Thelismer Thornton was one of the
first to stir next morning in the big hotel.
All night roisterers had flanked his room, there had
been the buzz of eager argument overhead, riot of
dispute below, and continual thudding of hurrying
feet in the corridors. He had gone to sleep realizing
that the hive was in a state of upheaval extraordinary,
but he slept calmly in spite of it, and woke refreshed.
He picked his way past cots in the
corridors. Men were snoring there.
His grandson had not returned to their
apartments. But the Duke divined his whereabouts.
He had ascertained by the house telephone the number
of Linton’s room. He tried the door when
he arrived there. It was not locked. He
entered. Linton was asleep on the bed. Harlan
was on a cot. They had taken off only their coats
and waistcoats. They did not wake when he came
in. He pulled a chair to the centre of the room
and sat astride it, his arms on its back. In
a few moments both sleepers woke, stirring under his
intent regard. They sat up and returned his gaze.
“Well, my boys, what’s
the programme?” he inquired, pleasantly.
Heavy with sleep, perturbed, a bit
apprehensive, neither answered.
“You didn’t come back
to your room last night, Harlan. You weren’t
afraid of this old chap, were you? Didn’t
think I’d be running around the room on all
fours, eh, or climb the wall, or growl and try to bite
you?”
“I didn’t want to disturb
you, and Mr. Linton and I wanted to talk after we
left General Waymouth,” said Harlan.
“It’s all right if you
weren’t afraid of me, my boy. We can’t
afford to have politics put us in that state of mind.
Now, own up! You thought I’d pitch in and
pull you over to the machine you were afraid
of that, now, weren’t you?”
“To be perfectly honest, I didn’t
want any argument with you, grandfather, but I wasn’t
afraid you’d convert me. You couldn’t
do that.”
“Bub, ‘politics before
friendship’ is all right for a code. I practice
that myself, but it hurts me to have you put politics
before relationship the kind that’s
between us.”
“Grandfather,” replied
the young man, firmly, “you remember that you
told me you were going to put me into politics right.
I consider that you’ve done so. I’m
going to stay where you put me.”
“Oh, you mean one thing and
I mean another, my boy, as matters stand just now.
You’re in wrong. A man isn’t in right
when he’s playing on the losing end.”
“I stay where you put me,”
insisted Harlan, doggedly. “I’m with
General Waymouth.”
“General Waymouth was a winner
till he committed hari-kari there last night.
He had Luke’s machine, and he had my scheme.
He kicked over the machine, and the scheme won’t
work now; it could have been snapped through,
but it can’t be bulled through not
with the bunch forewarned and on the lookout.
Your political chances with Vard Waymouth, Harlan,
don’t amount to that!” He clicked his finger
smartly above his head. “You may as well
go back up-country and boss the Quedaws.”
“And yet you know that General
Waymouth is right, Mr. Thornton,” broke in Linton,
pausing in lacing his shoes. “There’s
no chance for argument about that. Why is it
the big men of this State men like you,
that have the influence to set things straight won’t
back the man that’s honest and right?”
“Linton, that’s the kind
of a question that’s asked by the man whose
experience in practical politics is limited to a term
on the School Board and the ownership of a subscription
edition of American Statesmen, bound in half
morocco. I’ll tell you why we don’t:
we’re dealing with conditions, not theories.
The chap who writes for the ‘Kickers’
Column’ in the newspapers can tell you all about
how politics should be run, but that’s the only
privilege he ever gets. It’s the chap who
keeps still and runs the politics that gets what’s
to be got out of it. And that’s because
mankind wants what it wants, and not what it says
it wants.”
He went to the window, snapped up
the shade, and let the morning light flood the room.
“Wake up, my boys! Dreams
are rosy I’ve had ’em myself.
But they don’t buy the breakfast next morning.
