



Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
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                              HER INFINITE
                                VARIETY

                                  _by_

                             BRAND WHITLOCK
                     Author of "The 13th District"

                         WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
                        HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY

                             Decorations by
                         Ralph Fletcher Seymour





                                NEW YORK
                           A. L. BURT COMPANY
                               PUBLISHERS




                            _Copyright 1904_
                      _The Bobbs-Merrill Company_

                               _January_




                             _To_ My Mother




                          Her Infinite Variety





I


AMELIA came running eagerly down the wide stairs, and though she was
smiling with the joy of Vernon's coming, she stopped on the bottom step
long enough to shake out the skirt of the new spring gown she wore, with
a manner that told she had it on that evening for the first time. Vernon
hastened to meet her, and it was not until he had kissed her and
released her from his embrace that she saw the dressing-case he had set
down in the hall.

"What's that for?" she asked in alarm. Her smile faded suddenly, leaving
her face wholly serious.

"I have to go back to-night," he replied, almost guiltily.

"To-night!"

"Yes; I must be in Springfield in the morning."

"But what about the dinner?"

"Well," he began, helplessly, "I guess you'll have to get somebody in my
place."

Amelia stopped and looked at him in amazement.

"I thought the Senate never met Mondays until five o'clock in the
afternoon?" she said.

"It doesn't, usually; but I had a telegram from Porter an hour ago;
there's to be a conference in the morning."

They started toward the drawing-room. Amelia was pouting in her
disappointment.

"I knew something would spoil it," she said, fatalistically. And then
she added, presently: "I thought that Monday afternoon sessions never
lasted longer than a minute. You never went down before until Monday
night."

"I know, dear," said Vernon, apologetically, "but now that the session
is nearing its close, we're busier than we have been."

"Can't you wire Mr. Porter and get him to let you off?" she asked.

Vernon laughed.

"He isn't my master," he replied.

"Well, he acts like it," she retorted, and then as if she had suddenly
hit upon an unanswerable argument she went on: "If that's so why do you
pay any attention to his telegram?"

"It isn't he, dear," Vernon explained, "it's the party. We are to have a
very important conference to consider a situation that has just arisen.
I must not miss it."

"Well, it ruins my dinner, that's all," she said, helplessly. "I wanted
you here."

Vernon had come up from Springfield as usual for the week's end
adjournment, and Amelia had counted on his waiting over, as he always
did, for the Monday night train, before going back to his duties in the
Senate. More than all, she had counted on him for a dinner she had
arranged for Monday evening.

"What time does your train leave?" she asked, in the voice of one who
succumbs finally to a hopeless situation.

"Eleven twenty," he said. "But I brought my luggage over with me, so I
could start from here at the last minute. I'll go over to the
Twenty-third Street station and catch it there."

Amelia had had the deep chair Vernon liked so well wheeled into the
mellow circle of the light that fell from a tall lamp. The lamp gave the
only light in the room, and the room appeared vast in the dimness; an
effect somehow aided by the chill that was on it, as if the fires of the
Ansley house had been allowed to die down in an eager pretense of
spring. It was spring, but spring in Chicago. Sunday morning had been
bright and the lake had sparkled blue in the warm wind that came up
somewhere from the southwest, but by night the wind had wheeled around,
and the lake resumed its normal cold and menacing mood. As Vernon sank
into the chair he caught a narrow glimpse of the boulevard between the
curtains of the large window; in the brilliant light of a street lamp he
could see a cold rain slanting down on to the asphalt.

"How much longer is this legislature to last, anyway?" Amelia demanded,
as she arranged herself in the low chair before him.

"Three weeks," Vernon replied.

"Three--weeks--more!" The girl drew the words out.

"Yes, only three weeks," said Vernon. "And then we adjourn _sine die_.
The joint resolution fixes the date for June second."

Amelia said nothing. She was usually disturbed when Vernon began to
speak of his joint resolutions; which was, perhaps, the reason why he
spoke of them so often.

"Of course," Vernon went on, with a certain impression of relief in his
words, "I have another session after this."

"When will that be?" Amelia asked.

"Winter after next. The governor, though, may call a special session to
deal with the revenue question. That would take us all back there again
next winter."

"Next winter!" she cried, leaning over in alarm. "Do you mean you'll
have to be away all next winter, too!"

The significance of her tone was sweet to Vernon, and he raised himself
to take her hands in his.

"You could be with me then, dearest," he said softly.

"In Springfield!" she exclaimed.

"Why not?" asked Vernon. "Other members have their wives with them--some
of them," he qualified, thinking how few of the members cared to have
their wives with them during the session.

"What could one do in Springfield, pray?" Amelia demanded. "Go to the
legislative hops, I suppose? And dance reels with farmers and West Side
politicians!" She almost sniffed her disgust.

"Why, dearest," Vernon pleaded, "you do them a great injustice. Some of
them are really of the best people; the society in Springfield is
excellent. At the governor's reception at the mansion the other night--"

"Now, Morley," Amelia said, with a smile that was intended to reproach
him mildly for this attempt to impose upon her credulity.

"And besides," Vernon hurried on, suddenly taking a different course
with her, "you could be a great help to me. I never address the Senate
that I don't think of you, and wish you were there to hear me."

"I should like to hear you," said Amelia, softening a little. "But of
course I couldn't think of appearing in the Senate."

"Why not? Ladies often appear there."

"Yes, overdressed, no doubt."

"Well, you wouldn't have to be overdressed," Vernon retorted. He seemed
to have the advantage, but he decided to forego it. He sank back on the
cushions of his chair, folding his hands and plainly taking the rest a
senator needs after his legislative labors.

"Of course," he said, "we needn't discuss it now. The governor may not
call the special session. If the party--" but he paused, thinking how
little interested she was in the party.

"I wish you'd let politics alone," Amelia went on relentlessly. "It
seems so--so common. I don't see what there is in it to attract you. And
how am I ever going to explain your absence to those people to-morrow
night? Tell them that _politics_ detained you, I suppose?" She looked at
him severely, and yet triumphantly, as if she had reduced the problem to
an absurdity.

"Why," said Vernon, "you can tell them that I was called suddenly to
Springfield; that an important matter in the Senate--"

"The Senate!" Amelia sneered.

"But dearest," Vernon began, leaning over in an attitude for argument.

She cut him short.

"Why, Morley, do you think I'd ever let on to those Eltons that I _know_
any one in _politics_?"

"Don't they have politics in New York?" he asked.

"They won't even know where Springfield is!" she went on irrelevantly.

"What'll they say when they receive our cards next fall?" he asked with
a smile.

"Well, you needn't think your name will be engraved on them as
_Senator_, I can assure you!" Her dark eyes flashed.

Vernon laughed again, and Amelia went on:

"You can laugh, but I really believe you would if I'd let you!"

They were silent after that, and Amelia sat with her elbow on the arm of
her chair, her chin in her hand, meditating gloomily on her ruined
dinner.

"If you did any good by being in politics," she said, as if speaking to
herself. "But I fail to see what good you do. What good do you do?" She
lifted her head suddenly and challenged him with a high look.

"Well," he said, spreading his hands wide, "of course, if you don't care
enough to look in the newspapers!"

"But how could I, Morley?" said Amelia. "How was I to know where to
look?"

"Why, in the Springfield despatches."

"I began by reading the papers," Amelia said. "But, really now, Morley,
you know I couldn't find anything in them about you."

"The most important work in the legislature isn't done in the
newspapers," said Vernon, with a significance that was intended to hide
his inconsistency. "There are committee meetings, and conferences and
caucuses; it is there that policies are mapped out and legislation
framed."

He spoke darkly, as of secret sessions held at night on the upper floors
of hotels, attended only by those who had received whispered
invitations.

"But if you must be in politics," she said, "why don't you do something
big, something great, something to make a stir? Show your friends that
you are really accomplishing something!"

Amelia sat erect and gave a strenuous gesture with one of her little
fists clenched. Her dark eyes showed the excitement of ambition. But
Vernon drooped and placed his hand wearily to his brow. Instantly Amelia
started up from her chair.

"Does that light annoy you?" Her tone was altogether different from her
ambitious one. She was stretching out a hand toward the lamp, and the
white flesh glowed red between her fingers, held against the light.

"Never mind," said Vernon. "It doesn't bother me."

But Amelia rose and twisted the shade of the lamp about, and then, as
she was taking her seat again, she went on:

"I suppose it'll be worse than ever after--after we're--married." She
faltered, and blushed, and began making little pleats in her
handkerchief, studying the effect with a sidewise turn of her head.

Vernon bent over and took both her hands in his.

"If it were only Washington!" There was a new regret in her tone, as
there was in the inclination of her head.

"It shall be Washington, dear," he said.

Amelia's eyelids fell and she blushed again, even in the glow the lamp
shed upon her face. They were silent for a moment, and then suddenly she
looked up.

"Washington would be ever so much better, Morley," she said. "I should
feel as if that really amounted to something. We'd know all the
diplomats, and I'm sure in that atmosphere you would become a great
man."

"I will, dear; I will," he declared, "but it will be all for you."




II


WHEN Vernon went into the Senate that Tuesday morning and saw the red
rose lying on his desk he smiled, and picking it up, raised it eagerly
to his face. But when he glanced about the chamber and saw that a rose
lay on every other desk, his smile was suddenly lost in a stare of
amazement. Once or twice, perhaps, flowers had been placed by
constituents on the desks of certain senators, but never had a floral
distribution, at once so modest and impartial, been made before. Several
senators, already in their seats, saw the check this impartiality gave
Vernon's vanity, and they laughed. Their laughter was of a tone with the
tinkle of the crystal prisms of the chandeliers, chiming in the breeze
that came through the open windows.

The lieutenant-governor was just ascending to his place. He dropped his
gavel to the sounding-board of his desk.

"The Senate will be in order," he said.

The chaplain rose, and the hum of voices in the chamber ceased. Then,
while the senators stood with bowed heads, Vernon saw the card that lay
on the desk beside the rose. Two little jewels of the moisture that
still sparkled on the rose's petals shone on the glazed surface of the
card. Vernon read it where it lay.

"Will the Hon. Morley Vernon please to wear this rose to-day as a token
of his intention to support and vote for House Joint Resolution No. 19,
proposing an amendment to Section 1, Article VII, of the Constitution?"

The noise in the chamber began again at the chaplain's "Amen."

"New way to buttonhole a man, eh?" said Vernon to Bull Burns, who had
the seat next Vernon's. "What's it all about, anyway?"

Vernon took up his printed synopsis of bills and resolutions.

"Oh, yes," he said, speaking as much to himself as to Burns; "old man
Ames's resolution." Then he turned to the calendar. There it was--House
Joint Resolution No. 19. He glanced at Burns again. Burns was fastening
his rose in his buttonhole.

"So you're for it, eh?" he said.

"To hell with it," Burns growled in the gruff voice that spoke for the
First District. In trying to look down at his own adornment he screwed
his fat neck, fold on fold, into his low collar and then, with a grunt
of satisfaction, lighted a morning cigar.

"But--" Vernon began, surprises multiplying. He looked about the
chamber. The secretary was reading the journal of the preceding day and
the senators were variously occupied, reading newspapers, writing
letters, or merely smoking; some were gathered in little groups, talking
and laughing. But they all wore their roses. Vernon might have concluded
that House Joint Resolution No. 19 was safe, had it not been for the
inconsistency of Burns, though inconsistency was nothing new in Burns.
Vernon ventured once more with his neighbor:

"Looks as if the resolution were as good as adopted, doesn't it?"

But Burns cast a glance of pity at him, and then growled in
half-humorous contempt. The action stung Vernon. Burns seemed to resent
his presence in the Senate as he always resented the presence of
Vernon's kind in politics.

