HOW MORTY SANDS TURNED AWAY SADLY AND JUDGE VAN DORN UNCOVERED A SECRET
Grant Adams sat in his cell, with
the jail smell of stone and iron and damp in his nostrils.
As he read the copy of Tolstoy’s “The
Resurrection,” which his cell-mate had left in
his hurried departure the night before, Grant moved
unconsciously to get into the thin direct rays of
the only sunlight the early morning sunlight,
that fell into his cage during the long summer day.
The morning Times lay on the floor where Grant
had dropped it after reading the account of what had
happened to his cell-mate when the police had turned
him over to the Law and Order League, at midnight.
To be sure, the account made a great hero of John
Kollander and praised the patriotism of the mob that
had tortured the poor fellow. But the fact of
his torture, the fact that he had been tarred and
feathered, and turned out naked on the golf links of
the country club, was heralded by the Times
as a warning to others who came to Harvey to preach
Socialism, and flaunt the red flag. Grant felt
that the jailer’s kindness in giving him the
morning paper so early in the day, was probably inspired
by a desire to frighten him rather than to inform
him of the night’s events.
Gradually he felt the last warmth
of the morning sun creep away and he heard a new step
beside the jailer’s velvet footfall in the corridor,
and heard the jailer fumbling with his keys and heard
him say: “That’s the Adams cell there
in the corner,” and an instant later Morty Sands
stood at the door, and the jailer let him in as Grant
said:
“Well, Morty come right in and make
yourself at home.”
He was not the dashing young blade
who for thirty years had been the Beau Brummel of
George Brotherton’s establishment; but a rather
weazened little man whose mind illumined a face that
still clung to sportive youth, while premature age
was claiming his body.
He cleared his throat as he sat on
the bunk, and after dropping Grant’s hand and
glancing at the book title, said: “Great,
isn’t it? Where’d you get it?”
“The brother they ran out last
night. They came after him so suddenly that he
didn’t have time to pack,” answered Grant.
“Well, he didn’t need
it, Grant,” replied Morty. “I just
left him. I got him last night after the mob
finished with him, and took him home to our garage,
and worked with him all night fixing him up. Grant,
it’s hell. The things they did to that
fellow unspeakable, and fiendish.”
Morty cleared his throat again, paused to gather courage
and went on. “And he heard something that
made him believe they were coming for you to-night.”
The edge of a smile touched the seamed
face, and Grant replied: “Well maybe
so. You never can tell. Besides old John
Kollander, who are the leaders of this Law and Order
mob, Morty?”
“Well,” replied the little
man, “John Kollander is the responsible head,
but Kyle Perry is master of ceremonies the
stuttering, old coot; and Ahab gives them the use
of the police, and Joe Calvin backs up both of them.
However,” sighed Morty, “the whole town
is with them. It’s stark mad, Grant Harvey
has gone crazy. These tramps filling the jails
and eating up taxes and the Times
throwing scares into the merchants with the report
that unless the strike is broken, the smelters and
glassworks and cement works will move from the district it’s
awful! My idea of hell, Grant, is a place where
every man owns a little property and thinks he is
just about to lose it.”
The young-old man was excited, and
his eyes glistened, but his speech brought on a fit
of coughing. He lifted his face anxiously and
began: “Grant, I’m with
you in this fight.” He paused for breath.
“It’s a man’s scrap, Grant a
man’s fight as sure as you’re born.”
Grant sprang to his feet and threw back his head,
as he began pacing the narrow cell. As he threw
out his arms, his claw clicked on the steel bars of
the cell, and Morty Sands felt the sudden contracting
of the cell walls about the men as Grant cried
“That’s what it is, Morty it’s
a man’s fight a man’s fight
for men. The industrial system to-day is rotting
out manhood and womanhood too rotting
out humanity because capitalism makes unfair divisions
of the profits of industry, giving the workers a share
that keeps them in a man-rotting environment, and
we’re going to break up the system the
whole infernal profit system the blight
of capitalism upon the world.” Grant brought
down his hand on Morty’s frail shoulder in a
kind of frenzy. “Oh, it’s coming the
Democracy of Labor is coming in the earth, bringing
peace and hope hope that is the ’last
gift of the gods to men’ Oh, it’s
coming! it’s coming.” His eyes were
blazing and his voice high pitched. He caught
Morty’s eyes and seemed to shut off all other
consciousness from him but that of the idea which obsessed
him.