Martyrs get a devil of a reputation after they’re
dead. It doesn’t do ’em a mite of
good, not as human beings. As long as you’re
taking the curse that belongs with a human being,
get some of the good, too. I tried to operate
on a different plan long ago about the
time I had the dreams but I had to give
it up if I was to get anything out of life. Vard
Waymouth can’t build over the human nature in
this State. I’ve had to drop him. I
hadn’t realized he was in such a bad way.
Get aboard with the winners this trip! Then at
least you can be in the swim you can find
some good to do on the side, and be able to do it.
But you won’t amount to anything sitting on the
bank and bellowing.”
The vigils of the night had fortified
their faith, the loyalty of youth was in them, and
they were the disciples of one who had enlisted their
enthusiasm. Linton, however, was less assertive
than Harlan. The Duke did not lose his patience.
“Boys,” he said, at the
end of his exhortations, “I see that you’ve
got to have your little lesson (I’ll have to
be going now, for I’ve a few things to attend
to), and I’ll tell you frankly I propose to make
that lesson a lasting one.”
A few hours later the young men went
in to breakfast together. The early trains had
brought other delegates and visitors. The great
room was crowded with a chattering throng. The
head waiter intercepted them; he seemed to be waiting
for them. They followed obediently, and he led
them to an alcove.
Here a breakfast-party was already installed.
Miss Presson was first to greet them,
giving a hand to each radiant, fresh, and
altogether charming in her tailored perfection.
“We left word at the door,”
she smiled, “for I wanted to behold you before
the blood and dust of the arena settled over all.”
Mrs. Presson and her ladies were cordial.
They did not seem to remark that the State chairman
kept his seat and was brusque in his greeting.
Political abstraction excused general disregard to
conventions among the men-folks that morning.
The Duke was there. He patronized them with a
particularly amiable smile.
“May I?” asked Linton, touching the chair
next Madeleine.
“Yes,” said the girl.
“You know, Herbert and I are very old friends,
Mr. Thornton.” There was a hint of apology
to Harlan behind the brilliant smile she gave him.
He had moved toward the chair. He flushed when
he realized that he felt a queer sense of hurt at
her choice. It was another new experience for
him who had made the woods his mistress a
woman had chosen another, slighting him. As he
took his seat beside his grandfather he was angry
at himself at the sudden boyish pique he
felt. He had not been conscious till then that
he had been interested especially in Madeleine Presson.
It needed the presence of this other young man, selected
over his head, to make him understand that one may
not draw near beauty with impunity, even though one
may be very certain telling his own heart that
love is undreamed of. He wondered whether he
might not be afflicted with asinine pride.
He did not relish the glance that
Linton bestowed on him; it seemed there was just a
flash of triumph in it that bit of a boast
one sees in the eyes of a man who becomes, even briefly,
the proprietor of a pretty woman.
“We were just talking over the
latest news or, rather, it’s a rumor,”
said Miss Presson. With quick intuition she felt
that something, somehow, was not just right.
She hastened to break the silence. “They
are saying that Mr. Spinney has withdrawn, and that
his name will not go before the convention. Of
course, you’ve heard about it, Herbert and
Mr. Thornton!”
They had not heard it. They looked
guilty. They had been all the morning with Colonel
Wadsworth, locked away from the throng, finishing matters
of the night before. The expression on their faces
was confession of their ignorance.
“If you’re going to be
early political fishermen you’ll have to look
for your worms sharp in the morning or you’ll
fetch up short of bait,” suggested the Duke,
maliciously.
“Three cheers and a snatch of
band-music take on a hopeful color when they’re
lit up by red fire overnight,” remarked the State
chairman. “So do some other things.
But a fellow with good eyesight usually comes to himself
in the daylight.”
“Is that true about Spinney?”
asked Harlan, scenting mischief and treachery, and
not yet enough of a politician to understand instantly
just what effect this would have on the situation.
“I don’t know anything
about it,” snapped Presson. “I don’t
care anything about it. It isn’t important
enough. The man’s strength was overrated.
It was mostly mouth. Just as soon as the delegates
got together last night and shook themselves down
it was plain enough where Spinney stood.”
