Bruce was incensed at the cool manner in which Katherine had taken leave of him without so much as hinting at her purpose. In offering her aid and telling her his plans he had made certain advances. She had responded to these overtures by telling nothing. He felt he had been snubbed, and he resented such treatment all the more from a woman toward whom he had somewhat relaxed his dignity and his principles. As he sat alone on his porch that night he breathed out along with his smoke an accompanying fire of profanity; but for all his wrath, he could not keep the questions from arising. Why had she gone? What was she going to do? Was she coming back? Had she given up her father’s case, and had she been silent to him that afternoon about her going for the simple reason that she had been ashamed to acknowledge her retreat? He waited impatiently for the return of his uncle, who had been absent that evening from Bruce flung away his cigar in exasperation, and the dry night air was vibrant with half-whispered but perfervid curses. She was irritating, erratic, irrational, irresponsible—preposterous, simply preposterous—damn that kind of women anyhow! They pretended to be a lot, but there wasn’t a damned thing to them! But he could not subdue his curiosity, though he fervently informed himself of the thousand and one kinds of an unblessed fool he was for bothering his head about her. Nor could he banish her image. Her figure kept rising before him out of the hot, dusty blackness: as she had appeared before the jury yesterday, slender, spirited, clever—yes, she had spoken cleverly, he would admit that; as she had appeared in her parlour that afternoon, a graceful, courteous, self-possessed home person; as he The next morning Bruce sent young Harper to inquire from Doctor West in the jail, and after that from Katherine’s aunt, why Katherine had gone to New York, whether she had abandoned the case, and whether she had gone for good. But if these old people knew anything, they did not tell it to Billy Harper. Westville buzzed over Katherine’s disappearance. The piazzas, the soda-water fountains, the dry goods counters, the Ladies’ Aid, were at no loss for an explanation of her departure. She had lost her case—she had discovered that she was a failure as a lawyer—she had learned what Westville thought of her—so what other course was open to her but to slip out of town as quietly as she could and return to the place from which she had come? The Women’s Club in particular rejoiced at her withdrawal. Thank God, a pernicious example to the rising young womanhood of the town was at last removed! Perhaps woman’s righteous disapproval of Katherine had a deeper reason than was expressed—for what most Westville continued to buzz, but it soon had matters more worth its buzzing. Pressing the heels of one another there came two amazing surprises. The city had taken for granted the nomination of Kennedy for mayor, but the convention’s second ballot declared Blake the nominee. Blake had given heed to Mr. Brown’s advice and had decided to take no slightest risk; but to the people he let it be known that he had accepted the nomination to help the city out of its water-works predicament, and Westville, recognizing his personal sacrifice, rang with applause of his public spirit. The respectable element looked forward with self-congratulation to him as the next chief of the city—for he would have an easy victory over any low politician who would consent to be Blind Charlie’s candidate. Then, without warning, came Bruce’s nomination, with a splendid list of lesser candidates, People recalled Katherine now and then to wonder what she was doing and how mortified she must feel over her fiasco, and to laugh good-naturedly or sarcastically at the pricked soap-bubble of her pretensions. But the newer and present excitement of the campaign was forcing her into the comparative insignificance of all receding phenomena—when, one late September She quietly entered a vacant pew and slipped to a position which allowed her an unobstructed view of Doctor Sherman, and which allowed Doctor Sherman an equally unobstructed view of her. Worshippers who stared her way noticed that she seemed never to take her gaze from the figure in the pulpit; and it was remarked, after the service was over, that though Doctor Sherman’s discourses had been falling off of late—poor man, his health was failing so!