Тяжесть лиры
By CLARENCE BUDINGTON KELLAND
Author of
"_The Source_," "_The Hidden Spring_,"
"_Sudden Jim_," _etc._
[Illustration]
WITH FRONTISPIECE
A. L. BURT COMPANY
Publishers New York
Published by arrangement with Harper & Brothers
THE HIGHFLYERS
Copyright, 1919, by Harper & Brothers
Printed in the United States of America
THE HIGHFLYERS
CHAPTER I
Fred la Mothe was speaking. After a certain number of beverages composed
of Scotch whisky, imported soda, and a cube of ice, it was a matter of
comparative ease for him to exhibit a notable fluency. After two o'clock
in the afternoon Fred was generally fluent.
"''Tain't safe,' I says to him. And the wind was blowin' enough to lift
the hair out of your head. 'I wouldn't go up in the thing for the price of
it,' I says, 'and, besides, you're seein' two of it. Bad enough drivin' a
car when you're lit up,' I says, 'but what these flyin' machines want is a
still day and a man that's cold sober. You just let it rest on its little
perch in the bird-cage.'"
Fred refreshed his parched throat while his four companions waited for the
conclusion of the tale. "'You'll bust your neck,' I told him.
"'Ten to one,' says he, 'I round Windmill Point Light and come back
without bustin' my neck. Even money I make it without bustin' anything,'
says he.
"'Dinner for four at the Tuller to-night that the least you bust is a
leg,' I says, and the wind whipped the hat off my head and whirled it into
a tree."
Fred stopped, evidently mourning the loss of his hat.
"Well," said Will Kraemer, impatiently, "what happened? Did he go up?"
"_Him?..._ I paid for that dinner, but, b'lieve _me_, there were times
when I thought I'd have to collect from his estate. Ever see a leaf
blowing around in a gale? Well, that's how he looked out over the lake.
Just boundin' and twirlin' and twistin', but he went the distance and came
back and landed safe. Got out of the dingus just like he was gettin' off a
Pullman. Patted the thing on the wing like it was a pet chicken. 'Let's
drive down to the Pontchartrain,' he says. 'Likely the crowd's there.' Not
another darn word. Just that."
"Trouble with Potter Waite," said Tom Watts, "is that he just naturally
don't give a damn. If he's going to pull something he'd as lief pull it in
the middle of Woodward Avenue at noon by the village clock as to pull it
on the Six Mile Road at midnight."
"No pussy-footin' for him," said Jack Eldredge. "My old man was talking
about him the other night. Day after he cleaned up those two taxi-drivers
out here in front. 'Don't let me hear of you running around with that
young Waite,' he says. 'He's a bad actor. You keep off him.'"
"He's a life-saver," Fred La Mothe joined in. "When dad lights into me I
just mention Potter, and dad forgets me entirely. You ought to hear dad
when he really gets to going on Potter."
"I'm no Sunday-school boy--" said Brick O'Mera.
"Do tell," gibed Eldredge.
"--but I'll say Potter is crowdin' the mourners. _I_ wouldn't follow his
trail a week steady."
The others waggled their heads acquiescently. Even to their minds Potter
Waite traveled at too high speed and with too little thought of public
opinion. About that table sat five young men who were as much a result of
a condition as outlying subdivisions are the result of a local boom. Of
them all, La Mothe came from a family which had known moderate wealth for
generations, but it had grown swiftly, unbelievably, during the past few
wonderful years, to a great fortune. Of the rest, Kraemer and O'Mera were
the sons of machinists who, a dozen years before, would have considered
carefully before giving their sons fifteen cents to sit in the gallery at
the old Whitney Opera House to see sawmill and pile-driver and fire-engine
drama. The automobile had caught them up and poured millions into their
laps. Eldredge was the son of a bookkeeper who, fifteen years ago, had
drawn fifty dollars at the end of each month for his services. For every
dollar of that monthly salary he could now show a million. Watts was the
son of a lawyer whom sheer good luck had lifted from a practice consisting
of the collection of small debts, and made a stockholder in and adviser to
a gigantic automobile concern. And these boys were the sons of those
swiftly gotten millions. They had forgotten the old days, just as Detroit,
their home city, had forgotten its old drowsiness, its mid-Western
quietness and conservatism.
One might compare Detroit to a demure village girl, pleasing, beautiful,
growing up with no other thought than to become a wife and mother, when,
by chance, some great impresario hears her singing about her work and it
is discovered that she has one of the world's rarest voices. From her the
old things and the old thoughts and the old habits of life are gone
forever. The world pours wealth and admiration at her feet and her name
rings from continent to continent. So with the lovely old city, straggling
along the shores of that inland strait. She has become a prima donna among
cities. The old identity is gone, replaced by something else, less homely,
but mightier, grander. Her population, which, within the memory of boys
not out of high-school, numbered less than three hundred thousand souls,
was now reported to be thrice that, and, by the optimistic, even more. Her
wealth has not doubled or trebled, but multiplied by an unbelievable
figure, and she has spent it with unbelievable lavishness.
Where once were cobblestone pavements and horse-cars are countless swarms
of automobiles; where once were meadows, pastures, wood-lots, are
tremendous plants employing armies of men, covering scores of acres,
turning out annual products which bring to the city hundreds of millions
of dollars. In the history of the world no city has come into such a
fortune as Detroit, nor has there been such universal prosperity, not to
employer alone, but to employees, and to the least of employees. It seemed
as if the day had arrived when one asked, not where he should get money,
but what he should do with his money. So Detroit spent! It built
magnificent hotels; it created palaces for its millionaires, and miles
upon miles of homes--luxurious, costly homes for those whose handsome
salaries passed the dreams of their youth, or whose fortunes, built up by
contact with the trade of purveying automobiles to an eager world, had not
even been hoped for ten years before. Even the laborer had his home. Why
not, when one manufacturer paid to the man who swept his floors the
minimum wage of five dollars a day?
That was before the war, before a solemn covenant became a scrap of paper
and the world fell sick of its most horrible disease. Then Detroit was
rich, was spending lavishly but not insanely. With the coming of war there
was a halt, a fright, a retrenchment, a hesitation, for no man knew what
the next day might bring. But as the next day brought no disaster, as it
became apparent that the coming days were to bring something quite
different from disaster, Detroit went ahead gaily.
Then came strangers from abroad, speaking other languages than ours, and
men began to whisper that this plant had a ten-million-dollar contract
from Russia for shrapnel fuses; this other plant a twenty-million-dollar
contract for trucks; this other a fabulous arrangement for manufacturing
this or that bit of the devil's prescription for slaughtering men--and the
whispers proved true.
The automobile brought amazingly sudden wealth; munition manufacture added
to it with a blinding flash--and Detroit came to know what spending was.
These five young men, sitting in mid-afternoon in the Hotel Pontchartrain
bar, were a part of all this; their life was the result of it; the
thoughts, or lack of thoughts, in their minds, derived from it inevitably,
remorselessly. They were castaways thrown up in a barroom by a golden
flood.
