwhile as if his heart would | |
| break. | |
| CHAPTER XXV | |
| Samuel rushed away into the darkness. But he couldn't stay away--he | |
| could not bring himself to believe that he was separated from St. | |
| Matthew's forever. He turned and came back to the church, and stood | |
| gazing at it, choking with his sobs. | |
| Then, as he waited, he saw an automobile draw up in front of the side | |
| entrance, and saw Mr. Wygant step out and enter. The sight was like | |
| a blow in the face to him. There was the proud rich man, defiant and | |
| unpunished, seated in the place of authority; while Samuel, the Seeker, | |
| was turned out of the door! | |
| A blaze of rebellion flamed up in him. No, no--they should not cast him | |
| off! He would fight them--he would fight to the very end. The church was | |
| not their church--it was the church of God! And he had a right to belong | |
| to it--and to speak the truth in it, too! | |
| And so, just after the vestry had got settled to the consideration of | |
| the architect's sketch for the new Nurse's Home, there came a loud knock | |
| upon the door, and Samuel entered, wild-eyed and breathless. | |
| “Gentlemen!” he cried. “I demand a hearing!” | |
| Dr. Vince sprang to his feet in terror. “Samuel Prescott!” he exclaimed. | |
| “I have been ordered out of the church!” proclaimed Samuel. “And I will | |
| not submit to it! I have spoken the truth, and I will not permit the | |
| evil-doers in St. Matthew's to silence me!” | |
| Mr. Hickman had sprung up. “Boy,” he commanded, “leave this room!” | |
| “I will not leave the room!” shouted Samuel. “I demand a hearing from | |
| the vestry of this church. I have a right to a hearing! I have spoken | |
| the truth, and nothing but the truth!” | |
| “What is the boy talking about?” demanded another of the vestrymen. This | |
| was Mr. Hamerton, a young lawyer, whose pleasant face Samuel had often | |
| noticed. And Samuel, seeing curiosity and interest in his look, sprang | |
| toward him. | |
| “Don't let them turn me out without a hearing!” he cried. | |
| “Boy!” exclaimed Mr. Hickman, “I command you to leave this room.” | |
| “You corrupted the city council!” shrilled Samuel. “You bribed it to | |
| beat the water bill! It's true, and you know it's true, and you don't | |
| dare to deny it!” | |
| Mr. Hickman was purple in the face with rage. “It's a preposterous lie!” | |
| he roared. | |
| “I have talked with one of the men who got the money!” cried Samuel. | |
| “There was two thousand dollars paid to ten of the supervisors.” | |
| “Who is this man?” cried the other furiously. | |
| “I won't tell his name,” said Samuel. “He told me in confidence.” | |
| “Aha!” laughed the other. “I knew as much! It is a vile slander!” | |
| “It is true!” protested Samuel. “Dr. Vince, you know that I am telling | |
| the truth. What reason would I have for making it up?” | |
| “I have told you, Samuel,” exclaimed Dr. Vince, “that I would have | |
| nothing to do with this matter.” | |
| “I will take any member of this vestry to talk with that man!” declared | |
| the boy. “Anybody can find out about these things if he wants to. Why, | |
| Mr. Wygant told me himself that he had paid money to Slattery to get | |
| franchises!” | |
| And then Mr. Wygant came into the controversy. “WHAT!” he shouted. | |
| “Why, of course you did!” cried Samuel in amazement. “Didn't you tell me | |
| this very afternoon?” | |
| “I told you nothing of the sort!” declared the man. | |
| “You told me everybody did it--that there was no way to help doing it. | |
| You called it the competition of capital!” | |
| “I submit that this is an outrage!” exclaimed Mr. Hickman. “Leave this | |
| room, sir!” | |
| “The poor people in this town are suffering and dying!” cried Samuel. | |
| “And they are being robbed and oppressed. And are these things to go on | |
| forever?” | |
| “Samuel, this is no place to discuss the question!” broke in Dr. Vince. | |
| “But why not, sir? The guilty men are high in the councils of this | |
| church. They hold the church up to disgrace before all the world. And | |
| this is the church of Christ, sir!” | |
| “But yours is not the way to go about it, boy!” exclaimed Mr. | |
| Hamerton--who was alarmed because Samuel kept looking at him. | |
| “Why not?” cried Samuel. “Did not Christ drive out the money-changers | |
| from the temple with whips?” | |
| This was an uncomfortable saying. There was a pause after it, as if | |
| everyone were willing to let his neighbor speak first. | |
| “Are we not taught to follow Christ's example, Dr. Vince?” asked the | |
| boy. | |
| “Hardly in that sense, Samuel,” said the terrified doctor. “Christ was | |
| God. And we can hardly be expected--” | |
| “Ah, that is a subterfuge!” broke in Samuel, passionately. “You say that | |
| Christ was God, and so you excuse yourself from doing what He tells you | |
| to! But I don't believe that He was God in any such sense as that. He | |
| was a man, like you and me! He was a poor man, who suffered and | |
| starved! And the rich men of His time despised Him and spit upon Him and | |
| crucified Him!” | |
| Here a new member of the vestry entered the arena. This was the | |
| venerable Mr. Curtis, who looked like a statue of the Olympian Jove. | |
| “Boy,” he said sternly, “you object to being put out of the church--and | |
| yet you confess to being an infidel.” | |
| “I may be an infidel, Mr. Curtis,” replied the other, quickly; “but I | |
| never paid two hundred dollars to Slattery so that the police would let | |
| me block the sidewalks of the town.” | |
| And Mr. Curtis subsided and took no further part in the discussion. | |
| “The church cast out Jesus!” went on Samuel, taking advantage of the | |
| confusion. “And it was the rich and powerful in the church who did it. | |
| And he used about them language far more violent than I have ever used. | |
| 'Woe unto you, scribes and pharisees, hypocrites!' he said. 'Woe unto | |
| you also, you lawyers!--Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye | |
| escape the damnation of hell?' And if He were here tonight He would be | |
| on my side--and the rich evil-doers who sit on this board would cast Him | |
| out again! You have cast Him out already! You have shut your ears to | |
| the cry of the oppressed--you make mockery of justice and truth! You are | |
| crucifying Him again every day!” | |
| “This is outrageous!” cried Mr. Hickman. “It is blasphemy!” | |
| “It must stop instantly,” put in Mr. Wygant. And Samuel knew that when | |
| Mr. Wygant spoke, he meant to be obeyed. | |
| “Then there is no one here who will hear me?” he exclaimed. “Mr. | |
| Hamerton, won't you help me?” | |
| “What do you want us to do?” demanded Mr. Hamerton. | |
| “I want the vestry to investigate these charges. I want you to find out | |
| whether it is true that members of St. Matthew's have been corrupting | |
| the government of Lockmanville. And if it is true, I want you to drive | |
| such men from the church! They have no place in the church, sir! Men who | |
| spend their whole time in trying to get the people's money from them! | |
| Men who openly declare, as Mr. Wygant did to me, that it is necessary to | |
| bribe lawmakers in order to make money! Such men degrade the church | |
| and drag it from its mission. They are the enemies the church exists to | |
| fight--” | |
| “Are we here to listen to a sermon from this boy?” shouted Mr. Hickman | |
| furiously. | |
| “Samuel, leave this room!” commanded Dr. Vince. | |
| “Then there is no one here who will help me?” | |
| “I told you you could accomplish nothing by such behavior. Leave the | |
| room!” | |
| “Very well, then,” cried the boy wildly, “I will go. But I tell you I | |
| will not give up without a fight. I will expose you and denounce you | |
| to the world! The people shall know you for what you are--cowards | |
| and hypocrites, faithless to your trust! Plunderers of the public! | |
| Corrupters of the state!” | |
| “Get out of here, you young villain!” shouted Hickman, advancing with a | |
| menace. | |
| And the boy, blazing with fury, pointed his finger straight into his | |
| face. “You, Henry Hickman!” he cried. “You are the worst of them all! | |
| You, the great lawyer--the eminent statesman! I have been among the | |
| lowest--I have been with saloon keepers and criminals--with publicans | |
| and harlots and thieves--but never yet have I met a man as merciless and | |
| as hard as you! You a Christian--you might be the Roman soldier who spat | |
| in Jesus' face!” | |
| And with that last thunderbolt Samuel turned and went out, slamming the | |
| door with a terrific bang in the great lawyer's face. | |
| For at least a couple of hours Samuel paced the streets of Lockmanville, | |
| to let his rage and grief subside. And then he went home, and to his | |
| astonishment found that Sophie Stedman had been waiting up for him all | |
| this while. | |
| She listened breathlessly to the story of his evening's adventures. Then | |
| she said, “I have been trying to do something, too.” | |
| “What have you done?” he asked. | |
| “I went to see little Ethel,” she replied. | |
| “Ethel Vince!” he gasped. | |
| “Yes,” said she. “She is your friend, you know; and I went to ask her | |