—to-day’s was quite the poorest sermon he had ever preached. The service ended, Katherine went quietly out of the church, smiling and bowing to such as met her eyes, and leaving an active tongue in every mouth behind her. So she had come back! Well, of all the nerve! Did you ever! Was she going to stay? What did she think she was going to do? And so on all the way home, to where awaited the heavy Sunday dinner on which Westville gorged itself python-like—if it be not sacrilege to compare communicants with such heathen beasts—till they At about the time Westville was starting up this chorus, Old Hosie Hollingsworth, in Katherine’s parlour, deposited his rusty silk hat upon the square mahogany piano that had been Doctor West’s wedding gift to his wife. The old lawyer lowered himself into a rocker, crossed his attenuated legs, and shook his head. “Land sakes—I certainly was surprised to get your note!” he repeated. “When did you get back?” “Late last night.” He stared admiringly at her fresh young figure. “I must say, you don’t look much like a lawyer who has lost her first case and has sneaked out of town to hide her mortification!” “Is that what people have been saying?” she smiled. “Well, I don’t feel like one!” “Then you haven’t given up?” “Given up?” She lifted her eyebrows. “I’ve just begun. It’s still a hard case, perhaps a long case; but at last I have a start. And I have some great plans. It was to ask your advice about these plans that I sent for you.” “My advice! Huh! I ain’t ever been married—not even so much as once,” he commented dryly, “but I’ve been told by unfortunates that have that it’s the female way to do a thing and then ask whether she should do it or not.” “Now, don’t be cynical!” laughed Katherine. “You know I tried to consult you before I went away. But it still is not too late for your advice. I’ll put my plans before you, and if your masculine wisdom, whose superiority you have proved by keeping yourself unmarried, can show me wherein I’m wrong, I’ll change them or drop them altogether.” “Fire away,” he said, half grumbling. “What are your plans?” “They’re on a rather big scale. First, I shall put a detective on the case.” “That’s all right, but don’t you underestimate Harrison Blake,” warned Old Hosie. “Since you’ve come back Blake will be sure you’re after him. He will be on his guard against you; he will expect you to use a detective; he will watch out for him, perhaps try to have his every move shadowed. I suppose you never thought of that?” he demanded triumphantly. “Oh, yes I did,” Katherine returned. “That’s why I’m going to hire two detectives.” The old man raised his eyebrows. “Two detectives?” “Yes. One for Mr. Blake to watch. One to do the real work.” “Oh!” It was an ejaculation of dawning comprehension. “The first detective will be a mere blind; a decoy to engage Mr. Blake’s attention. He must be a little obvious, rather blundering—so that Mr. Blake can’t miss him. He will know nothing about my real scheme at all. While Mr. Blake’s attention and suspicion are fixed on the first man, the second man, who is to be a real detective with real brains in his head, will get in the real work.” “Splendid! Splendid!” cried Old Hosie, looking at her enthusiastically. “And yet that pup of a nephew of mine sniffs out, ‘Her a lawyer? Nothing! She’s only a woman!’” Katherine flushed. “That’s what I want Mr. Blake to think.” “To underestimate you—yes, I see. Have you got your first man?” “No. I thought you might help me find him, for a local man, or a state man, will be best; it will be easiest for him to be found out to be a detective.” “I’ve got just the article for you,” cried Old Hosie. “You know Elijah Stone?” “No. But, of course, I’ve seen him.” “He’s Westville’s best and only. He thinks “Come, I’m not engaging a low comedian for a comic opera.” “Oh, he’s not so bad as I said. He’s really got a reputation. He’s just the kind of a detective that an inexperienced girl might pick up. Blake will soon find out you’ve hired him, he’ll believe it a bona fide arrangement on your part, and will have a lot of quiet laughs at your simplicity. God made Lige especially for you.” “All right. I’ll see him to-morrow.” “Have you thought about the other detective?” “Yes. One reason I went to New York was to try to get a particular person—Mr. Manning, with whom I’ve worked on some cases for the Municipal League. He has six children, and is very much in love with his wife. The last thing he looks like is a detective. He might pass for a superintendent of a store, or a broker. But he’s very, very competent and clever, and is always master of himself.” “And you got him?” “Yes. But he can’t come for a couple of weeks. He is finishing up a case for the Municipal League.” “How are you going to use him?” “I don’t just know yet. Perhaps I can fit him into a second scheme of mine. You’ve heard of Mr. Seymour, of Seymour & Burnett?” “The big bankers and brokers?” “Yes. I knew Elinor Seymour at Vassar, and I visited her several times; and as Mr. Seymour is president of the Municipal League, altogether I saw him quite a great deal. I don’t mean to be conceited, but I really believe Mr. Seymour has a lot of confidence in me.” “That’s a fine compliment to his sense,” Old Hosie put in. “He’s about the most decent of the big capitalists,” she went on. “He was my second reason for going to New York. When I got there he had just left to spend a week-end in Paris, or something of the sort. I had to wait till he came back; that’s why I was gone so long. I went to him with a plain business proposition. I gave him a hint of the situation out here, told him there was a chance the water-works might be sold, and asked authority to buy the system in for him.” “And how did he take it?” Old Hosie asked