To four of them a nickel for candy had been an event; now, without mental
anguish, each of them could sign a dinner check which stretched to three
figures, or buy a runabout or a yacht, or afford the luxury of
acquaintance with the young woman who stood fourth from the end in the
front row.
Let them not be chided too harshly. The fault was not theirs wholly, but
was the inevitable result of their environment. They played at work, drew
salaries--but could spend their afternoons in the Pontchartrain, in the
Tuller, on the links or at _th; dansant_. They knew no responsibility to
man, felt but a hazy responsibility to God, and as for their country, they
had never thought about its existence.
They talked of the war, were pro-Ally with the exception of Kraemer, whom
they baited when the fit was on them. Kraemer had been born on Brady
Street. His grandfather was a 'forty-eighter. It was natural that he
should see eye to eye with the land from which he derived his blood. Of
them all, he alone took the war with seriousness, so they baited him at
times, and he raged for their amusement.
They began the sport now.
"If the Kaiser only had the grand duke," said La Mothe, "he might stand
some show. Look what he's done and what he had to do it with! I don't
figure it'll last much longer. Everybody's lickin' Germany."
Kraemer banged the table. "You'll see," he said, passionately. "The war
would be over now if it wasn't for the _neutrality_ of the United States.
This country's just prolonging the agony. If it wasn't for the munitions
the Allies get from here, we'd be in Paris and London and St. Petersburg.
Devil of a neutrality, ain't it? Look here...."
"Rats!" said O'Mera. "Where's Potter, anyhow?"
"Haven't seen him to-day. Ought to be driftin' in."
"He's over at police headquarters," said a new voice, and Tom Randall
beckoned a waiter and sat down at the table.
"Pinched again?" came in chorus.
"No, but he'll probably get himself pinched before he's through with it.
Know the von Essen girl?"
"Hildegarde, you mean? Sassy one? Swiftest flapper that ever flapped?"
"That's the darlin'. Well, she drives that runabout of hers down Jefferson
again, doin' nothin' less than forty-five and makin' real time in spots.
Seems she's been fined pretty average regular. Well, traffic cop gets her
and makes her haul up to the curb and crawls right in beside her. Uh-huh.
And off they go to the station, her lookin' like she could bite off the
steerin'-wheel. Well, Potter and I are comin' along in _his_ car, and we
see the excitement and tag after. You know Potter?"
"We do!"
"'It's that von Essen kid, isn't it?' he says to me, and I agree with him.
'She's been caught too regular,' he says. 'They'll be nasty. Better trail
along and see if we can help out.' So we did. Got to the station
simultaneous and adjacent to them, and out jumps Potter.
"'Afternoon, Miss von Essen,' says he.
"'Mr. Waite,' she says, cool as a _bisque tortoni_.
"'Pinched?' says he.
"'Ask him,' she says, and jerks her head toward the cop, who is clambering
down.
"'She is,' says the cop, 'and this time she gits what's comin' to her. She
been a dam' nuisance,' he says, 'and this here time I'm goin' to put her
over the jumps. Git out and git inside,' he says to her.
"Well, Potter sort of edged up to the cop and looks him over and says, 'I
don't really see why this young lady has to go inside. You can make your
complaint, and that about ends your usefulness.'
"'She stays,' says the cop, 'and if I got anything to say about it, she
sleeps on a plank.'
"'You wouldn't care to do that, would you, Miss von Essen?' says Potter,
with that grin of his, and I made ready to duck, because when he grins
that way--"
"We know," said the boys.
"'Now you listen to reason,' says Potter. 'A police station is no place
for a young lady. It doesn't smell pleasantly. So she doesn't go in. If
bail's necessary or if anything's necessary, I'm here for that. But omit
the stern policeman part of it.'
"'Git out and come in,' says the cop to the girl.
"'You and I are going in, friend,' says Potter, and he took hold of the
policeman's arm. '_We'll_ fix this up--not the young lady. Come _on_,'
says Potter, with his left fist all doubled up and ready.
"The cop knew Potter, so they parleyed, and then they walked under the
porch--you know the entrance to the station--and in a couple of minutes
out comes Potter, looking sort of sneering and shoving a roll of bills
into his pocket.
"'Seems there was some mistake,' he says to Miss von Essen. 'It wasn't
_you_ who broke the speed ordinance; it was I. I've arranged the mistake
with the officer. Now, for cat's sake, cut it out. You'll be breaking into
print _good_ one of these days, and there'll be the devil to pay ... or
breaking your neck. You'll get yourself talked about if you don't ease off
some.' And," said Randall, "he hardly knows the girl. Some line of talk
for Potter to ladle out!"
"What did she say?"
"Her eyes just _glittered_ at him. She's a handsome little cat, but I'll
bet she can scratch. 'Coming from _you_,' she says, 'that advice is
_thrilling_.' Her engine was still running. She slammed into gear, stepped
on the gas, and _shot_ over to Randolph Street.
"Potter looked after her and chuckled. 'Promising kid,' he said. 'You
chase along, Tom. They want me inside.' So here I am. Guess he can take
care of himself."
"Here he comes," said La Mothe. "Didn't get locked up, anyhow."
A tall young man who did not need padding in the shoulders of his coat was
making his way between the tables. He wore a plaid cap jauntily on his
yellow hair. He was not handsome, but at first glance one was apt to call
him handsome--if he were in good humor. You liked his face, except at
times when he was alone, or thoughtful. Then it distressed you, for you
could not make out the meaning of its expression. Then his blue eyes,
which were twinkling now, looked dark and brooding. He had a way of
looking dissatisfied--and something worse, more disquieting--something not
to be defined. Ordinarily his face was such as to draw men to him, even
older men who quite disliked him and used his mode of life as a text for
dissertations on what the young man of to-day was coming to.
One thing might be said with safety--he possessed personality. When he was
one of a group he dominated it. He was not a boy to leave out of the
reckoning.... When one of his "fits," as his friends called them, was dark
upon him, even those who knew him best and regarded themselves as closest
to him were a bit uneasy in his company. The most hardy and reckless of
them was moved at such times to go away from there, for Potter Waite
usually set out on some mad enterprise when that mood was on him. He would
set a pace few cared to follow.
"You never know what he's thinking about," Kraemer said, frequently. It
was true. But you did not know that he _was_ thinking, and that he could
think. Also he never followed, he _led_. For him consequences did not
exist. If he set out to do a thing, he did it, and let consequences take
care of themselves. And, as the boys complained, he went his reprehensible
way with a brass band. The idea of concealing his escapades seemed not to
occur to him.
"What'll you have?" called Randall, whose waiter had come to him.
"A stein, a quart of Scotch, and a bottle of soda," said Potter.
"What's that, sir?" said the waiter.
"Deliver it as ordered," said Potter, with a boyish smile that got him
quicker and better service than other men's tips.