| not to let her father turn you off.” | |
| “And what came of it?” | |
| “She cried,” said Sophie. “She was terribly unhappy. She said that she | |
| knew that you were a good boy; and that she would never rest until her | |
| father had taken you back.” | |
| “You don't mean it!” cried Samuel in amazement. | |
| “Yes, Samuel; but then her mother came.” | |
| “Oh! And what then?” | |
| “She scolded me! She was very angry with me. She said I had no right to | |
| fill the child's mind with falsehoods about her uncle. And she wouldn't | |
| listen to me--she turned me out of the house.” | |
| There was a long silence. “I don't think I did any good at all,” said | |
| Sophie in a low voice. “We are going to have to do it all by ourselves.” | |
| CHAPTER XXVI | |
| Samuel slept not a wink all that night. First he lay wrestling with the | |
| congregation. And then his thoughts came to Miss Gladys, and what he | |
| was going to say to her. This kindled a fire in his blood, and when the | |
| first streaks of dawn were in the sky, he rose and went out to walk. | |
| Throughout all these adventures, his feelings had been mingled with | |
| the excitement of his love for her. Samuel hardly knew what to make of | |
| himself. He had never kissed a woman in his life before--but now desire | |
| was awake, and from the deeps of him the most unexpected emotions came | |
| surging, sweeping him away. He was a prey to longings and terrors. Wild | |
| ecstasies came to him, and then followed plunges into melancholy. He | |
| longed to see her, and other things stood in the way, and he did not | |
| know why he should be so tormented. | |
| Just to be in love would have been enough. But to have been given the | |
| love of a being like Miss Gladys--peerless and unapproachable, almost | |
| unimaginable! | |
| After hours of pacing the streets, he called to see her. And she came | |
| to him, her face alight with eager curiosity, and crying, “Tell me all | |
| about it!” | |
| She listened, almost dumb with amazement. “And you said that to my | |
| father!” she exclaimed again and again. “And to Mr. Hickman! And to old | |
| Mr. Curtis! Samuel! Samuel!” | |
| “It was all true, Miss Gladys,” he insisted. | |
| “Yes,” she said--“but--to say it to them!” | |
| “They turned me out of the church,” he went on. “Had they a right to do | |
| that?” | |
| “I don't know,” she answered. “Oh, my, what a time there will be!” | |
| “And what are you going to do now?” she asked after a pause. | |
| “I don't know. I wanted to talk about it with you.” | |
| “But what do you think of doing?” | |
| “I must expose them to the people.” | |
| Miss Gladys looked at him quickly. “Oh, no, Samuel,” she said--“you | |
| mustn't do that!” | |
| “Why not, Miss Gladys?” | |
| “Because--it wouldn't do.” | |
| “But Miss Gladys--” | |
| “It wouldn't be decent, Samuel. And it's so much more effective to talk | |
| with people privately, as you have been doing.” | |
| “But who else is there to talk to?” | |
| “Why, I don't know. We'll have to think.” | |
| “It's your father and Mr. Hickman I have to deal with, Miss Gladys. And | |
| they won't listen to me any more!” | |
| “Perhaps not. But, then, see how much you have done already!” | |
| “What have I done?” | |
| “Think how ashamed you have made them!” | |
| “But what difference does that make, Miss Gladys? Don't you see they've | |
| still got the money they've taken?” | |
| There was a pause. “This is something I have been thinking,” said Samuel | |
| gravely. “I've had this great burden laid upon me, and I must carry it. | |
| I have to see the thing through to the end. And I'm afraid it will be | |
| painful to you. You may feel that you can't possibly marry me.” | |
| At these words Miss Gladys gave a wild start. She stared at him in | |
| consternation. “Marry you!” she gasped. | |
| “Yes,” he said; and then, seeing the look upon her face, he stopped. | |
| “Marry you!” she panted again. | |
| A silence followed, while they gazed at each other. | |
| “Why, Samuel!” she exclaimed. | |
| “Miss Gladys,” he said in a low voice, “you told me that you loved me.” | |
| “Yes,” she said, “but surely--” And then suddenly she bit her lips | |
| together exclaiming, “This has gone too far!” | |
| “Miss Gladys!” he cried. | |
| “Samuel,” she said, “we have been two bad children; and we must not go | |
| on in this way.” | |
| The boy gave a gasp of amazement. | |
| “I had no idea that you were taking me so seriously,” she continued. “It | |
| wasn't fair to me.” | |
| “Then--then you don't love me!” he panted. | |
| “Why--perhaps,” she replied, “how can I tell? But one does not marry | |
| because one loves, Samuel.” | |
| He gazed at her, speechless. | |
| “I thought we were playing with each other; and I thought you understood | |
| it. It wasn't very wise, perhaps---” | |
| “Playing with each other!” whispered the boy, his voice almost gone. | |
| “You take everything with such frightful seriousness,” she protested. | |
| “Really, I don't think you had any right---” | |
| “Miss Gladys!” he cried in sudden anguish; and she stopped and stared at | |
| him, frightened. | |
| “Do you know what you have done to me?” he exclaimed. | |
| “Samuel,” she said in a trembling voice, “I am very much surprised and | |
| upset. I had no idea of such a thing; and you must stop, before it is | |
| too late.” | |
| “But I love you!” he cried, half beside himself. | |
| “Yes,” she said in great agitation--“and that's very good of you. But | |
| there are some things you must remember--” | |
| “You--you let me embrace you, Miss Gladys! You let me think of you so! | |
| Why, what is a man to do? What was I to make of it? I had never loved a | |
| woman before. And you--you led me on--” | |
| “Samuel, you must not talk like this!” she broke in. “I can't listen to | |
| you. It was a misunderstanding, and you must forget it all. You must go | |
| away. We must not meet again.” | |
| “Miss Gladys!” he cried in horror. | |
| “Yes,” she exclaimed, “you must go--” | |
| “You are going to turn me off!” he panted. “Oh, how can you say such a | |
| thing? Why, think what you have done to me!” | |
| “Samuel,” protested the girl angrily, “this is perfectly preposterous | |
| behavior of you! You have no right to go on in this way. You never had | |
| any right to--to think such things. How could you so forget your place?” | |
| And he started as if stung with a whip. “My place!” he gasped. | |
| “Yes,” she said. | |
| “I see, I see!” he burst out. “It's my 'place' again. It's the fact that | |
| I have no money!” | |
| “Why, Samuel!” she exclaimed. “What a thing to say! It's not that--” | |
| “It's that, and it's nothing but that! It never is anything but that! | |
| It's because I am a poor boy, and couldn't help myself! You told me that | |
| you loved me, and I believed you. You were so beautiful, and I thought | |
| that you must be good! Why, I worshiped the very ground you walked on. | |
| I would have done anything in the world for you--I would have died for | |
| you! I went about thinking about you all day--I made you into a dream | |
| of everything that was good and perfect! And now--now--you say that you | |
| were only playing with me! Using me for your selfish pleasure--just as | |
| you do all the other poor people!” | |
| “Samuel!” she gasped. | |
| “Just as your father does the children in his mill! Just as your cousin | |
| does the poor girls he seduces! Just as you do everything in life that | |
| you touch!” | |
| The girl had turned scarlet with anger. “How dare you speak to me that | |
| way?” she cried. | |
| “I dare to speak the truth to anyone! And that is the truth about you! | |
| You are like all the rest of them--the members of your class. You are | |
| parasites--vampires--you devour other people's lives! And you are the | |
| worst, because you are a woman! You are beautiful, and you ought to be | |
| all the things that I imagined you were! But you use your beauty for a | |
| snare--you wreck men's lives with it--” | |
| “Stop, Samuel!” | |
| “I won't stop! You shall hear me! You drew me on deliberately--you | |
| wanted to amuse yourself with me, to see what I would do. And you had | |
| never a thought about me, or my rights, or the harm you might be doing | |
| to me! And now you've got tired--and you tell me to end it! You tell | |
| me about my 'place!' What am I in the world for, but to afford you | |
| amusement? What are all the working people for but to save you trouble | |
| and keep you beautiful and happy? What are the children for but to spin | |
| clothes for you to wear? And you--what do you do for them, to pay for | |
| their wasted lives, for all their toil and suffering?” | |
| “Samuel Prescott!” cried the outraged girl. “I will not hear another | |
| word of this!” | |
| “Yes, that's just what your father said! And what your cousin said! And | |
| what your clergyman said! And you can send for the butler and have me | |
| put out--but let me tell you that will not be the end of it. We | |
| shall find some way to get at you! The people will not always be your | |
| slaves--they will not always give their lives to keep you in idleness | |
| and luxury! You were born to it--you've had everything in the world that | |