“But you yourself and grandfather
have been saying all along that he ”
began Harlan.
“We say a lot of things in politics,”
broke in the chairman, testily. “But it’s
only the final round-up that counts. And be prepared
for sudden changes, as the almanac says! I tell
you, I don’t know anything about this Spinney
rumor nor I don’t care. But it’s
probably true. Everett has got pledged delegates
enough to nominate him by acclamation.”
“But last night ” persisted
Harlan.
His grandfather interrupted this time.
“Don’t you remember that
old Brad Dunham wrote to New York one spring and asked
a commission man if he would take a million frogs’
legs? Commission man wrote that he’d take
a hundred pairs; and the best old Brad could do, after
wading in the swamp back of his house all day, was
to get a dozen. Wrote to the commission man that
he’d been estimating his frogs by sound and
thought he had a million. That’s been the
way with Spinney and his delegates, Harlan.”
Mrs. Presson took advantage of the
merriment to change the subject from politics.
It was a topic that did not interest her, and she had
learned from her husband’s disgusted growlings
that morning that there had been trouble the night
before.
Harlan did not join in the chatter
that went about the table. Under cover of it
his grandfather gave him a few words of compassionate
counsel.
“You’ll have to swing
in with the new deal, bub. You can’t cut
party sirloin too close to the horn, and that’s
what Vard did. He wants to sit on the mountain
and slam us flat under a rock with the new ten commandments
on it. We can’t stand for it. I didn’t
dream that he had grown to be so impractical in his
old age. No one wants any such deal as he’s
framing up for the State. As I told you, he’s
trying to build human nature over, and he can’t
do it. I’m sorry it’s turned as it
has he could have been just a little diplomatic
and made us a good Governor. But Everett will
make a good one you needn’t be afraid
of him. We’ll put through a few measures
that will smooth things down a little. Now you’ve
got to remember that you’re going to the legislature.
You might just as well not be there if you don’t
stand clever with the administration. I haven’t
put you in just as I intended. But get into line
now, quick. I can smooth it all right for you.
I’ve squared myself with Everett he
needed me!”
Harlan listened patiently, keeping his eyes on his
food.
“Right after breakfast Luke
is going to have a talk with you and Linton.”
“It will do Mr. Presson no good
to talk to me. I’m with General Waymouth.”
“But General Waymouth has been
eliminated, you young idiot. It was the combination
of circumstances that made him a candidate. But
those circumstances have been changed. I can’t
explain to you how, Harlan not here and
now. But a brand-new trump has been turned.
It had to be done. You stay behind here with
Linton and talk with Luke.”
The ladies were rising from the table.
Harlan did not reply. He did
not remain. He stepped aside and allowed the
ladies to pass, and followed them from the alcove.
Presson stared after him angrily. Linton, obeying
his request, sat down after Mrs. Presson and her party
had retired.
“You’ve got a fool, there,
for a grandson, Thelismer,” stated the chairman
with decision.
“He doesn’t seem to be
a politician,” returned the old man, gazing after
him. “There are a few joints in a man that
he ought to be able to bend in politics, but Harlan
seems to be afflicted with a sort of righteous ossification.
He’ll have to have his lesson, that’s all!”
The young man was not in the mood
to accept Miss Presson’s invitation to accompany
them to the hotel parlor. In the corridor he refused
so brusquely that she stood and gazed at him, allowing
the others to go on without her.
“You seem to be taking politics
very seriously, Mr. Harlan Thornton.”
“I’m taking honesty and
my pledges seriously, that’s all.”
“Then your honesty puts you
in opposition to my father, does it, sir?” It
was said with a spark of resentment. “Do
you realize how that sounds?”
“I do not say so, Miss Presson.”
“But I have heard queer rumors
this morning. Take a woman’s advice once,
Mr. Thornton: it may be worth something, because
I have seen more of this game than you have.
Don’t kill your career at the outset by trying
to realize an impossible ideal. It’s bad
enough in love, but it’s much worse in politics!”