Morty Sands felt gratefully the spell
of the strong mind upon him. Twice he started
to speak, and twice stopped. Then Grant said:
“Out with it, Morty what’s
on your chest?”
“Well, this thing,”
he tapped his throat, “is going to get me, Grant,
unless well, it’s a last hope; but
I thought,” he spoke in short, hesitating phrases,
then he started again. “Grant, Grant,”
he cried, “you have it, this thing they call
vitality. You are all vitality, bodily, mentally,
spiritually. Why have I been denied always, everything
that you have! Millions of good men and bad men
and indifferent men are overflowing with power, and
I I why, why can’t I what
shall I do to get it? How can I feel and speak
and live as you? Tell me.” He gazed
into the strong, hard visage looking down upon him,
and cried weakly: “Grant for
God’s sake, help me. Tell me what
shall I do to Oh, I want to live I
want to live, Grant, can’t you help me!”
He stopped, exhausted. Grant
looked at him keenly, and asked gently,
“Had another hemorrhage this morning didn’t
you?”
Morty looked over his clothes to detect
the stain of blood, and nodded. “Oh, just
a little one. Up all night working with Folsom,
but it didn’t amount to anything.”
Grant sat beside the broken man, and
taking his white hand in his big, paw-like hand:
“Morty Morty my
dear, gentle friend; your trouble is not your body,
but your soul. You read these great books, and
they fascinate your mind. But they don’t
grip your soul; you see these brutal injustices, and
they cut your heart; but they don’t reach your
will.” The strong hand felt the fluttering
pressure of the pale hand in its grasp. Morty
looked down, and seemed about to speak.
“Morty,” Grant resumed,
“it’s your money your soul-choking
money. You’ve never had a deep, vital,
will-moving conviction in your life. You haven’t
needed this money. Morty, Morty,” he cried,
“what you need is to get out of your dry-rot
of a life; let the Holy Ghost in your soul wake up
to the glory of serving. Face life barehanded,
consecrate your talents you have enough to
this man’s fight for men. Throw away your
miserable back-breaking money. Give it to the
poor if you feel like it; it won’t help them
particularly.” He shook his head so vigorously
that his vigor seemed like anger, and hammered with
his claw on the iron bunk. “Money,”
he cried and repeated the word, “money not earned
in self-respect never helps any one. But to get
rid of the damned stuff will revive you; will give
you a new interest in life will change your
whole physical body, and then if you live
one hour in the big soul-bursting joy of service you
will live forever. But if you die die
as you are, Morty you’ll die forever.
Come.” Grant reached out his arms to Morty
and fixed his luminous eyes upon his friend, “Come,
come with me,” he pleaded. “That
will cure your soul and it doesn’t
matter about your body.”
Morty’s face lighted, and he
smiled sympathetically; but the light faded.
He dropped his gaze to the floor and sighed. Then
he shook his head sadly. “It won’t
work, Grant it won’t work. I’m
not built that way. It won’t work.”
His fine sensitive mouth trembled,
and he drew a deep breath that ended in a hard dry
cough. Then he rose, held out his hand and said:
“Now you watch out, Grant they’ll
get you yet. I tell you it’s awful that’s
the exact word the way hate has driven this
town mad.” He shook the cage door, and
the jailer came from around a corner, and unlocked
the door, and in a moment Morty was walking slowly
away with his eyes on the cold steel of the cell-room
floor.