| you wanted, from the first hour of your life. And you think that will go | |
| on forever, that nothing can ever change it! But let me tell you that it | |
| seems different to the people underneath! We are tired of being robbed | |
| and spit upon! And we mean to fight! We mean to fight! We don't intend | |
| to be starved and tormented forever!” | |
| And then in the midst of his wild tirade, Samuel stopped, and stared | |
| with horror in his eyes--realizing that this was Miss Gladys to whom he | |
| was talking! And suddenly a storm of sobs rose in him; and he put his | |
| hands to his face, and burst into tears, and turned and rushed from the | |
| room. | |
| He went down the street, like a hunted animal, beside himself with | |
| grief, and looking for some place to hide. And as he ran on, he pulled | |
| out the faded pictures he had carried next to his heart, and tore them | |
| into pieces and flung them to the winds. | |
| CHAPTER XXVII | |
| When Sophie came home that evening, Samuel had mastered himself. He told | |
| her the story without a tremor in his voice. And this was well, for | |
| he was not prepared for the paroxysm of emotion with which the child | |
| received the news. Miss Gladys had been the last of Samuel's illusions; | |
| but she was the only one that Sophie had ever had. The child had made | |
| her life all over out of the joy of working for her; and now, hearing | |
| the story of her treatment of Samuel, she was almost beside herself with | |
| grief. | |
| Samuel was frightened at her violence. “Listen, Sophie,” he said, | |
| putting his arm around her. “We must not forget our duty.” | |
| “I could never go back there again!” exclaimed the child wildly. “I | |
| should die if I had to see her again!” | |
| “I don't mean that,” said the other quickly--seeking to divert her | |
| thoughts. “But you must remember what I have to do; and you must help | |
| me.” | |
| He went on to tell her of his plan to fight for the possession of St. | |
| Matthew's Church. “And we must not give way to bitterness,” he said; “it | |
| would be a very wicked thing if we did it from anger.” | |
| “But how can you help it?” she cried. | |
| “It is hard,” said Samuel; “but I have been wrestling with myself. We | |
| must not hate these people. They have done evil to us, but they do not | |
| realize it--they are poor human beings like the rest of us.” | |
| “But they are bad, selfish people!” exclaimed the child. | |
| “I have thought it all out,” said he. “I have been walking the streets | |
| all day, thinking about it. And I will not let myself feel anything but | |
| pity for them. They have done me wrong, but it is nothing to the wrong | |
| they have done themselves.” | |
| “Oh, Samuel, you are so good!” exclaimed Sophie; and he winced--because | |
| that was what Miss Gladys had said to him. | |
| “I had to settle it with myself,” he explained. “I have got to carry on | |
| a fight against them, and I have to be sure that I'm not just venting my | |
| spite.” | |
| “What are you going to do?” asked Sophie. | |
| “I am going to put the facts before the congregation of the church. If | |
| they will do nothing, I am going to the people.” | |
| “But how, Samuel?” | |
| “I am going to call a meeting. See, I have written this.” | |
| And he took from his pocket a piece of paper, on which he had printed, | |
| in capital letters, as follows: | |
| TO THE MEMBERS OF ST. MATTHEWS! | |
| “There is corruption in the church. Members of its vestry have bribed | |
| the government of the town. They are robbing the people. The vestry has | |
| refused me a hearing and turned me out of the church. I appeal to the | |
| congregation. Next Wednesday evening, at eight o'clock, I will address | |
| a meeting on the vacant lot opposite the church, and will tell what I | |
| know. SAMUEL PRESCOTT.” | |
| “And what are you going to do with that?” asked Sophie in wonder. | |
| “I am going to have it printed on little slips, and give them out to the | |
| people when they are coming out of the church to-morrow morning.” | |
| “Oh, Samuel!” gasped the child. | |
| “I have to do it,” he said. | |
| “But, Samuel, everyone will come--people from all over town.” | |
| “I can't help that,” he answered. “I can't afford to hire a hall; and | |
| they wouldn't let me speak in the church.” | |
| “But can you get this printed so quickly?” | |
| “I don't know,” said he. “I must find some one.” | |
| Sophie clapped her hands suddenly. “Oh, I know just the very thing!” she | |
| cried. “Friedrich Bremer has a printing press!” | |
| “What!” | |
| “Yes. His father used to print things. They will tell us.” And so, | |
| without stopping to eat, the two hurried off to the Bremer family; and | |
| mother and father and all the children sat and listened in astonishment | |
| while Samuel told his tale. Friedrich was thrilling with excitement; and | |
| old Johann's red face grew fiery. | |
| “Herr Gott!” he cried. “I vas that vay myself once!” | |
| “And then will you help me to get them printed?” asked Samuel. | |
| “Sure!” replied the other. “I will do it myself. Vy did I go through the | |
| Commune?” And so the whole family adjourned to the attic, and the little | |
| printing outfit was dragged out from under the piles of rubbish. | |
| “I used it myself,” said the old carpet designer. “But vhen I come here | |
| they give me a varning, and I haf not dared. For two years I haf not | |
| even been to the meetings of the local.” | |
| “Of the what?” asked Samuel. | |
| “I am a Socialist,” explained Mr. Bremer. And Samuel gave a start. | |
| Ought he to accept any help from Socialists? But meantime Friedrich was | |
| sorting out the type, and his father was inspecting Samuel's copy. | |
| “You must make it vith a plenty of paragraphs,” he said; “and | |
| exclamation points, too. Then they vill read it.” | |
| “They'll read it!” said Friedrich grimly. | |
| “How shall we print it?” asked the father; and the children rushed | |
| downstairs and came back with some sheets of writing paper, and a lot of | |
| brown wrapping paper. They sat on the floor and folded and cut it, while | |
| Friedrich set the type. And this was the way of the printing of Samuel's | |
| first manifesto. | |
| “Can you make a speech?” Mrs. Bremer asked. “Won't you be frightened?” | |
| To which Samuel answered gravely: “I don't think so. I shall be thinking | |
| about what I have to say.” | |
| It was late at night when the two children went home, with three hundred | |
| copies of the revolutionary document carefully wrapped up from view; | |
| and they were so much excited by the whole affair that they had actually | |
| forgotten about Miss Gladys! It was not until he tried to go to sleep | |
| that her image came back to him, and all his blasted hopes arose to mock | |
| at him. What a fool he had been! How utterly insane all his fantasies | |
| seemed to him now! So he passed another sleepless night, and it was not | |
| till daylight that he fell into a troubled slumber. | |
| He had to control his impatience until after eleven o'clock, the hour | |
| of the service at the church. Sophie wished to go with him and share his | |
| peril, but he would not consent to this. He would not be able to give | |
| the manifesto to everyone, but he could reach enough--the others would | |
| hear about it! So, a full hour before the end of the service, he took up | |
| his post across the street, his heart beating furiously. He was feeling, | |
| it must be confessed, a good deal like a dynamiter or an assassin. The | |
| weather was warm, and the door of the church was open, so that he could | |
| hear the booming voice of Dr. Vince. The sound of the organ brought | |
| tears into his eyes--he loved the organ, and he was not to be allowed to | |
| listen to it! At last came the end; the sounds of the choir receded, and | |
| the assassin moved over to a strategic position. And then came the first | |
| of the congregation--of all persons, the Olympian Mr. Curtis! | |
| “Will you take one of these, sir?” said Samuel, with his heart in | |
| his throat. And Mr. Curtis who was mopping his forehead with his | |
| handkerchief, started as if he had seen a ghost. “Boy, what are you | |
| doing?” he cried; but Samuel had darted away, trying to give out the | |
| slips of paper to the people as they came out at both doors. He was | |
| quite right in saying that everybody would know about it. The people | |
| took the slips and read them, and then they stopped to stare and exclaim | |
| to one another, so that there was a regular blockade at the doors of | |
| the church. By the time that a score of the slips had been given out | |
| the members had had time to get their wits back, and then there was an | |
| attempt to interfere. | |
| “This is an outrage!” cried Mr. Curtis, and tried to grab Samuel by the | |
| arm; but the boy wrenched himself loose and darted around the corner, to | |
| where a stream of people had come out of the side door. | |
| “Take one!” he exclaimed. “Pass it along! Let everyone know!” And so he | |
| got rid of a score or two more of his slips. And then, keeping a wary | |
| lookout for Mr. Curtis or any other of the vestrymen, he ran around in | |
| front again, and circled on the edge of the rapidly gathering throng, | |