She hurried away, joining the others.
Harlan paced the corridor impatiently,
waiting for Linton to come out. Few men of the
hundreds thronging past recognized him, and he was
not accosted.
He caught fragments of talk.
It was evident that the rumor concerning Spinney had
found as many disbelievers as believers. Some
charged that the story was started simply for the
purpose of hurting the reform candidate by decrying
his strength and inducing the wavering opportunists
to come over to the winning side. Others said
a trade had been effected, and that the story of it
had leaked out prematurely. At any rate, the
buzz of gossip showed that the situation was badly
mixed.
Linton came alone. He had left
the Duke and the chairman in conference. He took
Harlan by the arm, and walked to the end of the corridor.
They were alone there.
“Of course you know how I came
to be in on the Waymouth side,” he began, promptly.
“Once I was in I didn’t propose to quit
so long as there was any hope. I did what mighty
few young men in politics would do, Mr. Thornton I
stood out last night against Presson and your grandfather
when they dropped the General. I just say that
to show you I’m not a cur. But it’s
hopeless. The thing has turned completely over.”
“You’re going to desert the General?”
“It isn’t desertion.
That isn’t a word that belongs in this situation.
General Waymouth will not call it that after I’ve
talked with him.”
Harlan did not speak. At the
breakfast-table he had been ashamed of that little
gnawing feeling of rancor when he looked across at
the young couple who seemed so wholly contented with
their conversation. Now he indulged himself.
He began to hate this young man cordially. He
excused the feeling, on the ground that it was proper
resentment on behalf of the General.
“I don’t want you to think
that I’m disloyal or a deserter in this matter,
Mr. Thornton. But I’m going to the next
legislature, and I’m interested in certain measures
that will help this State if they’re adopted.
I can’t help General Waymouth now; you can’t
help him. He has no one behind him, as the thing
has turned.”
“He’s got the square deal behind him!”
“Meaning nothing in a political
mix-up such as this is. I can’t afford
to dump all my future overboard and kill myself for
the next legislature by an absolutely useless and
quixotic splurge in to-day’s convention.
The General has made no canvass he isn’t
even very much interested personally in the affair.
I hope I stand straight with you now. I’m
going up and tell the General exactly how I feel about
the thing. I advise you to do the same.
You’ll be very foolish to butt your head against
every political influence in this State that counts
for anything. I told your grandfather ”
“I don’t want your advice
in politics,” blazed Harlan, letting his grudge
have rein, “and I don’t thank you to tell
me how to get along with my own grandfather!”
He hoped that young Mr. Linton would
resent that manner of speech.
Young Mr. Linton, as stalwart as he,
raised his black eyebrows, pursed his lips, and was
not daunted by the outburst.
“I beg your pardon, Mr. Thornton,”
he said, “but I fear you did not have enough
sleep last night.”
He started for General Waymouth’s
room, and Harlan followed him. There seemed to
be no other haven for the latter just then. He
was hung between the political sky and earth.
He had no hope left that the General could prevail
over the conditions that had so suddenly presented
themselves. But his loyalty was not shaken.
Now it had become unreasoning loyalty, dogged determination
to stick to his choice; and as he looked at Linton’s
back preceding him along the corridor, he was more
firmly determined than ever. Suddenly he was glad
of the fact that this young man was on the other side,
and he did not stop to analyze why he was glad it
was so.
General Waymouth’s parlor was
crowded with men. The size of that levee astonished
the two new arrivals. The General was not in sight.
He was closeted with some one in the bedroom.
Harlan and Linton noted that the men in the parlor
did not wear the demeanor of ordinary visitors calling
to pay their respects to a “has been.”
Some of them were talking eagerly in bunches, some
were waiting all were serious and anxious.
General Waymouth, coming to his bedroom
door to usher out three men and admit others, saw
his young lieutenants. He called them to him.
He was straighter. He was stern. Fires within
had given his eyes the flash of youth. All his
usual gentle pensiveness was gone.