The waiter obeyed and the boys watched with interest. Potter poured a
generous half-pint into the stein upon the ice, and filled the stone mug
with soda.
"I'm goin' to _git_," said Jack Eldredge. "Somethin's goin' to bust loose
around here."
Potter sat back comfortably and sipped from his stein. He appeared
unconscious that, from other tables, glances were directed toward him, and
that men standing at the bar mentioned his name and pointed him out to
companions. He began chatting pleasantly.
"Not pinched, eh?" asked Randall.
"Suppose I'll get mine in the morning," Potter said, without interest.
"I'd 'a' let her take her medicine," Randall said. "It wasn't any of your
funeral.... Didn't even say thank you."
Potter looked at him musingly. "That was the best part of it," he said,
presently. "Sort of proves she's being natural; not four-flushing like
some of these girls. They'd have burbled and kissed my hand--stepped out
of character, you know. She didn't."
A boy came into the room with an armful of papers. What he called could
not be heard distinctly above the din of the place. Potter raised his hand
and the boy threw a paper before him. The young man glanced at it, seemed
to stiffen. He sat back in his chair while the others watched him,
arrested by something in his manner, something portentous.
He stood up and looked from one to the other of them. Then he laid down
the paper slowly.
"The _Lusitania_ has been torpedoed," he said, in a quiet voice, "without
warning. Hundreds of Americans are lost--women and children." He stopped
and repeated the last words. "Women and children." For a moment he stood
motionless.... "It means war," he said.
Every eye was on him. He held them. He stopped them as if they had been so
many clocks with their hands pointing to this fateful hour. He made them
feel the event.
Nobody spoke. Potter turned very slowly and surveyed the room, then, still
very slowly, he walked out of the room without a word or a nod. His stein
was left, scarcely touched, before his chair.
CHAPTER II
Potter Waite stood a moment at the curb beside his car, looking at the
heart of this great new city. At his right, Cadillac Square stretched
broadly away to the County Building's square tower. Within his memory this
handsome space had been a public market, unsightly, evil of odor, reeking
with decaying vegetables and the refuse of the meat-stalls. To-day it was
overcrowded with parked automobiles. At his left opened the Campus
Martius, bisected by the magnificent width of Woodward Avenue. There, on
its little irregular plot, squatted the City Hall, shabby, slatternly,
forbidding. It seemed, against the background, the palisade, of upreaching
sky-scrapers of terra-cotta and brick, to typify that thing we tolerate as
municipal government. As was the shabby building to its clean, its
magnificent, neighbors, so was the thing it contained--the government of a
great city--to the governments of private enterprises which had made that
city a place to excite the envious admiration of her sister
municipalities.
Potter frowned at the thought. The huge machine of government was made up
of such parts, of common councils, of mayors, of state legislatures, of
national legislatures, differing only in degree, but wrought of kindred
materials. It was this machine with which the country would make war.
"It won't work," Potter said to himself. "It hasn't the stroke or the
bore...."
He stood still looking at the teeming Campus, following its currents and
cross-currents and eddies with eyes darkened by thought. It was a current
worthy to pass between magnificent banks. The sidewalks eddied with
never-motionless men and women; with human beings whose errands hurried
them on. Potter studied them with interest. Their faces were mobile,
alert, intelligent, forceful. There was a capability about each
individual; there was something distinct about each atom in the crowd....
Here, after all, was the great machine of government. Here was that from
which government derived; here was that which would make war, which would
_fight_ the war. Walking down that street was a potential army, and the
mothers of a potential army.
It was these who had made possible, who had created, the terra-cotta
sky-scrapers; it was these who had made possible that marvelous procession
of automobiles which taxed the width of Woodward Avenue; it was these who
had made possible the building up of that miracle of industrial life that
stretched around the town like fortifications around some European
city--but fortifications holding the city safe, not from a foreign
invader, but from an economic invader. Factory-fortresses preserving the
prosperity of the town.
He continued to eye the crowd, and his eyes became less deep and dark. He
raised his head without knowing that he raised it. A feeling of pride was
upon him.
"Here's the thing--the real thing," he said within himself. "This is the
machine; the stroke is there and the bore is there ... if they can be made
to see and to understand."
Potter stepped into his car and drove out Woodward Avenue, and thence down
a side-street to that mammoth, unbelievable mass of buildings which all
the world, through advertisements, would recognize as the plant of the
Waite Motor Car Company. Since the day the first brick was laid, a dozen
years before, building had never ceased. The plant had never caught up
with itself, had never been able to produce the number of automobiles
required of it by the public. As far as the eye reached were clean,
splendid structures; the ragged outline at the end, dimly seen, was caused
by steel not yet covered by brick, by brick walls rising to wall in new
space in which to manufacture yet more thousands of the Waite motor-car.
To all this, to this concrete, visible, tangible fortune, Potter Waite was
sole heir. It was not like wealth in stocks, bonds, securities. It was not
in promises to pay, in paper standing for something more substantial. It
was _there_. It could be beheld in the mass. Perhaps a hundred millions of
dollars actually reared themselves in brick and steel, in splendid,
efficient machinery. Potter had grown up with it, was accustomed to it.
Unlike the casual passer-by, he was not awed by it.
He leaped from his car and ran up the broad flight of stairs leading to
the offices on the second floor.
"Dad in?" he flung at the man who sat behind the information-desk.
"Yes, but he's occupied, Mr. Waite. I shouldn't go in."
Potter strode past. The man rose as though to call him back, and then sat
down with a shrug. Potter flung open the door of his father's office,
flung himself through it.
"Dad, have you heard?" he said, abruptly.
Fabius Waite looked up, frowned. "I'm busy. Weren't you told?" he said.
Potter glanced at the other occupants of the room; recognized Senator
Marvel, did not recognize the other. He nodded to the Senator.
"The Germans have torpedoed the _Lusitania_," he said. "It was without
warning. More than a hundred Americans drowned--women and children ...
like rats," he finished.
The Senator was on his feet. The news had been a sudden, bewildering blow
to him. "What's that? Are you sure? Where did you get it?"
Potter threw a paper on the desk over which the Senator and the stranger
crouched with manifest excitement. Not so Fabius Waite. He did not glance
at the paper, nor did he seem moved. His broad, clean-shaven, patrician
face showed no emotion except, perhaps, a shade of irritation at the
others' reception of the tidings. Potter said to himself that his father
would sit outwardly unmoved, unruffled, not in the least disarranged
mentally, if word were brought him that the dissolution of the universe
had commenced. It was true. Fabius Waite would study the information and
determine his course of action before he gave a sign that the most
sharp-eyed might read.
"My God!" exclaimed the man whom Potter did not know.
"What'll it mean?... What will it mean?" the Senator asked, in an awed,
frightened voice.
"What can it mean but war?" Potter said.
His father merely glanced at him, not contemptuously, not rebukingly, in
fact, not as if Potter were a human being at all, but as if he were some
piece of the room's furniture to which attention had been called.