| giving away several of the dodgers wherever a hand was held out. “Give | |
| them to everyone!” he kept repeating in his shrill voice. | |
| “The evil-doers must be turned out of the church!” | |
| Then suddenly out of the crowd pushed Mr. Hamerton, breathless and red | |
| in the face. “Samuel!” he cried, pouncing upon him, “this cannot go on!” | |
| “But it must go on!” replied the boy. “Let me go! Take your hands off | |
| me!” And he raised his voice in a wild shriek. “There are thieves in the | |
| church of Christ!” | |
| In the scuffle the dodgers were scattered on the ground; and Mr. | |
| Hamerton stooped to pick them up. Samuel seized what he could and darted | |
| to the side door again, where there were more people eager to take them. | |
| And so he got rid of the last he had. And for the benefit of those whom | |
| he still saw emerging, he raised his hands and shouted: “There are | |
| men in the vestry of this church who have bribed the city council of | |
| Lockmanville! I mean to expose them in a meeting across the street on | |
| Wednesday night!” And then he turned, and dodging an outraged church | |
| member who sought to lay hold of him, he sped like a deer down the | |
| street. | |
| He had made his appeal to the congregation! | |
| CHAPTER XXVIII | |
| Samuel rushed home, breathless, to tell Sophie; and pretty soon came | |
| the Bremers, who had been watching the scene from a distance. And the | |
| thrilling tale had to be told all over to them. | |
| Then Johann made a novel announcement. “For that meeting,” he said, “you | |
| must get a permit.” | |
| “A permit!” exclaimed Samuel. “From whom?” | |
| “From the police,” replied the other. “You must haf it for all street | |
| meetings.” | |
| “And where do I get it?” | |
| “At the station house, I think.” | |
| Samuel did not much fancy a visit to the station house, which he knew | |
| far too well already; but he would have gone into a den of lions for the | |
| sake of his cause. So, bright and early the next morning, he set out. | |
| With Mrs. Stedman's help he had persuaded Sophie that she must return to | |
| the Wygants, and so he walked part of the way with her. | |
| There was a new sergeant at the desk, an Irishman. “Please, sir,” said | |
| the boy, “is this where I get a permit?” | |
| “For what?” asked the other. | |
| “To hold a meeting on the street, sir.” | |
| “What sort of a meeting?” | |
| “Why--I've just got something to say to the people, sir.” | |
| “Something to say to the people!” echoed the other; and then, suddenly, | |
| “What's your name?” | |
| “Samuel Prescott, sir.” | |
| And the sergeant's eyes opened wide. “Oh!” he said. “You're that | |
| fellow!” | |
| “What did you say?” asked Samuel. | |
| “The chief wants to see you,” replied the other. | |
| And so Samuel was escorted into the private room, where Chief McCullagh, | |
| red-faced and burly, sat at his desk. When he saw Samuel he bounded to | |
| his feet. “So here you are!” he cried. | |
| To the sergeant he said, “Leave us alone.” And when the man had shut the | |
| door, he strode toward Samuel, and thrust a finger into his face. “Young | |
| fellow,” he cried, “you promised me you would get out of this town!” | |
| “No!” exclaimed the boy. | |
| “What?” roared the other. | |
| “No, sir! It was Charlie Swift promised you that!” | |
| “And what did you promise?” | |
| “I promised I wouldn't tell anyone about--about Master Albert, sir. And | |
| I haven't done it.” | |
| “I told Charlie Swift to take you out of town. And why didn't you go?” | |
| “He didn't--” And then Samuel stopped. He had promised to tell nothing | |
| about Charlie. | |
| “Go on!” cried the chief. | |
| “I--I can't tell,” he stammered. | |
| “What?” exclaimed the other. “You want to hide things from me? Don't you | |
| suppose I know that he's still in town; and that you and him have been | |
| doin' jobs?” | |
| “No--no!” cried Samuel in terror. | |
| “You can't lie to me!” threatened the chief. “I know you, you young | |
| villain!” | |
| He stood glaring at the boy for a few moments. “And you have the nerve | |
| to come here!” he cried. “What do you want anyway?” | |
| “I--I want to hold a meeting, sir.” | |
| “Who's given you a license to make trouble in this town?” | |
| “Nobody's given me one yet,” replied Samuel. “That's what I came for.” | |
| “Don't you get gay with me!” snapped the chief. But Samuel was far from | |
| the thought of getting gay with anyone--he was trembling in his boots. | |
| The man towered over him like a huge gorilla, and his red face was | |
| ferocious. | |
| “Now look here, young fellow!” he went on. “You might as well get this | |
| straight. You'll get no permit to make any speeches in Lockmanville! | |
| D'ye see?” | |
| “Yes, sir.” | |
| “And what's more, you'll not make any speech. D'ye see?” | |
| “But--but--” gasped the boy. | |
| And McCullagh shook his finger so that it almost hit Samuel's nose. | |
| “You'll not make any speech! You'll not make it on the street, and | |
| you'll not make it anywheres else in town! And you might as well get | |
| that through your nut and save yourself trouble. And if I hear of you | |
| givin' out any more papers on the street--you'll wish you hadn't--that's | |
| all, young fellow! D'ye see?” | |
| “I see,” gasped Samuel. | |
| “All right,” said the chief. “And if you take my advice, you'll get the | |
| first train out of Lockmanville and never show your face in it again. | |
| Now get out of here!” | |
| And Samuel got out, and went down the street dumb with dismay. So they | |
| had got the police after him! | |
| Of course he would make his speech. He could not let himself be | |
| stopped by such a thing as that. But he saw at once how matters were | |
| complicated--if the police were to stop him before he had made clear | |
| what he had to say, they might ruin all his plans. | |
| He must seek advice about it; and he went at once to the carpet factory, | |
| and sought out the little room where the Bremers sat with their drawing | |
| boards and paints. | |
| “So that's it!” exclaimed Johann. “They vill shut you up!” | |
| “Do you think they can?” asked the boy. | |
| “Sure they can!” cried the other. “They hafn't let the Socialists speak | |
| on the streets for years. We should haf fought them!” | |
| He reached for his coat. “Come,” he said. “I vill take you to see Tom | |
| Everley.” | |
| “Who is Tom Everley?” asked the boy. | |
| “He's a lawyer, and he vill tell you. He's the secretary of the local.” | |
| “A Socialist!” exclaimed Samuel, startled. Again it was the Socialists! | |
| Everley sat in a little office in an out-of-the-way street. He was a | |
| young chap, frank and boyish-looking, and Samuel's heart warmed to him | |
| at once. “Comrade Everley,” said the carpet designer, “here is a boy you | |
| ought to help. Tell him all about it, Samuel--you can trust him.” | |
| So Samuel told his tale once more. And the other listened with | |
| breathless interest, and with many exclamations of incredulity and | |
| delight. When the boy had finished, he sprang up excitedly and grasped | |
| his hand. “Samuel Prescott,” he cried, “put it there! You are a brick!” | |
| “Then you'll stand by me!” exclaimed Samuel, breathless with relief. | |
| “Stand by you?” echoed the other. “I'll stand by you until hell freezes | |
| solid!” | |
| Then he sat down again, and began tapping nervously on the desk with his | |
| pencil. “I'll call a special meeting of the local,” he said. “They must | |
| take you up. The movement's been slow in Lockmanville of late, and a | |
| fight like this is just what the comrades need.” | |
| “But I'm not a Socialist!” objected Samuel. | |
| “That's all right,” replied Everley, “we don't care about that.” | |
| Samuel had not meant it that way, but he could not think how to make his | |
| trouble clear. | |
| “I can get the local together to-morrow night,” went on the other. | |
| “There's no time to be lost. We must get out a lot of circulars and | |
| cover the town.” | |
| “But I only wanted the people of the church to come,” said the boy. | |
| “But others will come anyway,” said Everley. “And haven't the people a | |
| right to know how they've been robbed?” | |
| “Yes,” said Samuel, “they have.” | |
| “And perhaps,” added the other with a smile, “if the congregation has a | |
| little pressure from outside, it will be much more apt to take action. | |
| What we've got to do with this thing is to make a free speech fight out | |
| of it, and open the eyes of the whole town. Otherwise the police will | |
| nip the thing in the bud, and no one will ever know what we had.” | |
| “You must be careful how you give out those circulars,” put in Johann. | |
| “They will nip you there, if they can.” | |
| “That's all right,” laughed Everley. “You trust the comrades for that! | |
| We know a printer we can rely on!” | |
| Samuel drew a deep breath of satisfaction. Here was a man who understood | |
| things, and took hold with conviction--a man who was really willing | |
| to do something. It was very disconcerting that he happened to be a | |
| Socialist! | |
| Everley took up a pencil and wrote the new announcement: | |
| PEOPLE OF LOCKMANVILLE! | |