“My boys,” he said, earnestly,
“a week ago I didn’t think I wanted to
be Governor of this State again. But I want that
office now with the whole strength of my soul.
The devil is running our State to-day through his
agents. I’ve got a duty to perform.
I haven’t time now to tell you what I’ve
discovered since you left my room. I want you
to ”
“I ask your pardon for interrupting,
General,” said Linton, manfully, “but
I want to be as square with you as I can. Interests
that belong to others will suffer if I continue with
you things being as they are. I make
haste to speak before you tell me any more. I
ask to be released.”
“As a soldier I might question
a resignation on the eve of battle, but as a politician
I want no half-heartedness in my ranks. Good-day,
Mr. Linton.” He stood very erect, and his
air admitted no further explanation. Linton bowed,
and went out of the room.
“There is no half-heartedness
here!” cried Harlan, passionately. “Is
there anything I can do, General Waymouth?”
“Go and bring Arba Spinney to
this room at once. Understand the situation before
you go: I have already sent men for him.
He has refused to come. Tell him this is his
last opportunity to save himself from such deep disgrace
that it will drive him from his State. I wish
I could tell you to take him by the collar and lug
him here. I venture to say you have the muscle,
young man. But minutes are valuable bring
him.”
Harlan hurried away.
Mr. Spinney was not in evidence in
the parlor of his suite, but Harlan heard his tremendous
voice in the bedroom that voice could not
be softened even in an exigency.
Several men whom Harlan recognized
as members of the State Committee were seated near
the door; and when he approached to knock, one of them
informed him that Mr. Spinney was too busy to be seen.
“But my business is important.”
“What sort of business is it?”
“Is Mr. Spinney afraid of visitors?”
demanded the young man. His mien impressed the
men. They knew that he was Thelismer Thornton’s
grandson. They conversed among themselves in
whispers. Without waiting, and before they could
stay him, he flung open the door.
Spinney stopped in his discourse with
several men, and faced about apprehensively.
He, too, recognized the young man, and was unable to
decide whether to class him with friends or foes.
“Mr. Spinney, I have been sent
to bring you with me instantly. Will you come?”
“Where?”
“It’s a matter for your ear, sir.
But you must come.”
The men with Spinney promptly counselled
him to remain where he was, but the candidate was
impressed by the young man’s determined appearance.
Harlan strode to him, and took him by the arm.
He had been used to the command of men since boyhood.
“I have some very positive instructions.
It will be a serious matter for you, Mr. Spinney, if
you don’t come and you can’t
afford to take the advice of these men here.”
He propelled his man toward the door,
and Mr. Spinney went. It is likely that he concluded
that no very serious damage could come to him in the
presence of Thelismer Thornton’s grandson.
But when they arrived near the door of General Waymouth’s
parlor, Spinney recognized what it meant and resisted.
“It’s a trap!” he gasped. “I
thought your grandfather ”
The State Committeemen were following
along the corridor, growling threats. Now they
understood that this was practically an abduction.
They hastened up to the scene of the struggle.
But the young man was not deterred. He was obeying
orders without question. With him it was not a
matter of politics; he did not pause to wonder how
the affair would be looked upon. The man to whom
all his loyalty had gone out had commanded; he was
obeying. But the others were resolute too.
They were about to interfere. At that moment
Thelismer Thornton appeared in the corridor.
“Let the boy alone,” he
commanded, thrusting himself among them.
The diversion gave Harlan his opportunity.
Clutching Spinney with one hand, he threw open the
door and pushed him in, followed him, and closed the
door. He locked it, and stood with his back against
it.
In that moment he did not reflect
that in obeying General Waymouth so implicitly he
might be playing traitor to his own flesh and blood.
But the Duke, in his cynicism, had never attracted
his grandson’s political loyalty. That
had seemed a matter apart from the family ties between
them. His grandfather had set him on the trail
of decency in politics, and had given him a leader
to follow.