The rose still lay on Vernon's desk; he was the only one of the
fifty-one senators of Illinois that had not put his rose on. He opened
his bill file and turned up House Joint Resolution No. 19. He read it
carefully, as he felt a senator should before making up his mind on such
an important, even revolutionary measure. He remembered that at the time
it had been adopted in the House, every one had laughed; no one, with
the exception of its author, Doctor Ames, had taken it seriously.

Ames was known to be a crank; he was referred to as "Doc" Ames, usually
as "Old Doc" Ames. He had introduced more strange bills and resolutions
than any member at that session; bills to curb the homeopathists, bills
to annihilate English sparrows, bills to prohibit cigarettes, bills to
curtail the liquor traffic, and now this resolution providing for the
submission of an amendment to the Constitution that would extend the
electoral franchise to women.

His other measures had received little consideration; he never got any
of them out of committee. But on the female suffrage resolution he had
been obdurate, and when--with a majority so bare that sick men had to be
borne on cots into the House now and then to pass its measures--the
party had succeeded, after weeks of agony, in framing an apportionment
bill that satisfied every one, Doctor Ames had seen his chance. He had
flatly refused to vote for the reapportionment act unless his
woman-suffrage resolution were first adopted.

It was useless for the party managers to urge upon him the impossibility
of providing the necessary two-thirds' vote; Ames said he could get the
remaining votes from the other side. And so the steering committee had
given the word to put it through for him. Then the other side, seeing a
chance to place the majority in an embarrassing attitude before the
people, either as the proponents or the opponents of such a radical
measure--whichever way it went in the end--had been glad enough to
furnish the additional votes. The members of the steering committee had
afterward whispered it about that the resolution was to die in the
Senate. Then every one, especially the women of Illinois, had promptly
forgotten the measure.

As Vernon thought over it all he picked up the rose again, then laid it
down, and idly picked up the card. Turning it over in his hand he saw
that its other side was engraved, and he read:


                          MARIA BURLEY GREENE
                    _Attorney and Counselor at law_
                         _The Rookery_ CHICAGO



Then he knew; it was the work of the woman lawyer. Vernon had heard of
her often; he had never seen her. He gave a little sniff of disgust.

The Senate was droning along on the order of reports from standing
committees, and Vernon, growing tired of the monotony, rose and
sauntered back to the lobby in search of company more congenial than
that of the gruff Burns. He carried the rose as he went, raising it now
and then to enjoy its cool petals and its fragrance. On one of the
leather divans that stretch themselves invitingly under the tall windows
on each side of the Senate chamber sat a woman, and about her was a
little group of men, bending deferentially. As he passed within easy
distance one of the men saw him and beckoned. Vernon went over to them.

"Miss Greene," said Senator Martin, "let me present Senator Vernon, of
Chicago."

Miss Greene gave him the little hand that looked yet smaller in its
glove of black _suede_. He bowed low to conceal a surprise that had
sprung incautiously to his eyes. Instead of the thin, short-haired,
spectacled old maid that had always, in his mind, typified Maria Burley
Greene, here was a young woman who apparently conformed to every
fashion, though her beauty and distinction might have made her
independent of conventions. Physically she was too nearly perfect to
give at once an impression of aristocracy; but it was her expression
that charmed; it was plain that her intellectuality was of the higher
degrees.

As Vernon possessed himself he was able to note that this surprising
young woman was clad in a black traveling gown that fitted her
perfectly. From her spring hat down to the toes of her boots there was
nothing in her attire that was mannish, but she was of an exquisite
daintiness wholly feminine and alluring.

All these superficial things faded into their proper background when, at
last, his eyes looked full in her face. Reddish brown hair that
doubtless had been combed into some resemblance to the prevailing
fashion of the pompadour, had fallen in a natural part on the right side
and lightly swept a brow not too high, but white and thoughtful. Her
other features--the delicate nose, the full lips, the perfect teeth, the
fine chin--all were lost in the eyes that looked frankly at him. As he
gazed he was conscious that he feared to hear her speak; surely her
voice would betray her masculine quality.

She had seated herself again, and now made a movement that suggested a
drawing aside of her skirts to make a place for some one at her side.
And then she spoke.

"Will you sit down, Senator Vernon?" she said, with a scrupulous regard
for title unusual in a woman. "I must make a convert of Senator Vernon,
you know," she smiled on the other men about her. Her accent implied
that this conversion was of the utmost importance. The other men, of
whom she seemed to be quite sure, evidently felt themselves under the
compulsion of withdrawing, and so fell back in reluctant retreat.




III


THE surprise had leaped to Vernon's eyes again at the final impression
of perfection made by her voice, and the surprise changed to a regret of
lost and irreclaimable opportunity when he reflected that he had lived
for years near this woman lawyer and yet never had seen her once in all
that time. When Miss Greene turned to look him in the face again, after
the others were gone, Vernon grew suddenly bashful, like a big boy. He
felt his face flame hotly. He had been meditating some drawing-room
speech; he had already turned in his mind a pretty sentence in which
there was a discreet reference to Portia; Vernon was just at the age for
classical allusions. But when he saw her blue eyes fixed on him and read
the utter seriousness in them he knew that compliments would all be
lost.

"I am one of your constituents, Senator Vernon," she began, "and I am
down, frankly, lobbying for this resolution."

"And we both," he replied, "are, I believe, members of the Cook County
bar. Strange, isn't it, that two Chicago lawyers should have to wait
until they are in Springfield to meet?"

"Not altogether," she said. "It is not so very strange--my practice is
almost wholly confined to office work; I am more of a counselor than a
barrister. I have not often appeared in court; in fact I prefer not to
do so; I am--well, just a little timid in that part of the work."

The femininity of it touched him. He might have told her that he did not
often appear in court himself, but he was new enough at the bar to have
to practise the dissimulation of the young professional man. He indulged
himself in the temptation to allow her to go undeceived, though with a
pang he remembered that her practice, from all that he had heard, must
be much more lucrative than his. Something of the pretty embarrassment
she felt before courts and juries was evidently on her in this her first
appearance in the Senate, but she put it away; her breast rose with the
deep breath of resolution she drew, and she straightened to look him
once more in the eyes.

"But about this resolution, Senator Vernon; I must not take up too much
of your time. If you will give me your objections to it perhaps I may be
able to explain them away. We should very much like to have your
support."

Vernon scarcely knew what to reply; such objections as he might have
found at other times--the old masculine objections to women's voting and
meddling in politics--had all disappeared at sight of this remarkable
young woman who wished to vote herself; he could not think of one of
them, try as he would. His eyes were on the rose.

"Perhaps your objections are merely prejudices," she ventured boldly, in
her eyes a latent twinkle that disturbed him.

"I confess, Miss Greene," he began, trying to get back something of his
senatorial dignity, such as state senatorial dignity is, "that I have
not devoted much thought to the subject; I am indeed rather ashamed to
acknowledge that I did not even know the amendment was coming up to-day,
until I was--ah--so delightfully reminded by your rose."

He raised the rose to inhale its fragrance. She made no reply, but she
kept her eyes on him, and her gaze compelled him to go on. It was hard
for him to go on, for it was now but a struggle against the formality of
a surrender that had been inevitable from the beginning. But his man's
pride forced him to delay it as long as possible.

"What assurances have you from other senators?" he asked. "Though,
perhaps, I need not ask--they have unanimously mounted your colors." He
looked at his colleagues, sporting their roses. Miss Greene gave a
little exclamation of annoyance.

"Do you think I don't know," she said; "that I don't understand all
that? I might have known that they would not take it seriously! And I
thought--I thought--to put the matter so easily to them that I should be
spared the necessity of buttonholing them!"

"It was a novel way of buttonholing them," he laughed.

"Oh!" she exclaimed, catching her breath, "they wear the roses--and
laugh at me!"

Her eyes flashed through the mists of vexation that suggested tears.

"You are all alone then?"

Vernon said this in a low, solicitous tone, as if he were dealing with
some deep grief.

"All alone."

"And you represent no one--that is, no society, no club?"

"I am not a paid lobbyist," she said, "though I believe it is not beyond
the proprieties of our profession. I do what I do only from a love of
principle. I represent only my sex." She said it impressively, and then
with a quick little laugh that recognized the theatrical that had been
in her attitude, she added: "And that, I suspect, without
authorization."

"The ladies, generally, do not seem to be interested," Vernon
acquiesced.

"No," she shook her head sadly, "no, on the contrary, I suppose most of
them oppose the measure."

"I have generally found them of that feeling," Vernon observed.

"The slaves, before the war, often petitioned congress not to set them
free, you will remember."

Miss Greene spoke with a bitterness. Then quickly she collected herself.

"But your objections, Senator Vernon?" she said. "Really, we must get
down to business."

She raised the little chatelaine watch that hung at her bosom and looked
down at it. And then suddenly, without waiting for his objections, as if
she had quite forgotten them indeed, she impulsively stretched forth a
hand and said:

"You will help me, won't you?"

Vernon looked into her eyes. His gaze, after an instant, fell. He tried
to run the stem of the rose through his buttonhole. The thorns caught in
the cloth.

"You'll have to do it," he said, helplessly.

From some mysterious fold of her habit she took a pin, and then, leaning
over, she pinned the rose to his coat, pinned it with its long stem
hanging, as a woman would pin a flower to a man's lapel.

"Thank you." He was looking into her eyes again.

"Rather let me thank _you_," she said. "It's so good of you to vote for
my measure."

His eyes widened suddenly. He had quite forgotten the resolution. She
must have perceived this, for she blushed, and he hastened to make
amends.

"I'll not only vote for it," he rushed ahead impulsively, "but I'll make
a speech for it." He straightened and leaned away from her to give a
proper perspective in which she could admire him. He sat there smiling.

"How splendid of you!" she cried. "I feel encouraged now."

Then Vernon's face lengthened. He stammered: "But you'll have to give me
some data; I--I don't know a thing about the subject."

"Oh," she laughed, "I brought some literature. It shall all be at your
disposal. And now, I must be about my work. Can you make any
suggestions? Can you tell me whom I should see, whom I should interest,
who has the--ah--pull, I believe you call it?"

"I'll bring them to you," Vernon said. "You sit here and hold court."

He rose and his eyes swept the chamber. They lighted on Burns, and an
idea suddenly came to him. He would revenge himself on Burns for all the
slights of the session.

"Of course you'll have to see Sam Porter, but I'll begin by bringing
Senator Burns--familiarly known as Bull Burns."

"I've read of him so often in the newspapers," she said. "It would be an
experience."

Vernon went over to Burns's seat and touched him on the shoulder.

"Come on," he said in a tone of command, speaking for once from the
altitude of his social superiority. And for once he was successful. The
burly fellow from the First District stood up and looked inquiringly.

"Come with me," Vernon said; "there's a Chicago lawyer back here who
wants to see you."

Burns followed and an instant later Vernon halted before Miss Greene.
The other men, who had quickly returned to her side, made way, and
Vernon said:

"Miss Greene, may I present Senator Burns, of the First District?"

Miss Greene smiled on the big saloon-keeper, who instantly flamed with
embarrassment. She gave him her hand, and he took it in his fat palm,
carefully, lest he crush it.

"I am delighted to meet Senator Burns; I've heard of you so often," she
said, looking up at him. "And do you know I count it a privilege to meet
one of your acknowledged influence in our state's affairs?"

Vernon stood back, delighted beyond measure with the confusion into
which Burns for once had been betrayed. The senator from the First
District was struggling for some word to say, and at last he broke out
with:

"Aw now, lady, don't be t'rowin' de con into me."

The men in the little group on that side of the Senate chamber burst out
in a laugh, but Burns becoming suddenly grave, and dangerous and
terrible in his gravity, they broke off in the very midst of their
mirth. The group became silent.