| “Having made the discovery that members of the vestry of St. Matthew's | |
| Church had been bribing the city council, I demanded an investigation, | |
| and I was turned out of the church. | |
| “I called a meeting to tell the congregation about it, but I was refused | |
| a permit to speak. Chief of Police McCullagh declared to me that I | |
| should never make my speech in this town. | |
| “Will you stand by me? | |
| “I intend to speak on Wednesday night, at 8 P.M., at the vacant lot | |
| opposite the church. | |
| “In the name of Free Speech and Civic Decency, | |
| “SAMUEL PRESCOTT.” | |
| “How's that?” he asked. | |
| “Fine!” exclaimed Samuel in delight. | |
| “I'll take the risk of having it set up,” added the lawyer. “And I'll | |
| get the notices to the members of the local off in this evening's mail. | |
| Come, we'll go to see one or two of them now and talk it over with | |
| them.” | |
| So they went down, and while Johann hurried back to his work, Samuel and | |
| Everley stopped in a cigar store a couple of doors down the street, | |
| kept by a little Russian Jew with a merry face and dancing black eyes. | |
| “Comrade Lippman,” said Everley, “this is Mr. Prescott.” | |
| There came also “Comrade Minsky,” from the rear workroom, a cigar maker, | |
| bare-armed and very yellow and emaciated. To them Everley told briefly | |
| the story of Samuel's adventures and what he proposed to do. The glow | |
| of excitement with which they received the tidings left no doubt as to | |
| their attitude. And a couple of blocks around the corner was a little | |
| shop where a grizzled old carpenter, “Comrade Beggs,” clutched Samuel's | |
| hand in a grip like one of his vises, while he expressed his approval of | |
| his course. And then they called on Dr. Barton, a young physician, whom | |
| Everley declared to be one of the mainstays of the local of the town. | |
| “He got his education abroad,” he explained, “so he has none of the | |
| narrowness of our physicians. His wife's quite a speaker, too.” | |
| Mrs. Barton was a sweet-faced and mild-looking lady, who reminded Samuel | |
| of the picture of his mother. All the while that Everley was telling | |
| his story the boy was staring at her, and trying to straighten out the | |
| tangle of perplexity that was caused in his mind by the idea of her | |
| being a Socialist speaker! | |
| By and by the doctor came in, and the story had to be told yet again. | |
| They were so much interested and excited that they begged their visitors | |
| to remain to luncheon. They talked the whole problem out, and Samuel was | |
| struck by the certainty with which their minds took hold of it. There | |
| was no need of any long explanations with them--they seemed to know just | |
| what to expect; it was as if they possessed some magic key to the inner | |
| life of Lockmanville, enabling them to understand everyone in it, | |
| and exactly how he felt and exactly how he would act under any given | |
| circumstances. | |
| All this was an amazing experience for Samuel. A few hours ago he had | |
| been a voice crying in the wilderness; forlorn and solitary; and now | |
| here was a band of allies, sprung up suddenly, from the very ground, as | |
| it seemed. Men who knew exactly what was wanted, and exactly how to | |
| get it; who required no persuading, who set to work without wasting a | |
| word--just as if they had been doing such things all their lives! He | |
| was so swept away with delight that for a while he was tempted to forget | |
| what sort of people they were. | |
| But it came back to him suddenly, when they had returned to Everley's | |
| office. He sat gazing at the young lawyer with such a worried expression | |
| on his face that the other asked, “What's the matter?” | |
| “Tell me, Mr. Everley,” said the boy, “how can the Bartons believe in | |
| free love?” | |
| “Believe in free love?” echoed Everley. “What put that into your head?” | |
| “But don't they believe in free love?” persisted Samuel. | |
| “Why, of course not. Who said they did?” | |
| “But they are Socialists!” | |
| And the other put down his work and laughed heartily. “Where did you | |
| pick that up?” he asked. | |
| “Why,” stammered the boy, “I've read everywhere that Socialists believe | |
| in free love!” | |
| “Wait till you get well going in this reform of yours!” laughed the | |
| young lawyer, “and then see what you read about yourself!” | |
| “But,” gasped Samuel, aghast, “don't Socialists believe in free love?” | |
| “Some of them do, I suppose,” was the reply. “I know one who believes in | |
| ghosts, and one who believes in the Pope, and one who believes in Adam | |
| and Eve. How can I help what they believe?” | |
| There was a pause. “You see,” explained Everley, “we are a political | |
| party; and we can't keep anybody from joining us who wants to. And | |
| because we are an advanced party, all sorts of wild people come to us. | |
| How can we help that?” | |
| “But,” exclaimed Samuel, “you are against religion!” | |
| “We have nothing to do with religion,” replied the other. “I told you we | |
| are a political party. Some of us have found it necessary to leave the | |
| capitalist churches--but you will hardly blame us for that!” | |
| “N-no,” admitted the boy; then he added, “But don't you want to destroy | |
| the Government?” | |
| “On the contrary, we want to strengthen it. But first we have to get it | |
| away from the capitalists.” | |
| “Then, what DO you believe?” asked Samuel in perplexity. | |
| Then the other explained that they were seeking to organize and educate | |
| the working class, for the purpose of bringing about an economic change. | |
| They wished to take the land and the mines, the railroads and the | |
| factories out of the hands of the capitalists. “We believe that such | |
| things should not belong to individuals,” he said, “but to the people. | |
| Then there will be work for everyone, and everyone will get the full | |
| value of his labor, and no man will be able to live without working.” | |
| There was a pause, while Samuel was getting the meaning of this into | |
| his mind. “But,” he exclaimed in amazement, “that is exactly what _I_ | |
| believe!” | |
| “Of course,” replied the other, “it is exactly what everyone with sense | |
| believes.” | |
| “But--but--” gasped the boy, “then am I a Socialist?” | |
| “Nine tenths of the people in the country are Socialists,” replied | |
| Everley--“only they haven't found it out yet.” | |
| “But,” cried Samuel, “you ought to teach them!” | |
| “We're doing our best,” laughed the other. “Come and help us.” | |
| Samuel was quite dumfounded. “But how do people come to have all these | |
| false ideas about you?” he asked. | |
| “Those are the ideas that the masters want them to have.” | |
| Samuel was clutching at the arms of his chair. “Why--it's a conspiracy!” | |
| he cried. | |
| “Precisely,” said the other. “A conspiracy of the ruling class. They own | |
| the newspapers and the books, the colleges and churches and governments. | |
| And they tell lies about us and keep us down.” | |
| And so Samuel found himself face to face with the ultimate horror of | |
| Capitalism. It was bad enough to own the means whereby the people lived, | |
| and to starve and exploit their bodies. But to own their minds, and | |
| to lead them astray! To keep them from finding out the way of their | |
| deliverance! Surely that was the crime of crimes! | |
| “I can't believe it!” he panted. | |
| And the young lawyer answered, “Come and work with us a while and see | |
| for yourself.” | |
| CHAPTER XXIX | |
| Samuel went home and faced a surprising experience. There was a dapper | |
| and well-dressed young man waiting to see him. “My name is Pollard,” he | |
| said, “and I'm from the Lockmanville 'Express.' I want to get a story | |
| from you.” | |
| “A story from me?” echoed the boy in perplexity. | |
| “An interview,” explained the other. “I want to find out about that | |
| meeting you're going to hold.” | |
| And so Samuel experienced the great thrill, which comes sooner or later | |
| to every social reformer. He sat in Mrs. Stedman's little parlor, and | |
| told his tale yet again. Mr. Pollard was young and just out of college, | |
| and his pencil fairly flew over his notebook. “Gosh!” he exclaimed. “But | |
| this is hot stuff!” | |
| To Samuel it was an extraordinary revelation. He was surprised that | |
| the idea had not occurred to him before. What was the use of holding | |
| meetings and making speeches, when one could have things printed in | |
| the papers? In the papers everyone would read it; and they would get it | |
| straight--there would be no chance of error. Moreover, they would read | |
| it at their leisure, and have time to think it all over! | |
| And after Mr. Pollard had gone, he rushed off in great excitement to | |
| tell Everley about it. “You won't need to print those circulars,” he | |
| said. “For I told him where the meeting was to be.” | |
| But Everley only smiled at this. “We'll get out our stuff just the | |
| same,” he said. “You'd better wait until you've seen what the 'Express' | |
| prints.” | |
| “What do you mean?” asked the boy. But Everley would not explain--he | |
| merely told Samuel to wait. He did not seem to be as much excited as he | |