The frankness with which his grandfather
had exposed the code by which he and his ilk operated
in politics, making tricks, subterfuge, and downright
dishonesty an integral part of the game and entitled
to absolution, had divorced Harlan’s straightforward
sympathies when the question came to issue between
his own relative, complacently unscrupulous, and General
Waymouth, heroically casting off bonds of friendship
and political affiliations, and standing for what was
obviously the right. It was chivalrous. It
appealed to the youth in Harlan. His manhandling
of the amazed Spinney was an unheard-of event among
gentlemen at a political convention, but there was
more than impulse behind it. Harlan Thornton
was a woodsman. Social conventions make the muscles
subservient, but in the more primitive conditions the
muscles leap ahead of the mind.
Therefore, he came with Mr. Spinney
and tossed him into the presence of the chief, who
had sent for him.
Then he set his broad shoulders against
the door, for fists had begun to hammer at it.
It was evident at once that Spinney
recognized the nature of the conference that had assembled
in General Waymouth’s room, and knew what the
personnel of the group signified.
He looked around him and started toward the door.
“I’ve got witnesses to
that assault, and you’re going to suffer for
it,” he blustered. Harlan did not give
way.
“You can’t leave here
yet, Mr. Spinney not until General Waymouth
finishes his business with you.”
The General had viewed Mr. Spinney’s
headlong arrival with astonishment. He stepped
forward to the centre of the room. There was a
note in his voice that quelled the man as much as
had Harlan’s resolute demeanor at the door.
“Spinney, it will be better for you if you listen.”
The candidate turned to face him,
apprehensive and defiant at the same time. The
panels of the door against which Harlan leaned were
jarred by beating fists. Harlan heard the voice
of his grandfather outside, calling to him impatiently.
A moment more, and Chairman Presson added a more wrathful
admonition to open.
“Mr. Thornton, will you kindly
inform those people at the door that this is my room,
and that I command them to withdraw?” directed
General Waymouth.
Harlan flung the door open and filled
the space with the bulk of his body. Both parties
stood revealed to each other, the young man dividing
them, and disdaining intrenchments.
“What kind of a crazy-headed,
lumber-jack performance are you perpetrating here?”
demanded the elder Thornton. “You’re
not handling Canucks to-day, you young hyena!”
“This is a scandal a
disgrace to this convention!” thundered Presson.
He started to come in, but Harlan barred the doorway
with body and arms.
“Do you want any of these gentlemen
inside, General?” he asked.
“Neither Mr. Presson, nor Mr.
Thornton, nor any of the rest,” declared Waymouth.
“And I want that disturbance at my door stopped.”
“You hear that!” cried
the defender of the pass. “Now, Mr. Presson,
if you intend to disgrace this convention by a riot,
it’s up to you to start it.” And
then the choler and the hot blood of his youth spoke.
He did not pick his words. His opinion of them
was seething within him. He talked as he would
talk to a lumber-crew. “I’m keeping
this door, and I’m man enough for all the pot-bellied
politicians you can crowd into this corridor.
And if there’s any more hammering here, I’ll
step out and show you.”
He slammed the door, locked it, and
set his shoulders against the panels.
“Luke, keep away,” counselled
Thelismer. “The boy is just plain lumber-jack
at the present moment, and he’s a hard man in
a scrap. We can’t afford to have a scene.”
“They’re going to turn
wrongside-out that wad of cotton batting with two
ounces of brains wrapped in it!” raved the State
chairman. But the Duke pulled the politician
away, whispering in his ear.
Spinney faced the General, blinking, doubtful, sullen.
The old soldier knew how to attack.
He flung his accusation with fierce directness.
“Spinney, you have sold out. You’re
a traitor. And you’re a thief as well,
for you’ve sold what didn’t belong to you.
You solicited honest men, in the name of reform, to
put their cause into your hands. It was a trust.
You’ve sold it.”
“I’ll prosecute you for
slander!” roared the candidate. He hoped
his defiance would be heard by those outside.