"When you men are through scrambling over that paper," he said, quietly,
"I'll look at it myself." He did not stretch out his hand for the paper,
did not seem to suggest that it be given to him, but simply stated a fact.
Potter came near to smiling at the alacrity with which Senator and
business man abandoned the news sheet and pressed it upon his father. The
Senator was a big man in Washington and in Michigan, Potter knew. The
stranger looked like a man of importance, yet Fabius Waite dominated them,
made their personalities colorless by the simple fact of his presence. He
merely sat there--and they were dwarfs beside him.
"The people," said the Senator, "there'll be no holding them back. They'll
sweep us into war--as they did with Spain."
"I heard there were munitions shipped on the _Lusitania_," said the
stranger.
Fabius Waite paid not the minutest attention to them, but read calmly,
appraisingly, from beginning to end what the paper told of the sinking of
the _Lusitania_. When he was done he folded the paper neatly and laid it
on his desk.
"There were munitions," said the Senator, "and people were warned by
advertisements in the paper to keep off that boat."
"What's the difference?" Potter demanded. "Are we going to let them murder
our citizens like this--and put up such an excuse as that?"
"Citizens had no business on the boat," said the stranger. "They brought
it on themselves."
"There's _got_ to be war," said Potter, his eyes traveling uncertainly
from Senator to business man--to his father, where they remained. "There's
no other way. What else can be done about such a thing?"
"For one thing," said Fabius Waite, coolly, "we can stop jabbering and
think about it.... You especially, Potter. If you must wag your tongue, go
back to the Pontchartrain bar and wag it for the benefit of the gang of
loafers you train with.... Senator, what suggests itself to you?"
"I must get to Washington. The Senate doesn't want war, I can vouch for
that.... But the people.... Perhaps the President can hold them."
"I gather from your words that he'll be willing to try?"
"He's the last man in the country to want war.... There'll be no war.
Those German dunder-heads! Do they want to pull the whole world down about
their ears?"
"They're fools," said the stranger.
"We won't argue about their wisdom. Whether they were wise or foolish,
they seem to have sunk the _Lusitania_." Fabius Waite paused. "And when
all's said and done it won't be the Senate nor the President nor business
which determines what we will do about it. It's the people who will make
up their minds. Don't lose sight of that."
"Public opinion can be molded."
"For a while and to an extent.... I believe this thing can be handled so
that nothing will come of it. It will take careful handling. You agree
with me, do you not, Senator, that neither the people nor the business of
the Middle West want war?"
"Certainly I do."
"I have no doubt you will intimate to the President that you have grave
doubts if the Middle West will follow him into war--will back him up in
any belligerent attitude he may have in mind to assume." Fabius Waite's
eyes were on the Senator's face, and none could tell what thoughts stirred
behind them. He did not order, did not direct, did not suggest, but he was
imposing his will on this imposing member of an august body as surely and
as relentlessly as if he held a revolver at the Senator's head.
"I feel it my duty to intimate as much to him," said the Senator.
"There must, of course, be a protest," said Fabius White. "News that the
President is preparing a note to the German government will hold the
people in check. I incline to believe they will wait for it to see what
the President thinks.... If it should take time to prepare, so much the
better. It would give the country time to cool off."
"The people have seen what war means," said the Senator. "They've seen
Belgium and France.... They've no stomach for a dose like that. Handle
this thing _right_--let them get over the first shock of it--and the
excitement will die down. The people are sheep.... Yes, you're perfectly
right about delay."
Potter had hurried to his father, his soul a flame of emotion. The flame
was being quenched. The boy stood silent, looking from one to the other of
these men, hurt, amazed. Just why he had come or what he had expected his
father to do he did not know. Impulse had brought him. The word patriotism
was not in his vocabulary, as it was not in the vocabularies of millions
of Americans on that seventh day of May. But some spring had been touched,
something had been set in motion by the news of that atrocity which would
be heralded from one end to the other of the Germanic Empire as a splendid
feat of arms. The thing was _wrong_: the evil of it had seared through to
the uneasy soul of the boy and had set afoot within him something which he
did not understand as yet.... He was not able now to say, "_Civis
Americanus sum_."
It was not reason that had brought him. It was no conscious surge of
loyalty to his country. It was something--something he felt to be _right_.
Perhaps there was a tinge of adventure in it; perhaps his youth heard the
rolling of martial drums and saw the unfurling of flags of war.... But he
was right and these men were wrong. That he knew.
He wondered at the men. There had been no word of sympathy for the dead;
there had been no cry of anger wrung from them by this affront to the
honor of the nation; there had been but one thought--dollars. Business
came first. The prosperity of dollars and cents filled their minds to the
exclusion of all other prosperities. Even the Senator, servant and
representative of the people, was not serving and representing the people.
He, too, saw only the effect of this thing on business.
"Does everybody think like this?" Potter wondered. It might be so. His
friends at the table in the Pontchartrain bar had been surprised at the
news, but he considered their actions those of men who had not been
shocked or those of men enraged. Perhaps they, too, were of one mind with
his father.... Perhaps _all_ the people were of that mind. Perhaps that
was the sort of people the American nation had grown to be....
"Dad," he said, "if Mother had been on board--"
"She wasn't," said Fabius Waite. "Senator, this is mighty ticklish, and it
will grow more ticklish. This one act can be smoothed over, but many
recurrences of it cannot be smoothed over. Isn't there some machinery to
set afoot forbidding American citizens to cross the ocean? That would do
it."
"I wouldn't care to introduce such a resolution," said the Senator, "but
probably somebody can be got to do it."
"We've a _right_ to travel," Potter said, hotly. "Didn't we fight a war
about that once? You don't mean to say, Dad, that you actually would have
this country admit that it was afraid to claim its rights.... The world
would laugh at us."
"Let it," said his father. "Another year or two of this war and this
nation will top them all. We'll be the financial rulers of the world.
We're getting there now, and nothing must happen to set us back."
"And the world will despise us," Potter said, bitterly. He was beginning
to see more clearly now. He paused. This attitude of mind he was
witnessing could not be common to all the people. He would not believe it.
"Dad, think _bigger_. You men are wrong. You can't head this off. It means
_war_.... It's got to mean war. And war means armies and cannon and
shell--and aeroplanes. We've got to have them all. Think, Dad, and you'll
realize it.... Take a telegraph blank, Dad, and write the President. You
can help with this plant; every other plant like it can help. Wire the
President that this plant is at the disposal of the country for any use
the country can put it to.... Tell him you're with him. Tell him you can
make guns or shrapnel-cases or motors for him as well as for England or
France or Russia--as you are making them.... And aeroplanes. We'll need
thousands of them.... Give that job to me, Dad. I know aeroplanes--"
"You know mixed drinks and chorus girls and traffic cops," his father
snorted.
"You won't do it?"
"Don't be a fool."
Potter turned and walked out of the room. He stopped at the
information-desk. Here sat a man who worked for wages, a common citizen.
