McGUIRE ELLIS WAKES UP
On implication of the Highest Authority
we have it that the leopard cannot change his spots.
The Great American Pumess is a feline of another stripe.
Stress of experience and emotion has been known to
modify sensibly her predatory characteristics.
In the very beautiful specimen of the genus which,
from time to time, we have had occasion to study in
these pages, there had taken place, in a few short
months, an alteration so considerable as to be almost
revolutionary.
Many factors had contributed to the
result. No woman of inherent fineness can live
close to human suffering, as Esmé had lived in her
slum work, without losing something of that centripetal
self-concern which is the blemish of the present-day
American girl. Constant association with such
men as Hugh Merritt and Norman Hale, men who saw in
her not a beautiful and worshipful maiden, but a useful
agency in the work which made up their lives, gave
her a new angle from which to consider herself.
Then, too, her brief engagement to Will Douglas had
sobered her. For Douglas, whatever his lack of
independence and manliness in his professional relations,
had endured the jilting with quiet dignity. But
he had suffered sharply, for he had been genuinely
in love with Esmé. She felt his pain the more
in that there was the same tooth gnawing at her own
heart, though she would not acknowledge it to herself.
And this taught her humility and consideration.
The Pumess was not become a Saint, by any means.
She still walked, a lovely peril to every susceptible
male heart. But she no longer thirsted with unquenchable
ardor for conquests.
Meek though a reformed pumess may
be, there are limits to meekness. When Miss Eleanor
Stanley Maxwell Elliot woke up to find herself pilloried
as an enemy to society, in the very paper which she
had tried to save, she experienced mingled emotions
shot through with fiery streaks of wrath. Presently
these simmered down to a residue of angry amazement
and curiosity. If you have been accustomed all
your life to regard yourself as an empress of absolute
dominance over slavish masculinity, and are suddenly
subjected to a violent slap across the face from the
hand of the most highly favored slave, some allowance
is due you of outraged sensibilities. Chiefly,
however Esmé wondered WHY. WHY, in large capitals,
and with an intensely ascendant inflection.
Her first impulse had been to telephone
Hal a withering message. More deliberate thought
suggested the wisdom of making sure of her ground,
first. The result was a shock. From her still
infuriated guardian she had learned that, technically,
she was the owner, with full moral responsibility
for the “Pest-Egg.” The information
came like a dash of extremely cold water, which no
pumess, reformed or otherwise, likes. Miss Elliot
sat her down to a thoughtful consideration of the “Clarion.”
She found she was in good company. Several other
bright and shining lights of the local firmament,
social, financial, and commercial, shared the photographic
notoriety. Slowly it was borne in upon her open
mind that she had not been singled out for reprehension;
that she was simply a part of the news, as Hal regarded
news—no, as the “Clarion” regarded
news. That Hal would deliberately have let this
happen, she declined to believe. Unconsciously
she clung to her belief in the natural inviolability
of her privilege. It must have been a mistake.
Hal would tell her so when he saw her. Yet if
that were so, why had he sent word, the day after,
that he couldn’t keep his appointment? Would
he come at all, now?
Doubt upon this point was ended when
Dr. Elliot, admitted on the strength of his profession
to the typhus ward, and still exhibiting mottlings
of wrath on his square face, had repeated his somewhat
censored account of his encounter with “that
puppy.” Esmé haughtily advised her dear
Uncle Guardy that the “puppy” was her friend.
Uncle Guardy acidulously counseled his beloved Esmé
not to be every species of a mildly qualified idiot
at one and the same time. Esmé elevated her nose
in the air and marched out of the room to telephone
Hal Surtaine forthwith. What she intended to
telephone him (very distantly, of course) was that
her uncle had no authority to speak for her, that she
was quite capable of speaking for herself, and that
she was ready to hear any explanation tending to mitigate
his crime—not in those words precisely,
but in a tone perfectly indicative of her meaning.
Furthermore, that the matter on which she had wished
to speak to him was a business matter, and that she
would expect him to keep the broken appointment later.
None of which was ever transmitted. Fate, playing
the rôle of Miching Mallecho, prevented once again.
Hal was out.
In the course of time, Esmé’s
quarantine (a little accelerated, though not at any
risk of public safety) was lifted and she returned
to the world. The battle of hygiene vs.
infection was now at its height. Esmé threw herself
into the work, heart and soul. For weeks she did
not set eyes on Hal Surtaine, except as they might
pass on the street. Twice she narrowly missed
him at the hospital where she found time to make an
occasional visit to Ellis. A quick and lively
friendship had sprung up between the spoiled beauty
and the old soldier of the print-columns, and from
him, as soon as he was convalescent, she learned something
of the deeper meanings of the “Clarion”
fight and of the higher standards which had cost its
owner so dear.