"Really, Senator Burns," said Miss Greene, "this is no--ah--confidence
game, I assure you." She rose with a graceful sweep of her skirts. Then
she went on: "If you will permit me, I should like to explain my mission
to you. I am down here to ask the Senate to adopt a resolution that will
submit an amendment to the Constitution permitting the women of Illinois
to vote at all elections, as they vote at school elections now. If you
can give it, I should like your support; I should, at least, like to
tell you my reasons."


Slowly she seated herself again, saying: "Will you sit down?"

But Burns only stood and looked at her. There was a trace of fear in her
face.

"Do _you_ want dis resolution put t'rough?" he asked bluntly.

"I? Indeed I do!" she said.

"Is dere anyt'ing in it fer you?" he went on.

"Why," Miss Greene said, somewhat at a loss, "only that I am interested
as a matter of principle in seeing it adopted. It would be a great day
for me if I could go back to Chicago feeling that I had had just a
little bit to do with such a result."

"Den I'm wit' you," said Burns, and wheeling, he went back to his desk.

Miss Greene watched him a moment, and then turned to the men, their
numbers augmented now by others who had come up to see Burns in the
presence of such a woman. The glance she gave them was a question.

"Oh, he means it," said Monroe of Whiteside. "He'll vote for the
resolution."

"Yes, he's given his word," said Brownell of Cook.

Vernon devoted half an hour to bringing senators to meet Maria Greene.
It was not difficult work, though it had its disadvantages; it did not
allow Vernon to remain with her long at a time. But at last it was done,
and he found a moment alone with her. She had given him some pamphlets
on equal suffrage.

"Ah, if _you_ could only address the Senate!" he exclaimed, in open
admiration. And then, as if an inspiration had come to him, he added:

"Perhaps I could arrange it; it has been done."

She gasped and stretched out her hand to stay him.

"Oh, not for all the world!" she protested.

"But you'll come and meet the lieutenant-governor?"

"Up there?" she said, incredulously, pointing to the dais under the
flags.

"Why, yes," Vernon answered; "why not? It's where all the eminent
lawyers who come down here to lobby sit."

She looked up at the desk behind which the lieutenant-governor sat,
swinging gently in his swivel chair, while the secretary read Senate
bills on third reading. There was a reluctance in her eyes, but when she
caught Vernon's smile, she gathered her skirts and said:

"Well, if I must."




IV


WHILE Miss Greene sat chatting with the lieutenant-governor, who gladly
neglected the duties of his high office, Vernon went out into the
rotunda, lighted a cigarette, glanced over the pamphlets, and tried to
arrange the heads of his speech in his mind.

At the thought of the speech, Vernon grew cold and limp with
nervousness. His hands were clammy, his knees trembled, his mouth became
dry and parched, and the cigarette he had lighted imparted all at once
an evil taste. Yet he smoked on, and as he wandered around the rotunda,
men from both houses, passing to and fro, greeted him, but they seemed
to him to be strange new creatures flitting by in a dream. If he was
conscious of them at all it was only as of envied beings, all on a
common happy plane, fortunate ones who did not have to make a speech
within the hour. He went over to the state library, thinking that its
quiet would soothe, but when he stood among the tall stacks of books he
suddenly remembered that he must not smoke in those precincts; and so he
turned out into the rotunda again, for he must smoke. He walked round
and round the rotunda, pausing at times to lean over the brass railing
and look far down to the main floor where the red light glowed at the
cigar stand; he sauntered back into the dim and undisturbed corridors,
his mind racing over all the things he might say.

Once or twice he glanced into the pamphlets Miss Greene had given him,
but he could not fix his mind on them; their types danced meaninglessly
before his eyes. He was angry with himself for this nervousness. Why
must it assail him now, just when he wished to be at his best? He had
spoken before, a hundred times; he knew his audience, and he had the
proper contempt for his colleagues. He had never, to be sure, made a set
speech in that presence; seldom did any one do that; the speeches were
usually short and impromptu, and there was no time for anticipation to
generate nervous dread. And yet his mind seemed to be extraordinarily
clear just then; it seemed to be able to comprehend all realms of
thought at once.

But it was not so much the speech he thought of, as the effect of the
speech; already he could see the newspapers and the big headlines they
would display on their first pages the next morning; he could see his
mother reading them at breakfast, and then he could see Amelia reading
them. How her dark eyes would widen, her cheeks flush pink! She would
raise her hand and put back her hair with that pretty mannerism of hers;
then impulsively resting her arms on the table before her, she would
eagerly read the long columns through, while her mother reminded her
that her breakfast was getting cold. How proud she would be of him! She
would never chide him again; she would see that at last he had found
himself.

The Eltons, too, would read, and his absence from their dinner would
react on them impressively. And Maria Greene--but a confusion
arose--Maria Greene! He had not thought of Amelia all the morning until
that very instant; Amelia's letter lay still unopened on his desk back
there in the Senate chamber. Maria Greene! She would hear, she would
color as she looked at him, and her eyes would glow; he could feel the
warm pressure of the hand she would give him in congratulation.

And it was this handsome young woman's presence in the chamber that gave
rise to all this nervousness. He was sure that he would not have been
nervous if Amelia were to be there. She had never heard him speak in
public, though he had often pressed her to do so; somehow the places
where he spoke were never those to which it would be proper for her to
go. She would wish she had heard this speech, for in twenty-four hours
it would be the one topic of conversation throughout the state; his
picture would be in the newspapers--"The brilliant young Chicago lawyer
who electrified the Illinois Senate with his passionate oratory and
passed the woman-suffrage measure." It would be an event to mark the
beginning of a new era--

But his imaginings were broken, his name was spoken; he turned and saw
Miss Greene.

"Come," she said. "It's up! Hurry!"

She was excited and her cheeks glowed. His teeth began to chatter. He
followed her quick steps in the direction of the chamber.

"But," he stammered. "I--I didn't know--I haven't even arranged for
recognition."

"Oh, I've fixed all that!" the woman said. "The lieutenant-governor
promised me." She was holding her rustling skirts and almost running.




V


AS they entered the Senate chamber, Vernon heard the lieutenant-governor
say: "And the question is: Shall the resolution be adopted? Those in
favor will vote 'aye,' those opposed will vote 'no,' when their names
are called; and the secretary will call the--"

"Mr. President!" Vernon shouted. There was no time now to retreat; he
had launched himself on the sea of glory. A dozen other senators were on
their feet, likewise demanding recognition.

"The senator from Cook," said the lieutenant-governor.

Vernon stood by his desk, arranging complacently the documents Miss
Greene had given him. Once or twice he cleared his throat and wiped his
lips with his handkerchief. The other senators subsided into their
seats, and, seeing that they themselves were not then to be permitted to
speak, and like all speakers, not caring to listen to the speeches of
others, they turned philosophically to the little diversions with which
they whiled away the hours of the session--writing letters, reading
newspapers, smoking. Vernon glanced around. Maria Greene was sitting
precariously on the edge of a divan. Her face was white and drawn. She
gave a quick nod, and a smile just touched her fixed lips. And then
Vernon began. He spoke slowly and with vast deliberation; his voice was
very low. He outlined his subject with exquisite pains, detail by
detail, making it clear just what propositions he would advance. His
manner was that of the lawyer in an appellate court, making a masterly
and purely legal argument; when it was done, the Senate, if it had paid
attention--though it seldom did pay attention--would know all about the
question of woman-suffrage.

In his deliberation, Vernon glanced now and then at Maria Greene. Her
eyes were sparkling with intelligent interest. As if to choose the
lowest point possible from which to trace the rise and progress of
legislation favorable to women, Vernon would call the attention of the
Senate, first, to the decision of the Illinois Supreme Court _In re_
Bradwell, 55 Ill. 525. That was away back in 1869, when the age was
virtually dark; and that was the case, gentlemen would remember, just as
if they all kept each decision of the court at their tongues' ends, in
which the court held that no woman could be admitted, under the laws of
Illinois, to practise as an attorney at law. But,--and Vernon implored
his colleagues to mark,--long years afterward, the court of its own
motion, entered a _nunc pro tunc_ order, reversing its own decision in
the Bradwell case. Vernon dilated upon the importance of this decision;
he extolled the court; it had set a white milestone to mark the
progressing emancipation of the race. Then, briefly, he proposed to
outline for them the legislative steps by which woman's right to
equality with man had been at least partly recognized.

He fumbled for a moment among the papers on his desk, until he found one
of the pamphlets Miss Greene had given him, and then he said he wished
to call the Senate's attention to the Employment Act of 1872, the
Drainage Act of 1885, and the Sanitary District Act of 1890. Vernon
spoke quite familiarly of these acts. Furthermore, gentlemen would, he
was sure, instantly recall the decisions of the courts in which those
acts were under review, as for instance, in Wilson _vs._ Board of
Trustees, 133 Ill. 443; and in Davenport _vs._ Drainage Commissioners,
25 Ill. App. 92.

Those among the senators who were lawyers, as most of them were, looked
up from their letter writing at this, and nodded profoundly, in order to
show their familiarity with Vernon's citations, although, of course,
they never had heard of the cases before.

"This recognition of woman's natural right," Vernon shouted, "this
recognition of her equality with man, can not be overestimated in
importance!" He shook his head fiercely and struck his desk with his
fist. But then, having used up all the facts he had marked in Miss
Greene's pamphlets, he was forced to become more general in his remarks,
and so he began to celebrate woman, ecstatically. He conjured for the
senators the presence of their mothers and sisters, their sweethearts
and wives; and then, some quotations fortunately occurring to him, he
reminded them that Castiglione had truly said that "God is seen only
through women"; that "the woman's soul leadeth us upward and on." He
recounted the services of women in time of war, their deeds in the days
of peace, and in the end he became involved in an allegory about the
exclusion of the roses from the garden.

The senators had begun to pay attention to him as soon as he talked
about things they really understood and were interested in, and now they
shouted to him to go on. It was spread abroad over the third floor of
the State House that some one was making a big speech in the Senate, and
representatives came rushing over from the House. The correspondents of
the Chicago newspapers came over also to see if the Associated Press man
in the Senate was getting the speech down fully. All the space on the
Senate floor was soon crowded, and the applause shook the desks and made
the glass prisms on the chandeliers jingle. The lieutenant-governor
tapped from time to time with his gavel, but he did it perfunctorily, as
though he enjoyed the applause himself, as vicariously expressing his
own feelings; his eyes twinkled until it seemed that, were it not for
certain traditions, he would join in the delighted laughter that made up
most of the applause.

Once a page came to Vernon with a glass of water, and as he paused to
wipe his brow and to sip from the glass, he glanced again at Maria
Greene. Her face was solemn and a wonder was growing in her eyes. Beside
her sat old "Doc" Ames, scowling fiercely and stroking his long white
beard. There were sharp cries of "Go on! Go on!"

But Vernon, not accustomed to thinking on his feet, as talkers love to
phrase it, and having stopped, could not instantly go on, and that
awkward halt disconcerted him. He was conscious that the moments were
slipping by, and there were other things--many other things--that he had
intended to say; but these things evaded him--floated off,
tantalizingly, out of reach. And so, for refuge, he rushed on to the
conclusion he had half formed in his mind. The conclusion was made up
mostly from a toast to which he had once responded while in college,
entitled "The Ladies." The words came back to him readily enough; he had
only to apply them a little differently and to change his figures. Thus
it was easy to work up to a panegyric in which Illinois stood as a
beautiful woman leading her sister states up to new heights of peace, of
virtue and of concord. He had a rapt vision of this woman, by her sweet
and gentle influence settling all disputes and bringing heaven down to
earth at last.

The Senate was in raptures.

"This is the face," he cried, "'that launched a thousand ships and
burned the topless towers of Ilium!' ... 'she is wholly like in feature
to the deathless goddesses!'" So he went on. "'Age can not wither, nor
custom stale, her infinite variety.'"