When his visitor was gone, Grant Adams
went back to his book. At the end of an hour
he went to the slit in his cell, which served as window,
and looked on a damp courtyard that gave him a narrow
slice of Market Street and the Federal court house
in the distance. Men and women walking in and
out of the little stereoscopic view he had of the street,
seemed to the prisoner people in a play, or in another
world. They were remote from him. At the
gestures they made, the gaits they fell into, the
errands they were going upon, the spring that obviously
moved them, he gazed as one who sees a dull pantomime.
During the middle of the morning, as he looked, he
saw Judge Van Dorn’s big, black motor car roll
up to the curb before the Federal court house and unload
the spare, dried-up, clothes-padded figure of the
Judge, who flicked out of Grant’s eyeshot.
A hundred other figures passed, and Ahab Wright, with
his white side-whiskers bristling testily, came bustling
across the stereopticon screen and turned to the court
house and was gone. Young Joe Calvin, dismounting
from his white horse, came for a second into the picture,
and soon after the elder Calvin came trotting along
beside Kyle Perry with his heavy-footed gait, and
the two turned as the Judge had turned evidently
into the court house, where the Judge had his office.
Grant took up his book. After
noon the jailer came with Henry Fenn, who, as Adams’
attorney, visited him daily. But the jailer stood
by while the lawyer talked to the prisoner through
the bars. Henry Fenn wore a troubled face and
Grant saw at once that his friend was worried.
So Grant began:
“So you’ve heard my cell-mate’s
message eh, Henry? Well, don’t
worry. Tell the boys down in the Valley, whatever
they do to keep off Market Street and out
of Harvey to-night.”
The listening jailer looked sharply
at Fenn. It was apparent the jailer expected
Fenn to protest. But Fenn turned his radiant smile
on the jailer and said: “The smelter men
say they could go through this steel as if it was
pasteboard in ten minutes if you’d
say the word.” Fenn grinned at the prisoner
as he added: “If you want the boys, all
the tin soldiers and fake cops in the State can’t
stop them. But I’ve told them to stay away to
stay in their fields, to keep the peace; that it is
your wish.”
“Henry,” replied Grant,
“tell the boys this for me. We’ve
won this fight now. They can’t build a
fire, strike a pick, or turn a wheel if the boys stick and
stick in peace. I’m satisfied that this
story of what they will do to me to-night, while I
don’t question the poor chap who sent the word is
a plan to scare the boys into a riot to save me and
thus to break our peace strike.”
He walked nervously up and down his
cell, clicking the bars with his claw as he passed
the door. “Tell the boys this. Tell
them to go to bed to-night early; beware of false
rumors, and at all hazards keep out of Harvey.
I’m absolutely safe. I’m not in the
least afraid and, Henry, Henry,”
cried Grant, as he saw doubt and anxiety in his friend’s
face, “what if it’s true; what if they
do come and get me? They can’t hurt me.
They can only hurt themselves. Violence always
reacts. Every blow I get will help the boys I
know this I tell you ”
“And I tell you, young man,”
interrupted Fenn, “that right now one dead leader
with a short arm is worth more to the employers than
a ton of moral force! And Laura and George and
Nate and the Doctor and I have been skirmishing around
all day, and we have filed a petition for your release
on a habeas corpus in the Federal court on
the ground that your imprisonment under martial law
without a jury trial is unconstitutional.”
“In the Federal court before
Van Dorn?” asked Grant, incredulously.
“Before Van Dorn. The State
courts are paralyzed by young Joe Calvin’s militia!”
returned Fenn, adding: “We filed our petition
this morning. So, whether you like it or not,
you appear at three-thirty o’clock this afternoon
before Van Dorn.”
Grant smiled and after a moment spoke:
“Well, if I was as scared as you people, I’d look
here. Henry, don’t lose your nerve, man they
can’t hurt me. Nothing on this earth can
hurt me, don’t you see, man why go
to Van Dorn?”
Fenn answered: “After all,
Tom’s a good lawyer in a life job and he doesn’t
want to be responsible for a decision against you that
will make him a joke among lawyers all over the country
when he is reversed by appeal.” Grant shook
his dubious head.
“Well, it’s worth trying,” returned
Fenn.
