THE GREATER TEMPTING
Journalistic Worthington ran true
to type in the Milly Neal affair. No newspaper
published more than a paragraph about the “sudden
death.” Suicide was not even hinted at
in print. But newspaperdom had its own opinion,
magnified and colored by the processes of gossip, over
which professional courtesy exercised no control.
That the girl had killed herself was generally understood:
that there had been a shooting, previous to her death,
was also current. Eager report recalled and exaggerated
the fact that she had been seen with Hal Surtaine at
a dubious road-house some months previous. The
popular “inside knowledge” of the tragedy
was that Milly had gone to the Surtaine mansion to
force Hal’s hand, failing in which she had shot
him, inflicting an inconsiderable wound, and then
killed herself; and that Dr. Surtaine had thereupon
turned his son out of the house. Hal’s removal
to the hotel served to bear out this surmise, and
the Doctor’s strategic effort to cover the situation
by giving it out that his son’s part of the mansion
was being remodeled—even going to the lengths
of actually setting a force of men to work there—failed
to convince the gossips.
Between the two men, the situation
was now most difficult. Quite instinctively Hal
had fallen in with his father’s theory that the
primal necessity, after the tragedy, was to keep everything
out of print. That by so doing he wholly subverted
his own hard-won policy did not, in the stress of
the crisis, occur to him. Later he realized it.
Yet he could see no other course of action as having
been possible to him. The mere plain facts of
the case constituted an accusation against Dr. Surtaine,
unthinkable for a son to publish against his father.
And Hal still cozened himself into a belief in the
quack’s essential innocence, persuading his
own reason that there was a blind side to the man which
rendered it impossible for him to see through the legal
into the ethical phases of the question. By this
method he was saving his loyalty and affection.
But so profound had been the shock that he could not,
for a time, endure the constant companionship of former
days. Consequently the frequent calls which Dr.
Surtaine deemed it expedient to make for the sake
of appearances, at Hal’s hotel, resulted in painful,
rambling, topic-shifting talks, devoid of any human
touch other than the pitiful and thwarted affection
of two personalities at hopeless odds. “Least
said soonest mended” was a favorite aphorism
of the experienced quack. But in this tangle
it failed him. It was he who first touched on
the poisoned theme.
“Look here, Boy-ee,” said
he, a week after the burial. “We’re
both scared to death of what each of us is thinking.
Let’s agree to forget this until you are ready
to talk it out with me.”
“What good will talk do?” said Hal drearily.
“None at present.”
His father sighed. He had hoped for a clean breast
of it, a confession of the intrigue that should leave
the way open to a readjustment of relations.
“So let’s put the whole thing aside.”
“All right,” agreed Hal
listlessly. “I suppose you know,”
he added, “before we close the subject, that
I’ve ordered the Relief Pills advertising out
of the ‘Clarion.’”
“You needn’t have bothered. It won’t
be offered again.”
Silence fell between them. “I’ve
about decided to quit that line,” the charlatan
resumed with an obvious effort. “Not that
it isn’t strictly legal,” he added, falling
back upon his reserve defense. “But it’s
too troublesome. The copy is ticklish; I’ve
had to write all those ads. myself. And, at that,
there’s some newspapers won’t accept ’em
and others that want to edit ’em. Belford
Couch and I have been going over the whole matter.
He’s the diplomat of the concern. And we’ve
about decided to sell out. Anyway,” he
added, brightening, “there ain’t hardly
money enough in a side-line like the Pills to pay for
the trouble of running it separate.”
If Dr. Surtaine had looked for explicit
approval of his virtuous resolution, he was disappointed.
Yet Hal experienced, or tried to believe that he experienced,
a certain factitious glow of satisfaction at this
proof that his father was ready to give up an evil
thing even without being fully convinced of its wrongfulness.
This helped the son to feel that, at least, his sacrifice
had been made for a worthy affection. Still,
he had no word to say except that he must get to the
office. The Doctor left with gloom upon his handsome
face.
With McGuire Ellis, Hal’s association
had become even more difficult than with the Doctor.