He was growing weary. He already showed the impressive exhaustion of the
peroration. He had sacrificed a collar and drunk all the water from his
glass. He fingered the empty tumbler for a moment, and then lifted it on
high while he said:

    "'I filled this cup to one made up
      Of loveliness alone,
    A woman, of her gentle sex
      The seeming paragon--
    Her health! and would on earth there stood
      Some more of such a frame,
    That life might be all poetry,
      And weariness a name.'"

When he had done, there was a moment's stillness; then came the long
sweep of applause that rang through the chamber, and while the
lieutenant-governor rapped for order, men crowded around Vernon and
wrung his hand, as he wiped his forehead with his handkerchief. And then
the roll was called. It had not proceeded far when there was that
subtile change in the atmosphere which is so easily recognized by those
who have acquired the sense of political aeroscepsy; the change that
betokens some new, unexpected and dangerous manoeuver. Braidwood had
come over from the House. His face, framed in its dark beard, was stern
and serious. He whispered an instant to Porter, the Senate leader.
Porter rose.

"Mr. President," he said.

The lieutenant-governor was looking at him expectantly.

"The gentleman from Cook," the lieutenant-governor said.

"Mr. President," said Senator Porter, "I move you, sir, that the further
discussion of the resolution be postponed until Wednesday morning, one
week from to-morrow, and that it be made a special order immediately
following the reading of the journal."

"If there are no objections it will be so ordered," said the
lieutenant-governor.

Bull Burns shouted a prompt and hoarse "Object!"

But the lieutenant-governor calmly said:

"And it is so ordered."

The gavel fell.




VI


AFTER the adjournment Vernon sought out Maria Greene and walked with her
down Capitol Avenue toward the hotel. He was prepared to enjoy her
congratulations, but she was silent for a while, and before they spoke
again "Doc" Ames, striding rapidly, had caught up with them. He was
still scowling.

"I was sorry you didn't finish your speech as you intended, sir," he
said, with something of the acerbity of a reproach.

"Why," began Vernon, looking at him, "I--"

"You laid out very broad and comprehensive ground for yourself," the old
man continued, "but unfortunately you did not cover it. You should have
developed your subject logically, as I had hopes, indeed, in the
beginning, you were going to do. An argument based on principle would
have been more to the point than an appeal to the passions. I think Miss
Greene will agree with me. I am sorry you did not acquaint me with your
intention of addressing the Senate on this important measure; I would
very much have liked to confer with you about what you were going to
say. It is not contemplated by those in the reform movement that the
charms of woman shall be advanced as the reason for her right to equal
suffrage with man. It is purely a matter of cold, abstract justice. Now,
for instance," the doctor laid his finger in his palm, and began to
speak didactically, "as I have pointed out to the House, whatever the
power or the principle that gives to man his right to make the law that
governs him, to woman it gives the same right. In thirty-seven states
the married mother has no right to her children; in sixteen the wife has
no right to her own earnings; in eight she has no separate right to her
property; in seven--"

Vernon looked at Miss Greene helplessly, but she was nodding her head in
acquiescence to each point the doctor laid down in his harsh palm with
that long forefinger. Vernon had no chance to speak until they reached
the hotel. She was to take the midday train back to Chicago, and Vernon
had insisted on going to the station with her. Just as she was about to
leave him to go up to her room she said, as on a sudden impulse:

"Do you know that the women of America, yes, the people of America, owe
you a debt?"

Vernon assumed a most modest attitude.

"If we are successful," she went on, "the advocates of equal suffrage
all over the United States will be greatly encouraged; the reform
movement everywhere will receive a genuine impetus."

"You will be down next Wednesday when the resolution comes up again,
won't you?" asked Vernon.

"Indeed, I shall," she said. "Do you have any hopes now?"

"Hopes?" laughed Vernon. "Why certainly; we'll adopt it. I'll give my
whole time to it between now and then. If they don't adopt that
resolution I'll block every other piece of legislation this session,
appropriations and all. I guess that will bring them to time!"

"You're very good," she said. "But I fear Mr. Porter's influence."

"Oh, I'll take care of him. You trust it to me. The women will be voting
in this state next year."

"And you shall be their candidate for governor!" she cried, clasping her
hands.

Vernon colored; he felt a warm thrill course through him, but he waved
the nomination aside with his hand. He was about to say something more,
but he could not think of anything quickly enough. While he hesitated,
Miss Greene looked at her watch.

"I've missed my train," she said, quietly.

Vernon grew red with confusion.

"I beg a thousand pardons!" he said. "It was all my fault and it was
certainly very stupid of me."

"It's of no importance. Where must I go to reserve space on the night
train?" said Miss Greene.

Vernon told her, and proffered his services. He was now delighted at the
philosophical way in which she accepted the situation--it would have
brought the average woman, he reflected, to tears--and then he went on
to picture to himself the practical results in improving women's
characters that his new measure, as he had already come to regard it,
would bring about.




VII


MARIA GREENE would not let Vernon attend to her tickets; she said it was
a matter of principle with her; but late in the afternoon, when they had
had luncheon, and she had got the tickets herself, she did accept his
invitation to drive. The afternoon had justified all the morning's
promise of a fine spring day, and as they left the edges of the town and
turned into the road that stretched away over the low undulations of
ground they call hills in Illinois, and lost itself mysteriously in the
country far beyond, Miss Greene became enthusiastic.

"Isn't it glorious!" she cried. "And to think that when I left Chicago
last night it was still winter!" She shuddered, as if she would shake
off the memory of the city's ugliness. Her face was flushed and she
inhaled the sweet air eagerly.

"To be in the country once more!" she went on.

"Did you ever live in the country?" Vernon asked.

"Once," she said, and then after a grave pause she added: "A long time
ago."

The road they had turned into was as soft and as smooth as velvet now
that the spring had released it from the thrall of winter's mud. It led
beside a golf links, and the new greens were already dotted with
golfers, who played with the zest they had accumulated in the forbidding
winter months. They showed their enthusiasm by playing bare-armed, as if
already it were the height of summer.

As the buggy rolled noiselessly along, Vernon and Miss Greene were
silent; the spell of the spring was on them. To their right rolled the
prairies, that never can become mere fields, however much they be tilled
or fenced. The brown earth, with its tinge of young green here and
there, or its newly ploughed clods glistening and steaming in the sun,
rolled away like the sea. Far off, standing out black and forbidding
against the horizon, they could see the ugly buildings of a coal shaft;
behind, above the trees that grew for the city's shade, the convent
lifted its tower, and above all, the gray dome of the State House reared
itself, dominating the whole scene. The air shimmered in the haze of
spring. Birds were chirping in the hedges; now and then a meadow-lark
sprang into the air and fled, crying out its strange staccato song as it
skimmed the surface of the prairies. Vernon idly snapped the whip as he
drove along; neither of them seemed to care to speak. Suddenly they
heard a distant, heavy thud. The earth trembled slightly.

"What's that?" said Miss Greene, in some alarm. "It couldn't have been
thunder."

"No," said Vernon, "it was the miners, blasting."

"Where?"

"Down in the ground underneath us."

She gave him a strange look which he did not comprehend. Then she turned
and glanced quickly at the black breakers of the coal shaft, half a mile
away; then at the golf-players.

"Do the mines run under this ground?" she asked, sweeping her hand about
and including the links in her gesture.

"Yes, all over here, or rather under here," Vernon said. He was proud of
his knowledge of the locality. He thought it argued well that a
legislator should be informed on all questions. Maria thought a moment,
then she said:

"The golfers above, the miners below."

Vernon looked at her in surprise. The pleasure of the spring had gone
out of her eyes.

"Drive on, please," she said.

"There's no danger," said Vernon reassuringly, clucking at his horse,
and the beast flung up its head in a spasmodic burst of speed, as
livery-stable horses will. The horse did not have to trot very far to
bear them away from the crack of the golf-balls and the dull
subterranean echoes of the miners' blasts, but Vernon felt that a cloud
had floated all at once over this first spring day. The woman sitting
there beside him seemed to withdraw herself to an infinite distance.

"You love the country?" he asked, feeling the need of speech.

"Yes," she said, but she went no farther.

"And you once lived there?"

"Yes," she said again, but she vouchsafed no more. Vernon found a deep
curiosity springing within him; he longed to know more about this young
woman who in all outward ways seemed to be just like the women he knew,
and yet was so essentially different from them. But though he tried, he
could not move her to speak of her own life or its affairs. At the last
he said boldly:

"Tell me, how did you come to be a lawyer?"

Miss Greene turned to meet his inquisitive gaze.

"How did you?" she asked.

Vernon cracked his whip at the road.

"Well--" he stammered. "I don't know; I had to do something."

"So did I," she replied.

Vernon cut the lazy horse with the whip, and the horse jerked the buggy
as it made its professional feint at trotting.

"I did not care to lead a useless life," he said. "I wanted to do
something--to have some part in the world's work. The law seemed to be a
respectable profession and I felt that maybe I could do some good in
politics. I don't think the men of my class take as much interest in
politics as they should. And then, I'd like to make my own living."

"I have to make mine," said Maria Greene.

"But you never thought of teaching, or nursing, or--well--painting or
music, or that sort of thing, did you?"

"No," she replied; "did you?"

Vernon laughed at an absurdity that needed no answering comment, and
then he hastened on:

"Of course, you know I think it fine that you should have done as you
have. You must have met with discouragements."

She laughed, and Vernon did not note the bitterness there was concealed
in the laugh; to him it seemed intended to express only that polite
deprecation demanded in the treatment of a personal situation.

"I can sympathize with you there," said Vernon, though Miss Greene had
not admitted the need of sympathy. Perhaps it was Vernon's own need of
sympathy, or his feeling of the need of it, that made him confess that
his own family and friends had never sympathized with him, especially
with what he called his work in politics; he felt, at any rate, that he
had struck the right note at last, and he went on to assure her how
unusual it was to meet a woman who understood public questions as well
as she understood them. And it may have been his curiosity that led him
to inquire:

"How did your people feel about your taking up the law?"

Miss Greene said that she did not know how her people felt, and Vernon
again had that baffled sense of her evading him.

"I've felt pretty much alone in my work," he said. "The women I know
won't talk with me about it; they won't even read the newspapers. And
I've tried so hard to interest them in it!"

Vernon sighed, and he waited for Miss Greene to sigh with him. He did
not look at her, but he could feel her presence there close beside him.
Her gloved hands lay quietly in her lap; she was gazing out over the
prairies. The light winds were faintly stirring her hair, and the beauty
of it, its warm red tones brought out by the burnishing sun, suddenly
overwhelmed him. He stirred and his breath came hard.

"Do you know," he said, in a new confidence, "that this has been a great
day for me? To meet you, and to know you as I think I do know you now!
This morning, when I was speaking, I felt that with you to help me, I
could do great things."

Miss Greene drew in her lips, as if to compress their fullness; she
moved away on the seat, and raised her hand uneasily and thrust it under
her veil to put back a tress of hair that had strayed from its
fastening. Vernon saw the flush of her white cheeks come and go. Her
eyebrows were drawn together wistfully, and in her blue eyes, that
looked far away through the meshes of her dotted veil, there was a
little cloud of trouble. She caught her lip delicately between the edges
of her teeth. Vernon leaned slightly forward as if he would peer into
her face. For him the day had grown suddenly hot, the spring had
developed on the instant the oppressive heat of summer. He felt its
fire; he could see its intensity vibrating in the air all about him, and
he had a sense as of all the summer's voices droning in unison. The
reins drooped from his listless fingers; the horse moped along as it
pleased.

"I have always felt it, vaguely," Vernon went on, his voice dropping to
a low tone, "and this morning it was suddenly revealed to me--"

Miss Greene raised her hand as if to draw it across her brow; her veil
stopped her.

"Let's not talk about that now," she pleaded. "Let's enjoy the air and
the country. I don't have them often." Her hand fell to her lap. The
color had gone out of her cheeks. And Vernon suddenly felt that the
summer had gone out of the air; a cold wind was blowing as over soiled
patches of snow left in shaded depressions of the fields; the earth was
brown and bare; the birds were silent. He jerked the horse smartly, and
it gave an angry toss of its head, as it broke into its tentative trot.