Here sat the sort of man who made up the bulk of that crowd he had watched
on Woodward Avenue.
"Dickson," he said, "the Germans have sunk the _Lusitania_ and killed a
hundred Americans."
"Awful, wasn't it? I just heard."
"What are we going to do about it?"
"Why--we'll make 'em pay for it, that's what. We'll collect damages,
millions of dollars."
"_Money?_" said Potter.
"You bet, Mr. Waite. Money."
"Is that all? Will that satisfy you?"
"Isn't that enough?" asked Dickson, in real surprise. "What more can
anybody ask?"
"You don't want to fight? You don't think it means war?"
"Great heavens, no! War!... We don't want any of that in ours. I guess
this country won't mix in any wars. We've been seeing what war means.
Anyhow, what should we fight for? England and the Allies are going to lick
Germany, aren't they? Well, let them."
Potter turned on his heel. He had his answer.
Once more he got into his car and whirled down-town. Once more he stopped
before the Pontchartrain and entered the bar. His friends were not there,
but he sat down at a table and ordered a drink; he ordered another
drink--and another....
His eyes were dark and brooding; the restless urge to recklessness was
upon him--that smoldering fire which had made him a young man to be looked
upon askance by the respectable. His face was set--and he drank.... Fred
La Mothe came through the revolving door, saw Potter, studied his face and
his attitude for a moment, and then quietly withdrew. He knew the signs,
and had no desire to be in Potter's company from that hour on.
He sat alone at his table, brooding, drinking from time to time. He felt
no hunger, did not arise to eat. The lights came on and still he sat. The
room was thronged with the early-evening crowd, and Potter glowered at
them--and ordered other drinks.
Presently he stirred uneasily; the spirit of unrest, of recklessness was
working within him, urged on by liquor. He pushed himself to his feet, and
stood, not too steadily, and his eyes seemed to flame as he glared over
the crowd. His face seemed to flame, to be kindling from some fire that
surged up from depths inside him. His yellow hair, brushed back from his
brow, added to the flamelike semblance of him.
He struck the table with his fist and a glass danced over the edge to
smash on the floor.
"It's a hell of a country," he said, loudly, "and you're a hell of a lot
of men...."
The room fell silent, and every face was turned toward him. He glared into
the upturned eyes.
"You're a lot of crawling, sneaking, penny-chasing rabbits," he said,
distinctly. "Brag and blow--that's you.... And then somebody kills your
wives and babies and you haven't the guts to kill back again. You're
afraid, the lot of you. You won't fight. If anybody says war you crawl
under the table.... Americans!... I'd rather be an Esquimo.... If anybody
slapped your faces you wouldn't fight.... I'll show you. I'll show you
what kind of cattle you are.... Now, if there's a fight in you, come and
fight...."
He lunged forward and struck a man, upsetting him against a table. The
place was in an uproar. "It's young Waite--look out. He's a bad actor....
Call the cops." Potter swayed forward into the throng at the bar,
striking, striking. In a moment he was the center of a maelstrom of
shouting, scuffling men--and his laugh rang above their shouts. They
struck at him, clutched at him; waiters and bartenders tried to force
their way to him. He was pushed back and back, still keeping his feet,
still lashing out with his fists, his eyes blazing, his yellow hair
rumpled and waving, his reckless laugh dominating the turmoil. His back
was against the wall. Before him now was a clear semicircle which none
ventured to cross, and he laughed in their faces.
"Fifty to one," he jeered, "and you're afraid."
A couple of policemen shouldered their way through, recognized Potter, and
stopped. "Cut it out now, Waite," said one of them. "Cut it out and come
on."
Potter's answer was to step forward and strike the officer with all his
strength. The other officer did not parley. His night stick was out. He
raised it, brought it down on Potter's yellow hair, and the whole room
heard the thud of it.... Potter stood erect the fraction of a second, then
the stiffness went out of his body and he sank to the floor a shapeless
heap....
The morning papers printed Potter's picture and news stories of this his
most reckless escapade. They also printed moral editorials which, with
singular unanimity, pointed out facts concerning young men with too much
money, no regard for their citizenship, and mentioned disgracing an
honorable name.
CHAPTER III
When the heir to a hundred millions of dollars is arrested in this country
for any act less than murder, he does not expect to sleep in a cell. The
police do not expect him to sleep in a cell, and the public would be
astonished--and a little vexed--if he were compelled to do so. They would
be vexed because in the event of his detention, they would be deprived of
the pleasure of railing against our institutions and of saying to their
neighbors in the street-car that, "a man with enough money can get away
with anything."
"Couldn't you bring in a kid without usin' the wood?" the lieutenant at
the desk said to the officer who had floored Potter. It did not seem
fitting to that lieutenant that a hundred millions of dollars should have
its scalp abraided by a night stick.
"Kid, hell!" said the officer. "If you'd 'a' seen the wallop he handed
Tom!"
Potter clung to the edge of the desk, dizzy, swaying, his head not clear
between blow and drink.
"Here," said the lieutenant, "come in here and lay down. Want I should
telephone anybody--or git a doctor?"
"No," said Potter, sinking on the lounge and closing his eyes.
The lieutenant went out and called the superintendent on the telephone.
"Got young Waite here," he said. "He tried to tear the Pontchartrain up by
the roots and Kerr had to drop the locust on him a bit. What'll I do wit'
the kid?"
"Hurt?"
"Didn't improve him none."
"Drunk?"
"So-so."
"Send somebody over to the Tuller with him and have him put to bed."
It was not for the public to know that the superintendent had two sons who
were employed in the Waite Motor Car Company's plant--for whom he desired
fair prospects and promotion.
So Potter slept in an excellent hotel bedroom instead of a cell. He
awakened in the morning with a head that was very sore; dressed and went
down to the office.
"Your car is out front," said the clerk. Even that detail had been
attended to by a solicitous police force.
At breakfast he read a paper on whose first page he divided honors with
the _Lusitania_. He was not interested in what was said about himself; at
first he was not especially interested in what was said about the
_Lusitania_, but as he read his interest grew, changing to hot anger as he
read the still incomplete list of the dead. More than one individual was
there named with whom Potter had broken bread.
Even in the editorial there was no demand for war; there was astonishment,
there was wrath, but it seemed to Potter there was some effort to find an
excuse for Germany's act.... Passengers warned.... Munitions....
Possibility of internal explosion.... Wait for particulars. The attitude
of the paper was not quite his father's attitude, not so frank, but he was
able to see it was his father's attitude disguised for popular
consumption. And he was intelligent enough to realize that the finger of
that paper was on the public pulse; that, without doubt, the paper was
dealing with the situation as the public wanted it dealt with--a public
not willing to resent blow with blow.
At the next table a man was saying, "Just because they've killed a
thousand or so is no reason for us to get into it. War would mean killing
another hundred thousand or maybe half a million. Because they've killed a
thousand, should we let them kill a hundred times as many more? That's
_sense_.... Make 'em pay for it...."