eagerly. “You behold in me an accredited agent of Seymour & Burnett. I don’t know yet how I shall use that authority, but if I can’t do anything better, and if the worst comes to the very worst, I’ll buy in the plant, defeat Mr. Blake, and see that the city gets something like a fair price for its property.” Old Hosie stared at her in open admiration. “Well, if you don’t beat the band!” he exclaimed. “In the meantime, I shall busy myself with trying to get my father’s case appealed. But that is really only a blind; behind that I shall every minute be watching Mr. Blake. Now, what do you think of my plans? You know I called you in for your advice.” “Advice! You need advice about as much as an angel needs a hat pin!” “But I’m willing to change my plans if you have any suggestions.” “I was a conceited old idiot when I was a little sore awhile ago because you had called me in for my opinion after you had settled everything. Go right ahead. It’s fine. Fine, I tell you!” He chuckled. “And to think that Harrison Blake thinks he’s bucking up against only a woman. Just a simple, inexperienced, dear, bustling, blundering woman! What a jar he’s got coming to him!” “We mustn’t be too hopeful,” warned Katherine. “There’s a long, hard fight ahead. “But if you do win!” His old eyes glowed excitedly. “Your father cleared, the idol of the town upset, the water-works saved—think what a noise all that will make!” A new thought slowly dawned into his face. “H’m—this old town hasn’t been, well, exactly hospitable to you; has laughed at you—sneered at you—given you the cold shoulder.” “Has it? What do I care!” “It would be sort of nice, now wouldn’t it,” he continued slowly, keenly, with his subdued excitement, “sort of heaping coals of fire on Westville’s roofs, if the town, after having cut you dead, should find that it had been saved by you. I suppose you’ve never thought of that aspect of the case—eh? I suppose it has never occurred to you that in saving your father you’ll also save the town?” She flushed—and smiled a little. “Oh, so we’ve already thought of that, have we. I see I can’t suggest anything new to you. Let the old town jeer all it wants to now, we’ll show ’em in the end!—is that it?” She smiled again, but did not answer him. “Now you’ll excuse me, won’t you, for I promised to call on father this afternoon?” “Certainly.” He rose. “How is your father—or haven’t you seen him yet?” “I called at the jail first thing this morning. He’s very cheerful.” “That’s good. Well, good-by.” Old Hosie was reaching for his hat, but just then a firm step sounded on the porch and there was a ring of the bell. Katherine crossed the parlour and swung open the screen. Standing without the door was Bruce, a challenging, defiant look upon his face. “Why, Mr. Bruce,” she exclaimed, smiling pleasantly. “Won’t you please come in?” “Thank you,” he said shortly. He bowed and entered, but stopped short at sight of his uncle. “Hello! You here?” “Just to give an off-hand opinion, I should say I am.” Old Hosie smiled sweetly, put his hat back upon the piano and sank into his chair. “I just dropped in to tell Miss Katherine some of those very clever and cutting things you’ve said to me about the idea of a woman being a lawyer. I’ve been expostulating with her—trying to show her the error of her ways—trying to prove to her that she wasn’t really clever and didn’t have the first qualification for law.” “You please let me speak for myself!” retorted Bruce. “How long are you going to stay here?” Old Hosie recrossed his long legs and settled back with the air of the rock of ages. “Why, I was expecting Miss Katherine was going to invite me to stay to supper.” “Well, I guess you won’t. You please remember this is your month to look after Jim. Now you trot along home and see that he don’t fry the steak to a shingle the way you let him do it last night.” “Last night I was reading your editorial on the prospects of the corn crop and I got so worked up as to how it was coming out that I forgot all about that wooden-headed nigger. I tell you, Arn, that editorial was one of the most exciting, stirring, nerve-racking, hair-breadth——” “Come, get along with you!” Bruce interrupted impatiently. “I want to talk some business with Miss West!” Old Hosie rose. “You see how he treats me,” he said plaintively to Katherine. “I haven’t had one kind word from that young pup since, when he was in high-school, he got so stuck on himself because he imagined every girl in town was in love with him.” Bruce took Old Hosie’s silk hat from the piano and held it out to him. “You certainly won’t get a kind word from me to-night if that steak is burnt!” Katherine followed Hosie out upon the porch. “He’s a great boy,” whispered the old man She watched the bent, spare figure down the walk, then went in to Bruce. The editor was standing stiffly in the middle of the parlour. “I trust that my call is not inopportune?” “I’m glad to see you, but it does so happen that I promised father to call at five o’clock. And it’s now twenty minutes to.” “Perhaps you will allow me to walk there with