"I do wish you could know the women I know," said Vernon, obviously
breaking a silence. He spoke in an entirely different voice. "I meant to
put it the other way. I meant that I wish they could know you, and I
mean that they shall. You would be a revelation to them."

Miss Greene smiled, though her face was now careworn, almost old.

"Right along the line of our constitutional amendment, now," he said,
with a briskness, "do you think the women will become interested?"

"The women of your acquaintance, or of mine?" asked Miss Greene.

"You're guying," said Vernon, and when Miss Greene seriously protested,
Vernon said he meant all the women, as politicians pretend to mean all
the people, when they mean only the party.

"I'm afraid not," she said. "They could have the ballot to-morrow if
they'd only ask for it. The trouble is they don't want it."

"Well, we must educate them," said Vernon. "I have great hopes that the
women whom I know will be aroused by what we are doing."

"I have no doubt they will," said Miss Greene. There was something
enigmatical in her words, and Vernon glanced uneasily at her again.

"How do you mean?" he asked.

"You'll learn when you see the newspapers to-morrow," said Miss Greene.

"Do you think they'll have it in full?" asked Vernon. He was all alert,
and his eyes sparkled in a new interest.

"On the first page," she replied, with conviction. "Have they your
picture?"

"I don't know," Vernon replied. "They can get it, though," he added,
thoughtfully.

"They keep the portraits of all distinguished public men on hand," Miss
Greene said, with a certain reassurance in her tone.

"Oh, well, I hope they'll not print it," said Vernon, as if just then
recalling what was expected of a distinguished public man under such
circumstances.


"That's one of the penalties of being in public life," she answered with
a curious smile.

"A penalty the ladies will be glad to pay when our reform is
accomplished; isn't that so?" said Vernon, seeking relief in a light
bantering tone.

"I thought we were not going to talk politics," she said, turning and
looking at him. She adjusted her hat and held herself resolutely erect.

The sun was going down behind the prairies, the afternoon was almost
gone; as they watched the sunset, Miss Greene broke the silence.

"It's a familiar sight," she said, and Vernon thought that he had a clue
at last. She must know the prairies.

"It is just like a sunset at sea," she added.

When they had driven back to the town and Vernon had left her at the
hotel, he turned to drive to the livery stable.

"By George!" he said, suddenly, speaking to himself. "I haven't read
Amelia's letter!"

He fumbled in his coat pocket.




VIII


MISS GREENE'S predictions were all realized in the sensation Vernon's
speech created. The newspapers gave whole columns to it and illustrated
their accounts with portraits of Vernon and of Maria Greene. Vernon
thought of the pleasure Amelia must find in his new fame, and when he
wrote to her he referred briefly but with the proper modesty to his
remarkable personal triumph, and then waited for her congratulations.

The legislative session was drawing to a close; the customary Friday
adjournment was not taken, but sessions were held that day and on
Saturday, for the work was piling up, the procrastinating legislators
having left it all for the last minute.

The week following would see House and Senate sweltering in shirt
sleeves and night sessions, and now, if a bill were to become law it was
necessary that its sponsor stay, as it were, close beside it, lest in
the mighty rush of the last few days it be lost.

Vernon, by virtue of his speech, had assumed the championship of the
woman-suffrage resolution, and he felt it necessary to forego his
customary visit to Chicago that week and remain over Sunday in
Springfield. He devoted the day to composing a long letter to Miss
Greene, in which he described the situation in detail, and suggested
that it would be well for her, if possible, to come down to Springfield
on Monday and stay until the resolution had been adopted. He gave her,
in closing, such pledges of his devotion to the cause of womankind that
she could hardly resist any appeal he might make for her presence and
assistance.

On Monday he wired, urging the necessity of her presence. Tuesday
morning brought him a reply, thanking him, in behalf of women, for his
disinterested devotion to their cause, assuring him of her own
appreciation of his services, and saying that she would reach
Springfield--Wednesday morning.

Meanwhile he had had no letter from Amelia, and he began to wonder at
her silence. He was not only disappointed, but piqued. He felt that his
achievement deserved the promptest recognition from her, but he found a
consolation, that grew in spite of him, in the thought that Maria Greene
would soon be in Springfield, and to his heart he permitted Amelia's
silence to justify him in a freer indulgence of attention to this
fascinating woman lawyer.

Tuesday evening the crowd, that grows larger as the session nears its
close, filled the lobby of the Leland. The night was warm, and to the
heat of politics was suddenly added the heat of summer. Doors and
windows were flung wide to the night, and the tall Egyptians, used as
they were to the sultry atmospheres of southern Illinois, strode lazily
about under their wide slouch hats with waistcoats open and cravats
loosened, delighting in a new cause for chaffing the Chicago men, who
had resumed their customary complaints of the Springfield weather.

The smoke of cigars hung in the air. The sound of many voices, the ring
of heavy laughter, the shuffle of feet over the tiles, the clang of the
clerk's gong, the incessant chitter of a telegraph instrument that sped
news to Chicago over the _Courier's_ private wire, all these influences
surcharged the heavy air with a nervous excitement that made men speak
quickly and their eyes glitter under the brilliant lights of countless
electric bulbs. There was in that atmosphere the play of myriad hopes
and ambitions, political, social, financial. Special delegations of
eminent lawyers, leading citizens and prominent capitalists were down
from Chicago to look after certain measures of importance. Newspaper
correspondents hurried from group to group, gathering bits of
information to be woven into their night's despatches.

Late in the evening the governor came over from the mansion, and his
coming stirred the throng with a new sensation. His secretary was by his
side, and they mingled a while with the boys, as the governor called
them, after the politician's manner. Half a dozen congressmen were
there, thinking always of renomination. Over in one corner sat a United
States senator, his high hat tilted back on his perspiring brow. A group
of men had drawn their chairs about him; they laughed at his stories.

One was aware that the speaker's apartments upstairs were crowded. One
could easily imagine it; the door of his inner room, as men came and
went, opening now and then, and giving a glimpse of the speaker himself,
tired and worn under the strain that would tell so sorely on him before
another week could bring his labors and his powers and his glories to an
end. Through all that hotel that night, in lobby and in bar-room, on the
stairs, in the side halls and up and down in the elevators, throbbed the
fascination of politics, which men play not so much for its ends as for
its means.

Vernon was of this crowd, moving from one group to another, smoking,
laughing, talking. His heart may have been a little sore at the thought
of Amelia's strange neglect of him, but the soreness had subsided until
now it was but a slight numbness which he could forget at times, and
when he did think of it, it but gave him resolution to play the game
more fiercely.

He knew that it was incumbent on him to make sure of the adoption of the
resolution on the morrow. He had already spoken to the
lieutenant-governor and had promise of recognition. But he realized that
it would be wise to make a little canvass, though he had no doubt that
all was well, and that by the next night he could mingle with this crowd
serene and happy in the thought that his work was done; perhaps he might
even spend the evening in the company of Maria Greene. His heart gave a
little leap at this new and happy thought, and if the remembrance of
Amelia came back just at that instant, its obtrusion only made his eyes
burn the brighter.

He found it pleasant as he threaded his way through the crowd to halt
senators as he met them and say:

"Well, the woman-suffrage resolution comes up to-morrow. You'll be for
it, of course?"

It gave him such a legislative and statesmanlike importance to do this.
As he was going leisurely about this quest, testing some of the
sensations of a parliamentary leader, Cowley, the correspondent of the
_Courier_, accosted him, and, showing his teeth in that odd smile of
his, asked if he cared to say anything about the resolution.

"Only that it comes up as a special order in the morning, and that I
have no doubt whatever of its adoption by the Senate."

"Have you assurances from--"

"From everybody, and every assurance," said Vernon. "They're all for it.
Come and have a cigar."

They went over to the cigar stand, and when they had lighted their
cigars Cowley said:

"Let's go out for a little walk; I may be able to tell you something
that will interest you."




IX


VERNON was glad enough of a breath of the evening air, and they went
down the steps to the sidewalk. Along the curbstone many men had placed
chairs and in these cool and quiet eddies of the brawling stream of
politics they joked and laughed peacefully. Sixth Street stretched away
dark and inviting. Vernon and Cowley turned southward and strolled along
companionably. The air was delicious after the blaze of the hotel; the
black shade of a moonless night was restful; their cigars were fragrant.

"I've just got hold of a story," began Cowley, after they had enjoyed
the night for a moment in silence. "I've just got hold of a story--" he
spoke, of course, as always, from the detached standpoint of a newspaper
man, "which you ought to know."

"What is it?" asked Vernon.

"Porter and Braidwood are against your resolution." Cowley spoke these
names in a tone that told how futile any opposition would be. "And
Wright and his fellows are against it, too," he added.

"Nonsense," said Vernon.

"Well, you'll see," replied Cowley.

"But they told me--"

"Oh, well, that's all right. They've changed in the last day or two."

"Why?"

"Well, they say it's risky from a party standpoint. They think they
already have all the load they want to carry in the fall campaign.
Besides, they--"

"What?"

"They say there's no demand for such a radical step, and so see no
reason for taking it."

"No demand for it?"

"No, on the contrary," Cowley halted an instant and in his palm
sheltered a lighted match for his extinguished cigar. "On the contrary,
there's a lot of people against it."

"Since when?"

"They've been getting letters in the last few days--they've just been
pouring in on 'em--and they're from women, too."

"From women!"

"Yes, from women; the first ladies in the land." Cowley spoke with a
sneer.

Vernon laughed.

"All right," said Cowley in the careless tone of one who has discharged
a duty. "Wait till you see Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop land in here
to-morrow."

"Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop!" Vernon stopped still in the middle of the
sidewalk and turned in surprise and fear to Cowley. Cowley enjoyed the
little sensation he had produced.

"Yes, she's coming down on the Alton to-night. And she's bringing some
of her crowd with her. The women's clubs are all stirred up about the
matter."

Vernon was silent for a moment, then he wheeled suddenly, and said:
"Well, I'm much obliged to you, Cowley, but I'd better be getting back
to the hotel."

"It may not be serious after all," Cowley said with tardy reassurance,
"but there's danger, and I thought I'd let you know. I'm sending a
pretty good story in to-night about it; they'll cover the Chicago end
from the office."

"But they were all for it," Vernon muttered.

"Oh, well, you know they never took the thing very seriously. Of course
they passed it in the House just to line up old man Ames for the
apportionment bill. They didn't think it would amount to anything."

"Yes, I know--but Maria Burley Greene--"

"Well, she's a pretty woman; that's all."

"You bet she is," said Vernon, "and she'll be down here again to-morrow,
too."

"Will she?" said Cowley eagerly, with his strange smile.

"Yes--but, look here, Charlie!" Vernon exclaimed, "don't you go mixing
me up with her, now, understand?"

"Oh, I understand," said Cowley, and he laughed significantly.

When Vernon reached the hotel he set to work in earnest. He tramped
about half the night, until he had seen every senator who could be
found. He noted a change in them; if he did not find them hostile he
found many of them shy and reluctant. But when he went to his room he
had enough promises to allay his fears and to restore, in a measure, his
confidence, and he fell asleep thinking of Maria Greene, happy in the
thought that she would be there with her charms to offset the social
influence of Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop.




X


VERNON went down to breakfast the next morning wearing the new summer
clothes his tailor had sent to him from Chicago the day before. He had a
flower in his buttonhole; a red rose, indeed, showing his colors for the
final triumphant day.

The rotunda of the hotel, swept of the litter of the night before, was
clean and cool, and the morning air of a perfect day came in
refreshingly at the open doors. The farmer members, confirmed in the
habit of early rising, were already sauntering aimlessly about, but
otherwise statesmen still slumbered, tired out by their labors of the
night before.