"What could we do, anyhow?" asked the other. "Might get in with our navy,
but there isn't anything for a navy to do. Couldn't send an army across
three thousand miles of ocean."
"Right. I'm for the Allies, but my idea is we can help a lot more by
staying neutral and sending 'em all the munitions they want."
"My idea exactly," agreed the other.
That was it. What could we do? We had no army. Potter had been told that
Uruguay had more artillery than the United States. There was no
ammunition!... The United States was ready for peace, and the old
absurdity about a million squirrel-shooters was gospel in the minds of a
hundred millions of people. A million squirrel-shooters armed with what?
Potter got up from the table and went out to his car. He wanted to be
alone; he wanted fresh air; he wanted to work off the various
uncomfortable sensations that possessed him. He drove recklessly out
Jefferson Avenue to the Country Club. At this hour it was deserted save
for servants. It would do him good, he thought, to play around alone,
without even a caddy, so he donned flannels and shoes, and carried his
caddy bag to the first tee.
Somebody else was teeing off--a girl. Potter did not glance at her, but
dropped his bag with a clatter and sat down on the bench to wait till she
should get out of his way.
"How do you do?" said the young woman.
Potter stood up automatically. "Good morning, Miss von Essen," he said,
without interest.
She turned her back on the ball she had been about to address and walked
toward him, slender, graceful, yellow hair blowing out from beneath a
tilted tam-o'-shanter. Her face was thin, not especially pretty at first
glance, but arresting. The features were distinct, and the expression,
even in repose, was one of eagerness--such an expression as one associated
with the possession of wit and daring. The expression was akin to
pertness, but was not pertness. One knew she could play golf or tennis.
One knew she had been a tomboy. One knew she had temper. Her whole
appearance and bearing were a perpetual challenge. "Come on," it seemed to
say. "Whatever it is, if there's a chance to take, let's do it." Potter
knew she was a girl about whom there had been shakings of the head, not so
much because of what she had done as because of what she might do.
Conservative mothers preferred some other friend for their daughters--and
you felt immediately that Hildegarde von Essen delighted to tantalize such
matrons and to set their tongues clacking.
"You gave away something yesterday that you needed yourself," she said,
with directness.
"No," said Potter, amused as at a pert child. She was only nineteen. "What
was it?"
"Advice. 'You'll be breaking into print _good_ one of these days, and
there'll be the devil to pay,'" she quoted. "'You'll get yourself talked
about if you don't ease off some,' says _you_ to _me_." The effect of it
was of a naughty child thrusting out her tongue. "And you take your
sanctimonious air right away to the Pontchartrain and drink too much and
get into a dis-_grace_-ful fight, and get arrested, and break into print
_good_. I s'pose," she said, thoughtfully, "you were jealous--afraid I
might steal some advertising and crowd you out."
Potter laughed, a good, whole-hearted, boyish laugh. The sort of laugh one
likes to hear. "It was funny, wasn't it?" he said.
"Impertinent, _I_ call it," she said, sharply.
He laughed again. "If you want advice on any subject, you go to an expert,
don't you? Well, I'm an expert on breaking into print and getting myself
talked about. My advice is worth something. I ought to charge for it....
Now there's a notion. How would it do for me to open an office with a sign
on the door, Expert Advice on Wild-oats Farming--Years of Experience?"
"You seem proud of it."
"No, I'm not exactly proud of it. I'm not like little girls who do things
for effect."
She turned her back and marched to her ball, but before she was ready for
the stroke she faced him again. "You're just a naughty little boy throwing
paper wads in school," she said, sweetly, "and you think you're a grown
man being _devilish_."
"Eh?" he said, a bit startled. On the face of it she had merely uttered a
saucy, childish gibe, but Potter was struck by it. He tucked it away in
his mind for future reference. There were elements of shrewdness, of
insight, of _truth_ in it.
"I have a puppy who chewed up my best slippers--because he hadn't anything
else to do," she said.
"Do your friends, by any chance, hint that your tongue is sharp?" he
asked.
She made no reply, but her driver whistled viciously through the air in a
practice stroke.
"I'll tell you what," he said, "just to show you I'm forgiving I'll let
you play around with me."
She looked at him an instant. "I'll give you a stroke a hole," she said.
"Eh?"
"I've seen you play," she said, calmly.
"Drive," he said, with a chuckle. "I ought to put up a cup, oughtn't I?"
"Make it a ride in that aeroplane thing of yours," she said. "I've always
wanted to see how it felt to fly. Not just go up and come down, but a
regular fly."
"Not a chance. Your father would assassinate me."
"You haven't much confidence in your game, have you? To beat a girl who
gives you a stroke a hole."
"We'd both break into print. Can't you see it in type? 'Hildegarde von
Essen explores the firmament with Potter Waite,' with some account of your
career with number of fines for speeding, and references to myself. Not
nice."
"Fiddlesticks! We shouldn't have to invite any reporters...."
"But they'd hear about it. They always do."
"A stroke a hole," she jeered.
"Very well. Give me a beating and I'll take you flying." He felt confident
enough, for he played a fair game of golf.
His confidence decreased after the first hole was played. He outdrove her
and had the distance of her, but her every stroke was down the center of
the course; she never overestimated her strength, and avoided trouble. On
the green she holed a twelve-foot putt--and the hole was hers.
He settled down to play his best. The thing became not merely a game of
golf between a man and a girl. It seemed to him that more was at stake
than victory or defeat in a pastime. He became interested, intensely
interested. He wanted to win and he played to win.... And he watched the
girl. _She_ interested him. She was so utterly natural, so without pose,
yet so very different from the ordinary run of girls, particularly
nineteen-year-old girls. There was a _tang_ about her. It was as if one
were eating bread and all unexpectedly encountered some unidentified, some
palate-intriguing spice. That defined her for Potter. If he had been going
to describe her he would have said she was highly spiced.
Potter played better than usual, but at the end of the ninth hole he was
two down. They had talked little. Now she sat down.
"Tired?" he asked.
"Not the least," she said, "but I find I play the last nine better if I
sit here a few minutes and get the first nine out of my mind.... Had you
any friends on the _Lusitania_?" She asked the question suddenly.
"Yes," he said.
"If I were a man--"
"If you were a man--?" he repeated after her.
"I'd enlist. I wouldn't wait for this country to go to war. I'd go across.
A good many boys have gone, haven't they? I'd go across and be an
aviator--or anything they'd let me be...."
"For the Allies? I took it for granted you would be on the other side of
the fence."
"Pro-German!" Her eyes flashed. "I leave that for Father and his cronies.
I believe they _celebrated_ last night--actually. My mother wasn't
German," she said. Potter knew Mrs. von Essen had died two years before.
"_I know Germans_," she said, presently. "I ought to; I've lived among
them all my life.... Sometimes I think the whole race is a button short."