“I suppose,” he said,
“the hardest thing he ever had to do in his life
was to print your picture.”
“Did he have to print it?”
“Didn’t he? It was news.”
“And that’s your god, isn’t it,
Mr. Mac?” said his visitor, smiling.
“It’s only a small name for Truth.
Good men have died for that.”
“Or killed others for their ideal of it.”
“Miss Esmé,” said the
invalid, “Hal Surtaine has had to face two tests.
He had to show up his own father in his paper.”
“Yes. I read it. But I’ve only
begun to understand it since our talks.”
“And he had to print that about
you. Wayne told me he almost killed the story
himself to save Hal. ’I couldn’t bear
to look at the boy’s face when he told me to
run it,’ Wayne said. And he’s no sentimentalist.
Newspapermen generally ain’t.”
“Aren’t you?”
said Esmé, with a catch in her breath. “I
should think you were, pretty much, at the ‘Clarion’
office.”
From that day she knew that she must
talk it out with Hal. Yet at every thought of
that encounter, her maidenhood shrank, affrighted,
with a sweet and tremulous fear. Inevitable as
was the end, it might have been long postponed had
it not been for a word that Ellis let drop the day
when he left the hospital. Mrs. Festus Willard,
out of friendship for Hal, had insisted that the convalescent
should come to her house until his strength was quite
returned, instead of returning to his small and stuffy
hotel quarters, and Esmé had come in her car to transfer
him. It was the day after the Talk-It-Over Breakfast
at which Hal had announced the prospective fall of
the “Clarion.”
“I’ll be glad to get back
to the office,” said Ellis to Esmé. “They
certainly need me.”
“You aren’t fit yet,” protested
the girl.
“Fitter than the Boss. He’s worrying
himself sick.”
“Isn’t everything all right?”
“All wrong! It’s
this cussed Pierce libel case that’s taking the
heart out of him.”
“Oh!” cried Esmé, on a
note of utter dismay. “Why didn’t
you tell me, Mr. Mac?”
“Tell you? What do you know about it?”
“Lots! Everything.”
She fell into silent thoughtfulness. “I
supposed that you had heard from Mr. Pierce, or his
lawyer, at the office. I must see Hal—Mr.
Surtaine—now. Does he still come to
see you?”
“Everyday.”
“Send word to him to be at the
Willards’ at two to-morrow. And—and,
please, Mr. Mac, don’t tell him why.”
“Now, what kind of a little
game is this?” began Ellis, teasingly. “Am
I an amateur Cupid, or what’s my cue?”
He looked into the girl’s face and saw tears
in the great brown eyes. “Hello!”
he said with a change of voice. “What’s
wrong, Esmé? I’m sorry.”
“Oh, I’m wrong!”
she cried. “I ought to have spoken long
ago. No, no! I’m all right now!”
She smiled gloriously through her tears. “Here
we are. You’ll be sure that he’s
there?”
“Fear not, but lean on Dollinger
And he will fetch you through”—
quoted the other in oratorical assurance,
and turned to Mrs. Willard’s greeting.
At one-thirty on the following day,
Mr. McGuire Ellis was where he shouldn’t have
been, asleep in a curtained alcove window-seat of the
big Willard library. At one minute past two he
was where he should have been still less; that is,
in the same place and condition. Now Mr. Ellis
is not only the readiest hair-trigger sleeper known
to history, but he is also one of the most profound
and persistent. Entrances and exits disturb him
not, nor does the human voice penetrate to the region
of his dreams. To everything short of earthquake,
explosion, or physical contact, his slumber is immune.
Therefore he took no note when Miss Esmé Elliot came
in, nor when, a moment later, Mr. Harrington Surtaine
arrived, unannounced. Nor, since he was thoroughly
shut in by the draperies, was either of them aware
of his presence.
Esmé rose slowly to her feet as Hal
entered. She had planned a leading-up to her
subject, but at sight of him she was startled out of
any greeting, even.
“Oh, how thin you look, and tired!” she
exclaimed.
“Strenuous days, these,”
he answered. “I didn’t expect to see
you here. Where’s Ellis?”
“Upstairs. Don’t
go. I want to speak to you. Sit down there.”
At her direction Hal drew up a chair.
She took the corner of the lounge near by and regarded
him silently from under puckered brows.
“Is it about Ellis?” said Hal, alarmed
at her hesitation.