Vernon, in the nervous excitement which arouses one at the dawn of any
day that is to be big with events, had risen earlier than was his wont.
He hastened into the dining-room, and there, at the first table his eye
alighted on, sat Maria Burley Greene. She saw him at once, for she faced
the door, and she greeted him with a brilliant smile. With springing
step he rushed toward her, both hands extended in his eagerness. She
half rose to take them; their greeting silenced the early breakfasters
for an instant. Then he sat down opposite her and leaned over with a
radiant face as near to her as might be, considering the width of
table-cloth and the breakfast things between.

"And so you're here at last!" he exclaimed.

His eyes quickly took in her toilet; remarkably fresh it was, though it
had been made on the Springfield sleeper. It gave none of those
evidences of being but the late flowering of a toilet that had been made
the night before, as do the toilets of some ladies under similar
circumstances. She wore this morning a suit of brown, tailored
faultlessly to every flat seam, and a little turban to match it. Beside
her plate lay her veil, her gloves, and a brass tagged key. And her
face, clear and rosy in its rich beauty, was good to look upon. The
waiter had just brought her strawberries.

"Send John to me," said Vernon to the waiter. "I'll take my breakfast
here. May I?" He lifted his eyes to Miss Greene's.

"Surely," said she, "we'll have much to discuss."

"And so you're here again at last," repeated Vernon, as if he had not
already made the same observation. He laid, this time, perhaps a little
more stress on the "at last." She must have noted that fact, for she
blushed, red as the strawberries she began to turn over with a
critically poised fork.

"And did you come down alone?" Vernon went on.

"No, not exactly," said Miss Greene. "Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, and, I
believe, several--"

"Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop!"

"I think," said Miss Greene, "that she sits somewhere behind." There was
a twinkle in the eyes she lifted for an instant from her berries.

Vernon scanned the dining-room. There was Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, in
all her--and yes, beside her, sheltered snugly under her all-protecting
wing, was Amelia Ansley! They were at a long table, Mrs. Overman
Hodge-Lathrop at the head, and with them half a dozen women, severe, and
most aggressively respectable. They sat--all of them--erect, pecking at
their food with a distrust that was not so much a material caution as a
spiritual evidence of their superiority to most of the things with which
they were thrust in contact every day. Their hats scarcely trembled,
such was the immense propriety of their attitudes; they did not bend at
all, even to the cream.


Vernon, who was taking all this in at a glance, saw that Mrs. Overman
Hodge-Lathrop was severer than he had ever imagined it possible for
women to be--even such a woman as she. He would not have been surprised
had he suddenly been told that her name had acquired another hyphen;
certainly her dignity had been rehyphenated. There she sat, with her
broad shoulders and ample bust, her arms jeopardizing the sleeves of her
jacket.

It was the most impressive breakfast table he had ever seen. It might
have given him a vision of the future, when he should have secured for
women all their civil and political rights, and the nation had
progressed to female lieutenant-generals, who would be forced at times
to dine in public with their staffs. But he had no such vision, of
course; the very spiritual aversion of those women to such a thought
would have prevented it, occultly.

In point of fact, his regard in an instant had ceased to be general and
had become specific, having Amelia for its objective. She sat on the
right of her commander, a rather timid aide; and she seemed spiritually
to snuggle more closely under her protecting shadow with each passing
moment. She seemed to be half frightened, and had the look of a little
girl who is about to cry. Her gray figure, with its hat of violets above
her dark hair, was, on the instant, half pathetic to Vernon. She sat
facing him, her face downcast.

There was no conversation at that table; it was to be seen at a glance
indeed that among those ladies there would be need for none, all things
having been prearranged for them. Vernon noted that Amelia seemed to him
more dainty, more fragile than she had ever been before, and his heart
surged out toward her. Then she raised her eyes slowly, and held him,
until from their depths she stabbed with one swift glance, a glance full
of all accusation, indictment and reproach. The stab went to his heart
with a pain that made him exclaim. Then perceiving that the complicating
moments were flying, he rose hastily, and with half an apology to Miss
Greene, he rushed across the dining-room.




XI


NONE of the ladies relaxed at Vernon's approach, Mrs. Overman
Hodge-Lathrop least of all. On the contrary she seemed to swell into
proportions that were colossal and terrifying, and when Vernon came
within her sphere of influence his manner at once subdued itself into an
apology.

"Why, Amelia--Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop!" he cried, "and Mrs. Standish, Mrs.
Barbourton, Mrs. Trales, Mrs. Langdon--how do you do?"

He went, of course, straight to Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop's side, the
side that sheltered Amelia, and he tried to take the hands of both women
at once. Amelia gave him hers coldly, without a word and without a look.
He grew weak, inane, and laughed uneasily.

"Delightful morning," he said, "this country air down here is--"

"Morley," said Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, severely, "take that seat at
the foot of the table."

He obeyed, meekly. The ladies, he thought, from the rustle of their
skirts, withdrew themselves subtly. The only glances they vouchsafed him
were side-long and disapproving. He found it impossible to speak, and so
waited. He could not recall having experienced similar sensations since
those menacing occasions of boyhood when he had been sent to the library
to await his father's coming.

"Delightful morning, indeed!" Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop said, in her
most select tones. "Delightful morning to bring us poor old ladies down
into the country!"

"I bring you down!" ejaculated Vernon.

"Morley," she said, "I don't wish to have one word from you, not one; do
you understand? Your talent for speech has caused trouble enough as it
is. Lucky we shall be if we can undo the half of it!"

Vernon shrank.

"Morley Vernon," Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop continued, "do you know what
I have a notion to do?"

"No, Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop," he said in a very little voice.

"Well, sir, I've a notion to give you a good spanking."

Vernon shot a glance at her.

"Oh, you needn't look, sir," she continued, "you needn't look! It
wouldn't be the first time, as you well know--and it isn't so many years
ago--and I have your mother's full permission, too."

The chain of ladylike sympathy that passed about the table at this
declaration was broken only when its ends converged on Vernon. Even then
they seemed to pinch him.

"Your poor, dear mother," Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop went on, "insisted,
indeed, on coming down herself, but I knew she could never stand such a
trip. I told her," and here Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop paused for an
instant, "I told her that I thought _I_ could manage."

There was a vast significance in this speech.

The waiter had brought the substantials to the ladies, and Mrs. Overman
Hodge-Lathrop began eating determinedly.

"It was, of course, just what I had always predicted," she went on, in a
staccato that was timed by the rise of her fork to her lips, "I knew
that politics would inevitably corrupt you, soon or late. And now it has
brought you to this."

"To what?" asked Vernon, suddenly growing bold and reckless. Amelia had
not given him one glance; she was picking at her chop.

Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, raising her gold glasses and setting them
aristocratically on the bridge of her nose, fixed her eyes on Vernon.

"Morley," she said, "we know. We have heard and we have read. The
Chicago press is an institution that, fortunately, still survives in
these iconoclastic days. You know very well, of course, what I mean.
Please do not compel me to go into the revolting particulars." She took
her glasses down from her nose, as if that officially terminated the
matter.

"But really, Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop," said Vernon. He was growing angry, and
then, too, he was conscious somehow that Miss Greene was looking at him.
His waiter, John, timidly approached with a glance at the awful presence
of Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, and said:

"Yo' breakfus, Senato', is gettin' col'."

"That may wait," said Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, and John sprang back
out of range.

Vernon was determined, then, to have it out.

"Really, Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop, jesting aside--"

"Jesting!" cried Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, "jesting! Indeed, my boy,
this is quite a serious business!" She tapped with her forefinger.

"Well, then, all right," said Vernon, "I don't know what I've done. All
I have done has been to champion a measure--and I may add, without
boasting, I hope, with some success--all I have done has been to
champion a measure which was to benefit your sex, to secure your rights,
to--"

"Morley!" Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop said, cutting him short. "Morley,
have you indeed fallen so low? It is incomprehensible to me, that a
young man who had the mother you have, who had the advantages you have
had, who was born and bred as you were, should so easily have lost his
respect for women!"

"Lost my respect for women!" cried Vernon, and then he laughed. "Now,
Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop," he went on with a shade of irritation in his tone,
"this is too much!"

Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop was calm.

"Have you shown her any respect?" she went on. "Have you not, on the
contrary, said and done everything you could, to drag her down from her
exalted station, to pull her to the earth, to bring her to a level with
men, to make her soil herself with politics, by scheming and voting and
caucusing and buttonholing and wire-pulling? You would have her degrade
and unsex herself by going to the polls, to caucuses and conventions;
you would have her, no doubt, in time, lobbying for and against measures
in the council chamber and the legislature."

Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop paused and lifted her gold eye-glasses once
more to the bridge of her high, aristocratic nose.

"Is it that kind of women you have been brought up with, Morley? Do we
look like that sort? Glance around this table--do we look like that sort
of women?"

The ladies stiffened haughtily, disdainfully, under the impending
inspection, knowing full well how easily they would pass muster.

"And, if that were not enough," Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop went on
inexorably, "we come here to plead with you and find you hobnobbing with
that mannish thing, that _female_ lawyer!"

She spoke the word _female_ as if it conveyed some distinct idea of
reproach. She was probing another chop with her fork. She had sent the
pot of coffee back to the kitchen, ordering the waiter to tell the cook
that she was accustomed to drink her coffee hot.

"And now, Morley Vernon, listen to me," she said, as if he were about to
hear the conclusion of the whole matter. "If you have any spark of honor
left in you, you will undo what you have already done. This resolution
must be defeated in the Senate to-day; I am down here to see that it is
done. We go to the State House after breakfast, and these ladies will
assist me in laying before each member of the Senate this matter in its
true and exact light. As for our rights," she paused and looked at him
fixedly, "as for our rights, I think we are perfectly capable of
preserving them."

Her look put that question beyond all dispute.

"And now," she resumed, "you would better take a little breakfast
yourself; you look as if you needed strength."

Vernon rose. He stood for an instant looking at Amelia, but she glanced
at him only casually.

"I suppose, Amelia, I shall see you later in the morning?"

"I suppose so, Mr. Vernon," she said. "But pray do not let me keep you
from rejoining your companion." She was quite airy, and lifted her
coffee-cup with one little finger quirked up higher than he had ever
seen it before.

He went back to where Miss Greene sat, and where his breakfast lay.

"My goodness!" he said, seating himself. "I've had a time!"

"I should imagine so," said Miss Greene.

She was just touching her napkin to her lips with a final air. She
carefully pushed back her chair, and rose from the table.

"I beg your pardon," he stammered, getting up himself, "I'll see you
after breakfast."

Miss Greene bowed. Then she left the dining-room.




XII


MORLEY VERNON came out of the dining-room in a temper far different from
that he had worn when he went in. His breakfast, after so many
vicissitudes, was sure to be a failure, though John, striving against
fate, had tried to restore the repast to its original excellence by
replacing each dish with a fresh one. He affected a heroic cheerfulness,
too, but the cheer was hollow, for his experience of men and of
breakfasts must have taught him that such disasters can never be
repaired.

Vernon, however, had heavier things on his mind. In his new position as
knight-errant of Illinois womankind, he had looked forward to this day
as the one of triumph; now, at its beginning, he found himself with two
offended women on his hands, and two hopelessly irreconcilable
mistresses to serve. He began to see that the lot of a constructive
statesman is trying; he would never criticize leaders again.

The lobby of the hotel was filling rapidly, and men with their hair
still damp from the morning combing were passing into the breakfast room
with newspapers in their hands. In the center of the lobby, however, he
saw a group of senators, and out of the middle of the group rose a dark
bonnet; the flowers on the bonnet bobbed now and then decisively. Around
it were clustered other bonnets, but they were motionless, and, as it
were, subordinate.

"Can you tell me who that is?" asked Brooks of Alexander, jerking his
thumb at the group.