you?” “But wouldn’t that be, ah—a little dangerous?” “Dangerous?” “Yes. Perhaps you forget that Westville disapproves of me. It might not be a very politic thing for a candidate for mayor to be seen upon the street with so unpopular a person. It might cost votes, you know.” He flushed. “If the people in this town don’t like what I do, they can vote for Harrison Blake!” He swung open the door. “If you want to get there on time, we must start at once.” Two minutes later they were out in the street together. People whom they passed paused and stared back at them; groups of young men and women, courting collectively on front lawns, ceased their flirtatious chaffing and their At the start Katherine kept the conversation upon Bruce’s candidacy. He told her that matters were going even better than he had hoped; and informed her, with an air of triumph he did not try to conceal, that Blind Charlie Peck had been giving him an absolutely free rein, and that he was more than ever convinced that he had correctly judged that politician’s motives. Katherine meekly accepted this implicit rebuke of her presumption, and congratulated him upon the vindication of his judgment. “But I came to you to talk about your affairs, not mine,” he said as they turned into Main Street. “I half thought, when you left, that you had gone for good. But your coming back proves you haven’t given up. May I ask what your plans are, and how they are developing?” Her eyes dropped to the sidewalk, and she seemed to be embarrassed for words. It was not wholly his fault that he interpreted her “Your plans have not been prospering very well, then?” he asked, after a pause. “Oh, don’t think that; I still have hopes,” she answered hurriedly. “I am going to keep right on at the case—keep at it hard.” “Were you successful in what you went to New York for?” “I can’t tell yet. It’s too early. But I hope something will come of it.” He tried to get a glimpse of her face, but she kept it fixed upon the ground—to hide her discomfiture, he thought. “Now listen to me,” he said kindly, with the kindness of the superior mind. “Here’s what I came to tell you, and I hope you won’t take it amiss. I admire you for the way you took your father’s case when no other lawyer would touch it. You have done your best. But now, I judge, you are at a standstill. At this particular moment it is highly imperative that the case go forward with highest speed. You understand me?” “I think I do,” she said meekly. “You mean that a man could do much better with the case than a woman?” “Frankly, yes—still meaning no offense to you. You see how much hangs upon your father’s case besides his own honour. There is “Of course,” said Katherine, her eyes still upon the sidewalk, “this man lawyer would expect to be the chief counsel?” “Being older, and more experienced——” “And being a man,” Katherine softly supplied. “He of course would expect to have full charge—naturally,” Bruce concluded. “Naturally,” echoed Katherine. “Of course you would agree to that?” “I was just trying to think what a man would do,” she said meditatively, in the same soft tone. “But I suppose a man, after he had taken a case when no one else would take it, when it was hopeless—after he had spent months upon it, made himself unpopular by representing an unpopular cause, and finally worked out a line of defense that, when the evidence is gained, will not only clear his client but astound the city—after he had triumph and reputation almost within his grasp, I suppose a man would be quite willing to step He looked at her sharply. But her face, or what he saw of it, showed no dissembling. “But you are not stating the matter fairly,” he said. “You should consider the fact that you are at the end of your rope!” “Yes, I suppose I should consider that,” she said slowly. They were passing the Court House now. He tried to study her face, but it continued bent upon the sidewalk, as if in thought. They reached the jail, and she mounted the first step. “Well, what do you say?” he asked. She slowly raised her eyes and looked down on him guilelessly. “You’ve been most thoughtful and kind—but if it’s just the same to you, I’d like to keep on with the case a little longer alone.” “What!” he ejaculated. He stared at her. “I don’t know what to make of you!” he cried in exasperation. “Oh, yes you do,” she assured him sweetly, “for you’ve been trying to make very little of me.” “Eh! See here, I half believe you don’t want my aid!” he blurted out. Standing there above him, smiling down upon him, she could hardly resist telling him the truth—that sooner would she allow her right “I hope that you will do all for my father, for the city, for your own election, that you can,” she said. “All I ask is that for the present I be allowed to handle the case by myself.” The Court House tower tolled five. She held out to him a gloved hand. “Good-by. I’m sorry I can’t invite you in,” she said lightly, and turned away. He watched the slender figure go up the steps and into the jail, then turned and walked down the street—exasperated, puzzled, in profound thought. |