“You may do so, but I’ll
give you here and now the facts that you’ll go
up against. That’s how sure I am of my ground!”
He shook papers at the man.
“Last night, or rather this
morning at one o’clock, to be exact, you met
Luke Presson and members of the State Committee, and
for two thousand dollars, paid to you in one-hundred-dollar
bills, you agreed to pull out. The secret was
to be kept until it should be time for the nominating
speeches to be made on the floor of the convention
to-day. I have here affidavits signed by responsible
parties who heard the entire transaction.”
It was accusation formal, couched in cold phrases,
without passion.
Spinney started. The perspiration
began to stream down his face. But in spite of
the staggering blow the fight was not out of him.
He thought quickly, reassuring himself by the recollection
that his bedroom door had been locked, and men were
on guard in his parlor. There could have been
no eavesdroppers. This must be a bluff.
“That’s a damnation lie!” he shouted.
“Don’t you bellow at me,
sir! I’m not trying to extort any confession.
But you’re wasting time, denying. I’m
sure of my ground, I repeat. That’s why
I’m talking now. I’m an old man, and
I was in politics in this State before you were born.
And there were tricks and tricksters in the old days.
And I knew them. I played one of those tricks
on you, sir, last night. It’s the last
one I hope I shall ever play, for tricks are to be
taken out of the politics of this State. The god
of good chance lodged you in ‘Traitor’s
Room,’ last night, Mr. Spinney.”
The man stared at him, frightened, not understanding.
“There’s a false door
and a slide in the wall of that bedroom, Spinney,
and the old politician who put it there years ago passed
the knowledge on to me. I’m willing every
one should know it now. When you go back I will
have it shown to you. It will convince you that
these affidavits I hold in my hand are not guess-work.
These men in this room now for your own
men brought me word that you were hiding from them made
those affidavits. Look at them, and deny deny
once more, Spinney!”
But the candidate had no voice now.
He glanced furtively from face to face.
“Spinney,” one declared,
bitterly, “we’ve got you dead to rights.
There ain’t any use in squirming. We suspected
you when you hid away from us, and General Waymouth
put us in the way of finding out just who was with
you. You might as well give in.”
The General did not wait for Spinney
to speak. He was in no mood then for listening.
He was in command. He was issuing orders.
The battle was on, and he was in the saddle.
“I propose to have your name
go before the convention, Spinney. You must walk
out of this room and deny the rumors that are afloat.
I propose to have two of these men go with you and
stay with you. And if you deny half-heartedly,
or if you attempt any more sneak tricks, or if your
name is not put into nomination to-day, I’ll
stand out and declare what is in these affidavits.
If you want to save yourself and the men who bribed
you, obey my orders.”
“I don’t understand why
you want me to go ahead now,” Spinney ventured
to protest.
“And I don’t propose to
take you into my confidence enough, sir, to inform
you. I simply instruct you to do as I say, and
if you obey, I and these men here will do all we can
to cover up this nasty mess in our party. It’s
in your hands whether you go to jail or not.”
The General signalled to Harlan, and
the young man opened the door. Spinney went out
with his watchful guardians.
“Now you ought to be able to
hold your men together until we need them, gentlemen,”
said the General, addressing those who remained.
“But you’d better get out among them and
see that they stay in line. Defend Spinney!
God knows, the words will stick in your throats, but
show a bold front to the other side. Gather in
your stragglers.”
They filed out, plain and stolid individuals
from the rural sections.
Harlan was left alone with the General.
“There go the kind that the
demagogues always catch, Mr. Thornton. The demagogues
understand human nature. They prey on the radicals
who will follow the man who promises sets
class against class and eternally promises! Promises
the jealous ascetics to deprive other men of the indulgences
they seem to enjoy promises to correct things
for the great majority which dimly understands that
things are out of joint in their little affairs, and
as dimly hope that laws and rulers can correct those
things and make the income cover the grocery bills.
Spinney had them by the ears, that he did! But
the knave was shrewd enough to understand that the
machine would probably whip him in convention.