At three o’clock Joseph Calvin,
representing the employers, notified Henry Fenn that
Judge Van Dorn had been called out of town unexpectedly
and would not be able to hear the Adams’ petition
at the appointed time. That was all. No
other time was set. But at half-past five George
Brotherton saw a messenger boy going about, summoning
men to a meeting. Then Brotherton found that
the Law and Order League was sending for its members
to meet in the Federal courtroom at half-past eight.
He learned also that Judge Van Dorn would return on
the eight o’clock train and expected to hear
the Adams’ petition that night. So Brotherton
knew the object of the meeting. In ten minutes
Doctor Nesbit, Henry Fenn and Nathan Perry were in
the Brotherton store.
“It means,” said Fenn,
“that the mob is going after Grant to-night and
that Tom knows it.”
“Why?” asked the thin, sharp voice of
Nathan Perry.
“Otherwise he would have let the case go over
until morning.”
“Why?” again cut in Perry.
“Because for the mob to attack
a man praying for release under habeas corpus in a
federal court might mean contempt of court that the
federal government might investigate. So Tom’s
going to wash his hands of the matter before the mob
acts to-night.”
“Why?” again Perry demanded.
“Well,” continued Fenn,
“every day they wait means accumulated victory
for the strikers. So after Tom refuses to release
Grant, the mob will take him.”
“Well, say let’s
go to the Valley with this story. We can get five
thousand men here by eight o’clock,” cried
Brotherton.
“And precipitate a riot, George,”
put in the Doctor softly, “which is one of the
things they desire. In the riot the murder of
Grant could be easily handled and I don’t believe
they will do more than try to scare him otherwise.”
“Why?” again queried Nathan
Perry, towering thin and nervous above the seated
council.
“Well,” piped the Doctor,
with his chin on his cane, “he’s too big
a figure nationally for murder ”
“Well, then what
do you propose, gentlemen?” asked Perry who,
being the youngest man in the council, was impatient.
Fenn rose, his back to the ornamental
logs piled decoratively in the fireplace, and answered:
“To sound the clarion means
riot and bloodshed and failure for the
cause.”
“To let things drift,”
put in Brotherton, “puts Grant in danger.”
“Of what?” asked the Doctor.
“Well, of indignities unspeakable
and cruel torture,” returned Brotherton.
“I’m sure that’s
all, George. But can’t we we
four stop that?” said Fenn. “Can’t
we stand off the mob? A mob’s a coward.”
“It’s the least we can do,” said
Perry.
“And all you can do, Nate,”
added the Doctor, with the weariness of age in his
voice and in his counsel.
But when the group separated and the
Doctor purred up the hill in his electric, his heart
was sore within him and he spoke to the wife of his
bosom of the burden that was on his heart. Then,
after a dinner scarcely tasted, the Doctor hurried
down town to meet with the men at Brotherton’s.
As Mrs. Nesbit saw the electric dip
under the hill, her first impulse was to call up her
daughter on the telephone, who was at Foley that evening.
For be it remembered Mrs. Nesbit in the days of her
prime was dubbed “the General” by George
Brotherton, and when she saw the care and hovering
fear in the pink, old face of the man she loved, she
was not the woman to sit and rock. She had to
act and, because she feared she would be stopped,
she did not pick up the telephone receiver. She
went to the library, where Kenyon Adams with his broken
leg in splints was sitting while Lila read to him.
She stood looking at the lovers for a moment.
“Children,” she said,
“Grant Adams is in great danger. We must
help him.”
To their startled questions, she answered:
“He is asking your father, Lila, to release
him from the prison to-night. If he is not released,
a mob will take Grant as they took that poor fool
last night and ” She stopped, turned
toward them a perturbed and fear-wrinkled face.
Then she said quickly: “I don’t know
that I owe Grant Adams anything but you
children do ” She did not complete
her sentence, but burst out: “I don’t
care for Tom Van Dorn’s court, his grand folderol
and mummery of the law. He’s going to send
a man to death to-night because his masters demand
it. And we must stop it you and Lila
and I, Kenyon.”
