OUR LEADING CITIZEN
The year of grace, 1913, commended
itself to Dr. L. André Surtaine as an excellent time
in which to be alive, rich, and sixty years old.
Thoroughly, keenly, ebulliently alive he was.
Thoroughly rich, also; and if the truth be told, rather
ebulliently conscious of his wealth. You could
see at a glance that he had paid no usurious interest
to Fate on his success; that his vigor and zest in
life remained to him undiminished. Vitality and
a high satisfaction with his environment and with
himself as well placed in it, radiated from his bulky
and handsome person; but it was the vitality that
impressed you first: impressed and warmed you;
perhaps warned you, too, on shrewder observation.
A gleaming personality, this. But behind the
radiance one surmised fire. Occasion given, Dr.
Surtaine might well be formidable.
The world had been his oyster to open.
He had cleaved it wide. Ill-natured persons hinted,
in reference to his business, that he had used poison
rather than the knife wherewith to loosen the stubborn
hinges of the bivalve. Money gives back small
echo to the cries of calumny, however. And Dr.
Surtaine’s Certina, that infallible and guaranteed
blood-cure, eradicator of all known human ills, “famous
across the map of the world,” to use one of its
advertising phrases, under the catchword of “Professor
Certain’s Certina, the Sure-Cure” (for
he preserved the old name as a trade-mark), had made
a vast deal of money for its proprietor. Worthington
estimated his fortune at fifteen millions, growing
at the rate of a million yearly, and was not preposterously
far afield. In a city of two hundred thousand
inhabitants, claimed (one hundred and seventy-five
thousand allowed by a niggling and suspicious census),
this is all that the most needy of millionaires needs.
It was all that Dr. Surtaine needed. He enjoyed
his high satisfaction as a hard-earned increment.
Something more than satisfaction beamed
from his face this blustery March noon as he awaited
the Worthington train at a small station an hour up
the line. He fidgeted like an eager boy when the
whistle sounded, and before the cars had fairly come
to a stop he was up the steps of the sleeper and inside
the door. There rose to meet him a tall, carefully
dressed and pressed youth, whose exclamation was evenly
apportioned between welcome and surprise.
“Dad!”
“Boy-ee!”
To the amusement of the other passengers,
the two seized each other in a bear-hug.
“Oof!” panted the big
man, releasing his son. “That’s the
best thing that’s happened to me this year.
George” (to the porter), “get me a seat.
Get us two seats together. Aren’t any?
Perhaps this gentleman,” turning to the chair
back of him, “wouldn’t mind moving across
the aisle until we get to Worthington.”
“Certainly not. Glad to
oblige,” said the stranger, smiling. People
usually were “glad to oblige” Dr. Surtaine
whether they knew him or not. The man inspired
good will in others.
“It’s nearly a year since
I’ve set eyes on my son,” he added in a
voice which took the whole car into his friendly confidence;
“and it seems like ten. How are you feeling,
Hal? You look chirp as a cricket.”
“Couldn’t possibly feel
better, sir. Where did you get on?”
“Here at State Crossing.
Thought I’d come up and meet you. The office
got on my nerves this morning. Work didn’t
hold me worth a cent. I kept figuring you coming
nearer and nearer until I couldn’t stand it,
so I banged down my desk, told my secretary that I
was going to California on the night boat and mightn’t
be back till evening, hung the scrap-basket on the
stenographer’s ear when she tried to hold me
up to sign some letters, jumped out of the fifth-story
window, and here I am. I hope you’re as
tickled to see me as I am to see you.”
The young man’s hand went out,
fell with a swift movement, to touch his father’s,
and was as swiftly withdrawn again.
“Worthington’s just waiting
for you,” the Doctor rattled on. “You’re
put up at all the clubs. People you’ve
never heard of are laying out dinners and dances for
you. You’re a distinguished stranger; that’s
what you are. Welcome to our city and all that
sort of thing. I’d like to have a brass
band at the station to meet you, only I thought it
might jar your quiet European tastes. Eh?
At that, I had to put the boys under bonds to keep
’em from decorating the factory for you.”
“You don’t seem to have
lost any of your spirit, Dad,” said the junior,
smiling.
“Noticed that already, have
you? Well, I’m holding my own, Boyee.
Up to date, old age hasn’t scratched me with
his claws to any noticeable extent—is that
the way it goes?—see ‘Familiar Quotations.’
I’m getting to be a regular book-worm, Hal.
Shakespeare, R.L.S., Kipling, Arnold Bennett, Hall
Caine—all the high-brows. And I get
’em, too. Soak ’em right in.