| should have been. | |
| Samuel went home again. And later on in the afternoon, while Mrs. | |
| Stedman had gone out to the grocer's, there came a knock on the door, | |
| and he opened it, and to his amazement found himself confronted by Billy | |
| Finnegan. | |
| “Hello, young fellow!” said Finnegan. | |
| “Hello!” said Samuel. | |
| “What's this I hear about your making a speech?” asked Finnegan. | |
| “I'm going to,” was the reply. “But how did you know?” | |
| “I got it from Callahan. Slattery told him.” | |
| “Slattery! Has he heard about it?” | |
| “Gee, young fellow! What do you think he's boss for?” | |
| And Finnegan gazed around the room, to make sure that they were alone. | |
| “Sammy,” he said, “I've come to give you a friendly tip; I hope you'll | |
| have sense enough to take it.” | |
| “What is it?” asked the other. | |
| “Don't try to make any speech.” | |
| “Why not?” | |
| “Because you ain't a-going to be let to make it, Sammy.” | |
| “But how can they stop me?” | |
| “I dunno, Sammy. But they ain't a-going to let you.” | |
| There was a pause. | |
| “It's a crazy thing you're tryin' to do,” said the other. “And take my | |
| word for it--somethin' will happen to you if you go on.” | |
| “What will happen?” | |
| “I dunno, my boy--maybe you'll fall into the river.” | |
| “Fall into the river!” | |
| “Yes; or else run your head into a slungshot some night, in a dark | |
| alley. I can't tell you what--only you won't make the speech.” | |
| Samuel was dumfounded. “You can't mean such things!” he gasped. | |
| “Sure I mean them,” was the reply. “Why not?” | |
| Samuel did not respond. “I don't know why you're tryin' to do this | |
| thing,” went on the other, “nor who's backing you. But from what I can | |
| make out, you've got the goods, and you've got them on most everybody in | |
| the town. You've got Slattery, and you've got Pat McCullagh, and | |
| you've got the machine. You've got Wygant and Hickman--you've even got | |
| something on Bertie Lockman, haven't you?” | |
| “I suppose I have,” said Samuel. “But I'm not going to tell that.” | |
| “Well, they don't know what you're going to tell, and they won't take | |
| any chances. They won't let you tell anything.” | |
| “But can such things be done?” panted the boy. | |
| “They're done all the time,” said the other. “Why, see--it stands to | |
| reason. Wouldn't folks be finding out things like this, and wouldn't | |
| they be tellin' them?” | |
| “To be sure,” said Samuel. “That's what puzzled me.” | |
| “Well,” said the bartender, “they ain't let to. Don't you see?” | |
| “I see,” whispered the boy. | |
| “There's a crowd that runs this town, Sammy; and they mean to go on | |
| runnin' it. And don't you think they can't find ways of shuttin' up a | |
| kid like you!” | |
| “But Mr. Finnegan, it would be murder!” | |
| “Well, they wouldn't have to do it themselves, would they? When Henry | |
| Hickman wants a chicken for dinner, he don't have to wring its neck with | |
| his own hands.” | |
| Samuel could find nothing to reply to that. He sat dumb with horror. | |
| “You see,” continued Finnegan after a bit, “I know about this game, and | |
| I'm givin' you a friendly word. What the hell does a kid like you want | |
| to be reformin' things for anyway?” | |
| “What else can I do?” asked Samuel. | |
| To which the other answered, “Do? Get yourself a decent job, and find | |
| some girl you like and settle down. You'll never know what there is in | |
| life, Sammy, till you've got a baby.” | |
| But Samuel only shook his head. The plan did not appeal to him. “I'll | |
| try to keep out of trouble,” he said, “but I MUST make that speech!” | |
| So Finnegan went out, shaking his head and grumbling to himself. And | |
| Samuel hurried off to see his lawyer friend again. The result of the | |
| visit was that Everley exacted from him a solemn promise that he would | |
| not go out of the house after dark. | |
| “I know what was done in this town during the strike,” said the other, | |
| “and I don't want to take any chances. Now that they have finished the | |
| unions, there's nobody left but us.” | |
| So Samuel stayed at home, and told Sophie and her mother all about his | |
| various experiences, and about the people he had met. The child was | |
| almost beside herself with delight. | |
| “Oh, I knew that help would come!” she kept saying, “I knew that help | |
| would come!” | |
| Worn out as he was, the young reformer could hardly sleep that night, | |
| for all the excitement. And early in the morning he was up and out | |
| hunting for a copy of the “Express.” | |
| He stood on the street-corner and opened it. He glanced at the first | |
| page--there was nothing there. He glanced at the back page, and then | |
| at one page after another, seeking for the one that was given up to the | |
| story. But there was no such page. And then he went back and read over | |
| the headings of each column--and still he did not find it. And then | |
| he began a third time, reading carefully each tiny item. And so, | |
| after nearly an hour's search, when he found himself lost in a maze of | |
| advertisements, he brought himself to realize that there was not a line | |
| of the story in the paper! | |
| When Everley arrived at his office that morning, Samuel was waiting for | |
| him on the steps. Seeing the paper in the other's hand, the young lawyer | |
| laughed. “You found out, have you?” he said. | |
| “It's not here!” cried Samuel. | |
| “I knew just what would happen,” said the other. “But I thought I'd let | |
| you see for yourself.” | |
| “But what does it mean?” demanded the boy. | |
| “It means,” was the answer, “that the Lockman estate has a mortgage of | |
| one hundred thousand dollars on the Express.” | |
| And Samuel's jaw fell, and he stood staring at his friend. | |
| “Now you see what it is to be a Socialist!” laughed Everley. | |
| And Samuel saw. | |
| CHAPTER XXX | |
| After supper that evening came Everley with Friederich Bremer, to take | |
| Samuel to the meeting of the local, where he was to tell his story. | |
| The “local” met in an obscure hall, over a grocery shop. There were | |
| present those whom Samuel had met the night before, and about a score | |
| of others. Most of them were working-men, but there were several who | |
| appeared to be well-to-do shopkeepers and clerks. Samuel noticed that | |
| they all called one another “comrade”; and several of them addressed | |
| him thus, which gave him a queer feeling. Also he noted that there were | |
| women present, and that one of them presided at the meeting. | |
| Everley made a speech, reading Samuel's manifesto, and telling how it | |
| had been given out. Then he called upon Samuel. The boy stood upon his | |
| feet--and suddenly a deadly terror seized hold upon him. Suppose he | |
| should not be able to make a speech after all! Suppose he should be | |
| nervous! What would they think of him? But he clenched his hands--what | |
| did it matter what they thought of him? The poor were suffering, and the | |
| truth was crying out for vindication! He would tell these men what had | |
| happened to him. | |
| So he began. He told how he had been robbed, and how he had sought in | |
| vain for work, and how he had been arrested. And because he saw that | |
| these were people who understood, he found himself a case, and thinking | |
| no longer about himself. He talked for nearly half an hour, and there | |
| was quite a sensation when he finished. | |
| Then Everley rose to his feet again. “Comrades,” he said, “for the past | |
| year I have been urging that the local must make a fight for free speech | |
| in this town. And it seems to me that the occasion has now come. If we | |
| do not take up this fight, we might just as well give up.” | |
| “That's right,” cried Beggs, the old carpenter. | |
| “I took the liberty of ordering circulars,” continued Everley. “There | |
| was no time to be lost, and I felt sure that the comrades would back me. | |
| I now move that the local take charge of the meeting to-morrow evening, | |
| and that the two thousand circulars I have here be given out secretly | |
| to-night.” | |
| “I second that motion,” said Mrs. Barton. | |
| “It must be understood,” added Everley, “that we can't expect help from | |
| the papers. And our people ought to hear this story, as well as the | |
| members of the church.” | |
| And then he read the circulars, and the motion was put, and carried | |
| unanimously. | |
| “Now,” said Everley, “I suggest that the local make this the occasion of | |
| a contest for the right to hold street meetings in Lockmanville. As you | |
| know, the police have refused permits ever since the strike. And I move | |
| that beginning with Thursday evening, we hold a meeting on the corner of | |
| Market and Main streets, and tell this story to the public. And that | |
| we continue to hold a meeting every night thereafter until we have made | |
| good our right.” | |
| Samuel could see from the faces of the men what a serious proposition | |
| this was to them. Everley launched into an impassioned speech. The | |
| workingmen of the town had lost their last hope in the unions; they were | |