Kenyon reached out, tried to rise
and failed, but grasped her strong, effective hand,
as he cried: “What can we do what
can I do?”
She went into the Doctor’s office
and brought out two old crutches.
“Take these,” she said,
“then I’ll help you down the porch steps and
you go to your mother! That’s what you can
do. Maybe she can stop him she has
done a number of other worse things with him.”
She literally lifted the tottering
youth down the veranda steps and a few moments later
his crutches were rattling upon the stone steps that
rose in front of the proud house of Van Dorn.
Margaret had seen him coming and met him before he
rang the bell.
She looked the dreadful wonder in
her mind and as he took her hand to steady himself,
he spoke while she was helping him to sit.
“You are my mother,” he
said simply. “I know it now.”
He felt her hand tighten on his arm. She bent
over him and with finger on lips, whispered:
“Hush, hush, the maid is in there what
is it, Kenyon?”
“I want you to save Grant.”
She still stood over him, looking
at him with her glazed eyes shot with the evidence
of a strong emotion.
“Kenyon, Kenyon my
boy my son!” she whispered, then said
greedily: “Let me say it again my
son!” She whispered the word “son”
for a moment, stooping over him, touching his forehead
gently with her fingers. Then she cried under
her breath: “What about that man your Grant?
What have I to do with him?”
He reached for her hands beseechingly
and said: “We are asking your husband,
the Judge, to let him out of jail to-night, for if
the Judge doesn’t release Grant they
are going to mob him and maybe kill him! Oh,
won’t you save him? You can. I know
you can. The Judge will let him out if you demand
it.”
“My son, my son!” the
woman answered as she looked vacantly at him.
“You are my son, my very own, aren’t you?”
She stooped to look into his eyes
and cried: “Oh, you’re mine” her
trembling fingers ran over his face. “My
eyes, my hair. You have my voice O
God why haven’t they found it out?”
Then she began whispering over again the words, “My
son.”
A clock chimed the half-hour.
It checked her. “He’ll be back in
half an hour,” she said, rising; then “So
they’re going to mob Grant, are they? And
he sent you here asking me for mercy!”
Kenyon shook his head in protest and
cried: “No, no, no. He doesn’t
even know ”
She looked at the young man and became
convinced that he was telling the truth; but she was
sure that Laura Van Dorn had sent him. It was
her habit of mind to see the ulterior motive.
So the passion of motherhood flaring up after years
of suppression quickly died down. It could not
dominate her in her late forties, even for the time,
nor even with the power which held her during the
night of the riot in South Harvey, when she was in
her thirties. The passion of motherhood with Margaret
Van Dorn was largely a memory, but hate was a lively
and material emotion.
She fondled her son in the simulation
of a passion that she did not feel and
when in his eagerness he tried vainly to tie her to
a promise to help his father, she would only reply:
“Kenyon, oh, my son, my beautiful
son you know I’d give my life for
you ”
The son looked into the dead, brassy
eyes of his mother, saw her drooping mouth, with the
brown lips that had not been stained that day; observed
the slumping muscles of her over-massaged face, and
felt with a shudder the caress of her fingers and
he knew in his heart that she was deceiving him.
A moment after she had spoken the automobile going
to the station for the Judge backed out of the garage
and turned into the street.
“You must go now,” she
cried, clinging to him. “Oh, son son my
only son come to me, come to your mother
sometimes for her love. He is coming now in a
few minutes on the eight o’clock train.
You must not let him see you here.”
She helped Kenyon to rise. He
stumbled across the floor to the steps and she helped
him gently down to the lawn. She stood play-acting
for him a moment in whisper and pantomime, then she
turned and hurried indoors and met the inquisitive
maid servant with:
“Just that Kenyon Adams the
musician awfully dear boy, but he wanted
me to interfere with the Judge for that worthless brother,
Grant. The Nesbits sent him. You know the
Nesbit woman is crazy about that anarchist. Oh,
Nadine, did Chalmers see Kenyon? You know Chalmers
just blabs everything to the Judge.”