I love it! Tell me, who’s this Balzac?
An agent was in yesterday trying to make me believe
that he invented culture. What about him?
I’m pretty hot on the culture trail. Look
out, or I’ll overhaul you.”
“You won’t have to go
very far or fast. I’ve got only smatterings.”
But the boy spoke with a subdued complacency not wholly
lost upon the shrewd father.
“Not so much that you’ll
think Worthington dull and provincial?”
“Oh, I dare say I shall find
it a very decent little place.”
But here Hal touched another pride
and loyalty, quite as genuine as that which Dr. Surtaine
felt for his son.
“Little place!” he cried.
“Two hundred thousand of the livest people on
God’s earth. A gen-u-wine American city
if there ever was one.”
“Evidently it suits you, sir.”
“Couldn’t suit better
if I’d had it made to order,” chuckled
the Doctor. “And I did pretty near make
it over to order. It was a dead-and-alive town
when we opened up here. Didn’t care much
about my business, either. Now we’re the
biggest thing in town. Why Certina is the cross-mark
that shows where Worthington is on the map. The
business is sim-plee booming.” The
word exploded in rapture. “Nothing like
it ever known in the proprietary trade. Wait
till you see the shop.”
“That will be soon, won’t
it, sir? I think I’ve loafed quite long
enough.”
“You’re only twenty-five,”
his father defended him. “It isn’t
as if you’d been idling. Your four years
abroad have been just so much capital. Educational
capital, I mean. I’ve got plenty of the
other kind, for both of us. You don’t need
to go into the business unless you want to.”
“Being an American, I suppose
I’ve got to go to work at something.”
“Not necessarily.”
“You don’t want me to live on you all
my life, though, I suppose.”
“Well, I don’t want you
to want me to want you to,” returned the other,
laughing. “But there’s no hurry.”
“To tell the truth, I’m
rather bored with doing nothing. And if I can
be of any use to you in the business—”
“You’re ready to resume
the partnership,” his father concluded the sentence
for him. “That was the foundation of it
all; the old days when I did the ‘spieling’
and you took in the dollars. How quick your little
hands were! Can you remember it? The smelly
smoke of the torches, and the shadows chasing each
other across the crowds below. And to think what
has grown out of it. God, Boyee! It’s
a miracle,” he exulted.
“It isn’t very clear in
my memory. I used to get pretty sleepy, I remember,”
said the son, smiling.
“Poor Boyee! Sometimes
I hated the life, for you. But there was nobody
to leave you with; and you were all I had. Anyway,
it’s turned out well, hasn’t it?”
“That remains to be seen for
me, doesn’t it? I’m rather at the
start of things.”
“Most youngsters would be content
with an unlimited allowance, and the world for a playground.”
“One gets tired of playing. And of globe-trotting.”
“Good! Do you think you can make Worthington
feel like home?”
“How can I tell, sir? I
haven’t spent two weeks altogether in the place
since I entered college eight years ago.”
“Did it ever strike you that
I’d carefully planned to keep you away from
here, and that our periods of companionship have all
been abroad or at summer places?”
“Yes.”
“You’ve never spoken of it.”
“No.”
“Good boy! Now I’ll
tell you why. I wanted to be absolutely established
before I brought you back here. Not in business,
alone. That came long ago. There have been
obstacles, in other ways. They’re all overcome.
To-day we come pretty near to being king-pins in this
town, you and I, Hal. Do you feel like a prince
entering into his realm?”
“Rather more like a freshman
entering college,” said the other, laughing.
“It isn’t the town, it’s the business
that I have misgivings about.”
“Misgivings? How’s that?” asked
the father quickly.
“What I can do in it.”
“Oh, that. My doubts are whether it’s
the best thing for you.”
“Don’t you want me to go into it, Dad?”
“Of course I want you with me,
Boyee. But—well, frank and flat, I
don’t know whether it’s genteel enough
for you.”
“Genteel?” The younger
Surtaine repeated the distasteful adjective with surprise.
“Some folks make fun of it,
you know. It’s the advertising that makes
it a fair mark. ‘Certina,’ they say.
’That’s where he made his money.
Patent-medicine millions.’ I don’t
mind it. But for you it’s different.”
“If the money is good enough
for me to spend, it’s good enough for me to
earn,” said Hal Surtaine a little grandiloquently.
“Humph! Well, the business
is a big success, and I want you to be a big success.
But that doesn’t mean that I want to combine
the two. Isn’t there anything else you’ve
ever thought of turning to?”