“No. It is about Mr. Pierce. There
won’t be any libel suit.”
“What!”
“No.” She shook her
head in reassurance of his evident incredulity.
“You’ve nothing to worry about, there.”
“How can you know?”
“From Kathie.”
“Did her father tell her?”
“She told her father. There’s a dreadful
quarrel.”
“I don’t understand at all.”
“Kathie absolutely refuses to
testify for her father. She says that the accident
was her own fault, and if there’s a trial she
will tell the truth.”
Before she had finished, Hal was on
his feet. Her heart smote her as she saw the
gray worry pass from his face and his shoulders square
as from the relief of a burden lifted, “Has
it lain so heavy on your mind?” she asked pitifully.
“If you knew!” He walked
half the length of the long room, then turned abruptly.
“You did that,” he said. “You
persuaded her.”
“No. I didn’t, indeed.”
The eager light faded in his face.
“Of course not. Why should you after—Do
you mind telling me how it happened?”
“It isn’t my secret.
But—but she has come to care very much for
some one, and it is his influence.”
“Wonderful!” He laughed
boyishly. “I want to go out and run around
and howl. Would you mind joining me in the college
yell? Does Mac know?”
“Nobody knows but you.”
“That’s why Pierce kept
postponing. And I, living under the shadow of
this! How can I thank you!”
“Don’t thank me,”
she said with an effort. “I—I’ve
known it for weeks. I meant to tell you long
ago, but I thought you’d have learned it before
now—and—and it was made hard
for me.”
“Was that what you had to tell
me about the paper, when you asked me to come to see
you?”
She nodded.
“But how could I come?”
he burst out. “I suppose there’s no
use—I must go and tell Mac about this.”
“Wait,” she said.
He stopped, gazing at her doubtfully.
“I’m tearing down the tenement at Number
9.”
“Tearing it down?”
“As a confession that—that
you were right. But I didn’t know I owned
it. Truly I didn’t. You’ll believe
that, won’t you?”
“Of course,” he cried eagerly. “I
did know it, but too late.”
“If you’d known in time would you have—”
“Left that out of the paper?”
he finished, all the life gone from his voice.
“No, Esmé. I couldn’t have done that.
But I could have said in the paper that you didn’t
know.”
“I thought so,” she said very quietly.
He misinterpreted this. “I
can’t lie to you, Esmé,” he said with a
sad sincerity. “I’ve lived with lies
too long. I can’t do it, not for any hope
of happiness. Do I seem false and disloyal to
you? Sometimes I do to myself. I can’t
help it. All a man can do is to follow his own
light. Or a woman either, I suppose. And
your light and mine are worlds apart.”
Again, with a stab of memory, he saw
that desperate smile on her lips. Then she spoke
with the clear courage of her new-found womanliness.
“There is no light for me where you are not.”
He took a swift step toward her.
And at the call, sweetly and straightly, she came
to meet his arms and lips.
“Poor boy!” she said,
a few minutes later, pushing a lock of hair from his
forehead. “I’ve let you carry that
burden when a word from me would have lifted it.”
“Has there ever been such a
thing as unhappiness in the world, sweetheart?”
he said. “I can’t remember it.
So I don’t believe it.”
“I’m afraid I’ve
cost you more than I can ever repay you for,”
she said. “Hal, tell me I’ve been
a little beast!—Oh, no! That’s
no way to tell it. Aren’t you sorry, sir,
that you ever saw this room?”
“Finest example of interior
architecture I know of. Exact replica of the
plumb center of Paradise.”
“It’s where all your troubles
began. You first met me here in this very room.”
“Oh, no! My troubles began
from the minute I set eyes on you, that day at the
station.”
“Don’t contradict me.”
She laid an admonitory finger on his lips, then, catching
at his hand, gently drew him with her. “Right
in that very window-seat there—”
She whisked the hangings aside, and brushed McGuire
Ellis’s nose in so doing.
“Hoong!” snorted McGuire Ellis.
“Oh!” cried Esmé.
“Were you there all the time? We—I—didn’t
know—Have you been asleep?”
“I have been just that,”
replied the dormant one, yawning.
“I hope we haven’t disturbed—”
began Esmé in the same breath with Hal’s awkward
“Sorry we waked you up, Mac.”
“Don’t be—”
Ellis checked his familiar growl, looked with growing
suspicion from Esmé’s flushed loveliness to Hal’s
self conscious confusion, leaped to his feet, gathered
the pair into a sudden, violent, impartial embrace,
and roared out:—
“Go ahead! Be young!
You can only be it once in a lifetime.”