Nadine indicated that Chalmers had
recognized Kenyon as he crawled up the veranda steps
and Mrs. Van Dorn replied: “Very well, I’ll
be ready for him.” And half an hour later,
when the Judge drove up, his wife met him as he was
putting his valise in his room:
“Dahling,” she said as
she closed the door, “that Kenyon Adams was over
here, appealing to me for his brother, Grant.”
“Well?” asked the Judge contemptuously.
“You have him where we want
him now, dahling,” she answered. “If
you refuse him his freedom, the mob will get him.
And oh, oh, oh,” she cried passionately, “I
hope they’ll hang him, hang him, higher’n
Haman. That will take the tuck out of the old
Nesbit cat and that other, his his sweetheart,
to have her daughter marrying the brother of a man
who was hanged! That’ll bring them down.”
A flash across the Judge’s face
told the woman where her emotion was leading her.
It angered her.
“So that holds you, does it?
That binds the hands of the Judge, does it? This
wonderful daughter, who snubs him on the street she
mustn’t marry the brother of a man who was hanged!”
Margaret laughed, and the Judged glowered in rage
until the scar stood white upon his purple brow.
“Dahling,” she leered,
“remember our little discussion of Kenyon Adams’s
parentage that night! Maybe our dear little girl
is going to marry the son, the son,” she repeated
wickedly, “of a man who was hanged!”
He stepped toward her crying:
“For God’s sake, quit! Quit!”
“Oh, I hope he’ll hang.
I hope he’ll hang and you’ve got to hang
him! You’ve got to hang him!” she
mocked exultingly.
The man turned in rage. He feared
the powerful, physical creature before him. He
had never dared to strike her. He wormed past
her and ran slinking down the hall and out of the
door out from the temple of love, which
he had builded somewhat upon sand perhaps,
but still the temple of love. A rather sad place
it was, withal, in which to rest the weary bones of
the hunter home from the hills, after a lifelong ride
to hounds in the primrose hunt.
He stood for a moment upon the steps
of the veranda, while his heart pumped the bile of
hate through him; and suddenly hearing a soft footfall,
he turned his head quickly, and saw Lila his
daughter. As he turned toward her in the twilight
it struck him like a blow in the face that she in
some way symbolized all that he had always longed for his
unattainable ideal; for she seemed young immortally
young, and sweet. The grace of maidenhood shone
from her and she turned an eager but infinitely wistful
face up to his, and for a second the picture of the
slim, white-clad figure, enveloping and radiating the
gentle eagerness of a beautiful soul, came to him
like the disturbing memory of some vague, lost dream
and confused him. While she spoke he groped back
to the moment blindly and heard her say:
“Oh, you will help me now, this
once, this once when I beg it; you will help me?”
As she spoke she clutched his arm. Her voice dropped
to a whisper. “Father, don’t let
them murder him don’t, oh, please,
father for me, won’t you save him
for me won’t you let him out of jail
now?”
“Lila, child,” the Judge
held out his hand unsteadily, “it’s not
what I want to do; it’s the law that I must
follow. Why, I can’t do ”
“If Mr. Ahab Wright was in jail
as Grant is and the workmen had the State government,
what would the law say?” she answered. Then
she gripped his hands and cried: “Oh, father,
father, have mercy, have mercy! We love him so
and it will kill Kenyon. Grant has been like a
father to Kenyon; he has been ”
“Tell me this, Lila,”
the Judge stopped her; he held her hands in his cold,
hard palms. “Who is Kenyon who
is his father do you know?”
“Yes, I know,” the daughter replied quietly.
“Tell me, then. I ought to know,”
he demanded.
“There is just one right by
which you can ask,” she began. “But
if you refuse me this by what other right
can you ask? Oh, daddy, daddy,” she sobbed.
“In my dreams I call you that. Did you ever
hear that name, daddy, daddy I want you for
my sake, to save this man, daddy.”
The Judge heard the words that for
years had sounded in his heart. They cut deep
into his being. But they found no quick.