Since his abrupt and unceremonious departure from
the room of death, in the belief in Hal’s guilt,
Ellis had maintained a purely professional attitude
toward his employer. For a time, in his wretchedness
and turmoil of spirit, Hal had scarcely noticed Ellis’s
withdrawal of fellowship, vaguely attributing his silence
to unexpressed sympathy. But later, when he broached
the subject of Milly’s death, he was met with
a stony avoidance which inspired both astonishment
and resentment. Sub-normal as he now was in nervous
strength and tension, he shrank from having it out
with Ellis. But he felt, for the first time in
his life, forlorn and friendless.
On his part McGuire Ellis brooded
over a deep anger. He was not a man to yield
lightly of his best; but he had given to Hal, first
a fine loyalty, and later, as they grew into closer
association, a warm if rather reticent affection.
For the rough idealist had found in his employer an
idealism not always as clear and intelligent as his
own, yet often higher and finer; and along with the
professional protectiveness which he had assumed over
the younger man’s inexperience had come an honest
admiration and far-reaching hopes. Now he saw
in his chief one who had betrayed his cause through
a weak and selfish indulgence. The clear-sighted
journalist knew that the newspaper owner with a shameful
secret binds his own power in the coils of that secret.
And fatally in error as he was as to the nature of
the entanglement in which Hal was involved, he foresaw
the inevitable effect of the situation upon the “Clarion.”
Moreover, he was bitterly disappointed in Hal as a
man. Had his superior “gone on the loose”
and contracted a liaison with some woman of
the outer world, Ellis would have passed over the abstract
morality of the question. But to take advantage
of a girl in his own employ, and then so cruelly to
leave her to her fate,—there was rot at
the heart of the man who could do that. The excision
of the offending “Relief Pills” ad. after
the culmination of the tragedy, was simply a sop to
hypocrisy.
Only once had Ellis made any reference
to Milly’s death. On the day of her funeral
Max Veltman had disappeared, without notice. A
week later he reported for duty, shaken and pallid.
“Do you want to take him back?” Ellis
inquired of Hal.
Hal’s first impulse was to say
“No”; but he conquered it, remembering
Milly Neal’s pitiful generosity toward her lover.
“Where has he been?” he asked.
“Drunk, I guess.”
“What do you think?”
“I think yes.”
“All right, if he’s sobered up. Tell
him it mustn’t happen again.”
There was a gleam in McGuire Ellis’s
eye. “Suppose you tell him that
it mustn’t happen again. It would come with
more force from you.”
Hal whirled in his chair. “Mac, what’s
the matter with you?”
“Nothing. I was just thinking of ‘Kitty
the Cutie.’”
“What were you thinking of her?”
“Only that Max Veltman would
have gone through hell-fire for her. And, from
his looks, he’s been through and had the heart
burned out of him.”
With that he resumed his proof-reading in a dogged
silence.
To Hal’s great relief Veltman
kept out of his way. The man seemed dazed with
misery, but did his work well enough. Rumors reached
the office that he was striving to gain a refuge from
his sufferings by giving all his leisure hours to
work in the Rookeries district, under the direction
of the Reverend Norman Hale. Ellis was of the
opinion that his mind was somewhat affected, and that
he would bear watching a bit; and was the more disturbed
in that Veltman shared the secret of the great epidemic
“spread,” now practically completed for
the “Clarion’s” publishing or suppressing.
Ellis held the belief that, now, Hal would order it
suppressed. The man who had shirked his responsibility
to Milly Neal could hardly be relied on for the stamina
necessary to such an exploitation.
The time was at hand for the decision
to be made. The two physicians, Elliot and Merritt,
pressed for publication. Every day, they pointed
out, not only meant a further risk of life, but also
increased the impending danger of a general outburst
which would find the city wholly unprepared.
On the other hand, the journalists, Ellis and Wayne,
held out for delay. They perceived the one weak
point in their case, that neither a dead body nor
a living patient had as yet come to the hands of the
constituted authorities for diagnosis. The sole
determination had been made on corpses carried across
the line and now probably impossible of identification.
The committee fund was doing its work of concealment
effectually. But Fate tripped the strategy board
at last, using the Reverend Norman Hale as its agent.
Since Milly Neal’s death, the
Reverend Norman had tried to find time to call on
Hal Surtaine, and had failed. He wished to talk
with him about Veltman. Three days after the
funeral he had hauled the “Clarion’s”
foreman out of the gutter, stood between him and suicide
for one savage night of struggle, and listened to
the remorse of a haunted soul. Being a man and
a brother, the Reverend Norman forbore blame or admonition;
being a physician of the inner being, he devised work
for the wreck in his slums, and had driven him relentlessly
that he might find peace in the service of others.