“I’ve got something of
a leaning toward your profession, Dad.”
“My prof—oh, you mean medicine.”
“Yes.”
“Nothing in it. Doctors
are a lot of prejudiced pedants and hypocrites.
Not one in a thousand is more than an inch wide.
What started you on that?”
“I hardly know. It was
just a notion. I think the scientific and sociological
side is what appeals to me. But my interest is
only theoretical.”
“That’s very well for
a hobby. Not as a profession. Here we are,
half an hour late, as usual.”
The sudden and violent bite of the
brakes, a characteristic operation of that mummy among
railroads, the Mid-State and Great Muddy River, commonly
known as the “Mid-and-Mud,” flung forward
in an involuntary plunge the incautious who had arisen
to look after their things. Hal Surtaine found
himself supporting the weight of a fortuitous citizen
who had just made his way up the aisle.
“Thank you,” said the
stranger in a dry voice. “You’re the
prodigal son of whom we’ve heard such glowing
forecast, I presume.”
“Well met, Mr. Pierce,”
called Dr. Surtaine’s jovial voice. “Yes,
that’s my son, Harrington, you’re hanging
to. Hal, this is Mr. Elias M. Pierce, one of
the men who run Worthington.”
Releasing his burden Hal acknowledged
the introduction. Elias M. Pierce, receding a
yard or so into perspective, revealed himself as a
spare, middle-aged man who looked as if he had been
hewn out of a block, square, and glued into a permanent
black suit. Under his palely sardonic eye Hal
felt that he was being appraised, and in none too amiable
a spirit.
“A favorite pleasantry of your
father’s, Mr. Surtaine,” said Pierce.
“What became of Douglas? Oh, here he is.”
A clean-shaven, rather floridly dressed
man came forward, was introduced to Hal, and inquired
courteously whether he was going to settle down in
Worthington.
“Probably depends on how well
he likes it,” cut in the dry Mr. Pierce.
“You might help him decide. I’m sure
William would be glad to have you lunch with him one
day this week at the Huron Club, Mr. Surtaine.”
Somewhat surprised and a little annoyed
at this curiously vicarious suggestion of hospitality,
the newcomer hesitated, although Douglas promptly
supported the offer. Before he had decided what
to reply, his father eagerly broke in.
“Yes, yes. You must go,
Hal,” he said, apparently oblivious of the fact
that he had not been included in the invitation.
“I’ll try to be there,
myself,” continued Pierce, in a flat tone of
condescension. “Douglas represents me, however,
not only legally but in other matters that I’m
too busy to attend to.”
“Mr. Pierce is president of
the Huron Club,” explained Dr. Surtaine.
“It’s our leading social organization.
You’ll meet our best business men there.”
And Hal had no alternative but to accept.
Here William Douglas turned to speak
to Dr. Surtaine. “The Reverend Norman Hale
has been looking for you. It is some minor hitch
about that Mission matter, I believe. Just a
little diplomacy wanted. He said he’d call
to see you day after to-morrow.”
“Meaning more money, I suppose,”
said Dr. Surtaine. Then, more loudly: “Well,
the business can stand it. All right. Send
him along.”
With Hal close on his heels he stepped
from the car. But Douglas, having the cue from
his patron, took the younger man by the arm and drew
him aside.
“Come over and meet some of
our fair citizens,” he said. “Nothing
like starting right.”
The Pierce motor car, very large,
very quietly complete and elegant, was waiting near
at hand, and in it a prematurely elderly, subdued
nondescript of a woman, and a pretty, sensitive, sensuous
type of brunette, almost too well dressed. To
Mrs. Pierce and Miss Kathleen Pierce, Hal was duly
presented, and by them graciously received. As
he stood there, bareheaded, gracefully at ease, smiling
up into the interested faces of the two ladies, Dr.
Surtaine, passing to his own car to await him, looked
back and was warmed with pride and gratitude for this
further honorarium to his capital stock of happiness,
for he saw already in his son the assurance of social
success, and, on the hour’s reckoning, summed
him up. And since we are to see much of Harrington
Surtaine, in evil chance and good, and see him at times
through the eyes of that shrewd observer and capitalizer
of men, his father, the summing-up is worth our present
heed, for all that it is to be considerably modified
in the mind of its proponent, as events develop.
This, then, is Dr. Surtaine’s estimate of his
beloved “Boyee,” after a year of separation.
“A little bit of a prig.
A little bit of a cub. Just a little mite
of a snob, too, maybe. But the right, solid, clean
stuff underneath. And my son, thank God! My
son all through.”