"Yes," said Vernon, "that's General Hodge-Lathrop. She's on her way to
the front to assume command."

"Oh!" said Brooks. "I saw something in the papers--" And he went away,
reading as he walked.

Vernon looked everywhere for Miss Greene, but he could not find her. The
porter at the Capitol Avenue entrance told him that she had driven over
to the State House a few minutes before. Vernon was seized by an impulse
to follow, but he remembered Amelia. He could not let matters go on thus
between them. If only Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop were not in command; if
he could get Amelia away from her for a while, if he could see her
alone, he felt that explanations would be possible.

He looked at his watch; it was half-past nine; the Senate would convene
at ten; the resolution would not be reached before half-past ten at any
rate; and so he determined to brave Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop again. He
turned back into the lobby; there she was, hobnobbing with men; she did
not pass from group to group, after the manner of any other lobbyist,
but by some coercion he wished he might be master of, she drew them
unerringly to her side. Now she had Braidwood, the leader of the House,
and chairman of the steering committee, and Porter, the leader of the
Senate. She appeared to be giving them instructions.

She had set her committee on less important game; the ladies were
scattered over the rotunda, each talking to a little set of men. When
Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop saw Vernon coming, she turned from Braidwood
and Porter and stood awaiting him. Strangely enough Braidwood and Porter
stayed where they were, as if she had put them there. And Vernon
reflected that he had never known them, as doubtless no one else had
ever known them, to do such a thing as that before.

"Where's Amelia?" he asked before she could speak.

"I have sent her upstairs," said Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, "poor
child!"

Vernon wondered why "poor child."

"It's really too bad," Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop continued.

"What is too bad?" demanded Vernon. He had grown sulky.

Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop looked at him pityingly.

"Morley," she said in a vast solemn tone that came slowly up from her
great stays, "I can make allowances, of course. I know something of the
nature of man; I will admit that that Greene woman is remarkably
handsome, and of her cleverness there can be no doubt. I don't
altogether blame you."

She paused that Vernon might comprehend to the fullest her marvelous
magnanimity.

"But at the same time it has been hard on poor little Amelia. I saw no
other way than to bring her down. You must go to her at once."

She turned toward Braidwood and Porter, still standing where she had
left them.

"When you have done, I'll see you with reference to this miserable
resolution; but that can wait till we are at the Capitol. This other
matter comes first, of course."

She smiled with a fat sweetness.

"And Morley," she said, "order two carriages for us at ten o'clock. You
may drive to the Capitol with us."

And she went away.

Vernon ordered the carriages, and in turning the whole matter over in
his mind he came to the conclusion that he must deal with these
complications one at a time; Miss Greene, as events now had shaped
themselves, would have to wait until he got over to the State House.




XIII


VERNON found Amelia in one of the hotel parlors, seated on a sofa by a
window. She was resting her chin in her hand and looking down into
Capitol Avenue.

"Amelia," he said, bending over her. "What is it? tell me."

He sat down beside her, and sought to engage one of her hands in his
own, but she withdrew it, and pressed it with the other and the
handkerchief in both, to her lips and chin. Vernon glanced about the
respectable parlors, maintained in instant readiness for anybody that
might happen along with his little comedy or his little tragedy. She
continued to look obdurately out of the window.

"Amelia," he said, "aren't you going to speak to me? Tell me what I have
done."

Still there came no answer. He flung himself back on the sofa
helplessly.

"Well," he said, "I don't know what it all means. I've tried to fathom
it in the last hour, but it's too deep for me; I give it up." He flung
out his hands to illustrate his abandonment.

"God knows," he suddenly exclaimed, "I was only trying to do something
worthy--for your sake!"

"Please don't swear, Morley," Amelia said.

He looked up swiftly.


"Well--" he began explosively, but he didn't continue. He relapsed into
a moody silence. He stretched his legs out before him in an ungainly
attitude, with his hands plunged deep in his trousers' pockets. Then he
knitted his brows and tried to think.

"I suppose," he said, as if he were thinking aloud, "that you expect
some explanation, some apology."

"Oh, not at all," she said lightly, in the most musical tone she could
command.

"Very well," he said, "I wouldn't know where to begin if you did. I'm
sure I'm not aware of having--"

She began to hum softly, to herself, as it were, some tuneless air. He
remembered that it was a way she had when she was angry. It was intended
to show the last and utmost personal unconcern. In such circumstances
the tune was apt to be an improvisation and was never melodious.
Sometimes it made her easier to deal with, sometimes harder; he could
never tell.

"I don't exactly see what we are here for," he ventured, stealing a look
at her. She had no reply. He fidgeted a moment and then began drumming
with his fingers on the arm of the sofa.

"Please don't do that," she said.

He stopped suddenly.

"If you would be good enough, _kind_ enough," he said it sarcastically,
"to indicate, to suggest even, what I am to do--to say."

"I'm sure I can't," she said. "You came. I presumed you had something to
say to me."

"Well, I have something to say to you," Vernon went on impetuously. "Why
didn't you answer my letters? Why have you treated me this way? That's
what I want to know."

He leaned toward her. He was conscious of two emotions, two passions,
struggling within him, one of anger, almost hate, the other of love, and
strangely enough they had a striking similarity in their effect upon
him. He felt like reproaching, yet he knew that was not the way, and he
made a desperate struggle to conquer himself.

He tried to look into her face, but she only turned farther away from
him.

"I've spent the most miserable week I ever knew, doomed to stay here,
unable to get away to go to you, and with this fight on my hands!"

"You seemed to be having a fairly good time," the girl said.

"Now, Amelia, look here," said Vernon, "let's not act like children any
longer; let's not have anything so foolish and little between us."

His tone made his words a plea, but it plainly had no effect upon her,
for she did not answer. They sat there, then, in silence.

"Why didn't you write?" Vernon demanded after a little while. He looked
at her, and she straightened up and her eyes flashed.

"Why didn't I write!" she exclaimed. "What was I to write, pray? Were
not your letters full of this odious Maria Burlaps Greene? And as if
that were not enough, weren't the papers full of you two? And that
speech--oh, that speech--that Portia and Helen, and 'I fill this cup to
one made up,' ah, it was sickening!" She flirted away again.

"But, darling," Vernon cried, "listen--you misunderstood--I meant all
that for _you_, didn't you understand?"

She stirred.

"Didn't you see? Why, dearest, I thought that when you read the papers
you'd be the proudest girl alive!"

Her lip curled.

"I read the papers," she said, and then added, significantly, "this
once, anyway."

"Well, you certainly don't intend to hold me responsible for what the
papers say, do you?"

She resumed her old attitude, her elbow on the arm of the sofa, her chin
in her hand, and looked out the window. And she began to hum again.

"And then," he pressed on, "to come down here and not even let me know;
why you even called me _Mister_ Vernon when I came into the
dining-room."

"Yes," she exclaimed, suddenly wheeling about, "I _saw_ you come into
the dining-room this morning!" Her eyes grew dark and flashed.

He regretted, on the instant.

"I saw you!" she went on. "I saw you rush up to that Maria Burlaps
Greene woman, and--oh, it was horrid!"

"Her name isn't Burlaps, dear," said Vernon.

"How do you know her name, I'd like to know!" She put her hands to her
face. He saw her tears.

"Amelia," he said masterfully, "if you don't stop that! Listen--we've
got to get down to business."

She hastily brushed the tears from her eyes. She was humming once more,
and tapping the toe of her boot on the carpet, though she was not
tapping it in time to her tune.

"Why did you come down without letting me know?" Vernon went on; but
still she was silent.

"You might at least have given me--"

"Warning?" she said, with a keen inflection.

"Amelia!" he said, and his tone carried a rebuke.

"Well, I don't care!" she cried. "It's all true! You couldn't stay for
my dinner, but you could come off down here and--"

She covered her face with her hands and burst suddenly into tears.
Vernon gazed at her in astonishment.

"Why, dearest!" he said, leaning over, and trying to take her in his
arms. She drew away from him, and sobbed. Vernon glanced about the room
helplessly. He pleaded with her, but she would not listen; neither would
she be comforted, but continued to sob. Vernon, in a man's anguish with
a weeping woman, stood up.

"Amelia! Amelia!" He bent over her and spoke firmly. "You must not!
Listen to me! We must go over to--"

Suddenly he stood erect, and jerked out his watch.

"Heavens!" he cried. "It's half-past ten!"

She tried to control herself then, and sitting up, began to wipe her
eyes.

"Sweetheart," he said, "I must go now. I should have been in the Senate
at ten o'clock; I hate to leave you, but I'll explain everything when I
get back."

He waited an instant, then he went on:

"Aren't you going to say 'Good bye'?"

Amelia got up.

"I'll go, too," she said. She was still catching little sobs in her
throat, now and then. Vernon looked at her in some surprise.

"Why--" he began, incredulously.

She must have divined his surprise.

"I have to help Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop," she said, as if in explanation.
"But, of course, I hate to bother you."

"Oh, nonsense, dearest," he said, impatiently. "Come on. Let's start."

"But I can't go looking this way," she said. She walked across the room,
and standing before a mirror, wiped her eyes carefully, then arranged
her hat and her veil.

"Would anybody know?" she asked, facing about for his inspection.

"Never--come on."

They went out, and down the elevator. When they reached the entrance,
Vernon looked up and down the street, but there was no carriage in
sight. The street was quiet and the hotel wore an air of desertion,
telling that all the political activity of Illinois had been transferred
to the State House. Vernon looked around the corner, but the old hack
that always stood there was not at its post.

"We'll have to walk," he said. "It'll take too long for them to get a
carriage around for us. It's only a few blocks, anyway. The air will do
you good."

As they set forth in the bright morning sun they were calmer, and,
having come out into public view, for the time being they dropped their
differences and their misunderstandings, and began to talk in their
common, ordinary fashion.

"Did Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop ask you to change me on the Ames Amendment?"
Vernon asked her.

"The what?"

"The Ames Amendment; that's the woman-suffrage measure."

"No, do her justice; she didn't."

"What then?"

"She said she wanted me to work against it, that's all."

"Didn't she say anything about asking _me_ not to vote for it?"

"Well, yes; but I told her--"

"What?"

"That I wouldn't try to influence you in the least."

Vernon made no reply.

"No," she went on, "I'm to work against it, of course."

They were silent then, till suddenly she appealed to him:

"Oh, Morley, I've got to ask strange men, men I never met, to vote
against it! How am I ever!"

She shuddered.

"It's all very strange," Vernon said.




XIV


THEY walked briskly down the sloping street under the railroad bridge
and then up the little hill whereon sits the Capitol of Illinois. They
could see the big flag high up on the dome standing out in the prairie
wind, and the little flags on the House wing and the Senate wing
whipping joyously, sprightly symbols of the sitting of both houses.

Now and then they heard cheers from the House wing, where the
legislative riot that ends a session was already beginning. They passed
into the dark and cool corridors of the State House, then up to the
third floor, where members and messenger-boys, correspondents and
page-boys, rushed always across from one house to the other, swinging
hurriedly around the brass railing of the rotunda. It seemed that the
tide of legislative life was just then setting in toward the Senate.

"Oh, Morley," whispered Amelia, forgetting his offense, and clinging
close to him, "I can't go in there, really I can't."

"Nonsense," said Vernon, "come on. I'll deliver you to Mrs.
Hodge-Lathrop in a minute; then you'll be perfectly safe. Besides, you
have your lobbying to do."

They reached the Senate entrance, and the doorkeeper, seeing a senator,
opened a way through the crowd for their passage. There was confusion
everywhere, the nervous and excited hum of voices from the floor, from
the vestibule, from the galleries, from all around. And just as they
stepped up to the raised floor whereon the desks of senators are placed,
the gavel fell, and stillness with it. They saw the lieutenant-governor
leaning over his desk, studying a slip of paper he held in his hand.