Slowly the man won back to sanity. One obsession
persisted, however, disturbing to the clergyman.
Veltman was willing to do penance himself, in any
possible way, but he insisted that, since the Surtaines
shared his guilt, they, too, must make amends, before
his dead mistress could rest in her grave. Apprised
by Veltman of the whole wretched story, Hale secretly
sympathized with this view of the Surtaines’
responsibility. But he was concerned lest, in
Veltman, it take some form of direct vengeance.
When he learned that Veltman had returned to the “Clarion”
composing-room to work, the minister, unable to spare
time for a call from his almost sleepless activities,
sent an urgent request to Hal to meet him at the Recreation
Club. Hal being out, Ellis got the note, observed
the “Immediate and Important” on the envelope,
read the contents, and set out for the rendezvous.
He never got there. For at the
corner of Sperry Street he was met by a messenger
who knew him.
“The back room at McManey’s,”
said the urchin. “He’s in there, waitin’.”
Ellis entered the place. At a
table sat the Reverend Norman Hale, with an expression
of radiant happiness on his gaunt face. The barkeeper,
who, on his own initiative, had just brought in a steaming
hot drink, stood watching him with unfeigned concern.
Hale welcomed Ellis warmly, and drew a chair close
for him.
“You sent for Mr. Surtaine,” said Ellis.
“Did I?” asked the other
vaguely. “I forget. It doesn’t
matter. Nothing matters, now. Ellis, I’ve
found out the secret.”
“What secret?”
“The great secret. The
solution,” replied the young minister, buoyantly.
“All that is necessary is to get the bodies.”
“Yes, of course,” agreed
the other, with rising uneasiness. “But
they smuggle them out as fast—”
“They won’t when I’ve
told them. McGuire Ellis,”—he
gripped his companion suddenly with fingers that clamped
like a burning vise,—“I can bring
the dead back to life.”
“Tell me about it. But
take a swallow of this first.” Ellis pushed
the hot drink toward him. “You’re
cold.”
“Nothing but excitement.
The glory of it! All this suffering and grief
and death—”
“Wait a minute. I want a drink myself.”
He turned to the bartender. “Get an auto,”
he whispered. “Quick!”
“There’s a rig outside,”
said the man. “I seen he was sick when he
came in, so I sent for it.”
“Good man!” said Ellis.
“Telephone to Dr. Merritt at the Health Office
to meet me instantly at the hospital. Tell him
why. Now, Mr. Hale,” he added, “come
on. Let’s get along. You can tell me
on the way.”
Still rapt with his vision the minister
rose, and permitted himself to be guided to the carriage.
Once inside he fell into a semi-stupor. Only
at the hospital, where Dr. Merritt was waiting to see
him safe within the isolation ward, did he come to
his rightful senses, cool, and, as ever, thoughtful
of everything but himself.
“You’ve got your chance
for a diagnosis at last, Doctor,” he whispered
to the health officer.
Half an hour later, Dr. Merritt came
out to the waiting journalist.
“Typhus,” he said, with
grievous exultation. “Unmistakably and
officially typhus. We’ve got our case.
Only, I wish to God it had been any of the rest of
us.”
“Will he die?” queried Ellis.
“God knows. I should say
his chance was worse than even. He’s worn
out from overwork.”
For assurance, Dr. Elliot was sent
for and added his diagnosis. Ellis got authoritative
interviews with both men, and the “Clarion’s”
great, potential sensation was now fully ripe for
print. Denton the reporter had done the previous
work well. His “story,” leaded out
and with subheads, ran flush to two pages of the paper,
and every paragraph of it struck fire. It would,
as Ellis said, set off a ton of dynamite beneath sleepy
Worthington. That night Veltman “pulled”
a proof, and Ellis stayed far into the morning, pasting
up a dummy of the article for Hal’s inspection
and final judgment.
It was on Thursday that Norman Hale
was taken to the hospital. Friday noon McGuire
Ellis laid before his principal the carefully constructed
dummy with the brief comment:
“There’s the epidemic story.”