| suffering from the hard times; and now, if ever, was the time to open | |
| their eyes to the remedy. And the Socialists were powerless, because | |
| they had permitted the police to frighten them. Now they must make a | |
| stand. | |
| “You realize that it will mean going to jail?” asked Dr. Barton. | |
| “I realize it,” said Everley. “We shall probably have to go several | |
| times. But if we make up our minds from the beginning, we can win; | |
| we shall have the sympathy of the people--and also we can break the | |
| conspiracy of silence of the newspapers.” | |
| “That is the thing we must think of,” said the woman in the chair. | |
| “I am ready to do what I can,” added the lawyer. “I will give my | |
| services free to defend the speakers, or I will be the first man to be | |
| arrested--whichever the comrades prefer.” | |
| “We will lose our jobs,” said some one in the rear of the room. | |
| “Yes,” said Everley, “that is something you will have to consider. You | |
| know well enough how much I have lost already.” | |
| Samuel listened in breathless excitement to this discussion. Here were | |
| poor people, people with no more resources than he, and at the mercy of | |
| the same forces which had been crushing him. Here was one man who had | |
| lost an eye in the glass works, and another, a railroad brakeman, who | |
| was just out of the hospital after losing a leg. Here were men pale and | |
| haggard from hunger, men with wives and children dependent upon them; | |
| yet they were giving their time and their money--risking their very | |
| existence--in the cause of human freedom! Had he ever met a group of men | |
| like this before? Had he ever dreamed that such men were living? | |
| He had thought that he was alone, that he had all the burdens of | |
| humanity upon his own shoulders! And now here were people who were ready | |
| to hold up his hands; and from the discussion he gathered that they were | |
| part of a vast organization, that there existed such “locals” in every | |
| city and town in the country. They made their own nominations and | |
| voted for their own candidates at every election; they published many | |
| newspapers and magazines and books. And they were part of an army of men | |
| who were banded together in every civilized nation. Wherever Capitalism | |
| had come, there men were uniting against it; and every day their power | |
| grew--there was nothing that could stop them. | |
| These men had seen the vision of the new time that was coming, and there | |
| burned in them a fire of conviction. Suddenly Samuel realized the import | |
| of that word “comrade” which they gave one another; they were men bound | |
| together by the memory of persecutions, and by the presence of ruthless | |
| enemies. They knew what they were facing at this moment; not only Chief | |
| McCullagh with his policemen and their clubs; not only the subsidized | |
| “Express” with its falsehoods and ridicule: but all the political and | |
| business power of the Hickmans and Wygants. They were facing arrest and | |
| imprisonment, humiliation and disgrace--perhaps ruin and starvation. | |
| Only in this way could they reach the ears of the people. | |
| “Comrades,” the young lawyer was saying, “every step that has been taken | |
| in the progress of humanity has been taken because men have been willing | |
| to give their lives. Everywhere that our movement has grown, it has | |
| been in the face of persecution. And sooner or later we must make up | |
| our minds to it--we may wait for years, but nothing can be accomplished | |
| until we have faced this issue. And so I ask you to join with me in | |
| taking this pledge--that we will speak on the streets of Lockmanville | |
| next Saturday night, and that we will continue to speak there as often | |
| as need be until we have vindicated our rights as American citizens.” | |
| There was a solemn hush when he finished; one by one the men and women | |
| arose and offered themselves. | |
| “I have been out of work for four months,” said one, “and I have been | |
| promised a job next week. If I am arrested, I know that I will not get | |
| it. But still I will speak.” | |
| “And I am in Wygant's cotton mill,” said another. “And I'm not young, | |
| and when I'm turned out, it will not be easy for me. But I will help.” | |
| “And I, too,” put in Lippman, the cigar store keeper; “my wife can tend | |
| the shop!” There was a general laugh at this. | |
| And then Friedrich Bremer sprang up. “My father has been warned!” he | |
| cried. “But I will speak also!” | |
| “And I!” exclaimed Samuel. “I think I am going to be a Socialist. Will | |
| you let me help?” | |
| “No one's help will be refused in a crisis like this,” said Everley. “We | |
| must stand by our guns, for if they can crush us this time, it may be | |
| years before we can be heard.” | |
| And then, somewhere in the hall, a voice began to sing. Others took it | |
| up, until the walls of the building shook with a mighty chant. “What is | |
| it?” whispered Samuel to Friedrich. | |
| “It is called 'The Red Flag,'” replied Friedrich. | |
| And Samuel sat spellbound, listening while they sang: | |
| Hark to the thunder, hark to the tramp--a myriad army comes! | |
| An army sprung from a hundred lands, speaking a hundred tongues! | |
| And overhead a portent new, a blood-red banner see! | |
| The nations gather in affright to ask what the sign may be. | |
| Banner of crimson, banner bright, banner flaunting the sky! | |
| What is the word that ye bring to men, the hope that ye hold on high? | |
| We come from the fields, we come from the forge, we come from the land | |
| and sea-- | |
| We come in the right of our new-born might to set the people free! | |
| Masters, we left you a world to make, the planning was yours to do-- | |
| We were the toilers, humble and sad, we gave our faith to you. | |
| And now with a dread in our hearts we stand and gaze at the work of the | |
| years-- | |
| We have builded a temple with pillars white, ye have stained it with | |
| blood and tears! | |
| For our little ones with their teeming hopes ye have roofed the | |
| sweatshop den, | |
| And our daughters fair ye have prisoned in the reeking brothel's pen! | |
| And so for the sign of our murdered hopes our blood-red banner see-- | |
| We come in the right of our new-born might to set the people free! | |
| Tremble, oh masters--tremble all who live by others' toil-- | |
| We come your dungeon walls to raze, your citadel to spoil! | |
| Yours is the power of club and jail, yours is the axe and fire-- | |
| But ours is the hope of human hearts and the strength of the soul's | |
| desire! | |
| Ours is the blazing banner, sweeping the sky along! | |
| Ours the host, the marching host--hark to our battle song! | |
| Chanting of brotherhood, chanting of freedom, dreaming the world to be-- | |
| We come in the right of our new-born might to set the people free! | |
| CHAPTER XXXI | |
| While the other members of the local scattered to distribute the | |
| circulars, Everley and Friedrich escorted Samuel home, and saw him | |
| safely in, and the door locked. They had supplied him with some | |
| Socialist papers and pamphlets, and he spent most of the next day | |
| devouring these. They spread a picture of the whole wonderful movement | |
| before him; they explained to him all the mechanism of the cruel system, | |
| in the cogs of which he had been caught. | |
| It was all so very obvious that Samuel found himself in a state of | |
| exasperation with the people who did not yet understand it, and spent | |
| his time wrestling in imagination with all those he had ever known: with | |
| his brothers, and with Finnegan, and with Charlie Swift, with Master | |
| Albert and Mr. Wygant, with Professor Stewart and Dr. Vince. Most of all | |
| he labored with Miss Gladys; and he pictured how it would be after the | |
| Revolution, when he would be famous and she would be poor, and he might | |
| magnanimously forgive her! | |
| And when Sophie came home, he explained it all to her. It did not | |
| take much to make a revolutionist out of Sophie. She had become quite | |
| thoroughly what the Socialists called “class-conscious.” | |
| The members of the local had been anxious about Samuel all day. Everley | |
| had come in twice in the afternoon, to make sure that he was safe; and | |
| he came over again after supper, and said that Beggs and Lippman and the | |
| Bartons and himself were coming to act as a body guard to take Samuel to | |
| the meeting. The circulars had created a tremendous sensation--the whole | |
| town was talking about it, and the police were furious at the way they | |
| had been outwitted. | |
| So the hour of the meeting drew near. It was as if a great shadow were | |
| gathering over them. They were nervous and restless--Samuel pacing the | |
| room, wandering about here and there. | |
| His speech was seething within him. He saw before him the eager | |
| multitude, and he was laying bare to them the picture of their wrongs. | |
| So much depended upon this speech! If he failed now, he failed in | |
| everything--all that he had done before has gone for nothing! Ah! if | |
| only one had a voice that could reach the whole world--that could shout | |