“Well, daughter,” he answered,
“as a father as a father who will
help you all he can I ask, then, who is
Kenyon Adams’s father?”
“Grant,” answered the girl simply.
“Then you are going to marry an illegitimate ”
“I shall marry a noble, pure-souled man, father.”
“But, Lila Lila,” he rasped,
“who is his mother?”
Then she shrank away from him.
She shook her head sadly, and withdrew her hands from
his forcibly as she cried:
“O father father daddy,
have you no heart no heart at all?”
She looked beseechingly up into his face and before
he could reply, she seemed to decide upon some further
plea. “Father, it is sacred very
sacred to me, a beautiful memory that I carry of you,
when I think of the word ‘Daddy.’
I have never, never, not even to mother, nor to Kenyon
spoken of it. But I see you young, and straight
and tall and very handsome. You have on light
gray clothes and a red flower on your coat, and I
am in your arms hugging you, and then you put me down,
and I stand crying ‘Daddy, daddy,’ after
you, when you are called away somewhere. Oh,
then then, oh, I know that then I
don’t know where you went nor anything, but
then, then when I snuggled up to you, surely you would
have heard me if I had asked you what I am asking now.”
The daughter paused, but the father
did not answer at once. He looked away from her
across the years. In the silence Lila was aware
that in the doorway back of her father, Margaret Van
Dorn stood listening. Her husband did not know
that she was there.
“Lila,” he began, “you
have told me that Kenyon’s father is Grant Adams,
why do you shield his mother?”
The daughter stood looking intently
into the brazen eyes of her father, trying to find
some way into his heart. “Father, Grant
Adams is before your court. He is the father
of the man whom I shall marry. You have a right
to know all there is to know about Grant Adams.”
She shook her head decisively. “But Kenyon’s
mother, that has nothing to do with what I am asking
you!” She paused, then cried passionately:
“Kenyon’s mother oh, father,
that’s some poor woman’s secret, which
has no bearing on this case. If you had any right
on earth to know, I should tell you; but you have
no right.”
“Now, Lila,” answered
her father petulantly “look here why
do you get entangled with those Adamses? They
are a low lot. Girl, a Van Dorn has no business
stooping to marry an Adams. Miserable mongrel
blood is that Adams blood child. Why the Van
Dorns ” but Lila’s pleading,
wistful voice went on:
“In all my life, father, I have
asked you only this one thing, and this is just, you
know how just it is that you keep my future
husband’s father from a cruel, shameful death.
And now ” her voice was
quivering, near the breaking point, and she cried:
“And now, now you bring in blood and family.
What are they in an hour like this! Oh, father father,
would my daddy the fine, strong, loving
daddy of my dreams do this? Would he would
he oh, daddy daddy daddy!”
she cried, beseechingly.
Perhaps he could see in her face the
consciousness that some one was behind him, for he
turned and saw his wife standing in the doorway.
As he saw her, there rose in him the familiar devil
she always aroused, which in the first years wore
the mask of love, but dropped that mask for the sneer
of hate. It was the devil’s own voice that
spoke, quietly, suavely, and with a hardness that
chilled his daughter’s heart. “Lila,
perhaps the secret of Kenyon’s mother is no affair
of mine, but neither is Grant Adams’s fate after
I turn him back to the jailer, an affair of mine.
But you make Grant’s affair mine; well, then I
make this secret an affair of mine. If you want
me to release Grant Adams well, then, I
insist.” The gray features of his wife stopped
him; but he smiled and waved his hand grandly at the
miserable woman, as he went on: “You see
my wife has bragged to me once or twice that she knows
who Kenyon’s mother is, Lila, and now ”
The daughter put her hands to her
face and turned away, sick with the horror of the
scene. Her heart revolted against the vile intrigue
her father was proposing. She turned and faced
him, clasping her hands in her anguish, lifted her
burning face for a moment and stared piteously at
him, as she sobbed: “O dear, dear God is
this my father?” and shaking with shame and
horror she turned away.