Hal accepted and read it in silence.
Once or twice he made a note. When he had finished,
he turned to find Ellis’s gaze fixed upon him.
“We ought to run it Monday,”
said Ellis. “We can round it all up by
then.”
Monday is the dead day of journalism,
the day for which news articles which do not demand
instant production are reserved, both to liven up a
dull paper and because the sensation produced is greater.
However, the sensation inevitable to the publishing
of this article, as Hal instantly realized, would
be enormous on any day.
“It’s big stuff,” said he, with
a long breath.
Ellis nodded. “Shall I release it for Monday?”
“N-n-no,” came the dubious reply.
“It’s been held already for ten days.”
“Then what does it matter if we hold it a little
longer?”
“Human lives, maybe. Isn’t that matter
enough?”
“That’s only a guess.
I’ve got to have time on this,” insisted
Hal. “It’s the most vital question
of policy that the paper has had to face.”
“Policy!” grunted Ellis savagely.
“Besides, I’ve given my
word to the Chamber of Commerce Committee that we
wouldn’t publish any epidemic news without due
warning to them.”
“Then it’s to be killed?”
“‘Wait for orders’ proof,”
said Hal stonily.
“I might have known,”
sneered Ellis, with an infinite depth of scorn, and
went to bear the bitter message to Wayne.
While the “Clarion” policy
trembled in the balance, Dr. Surtaine’s Committee
on Suppression was facing a new crisis brought about
by the striking down of Norman Hale, of which they
received early information. Should he die, as
was believed probable, the news, whether or not the
full facts got into print, would surely become a focus
for the propagation of alarmist rumors. In their
distress, the patriots of commerce paid a hasty visit
to their chief, craving counsel. Having foreseen
the possibility of some such contingency, Dr. Surtaine
was ready with a plan. The committee would enlarge
itself, call a meeting of the representative men of
the town, organize an Emergency Health Committee of
One Hundred, and take the field against the onset of
pernicious malaria. This show of fighting force
would allay public alarm, a large fund would be raised,
the newspapers would be kept in thorough subjection,
and the disease could be wiped out without undue publicity
or the imperiling of Old Home Week.
“What about the ’Clarion’?”
inquired Hollenbeck, of the committee. “They’re
still holding off.”
“Safe as your hat,” Dr.
Surtaine assured the questioner with a smile.
“At the meeting you told us
you couldn’t answer for your son’s paper,”
Stensland recalled.
“I can now,” said the
confident quack. “Just you leave it to me.”
He went direct to the “Clarion”
office, revolving in his mind the impending interview.
For the first time since the tragedy he anticipated
a meeting with his son without embarrassment, for now
he had a definite topic to talk about, difficult though
it might be.
Finding Hal at the editorial desk
he went direct to the point.
“Boy-ee, the epidemic is spreading.”
“I know it.”
“I’m going to take hold of the matter
personally, from now on.”
“In what way?”
“By organizing a committee of
one hundred to cover the city and make a scientific
campaign.”
“Are you going to let people know that it’s
typhus?”
“Sh-sh-sh! So you know,
do you? Well, the important thing now is to see
that others don’t find out. Don’t
even whisper the word. Malaria’s our cue;
pernicious malaria. What’s the use of scaring
every one to death? We’ll call a public
meeting for next week—”
“Publicity is the last thing you want, I should
think.”
“Semi-public, I should have
said. The epidemic has gone so far that people
are beginning to take notice. We’ve got
to reassure them and the right kind of an Emergency
Health Committee is the way to do it, Belford Couch
is working up the meeting now. I’ve kept
him over on purpose for it. He’s the best
little diplomat in the proprietary business. And
Yours Truly will be elected Chairman of the Committee.
It’ll cost us a ten-thousand-dollar donation
to the fund, but it’s worth it to the business.”
“To the business? I don’t quite see
how.”
“Simple as a pin! When
it’s all over and we’re ready to let the
account of it get into print, Dr. Surtaine, proprietor
of Certina, will be the principal figure in the campaign.
What’s that worth in advertising to the year’s
business? Not that I’m doing it for that.
I’m doing it to save Old Home Week.”
“With a little profit on the side.”
Dr. Surtaine deemed it politic to ignore the tone
of the commentary.