Potter was to learn that in her vocabulary "a button short" meant not
quite complete mentally. "I like some of them, and I'd even trust some of
them, but most of them are arrogant _beasts_.... I've read their books,"
she said. "Dad has a lot of them. People used to think they were nice,
slow, harmless, fat, good-natured. Maybe some of them are. But I believe
that's what the German government _wanted_ the world to think." These were
unusual words to hear falling from a girl's lips. She had been _thinking_.
Perhaps that had happened in her life which made her think. "Will we
declare war?" she asked, in her sudden way.
"Last night I was sure we would. To-day I'm almost as sure we won't."
She nodded. "People don't realize.... But we'll be in it," she said. "No
matter how much we try to stay out, they'll force us in. They'll sink
another _Lusitania_ and another and another, until we _have_ to come in.
You'll see.... Partly because they don't understand--and partly because
that's the kind they are. You know a German never understands anybody but
a German. They can't. Just before Mother died she said to me, 'Garde'--she
always called me Garde--'don't marry a German, honey. Nobody but a German
woman should marry a German.' And Mother ought to know, oughtn't she? I'd
rather marry a _Chinaman_," she said, suddenly becoming girlish again.
"If we have war, what will all the Germans in this country do?"
"Talk loudly till war is declared. Then shut up and do sneaky things.
Nothing in the open.... I think," she said, slowly, evidently trying to
set aside prejudice and cling to fact--"I think most of them will be
loyal. In spite of their talk, I don't believe most of them would care to
live in Germany and in German conditions. That's why. But there'll be
enough." She got up quickly and teed her ball. "Let's go on," she said.
Hildegarde played the same steady game as before; Potter's mind was on
other things. Somehow he believed this girl was right; that she read the
future truly. The sinking of the _Lusitania_ meant war--sooner or later it
meant war.... And the country was unready for war. It did not want to get
ready for war.... She had spoken about going across to fight with the
Allies. He considered that. It was a thing he was to consider for days and
weeks to come. But that was a makeshift. He realized it was a makeshift.
There must be something better, something more logical than that.
He won a hole and halved a hole in the last nine.
"When do we fly?" she asked, eagerly.
"I shouldn't have promised."
"But you did."
He nodded. "Whenever you wish."
"Let's see. Suppose we say next Tuesday."
"My car is here. Can I drive you home?" he said.
"I was to telephone for my car. Yes, you may."
A limousine was just entering the grounds of the von Essen place in
Grossepoint when Potter and Hildegarde reached the drive.
"There's Father," she said, and her lips compressed a trifle.
A big man who looked not unlike Bismarck, and who endeavored to heighten
the likeness, alighted and stood beside the car, looking toward them. It
was obvious he was waiting for them. Potter stopped his car and lifted his
cap. Herman von Essen scowled.
"Since when are you friends with this young man?" he demanded. "Out of
that car and into the house. Have you no sense--to be seen in public with
this man whose picture is in the papers? For a girl to be with him is to
lose her reputation.... And you"--he turned on Potter furiously--"take
your car out of my grounds. Never speak with my daughter again. Do you
hear? You are a drunken young ruffian." He launched himself into a tirade
of great circumstantiality.
Potter's eyes were dark with the brooding expression which his friends
counted a signal of danger, but he remained motionless, save to turn
toward Hildegarde.
"I am sorry, Miss von Essen," he said. "I shouldn't have brought you. I
might have foreseen--"
She smiled. It was not a bright smile, but a reckless smile, as reckless
as one of Potter's own might be.
"Thank you for coming.... I hope we shall be friends." She did not glance
at her father, but walked erectly up the steps and disappeared in the
house. Von Essen continued verbally to chastise Potter, who did not look
at him. Perhaps he did not dare, fearing the weakness of his
self-restraint. The young man threw his car into gear and moved away,
leaving von Essen gesticulating behind him.
He drove to his own house, a mile beyond. Before he reached there the
brooding darkness was gone from his eyes; they twinkled. He was thinking
of Hildegarde.
CHAPTER IV
Detroit was flying high; it was spending as few cities have ever spent.
Wealth poured in upon her, and men who, ten years before, had worried when
they heard their landlady's step on the stairs were building palaces in
the midst of grounds for which they paid fabulous sums for each foot of
frontage. No clerk or school-teacher was too poor to own a lot in a
subdivision, laid out with sidewalks and shade trees, miles beyond the
city's limits. Overnight land increased in value, so that fortunate ones
who paid ten dollars down on a lot sold their equities within the month at
profits of hundreds of dollars. Men bought distant pasture-land for a song
and sold it for an opera. The streets were full of tales of this man who
had made a hundred thousand dollars, of that man who had cleared sixty
thousand, of men by the dozens whose bank-accounts had increased more
modestly, but still by thousands. Land that had gone begging at ten
dollars a foot was eagerly sought at a hundred dollars.... This was a
by-product of that great manufactory of wealth, the automobile.
As for it, and its growing sister, munitions, one believed whatever was
told, and the tale fell short of the truth. One manufacturer filled the
banks with his deposits, and, when they refused to accept more, was
obliged to build his own bank.
When money flows in torrentially it washes away walls of economy. Detroit
spent as it earned--lavishly. It was just completing what is perhaps the
most magnificent clubhouse in the United States--a million-dollar
plaything, the money for which had been raised almost in an hour. It was
the new Detroit Athletic Club, outgrowth of that historic and honorable
old athletic club which had so long been a landmark on Woodward Avenue
when land was cheap and a quarter-mile cinder track and football-field
might be maintained in the heart of the city. Five thousand men were found
instantly who could afford this luxury.
Magnificent new hotels sprang up miraculously; department stores,
surprised in their inadequacy by the multiplication of population, were
adding annexes treble the size of the original stores. Everybody owned a
motor-car.... The cabaret moved westward and found a welcome in a town
once famous for its staidness. The handling of motor traffic became a
greater problem for the police than the protection of the city from crime.
And yet people scarcely realized what was happening. They took it as a
matter of course--and flew high with the city.
Across the ocean another type of highflyer was coming into prominence. One
might say the war had passed through its second phase. The first phase was
the phase of fighting-men, of armies, of obtaining soldiers with rifles.
The second phase was the artillery phase, the high-explosive phase. Each
for its months filled the papers and demanded the interest of the
world.... Now was approaching the third, the aeroplane phase. It was
beginning to overshadow the other two in public estimation. Aeroplanes
were no longer contraptions which one went to the country fair to watch
performing tricks. They had come into their own. They ranked as a
_necessity_. They had emerged from the cloud of obscurity which hung low
over the battle-fields, and men were made to realize that victory in the
air meant victory in the fields below....
Potter Waite had thought much of this, had hoped for it, had even ventured
to prophesy it. One might say he was deeply interested in highflying of
both sorts.
A certain fascination which mechanics held for him since childhood had
enabled Potter to finish a turbulent college career with a
mechanical-engineering degree. This, or what it represented, he had never
put to use except in the way of a pastime. But aeronautics interested him.