They used my name to scare him into selling out threatened
to stampede the convention for me. That’s
why I’m so angry.”
“Let me ask you something, General.
It was Spinney, was it, Spinney and the kind I’ve
seen training with him in this thing, that stirred
up the opposition in this State the kind
of opposition we found at our Fort Canibas caucus?”
“From all reports, yes.
I know some of the agents that have been working in
the State. The men behind have hidden themselves
pretty well, and I’m not exactly certain where
their money is coming from. But I suppose the
liquor interests are putting in considerable, as usual.”
“The liquor interests! Backing reformers?”
The General smiled.
“Remember that I’ve had
better chances to see the inside than you, young man.
I’ve watched it operate from the start.
In case of doubt you’ll find the liquor interests
on both sides. It’s an evil that prohibition
opens the door to. The saloons are to be tolerated
and protected, or they are to be persecuted the
programme depends on the men who get control.
If they are to be tolerated, the wholesale liquor men
have to stand in right, so that they may have the
privilege of doing business with the retailers.
If the saloons are to be closed, the liquor men want
to stand in right, so that they can do business direct
with the consumer; and then there are the increased
sales through the legalized city and town agencies
when the saloons are closed the liquor men
need that business. The liquor is bound to come
in anyway, whichever faction is in control. So
the big rumsellers cater to both sides.”
“Isn’t there any decency
anywhere, in any man, General Waymouth, when he gets
mixed into such things?”
“Don’t lose your faith
that way, my boy! You see, I’m even playing
a few political tricks myself. Your grandfather
is more than half right we have to play
the game! But I’m trying a last experiment
with human nature before I die. I haven’t
the things to lose that a young man has. I am
forcing myself on my party using some means
that disgust me, but I have to do so in order to prevail.
I want to be Governor of this State again, and I want
to be Governor with more powers than I had before.
You and I both know what the party managers want,
I’d like to find out if the people are willing
to be governed that way, after they’ve learned
there’s a better system. I want to find
out if every man in this State is willing to pay his
own just share of taxes, if the people will wake up
and stand behind a man who shows them how to keep from
private greed what belongs to the people. And
most of all, young man, this State is in a condition
of civil war over this infernal liquor question.
The radicals are away off at one side, and the liberals
as far away from them as they can get, and both sides
plastering each other with mud. There’s
no common ground for a decent and honest man to stand
on between; that is, he’s too much disgusted
with both sides to join either. I want to see
whether there’s good sense enough in this State
to take the thing out of the hands of the fanatics
so that we can get results that decent men can subscribe
to results instead of the ruin and
rottenness we’re in now.”
He stopped suddenly with a word of apology.
“You mustn’t think I’m
inflicting a rehearsal of my inauguration speech on
you, Mr. Thornton. I talked more than I intended.
But my feelings have been deeply stirred this morning.”
“It’s wicked business,
General Waymouth! I don’t understand how
you’ve kept so calm through it. But, thank
God, you can show ’em all up now, as they deserve
to be shown to the people of this State. I can
hardly wait for that convention to open!”
The General put his papers into his
breast-pocket and buttoned his close frock-coat.
He gazed on the young man’s excitement indulgently.
“My boy, you have yet to learn,
I see, that what would make a good scene in a theatre
would be a mighty bad move in politics. This,
to-day, is a convention that a good many thousands
of voters are waiting to hear from. If they should
hear the whole truth, I’m thinking that the
Democratic party would win at the polls. So, you
see, I must continue to be a politician. We’ll
be going along to the hall, now, you and I. It’s
near the hour. I want to be the next Governor
of this State” (he smiled wistfully), “so
you and I will go out and hunt for enough honest men
to make me Governor.”
The hotel was pretty well deserted
as they walked down the stairs and through the lobby.
“Ours doesn’t seem to
be the largest parade of the day, Mr. Thornton,”
said the veteran mildly, when they were on the street,
“but we’ll see we’ll
see!”