“Why not? Nobody’s
hurt by it. You’ll be on the Central Committee,
Boy-ee.”
“No; I don’t think so.”
“Why not?”
“I think I’d better keep out of the movement,
Dad.”
“As you like. And you’ll see that
the ‘Clarion’ keeps out of it, too?”
“So that’s it.”
“Yes, Boy-ee: that’s
it. You can see, for yourself, that a newspaper
sensation would ruin everything just now—and
also ruin the paper that sprung it.”
“So I heard from Elias M. Pierce sometime since.”
“For once Pierce is right.”
“Are you asking me to suppress the epidemic
story?”
“To let us handle it our own
way,” substituted the Doctor. “We’ve
got our campaign all figured out and ready to start.
Do you know what the great danger is now?”
“Letting the infection go on without taking
open measures to stop it.”
“You’re way wrong!
Starting a panic that will scatter it all over the
place is the real danger. Have you heard of a
single case outside of the Rookeries district, so
far?”
Hal strove to recall the death-list on the proof.
“No,” he admitted.
“You see! It’s confined
to one locality. Now, what happens if you turn
loose a newspaper scare? Why, those poor, ignorant
people will swarm out of the Rookeries and go anywhere
to escape the quarantine that they know will come.
You’ll have an epidemic not localized, but general.
The situation will be ten times as difficult and dangerous
as it is now.”
Struck with the plausibility of this
reasoning, Hal hesitated. “That’s
up to the authorities,” he said.
“The authorities!” cried
the charlatan, in disdain. “What could they
do? The damage would be done before they got
ready to move. You see, we’ve got to handle
this situation diplomatically. Look here, Boyee;
what’s the worst feature of an epidemic?
Panic. You know the Bible parable. The seven
plagues came to Egypt and ten thousand people died.
The Grand Vizier said to the plagues, ‘How many
of my people have you slain?’ The plagues said,
‘A thousand.’ ‘What about the
other nine thousand?’ said the Grand Vizier.
‘Not guilty!’ said the plagues. ’They
were slain by Fear.’ Maybe it was in ‘Paradise
Lost’ and not the Bible. But the lesson’s
the same. Panic is the killer.”
“But the disease is increasing
all the time,” objected Hal. “Are
we to sit still and—”
“Is it?” broke in the
wily controversialist. “How do you account
for this, then?” He drew from his pocket a printed
leaflet. “Take a peek at those figures.
Fewer deaths in the Rookeries this last week than in
any week since March.”
This was true. Not infrequently
there comes an inexplicable subsidence of mortality
in mid-epidemic. No competent hygienist is deceived
into mistaking this phenomenon for an indication of
the end. Not being a hygienist Hal was again
impressed.
“The Health Bureau’s own
statistics,” continued the argumentator, pushing
his advantage. “With Dr. Merritt’s
signature at the bottom.”
“Dr. Merritt says that the epidemic
is being fostered by secrecy, suppression, and lying.”
“All sentimentalism. Merritt
would turn the city upside down if he had his way.
Was it him that told you it was typhus?”
“No. We’ve got a
two-page story in proof now, giving the whole facts
of the epidemic.”
“You can’t publish it, Boy-ee,”
said his father firmly.
“Can’t? That sounds like an order.”
Adroitly Dr. Surtaine caught at the
word. “An order drawn on your word of honor.”
“If there’s any question
of honor to the ‘Clarion,’ it’s to
tell the truth plainly and take the consequences.”
“Who said anything about the
‘Clarion’s’ honor? This is between
you and me.”
“You’ll have to speak
more plainly,” said Hal with a dawning dread.
“Boyee, I hate to do this, but
I’ve got to, to save the city. You gave
me your word that the day you had to suppress news
for your own sake, you’d quit this Don Quixotic
business and treat others as decently and considerately
as you treated yourself.”
“Go on,” said Hal, in a half whisper.
“Well—Milly Neal.”
Dr. Surtaine wet his lips nervously. “You
saved yourself there by keeping the story out of the
papers. Of course you were right. You were
dead right. You’d have been a fool to do
anything else. But there you are. And there’s
your promise.”
A nausea of the soul sickened Hal.