"On this question," he said, "the yeas are thirty and the nays are
seventeen; and two-thirds of the members-elect having failed to vote in
the affirmative, the resolution is lost."

Vernon stood transfixed. The whole thing was borne in upon him; he saw
Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, and the expression of calm and lofty
satisfaction that had settled on her face told him that it was the Ames
Amendment that had been lost. But some new thought seemed to strike her,
for when Senator Porter looked around with something like a smile of
congratulation, she beckoned him, and he hastened to her side.

"Move to reconsider and to lay on the table," she said, and with a look
of admiration he turned and made the motion. It was put, it was carried
of course, and the amendment was lost irrevocably.

"Well, that's attended to," said Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop. "Ah,
Morley," she said calmly, "you here? And Amelia?"

"She's here," he said, "and I--I didn't get here on time!" The shame and
mortification on his face were pitiable, though they could not have
touched Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop's heart.

"And I didn't get here on time," he repeated ruefully.

"Why, my dear boy," said Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, "I didn't intend
that you should."

He looked at her fiercely, angrily, a second.

"So that was the game, was it?" he said. He whirled, with another fierce
look, on Amelia.

"That was the game, yes, Morley," said Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, "but
you needn't look at Amelia so--she was utterly innocent, the dear little
thing."

Amelia came up. She had seen Vernon's expression.

"What is it--what has happened?" she inquired.

"Well, I got here too late, that's all," said Vernon. "I was detained,
and Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop has just now kindly told me that she had arranged
that I should be. I'm ruined, that's all; I'm lost."

"No, Morley," said Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop, "you're saved. You're saved from
yourself." She still smiled at him sweetly. "You might have made, don't
you know, another one of your speeches."

Vernon bit his lip and walked away. He encountered Martin, but could
only look at him helplessly. Martin returned his look with one of
surprise.

"You here?" he said.

"Well, yes," replied Vernon. "At last--too late, it seems."

The surprise had not left Martin's face; to it was now added a
perplexity.

"If we'd known," said Martin; "but we thought, that is, we heard, that
you had ducked."

Vernon shook his head as with a pain that would not let him speak. He
was looking disconsolately across the chamber to where Miss Greene stood
talking with Bull Burns. As in a dream, he heard Mrs. Overman
Hodge-Lathrop exclaim:

"Ah, there is that Greene woman!"

Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop was lifting her gold glasses again. Vernon
was wondering how he was to face the Greene woman. But at Mrs. Overman
Hodge-Lathrop's words an idea came to him.

"I'll go bring her and introduce her," he said. He bolted away and went
toward her. She was cold and distant. Fortunately, Burns fled at his
approach.

"Can you forgive me?" he said. "I'll explain it all in an instant."

"And how?" she asked with a chill rise in her tone.

"Have you ever met Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop?" he asked significantly.

"No," she answered.

"Then permit me," he said. She went with him. Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop
had withdrawn her delegation to the rear of the chamber, and there
awaited Vernon's return.

"Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, permit me to present Miss Greene; Miss
Ansley, Miss Greene." And so on, in the order of relative rank, he
introduced her to the other ladies.

Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop extended her hand officially. Miss Greene
took it with a smile.

"I am very glad," she said, "to meet Mrs.--Mrs.--ah, pardon me, but what
was the name?"

"Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop," Vernon said.

"Ah, Mrs. Lathrop."

Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop seemed, to the eye, to swell.

"You have a charming little city here, Mrs. Lathrop. We poor Chicagoans
love to get down into the country once in a while, you know."

Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop reared back a little.

"No doubt," she stammered. "I have always found it so."

Miss Greene feigned surprise, and affected a look of perplexity. Vernon
withdrew a step, and with his chin in his hand looked on out of eyes
that gloated. The other women in the party exchanged glances of horror
and wrath. Mrs. Barbourton, for her part, seemed unable to endure it.

"Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop lives in Chicago," she interjected.

"Oh!" cried Miss Greene. "Is it possible? How very strange that one
could live in the city all one's life and yet not have heard!"

"Not so very strange, I fancy," said Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop. "One's
circle is apt to be so far removed."

"Yes?" said Miss Greene, with that rising inflection. "Then you can not
have lived in Chicago long?"

"All my life," snapped Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop.

"So long as that!" said Miss Greene with eyes that stared incredibility.
Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop actually colored.


"You are enjoying your visit to Springfield, I trust? You have seen the
Lincoln Monument and the Homestead? How very interesting they must be!
And the Legislature offers novelty; don't you find it so?" She gathered
her skirts as if to withdraw. But Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop achieved a
smile.

"We have not enjoyed the pleasures of sight-seeing. On the contrary, we
came to appear before the Senate," she said.

Miss Greene surveyed her critically, with that look in which one woman
inspects another woman's attire. She then extended her critical scrutiny
to the dress of the others.

"To be sure!" she said, "I should have known."

The ladies again exchanged glances. Mrs. Barbourton plainly could not
bear that their position should be equivocal. She doubtless had her
little vainglorious wish to have their success known.

"Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop came down to appear in opposition to the
woman's-rights resolution!" She emphasized the word _woman_ as if she
would not for worlds have been a woman herself.

"Indeed!" exclaimed Miss Greene. "I am sure her appearance must have
been a very convincing argument." She gave her opponent another
searching glance. Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop was having difficulty in
getting her breath.

"We have been having a taste of lobbying, Miss Greene," she began,
"and--"

"How unpleasant!" said she.

"You know, possibly," said Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop, regaining
something of her position.

"Indeed I do," Miss Greene assented sweetly, "but where it is in the
line of one's profession, duty obscures the unpleasantness. One can not,
you know, always choose one's occupation. Good morning!"

And catching her skirts, with a smile and a bow she left.

The successful lobbyists stood in silence a moment, looked one to
another with wide and staring eyes. Then at last Mrs. Overman
Hodge-Lathrop spoke.

"Morley," she said, "I do wish you could learn to discriminate in your
introductions."




XV


IN the evening, just before dinner, Amelia and Vernon sat in the little
waiting room of the hotel. Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop and her ladies had
gone up to the suite they had taken and were engaged in repairing the
toilets their political labors of the day had somewhat damaged. Amelia
had completed her toilet more quickly than they and had joined Vernon,
waiting for her below.

They sat in the dim little room where Amelia could look across the
corridor to the elevator, expecting every moment the coming of Mrs.
Overman Hodge-Lathrop. Now that they found themselves alone and face to
face with the necessity of reconciliation, a constraint had fallen on
them. Amelia constantly kept her eye on the elevator. Men were passing
and repassing the open door, going to or coming from the bar-room, and
their loud talk and laughter beat in waves into the dim little retreat
of the lovers.

As Vernon sat there he imagined that all that talk was of him; more than
all, that all that laughter was at him--though there was no more of
either than there was every evening when the legislators came over to
the hotel for dinner. At last Amelia turned to him.

"You've got the blues, haven't you?" she said. It would seem that
somehow he did her an injustice by having the blues.

"No," he answered.

"Then what's the matter?" she demanded.

Vernon glanced at her, and his glance carried its own reproach.

"Oh!" she said, as if suddenly recalling a trivial incident. "Still
worrying about that?"

"Well," Vernon answered, "it has some seriousness for me."

Amelia, sitting properly erect, her hands folded in her lap, twisted
about and faced him.

"You don't mean, Morley, that you are sorry it didn't pass, do you?"

"It puts me in rather an awkward position," he said. "I suppose you know
that."

"I don't see how," Amelia replied.

"Well," Vernon explained, "to stand for a measure of that importance,
and then at the final, critical moment, to fail--"

"Oh, I see!" said Amelia, moving away from him on the couch. "Of course,
if you regret the _time_, if you'd rather have been over in the Senate
than to have been with _me_--why, of course!" She gave a little
deprecating laugh.

Vernon leaned impulsively toward her.

"But, dear," he said, "you don't understand!"

"And after your begging me to come down to Springfield to see you!"
Amelia said. Her eyes were fixed on the elevator, and just at that
moment the car came rushing down the shaft and swished itself to a stop
just when, it seemed, it should have shattered itself to pieces at the
bottom. The elevator boy clanged the iron door back, and Maria Greene
stepped out.

"There she is now!" said Amelia, raising her head to see. Miss Greene
paused a moment to reply to the greeting of some one of the politicians
who stopped to speak to her.

Amelia's nose was elevated.

"And so that's the wonderful hair you all admire so much, is it?" she
said.

"Well," replied Vernon, almost defiantly, "don't you think it is rather
exceptional hair?"

Amelia turned on him with a look of superior and pitying penetration.

"Does that shade deceive you?" she asked. She smiled disconcertingly, as
she looked away again at Maria Greene. The woman lawyer was just leaving
the politicians.

"And to think of wearing that hat with that hair!" Amelia went on.
"Though of course," she added with deep meaning, "it may originally have
been the right shade; the poor hat can't be expected to change its
color."

Vernon had no answer for her.

"I wonder what explanation she'll have for her defeat," said Amelia in a
tone that could not conceal its spirit of triumph.

"I'm not worried about that," said Vernon. "I'm more concerned about the
explanation I'll have."

"Dearest!" exclaimed Amelia, swiftly laying her hand on his. Her tone
had changed, and as she leaned toward him with the new tenderness that
her new manner exhaled, Vernon felt a change within himself, and his
heart swelled.

"Dearest," she said, in a voice that hesitated before the idea of some
necessary reparation, "are you really so badly disappointed?"

He looked at her, then suddenly he drew her into his arms, and she let
her head rest for an instant on his shoulder; but only for an instant.
Then she exclaimed and was erect and all propriety.

"You forget where we are, dear," she said.

"I don't care about that," he replied, and then glancing swiftly about
in all directions, he kissed her.

"Morley!" she cried, and her cheeks went red, a new and happy red.

They sat there, looking at each other.

"You didn't consider, you didn't _really_ consider her pretty, did you?"
Amelia asked.

"Why, Amelia, what a question!"

"But you didn't? Don't evade, Morley."

"Oh well, now, she's not bad looking, exactly, but as for beauty--well,
she's rather what I'd call handsome."

"Handsome!" Amelia exclaimed, drawing back.

"Why, yes. Don't you see, dear?" Vernon was trying to laugh. "Can't you
see the distinction? We call _men_ handsome, don't we? Not pretty, or
anything like that. But women! Ah, women! Them we call, now and then,
beautiful! And you, darling, you are beautiful!"

They were face to face again, both smiling radiantly. Then Amelia drew
away, saying:

"Morley, don't be ridiculous."

"But I'm dead in earnest, dear," he went on. "And I think you ought to
make some sort of amends for all the misery you've caused me."

"You poor boy!" she said, with the pity that is part of a woman's
triumph.

"I did it," he said, "just because I love you, and have learned in you
what women are capable of, what they might do in politics--"

"In politics! Morley! Can you imagine me in politics? I thought you had
a more exalted opinion of women; I thought you kept them on a higher
plane."

"But you--" Vernon laughed, and shook his head at the mystery of it, but
did not go on.

"Why, Morley, would you want to see your mother or your sister or me, or
even Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop in politics?"

"Well," he said, with a sudden and serious emphasis, "not Mrs.
Hodge-Lathrop exactly. She'd be chairman of the state central committee
from the start and, well--the machine would be a corker, that's all."

The elevator was rushing down again in its perilous descent, and when
its door flew open they saw Mrs. Overman Hodge-Lathrop come out of the
car. Vernon rose hastily.

"There she is," he said. "We mustn't keep her waiting."

Amelia rose, but she caught his hand and gave it a sudden pressure.

"But you haven't answered my question," she said, with a continuity of
thought that was her final surprise for him. "Are you so very badly
disappointed, after all?"

"Well, no," he said. "I don't think it would do. It would--well, it
would complicate."

Mrs. Hodge-Lathrop was standing in the door, peering impatiently into
the dim little room. They started toward her.

"Anyway, dear heart," Amelia whispered as they went, "remember
this--that you did it all for me."





*** 