| these things into the ears of the oppressed! | |
| His friends had said they would come at a quarter to eight. But they | |
| came at half past seven, and sat round and waited. It was thought best | |
| that they should not arrive until the precise minute of the meeting; and | |
| meantime they outlined to Samuel the plan of campaign they had formed. | |
| Dr. Barton was to make the opening speech, introducing Samuel; and by | |
| way of outwitting the police, he was to be particularly careful to get | |
| into this “introduction” all the essential facts which it was desired to | |
| lay before the people. He was to tell about the twenty thousand dollars | |
| which Hickman paid to Slattery, and about the acknowledgment which | |
| Wygant had made to Samuel, and about how the boy had been turned out of | |
| St. Matthew's Church. If the police attempted to interfere with this, | |
| the doctor was to persist until he had been actually placed under | |
| arrest; and then others were to take up the attempt in different places, | |
| until six had been arrested. In this case Samuel was to make no attempt | |
| to speak at all; they would “save” him for an out-door meeting--and also | |
| Everley, who was to defend them in court. More circulars would be given | |
| out the next afternoon, and another attempt to speak would be made that | |
| evening. | |
| All this was duly impressed upon the boy, and then the little company | |
| set forth. Dr. Barton walked on one side of him, and Everley on the | |
| other; Mrs. Barton, Mrs. Stedman and Sophie came next, and Beggs and | |
| Lippman brought up the rear. So they marched along; they kept their eyes | |
| open, and every time they had to pass a man they gave him a wide berth. | |
| So they came to the place of the meeting. At the corner were the Bremers | |
| and half a dozen others, who formed a ring about them. There was a | |
| huge crowd, they said--the lot was thronged, and the people extended to | |
| streets on every side. There was a score of policemen scattered about, | |
| and no doubt there were many detectives. | |
| Promptly on the minute of eight the little group approached. There was | |
| a murmur of excitement among the waiting crowd, as they started to force | |
| their way through. Samuel's heart was thumping like mad, and his knees | |
| were trembling so that he could hardly walk. The people gave way, and | |
| they found themselves in the center, where several of the Socialists | |
| stood guard over the half dozen boxes from which the speaking was to be | |
| done. | |
| Without a moment's delay, Dr. Barton mounted up. | |
| “Fellow citizens,” he called in a clear, ringing voice; and instantly a | |
| hush fell upon the crowd, and a thousand faces were turned toward him. | |
| “We are here,” he began, “for a very important purpose--” | |
| Instantly a policeman pushed his way toward him. | |
| “Have you a permit for this meeting?” he demanded. | |
| “We have been refused a permit!” proclaimed Dr. Barton to the crowd. “We | |
| are here as law-abiding citizens, demanding our right to free speech!” | |
| “You cannot speak,” declared the policeman. | |
| “There has been bribery of the city council of Lockmanville,” shouted | |
| the doctor. | |
| “You cannot speak!” cried the policeman sharply. | |
| “Henry Hickman paid twenty thousand dollars to the city council to | |
| prevent the passage of the water bill!” cried the speaker. | |
| “Come down from there!” commanded the officer, and made a grab at him. | |
| “I will not stop until I am arrested!” declared the doctor. “I am here | |
| to protest against bribery!” | |
| “Come down and shut up!” shouted the other. | |
| “For shame! For shame!” said voices in the crowd. “Let him speak!” | |
| “That charge was made before the vestry of the St. Matthew's Church! | |
| And the vestry refused to investigate it, and turned out a member of the | |
| church! And we are here--” | |
| And so, still shouting, the doctor was dragged off the box and collared | |
| by the policeman. | |
| “An outrage!” cried people in the audience. “Let him go on!” And yet | |
| others shouted, “Arrest him!” The throng was in a turmoil; and in | |
| the midst of it, Lippman, who was the second victim appointed for the | |
| sacrifice, sprang upon the stump of an old tree, a little at one side, | |
| and shrieked at the top of his lungs: | |
| “Henry Hickman paid twenty thousand dollars to Slattery to beat the | |
| water bill; and now he and the Lockman estate are making ten thousand | |
| dollars a month out of it! And Wygant confessed to our speaker that he | |
| ran the city government to get franchise favors--” | |
| And then Lippman was seized by an officer and dragged off his perch, | |
| and choked into silence--surrounded meanwhile by a crowd of indignantly | |
| protesting citizens. It was quite clear by this time that the crowd had | |
| come to hear Samuel's speech, and was angry at being balked. There was a | |
| general shout of protest that made the policemen glad of their numbers. | |
| Of these exciting events Samuel and Everley had been witnesses from the | |
| vantage point of a soap box. Now suddenly the boy caught his friend's | |
| arm and pointed, crying, “Who's that man?” | |
| Near the outskirts of the thrown was a big burly individual, who had | |
| been roaring in a furious voice, “For shame! Go on!” and waving his | |
| fists in the air. | |
| “I don't know,” said Everley. “I never saw him before.” | |
| “An outrage!” yelled the man. “Kill the police! Smash them! Drive them | |
| away!” | |
| And Everley caught the boy's arm, crying excitedly, “He's been sent | |
| here, I'll wager! They want to provoke trouble!” | |
| And even as he spoke, the two saw the man stoop, and pick up a | |
| brick-bat, and fling it into the center of the crowd, where the police | |
| were massing. | |
| “Arrest that man!” shouted Everley indignantly, and leaped forward and | |
| plunged through the throng to reach him. | |
| There was a roar from the crowd, and Samuel saw that several men had | |
| grappled with the bully; he saw, also, that the police in the center of | |
| the throng had drawn their clubs, and were beginning to strike at the | |
| people. A burly sergeant was commanding them, and forcing back the crowd | |
| by jabbing men in the stomachs. | |
| Meantime the next speaker, a woman, had mounted upon a box, and was | |
| crying in a shrill voice: “We are Socialists! We are the only political | |
| party which dares to speak for the working class of Lockmanville! We | |
| protest against this outrage! We demand free speech! There has been | |
| bribery in our city council!” | |
| Then suddenly the boy heard a disturbance behind him, and turned, just | |
| in the nick of time. A fellow had thrust his way through the crowd | |
| toward him, a rowdy with a brutal, half-drunken face. And Samuel saw him | |
| raise his hand, with some dark object in it, and aim a smashing blow at | |
| his head. | |
| The boy ducked and raised his arm. He felt a sharp, agonizing pain, and | |
| his arm dropped helpless at his side. Something struck him across the | |
| forehead, cutting a gash, out of which hot blood spurted, blinding him. | |
| He heard Beggs, who was beside him, give a shout--“Down!” And realizing | |
| that his life was aimed at, he dropped like a flash, and put his head | |
| under him, covering it with one arm as well as he could. | |
| There was a struggle going on over him. Men were pushing and | |
| shouting--and some one kicked him savagely upon the leg. He crawled on | |
| a little way, still keeping his head down, underneath the feet of the | |
| contendents. He heard Beggs shouting for help, and heard the Bremers | |
| answering; he heard the roar of the throng all about, the sharp commands | |
| of the police sergeant, and the crack of clubs, falling upon the heads | |
| of men and women. And then he swooned, and lay there, his face in a pool | |
| of his own blood. | |
| Meanwhile, one by one, three more speakers rose and made their attempts, | |
| and were arrested, while the indignant people voiced their helpless | |
| protests. Then suddenly, somewhere in the crowd, a woman began to sing. | |
| Others took up the song--it swelled louder, until it rang above all | |
| the uproar. It was the hymn that Samuel had heard at the meeting of the | |
| local--The Red Flag! | |
| It took hold of the crowd--men followed the melody, even though they did | |
| not know the words. They continued to sing while the police were leading | |
| away their prisoners; they followed, all the way to the station house, | |
| with shouts of protest, and of encouragement for the victims. | |
| And so the throng moved on, and the uproar died away. There was left | |
| upon the scene a little group of frightened people, gathered about | |
| two who lay upon the ground. One of them was Samuel, unconscious and | |
| bleeding; and the other was Sophie, clinging to him and sobbing upon his | |
| bosom, frantic with grief and fear. And meanwhile, in the distance one | |
| could still hear the melody ringing: | |
| Yours is the power of club and jail, yours is the axe and fire, | |
| But ours is the hope of human hearts and the strength of the soul's | |
| desire! |