That his father, whom he had so loved and honored,
should make of the loyalty which had, at the cost of
principle, protected the name of Surtaine against open
disgrace, a tool wherewith to tear down his professional
standards—it was like some incredible and
malign jocosity of a devilish logic. Of what was
going on in the quack’s mind he had no inkling.
He could not know that his father saw in the suppression
of the suicide news, only a natural and successful
effort on the part of Hal to conceal his own guilt
in Milly’s death. No more could Dr. Surtaine
comprehend that it was the dreadful responsibility
of the Surtaine quackery for which Hal had unhesitantly
sacrificed the declared principle of the “Clarion.”
So they gazed darkly at each other across the chasm,
each seeing his opponent in the blackest colors.
“You hold me to that?” demanded Hal, half
choked.
“I have to, Boy-ee.”
To Dr. Surtaine the issue which he
had raised was but the distasteful means to a necessary
end. To Hal it meant the final capitulation to
the forces against which he had been fighting since
his first enlightenment.
“I might as well sell the ‘Clarion’
now, and be done with it,” he declared bitterly.
“Nonsense! If you stuck
to this foolishness you’d have to sell it or
lose it. You’d be ruined, both in influence
and in money. How would you feel when Mac Ellis,
and Wayne, and all the fellows that stuck by you found
themselves out of a job because of your pig-headedness?
And what harm are you doing by dropping the story,
anyway? We’ve got this thing beaten, right
now. It isn’t spreading. It’s
dropping off. What’ll the ‘Clarion’
look like when its great sensation peters out into
thin air? But by that time the harm’ll
be done and the whole country will think we’re
a plague-stricken city. Don’t do all that
damage and spoil everything just for a false delusion,
Boyee.”
But Hal’s mind was brooding
on the fatal promise which he had so confidently made
his father. One way out there was.
“Since it’s a question
of my word to you,” he said, “I could still
publish the truth about Milly Neal.”
“No. You couldn’t
do that, Boyee,” said his father in a tone, half
sorrowful, half shamed.
“No. You’re right. I couldn’t—God
help me!”
To proclaim his own father a moral
criminal in his own paper was the one test which Hal
lacked the power to meet. It was the world-old
conflict between loyalty and principle—in
which loyalty so often and so tragically wins the
first combat.
After all, Hal forced himself to consider,
he was not serving his public ill by this particular
sacrifice of principle. The official mortality
figures helped him to persuade himself that the typhus
was indeed ebbing. For himself, as the price
of silence, there was easy sailing under the flag
of local patriotism, and with every success in prospect.
Yet it was with sunken eyes that he turned to the tempter.
“All right,” he said,
with a half groan, “I give in. We won’t
print it.”
Dr. Surtaine heaved a great sigh of
relief. “That’s horse sense!”
he cried jovially. “Now, you go ahead on
those lines and you’ll make the ‘Clarion’
the best-paying proposition in Worthington. I’ll
drop a few hints where they’ll do the most good,
and you’ll see the advertisers breaking their
necks to come in. Journalism is no different from
any other business, Boy-ee. Live and let live.
Bear and forbear. There’s the rule for
you. The trouble with you, Boy-ee, has been that
you’ve been trying to run a business on pink-tea
principles.”
“The trouble with me,”
said his son bitterly, “is that I’ve been
trying to reform a city when I ought to have been
reforming myself.”
“Oh, you’re all right,
Boy-ee,” his affectionate and admiring father
reassured him. “You’re just finding
yourself. As for this reform—”
And he was launched upon the second measure of the
Pæan of Policy when Hal cut him short by ringing a
bell and ordering the boy to send McGuire Ellis to
him. Ellis came up from the city room.
“Kill the epidemic story, Mr. Ellis,”
he ordered.
Red passion surged up into Ellis’s face.
“Kill—” he began, in a strangled
voice.
“Kill it. You understand?”
The associate editor’s color receded. He
looked with slow contempt from father to son.
“Oh, yes, I understand,” he said.
“Any other orders to-day?”
Hal made no reply. His father,
divining that this was no time for further speech,
took his departure. McGuire Ellis went out with
black despair at his heart, a soldier betrayed by
his captain. And the proprietor of the “Clarion,”
his feet now set in the path of success and profit,
turned back to his work in sodden disenchantment, sighing
as youth alone sighs, and as youth sighs only when
it foregoes the dream of ideals which is its immortal
birthright.