He was so fortunate as to be rich enough to play with aeroplanes, to fly
aeroplanes, to own and experiment with aeroplanes, and there was something
about the risk of it, the romance of it, the thrill of it, the novelty and
the miracle of it, that fitted well into the recklessness of his
unsatisfied nature. So he had been one of the country's earliest amateur
aviators. The part taken by the aeroplane in the Great War had quickened
that interest, solidified it. It had become something more than the fad of
a rich young man to him.
It was during the week that followed the sinking of the _Lusitania_ that
Potter was introduced to a Major Craig, of that then comparatively unknown
branch of the United States military machinery known as the Signal Corps.
It was at the Country Club, and Potter, who was seldom drawn to an
individual, felt something much akin to boyish admiration for the slender,
trim, uniformed figure of the young major. Craig was young for a major. He
might have been forty, but a well-spent man's life made him appear
younger. He had not the face we have taken as typical of our soldier, but
rather the softer, gentler features of the enthusiast--not the sharp,
hungry look of the fanatic. He was a man with one compelling interest in
life, a man bound to his profession, not by duty, but by love. Something
of this was apparent at a glance. It became plain upon acquaintance. There
was something about him--not the uniform he wore--but a subtle
characteristic which set him apart from the run of men. He was distinct.
After half an hour's chat with him Potter perceived that the major was
something wholly outside his experience, and he was interested. He was
interested in the major's conversation, in his appearance, but chiefly in
that peculiar something which made Craig different from La Mothe or
Kraemer or O'Mera. The others who had gathered about the table wandered
off upon the links and left Potter and the major alone.
"You are the Potter Waite who has done something in the flying way, are
you not?" asked the major.
"A little."
"I wish," said the major, enthusiasm fighting in his eyes, "that there
were ten thousand of you."
"There are people around this town," Potter said, laughingly, "who wish
there were one less."
The major did not join in Potter's laugh, but regarded the young man
shrewdly, appraisingly--with something of sympathy and understanding in
his eyes. He got to his feet abruptly. "I should be obliged, Mr. Waite,"
he said, "if you would play around with me."
Presently they were equipped and walking toward the first tee.
"Mr. Waite," said the major, "have you ever considered the possibility
that this country might be compelled to enter the war?"
"Yes," said Potter, and the major saw that darkening of his eyes, that
sullen, restless, forbidding expression which came at times over the boy's
face.
The major laid his hand on Potter's arm. "You have been disappointed in
us, is that it? You thought the country would flare into righteous rage
over the _Lusitania_ and go knight-erranting? Is that it?"
"Didn't you?" Potter countered, a bit sharply.
"I am not permitted to express opinions," said the major, simply. "You
wanted immediate war because you are young and easily moved. Perhaps
because you have not thought deeply what war means. I take it you are
impulsive.... Have you asked yourself _why_ you want war? Was it mere
resentment? That isn't an excuse for war. Was it the adventure of it? Or
was it possibly something bigger and deeper? What do you think of the
United States, anyhow?"
Potter did not reply immediately. What _did_ he think about the United
States? He did not know. As a matter of fact, he had done very little
thinking about the United States; had rather taken the United States for
granted. Somehow he felt embarrassed by the question.
"Do you perhaps _love_ your country?" asked the major.
From another man Potter might have regarded this question as a symptom of
mawkish sentimentality. From the major it seemed natural, unaffected, as
if the major had the right to ask such a question and have a plain answer.
Craig waited for Potter to answer, his face grave, gentle; his bearing
sympathetic. Potter felt the sympathy, felt that he and this officer could
grow to be friends.
"Why," said Potter, presently, "I don't know."
The major nodded his head. "I'm afraid that's the way with most of us--we
don't know. We're thinking about ourselves and our businesses and about
making money and passing the time. We have grown unconscious of the
country just as we are unconscious of the air we breathe. That's hardly a
state of mind to carry us into war, is it?"
"No," said Potter.
"Because war requires love of country," said the major. "Not the love of
country that orators talk about on July Fourth, but the kind of love that
is willing to prove itself. War, Mr. Waite, means sacrifices such as we do
not even dream of. It means that love of country must take place over
everything else. Not a stingy loyalty, but a real _love_--the sort that
gives life and everything one possesses to the country. Mr. Waite, if we
should go to war to-morrow and your country should come to you and say, 'I
want your life. I want everything you possess in the world--wealth,
comfort, place. I need _everything_ to win this war,' what would you say?
Would you give willingly and gladly? I mean what I say literally."
Potter stopped and faced his companion a moment in silence. "Could you?"
he asked.
"I think I could," said Craig. "I think my country means all that to me."
"Why?"
"That you will have to find out for yourself. I can't teach you
patriotism, love of country, in half an hour, nor in a course of twenty
lessons. I couldn't teach you to love a woman. Each man must find those
things for himself."
"I suppose so," said Potter, uneasily, and they walked along together in
silence.
"We've heard a great deal about military preparedness lately," said the
major, presently. "It's in my mind that we need another sort of
preparedness even more. There _is_ such an emotion as patriotism, Mr.
Waite, but it seems to be dormant in this people. A couple of generations
of ease and prosperity and peace have lulled it to sleep. We have grown
careless of our country, as we sometimes grow careless of our parents. But
I believe patriotism is here--more than we need universal military
training, more than we need artillery and ammunition and war-ships, we
need its awakening. We can never have one sort of preparedness without the
other."
"I had never thought about it," said Potter.
"Will you think about it, Mr. Waite? And when you have thought about it,
see if you don't find it demanding something of you.... Do you know that
an army without aeroplanes is like a blind man in a duel with a man who
sees? Think about that. I sha'n't tell you how many 'planes we have, nor
how many trained aviators. It would shock you."
"I know something about that."
"But have you realized that if events force us into this war we shall
need, not hundreds of 'planes, but thousands--possibly twenty-five
thousand?"
Potter was astonished at the number. "Really?" he asked.
"That many will be absolutely necessary, and the best and fastest 'planes
that can be had. Where will we get twenty-five thousand of them?"
"God knows," said Potter.
"Mr. Waite, the War Department is not sleeping. Will it surprise you to
know that I came to Detroit solely to have this talk with you?"
"With me?"
"We know all about you, and about every other amateur aviator in the
country. _All_ about you," the major repeated.
"I'm surprised you found it worth your while to come, then," Potter said,
with, a trace of bitterness.
"For instance," said the major, "we know what happened in your
Pontchartrain Hotel the night the _Lusitania_ was sunk."
Potter flushed angrily, but made no reply.
"The manner of it," said the major, quietly, "was regrettable. The impulse
behind it--and we looked for that impulse--was hoped to be something not
regrettable. I came to find out that and other things. I have not come to
offer advice, Mr. Waite, merely to get information valuable to our
country.... Had you thought you might be valuable?"
"General opinion seems to hold the opposite view."
It was the major's turn to remain silent. He watched Potter's face keenly.
"What do you want of me?" Potter asked, finally.
"What would you do if war came?" countered the major.
"Enlist, I suppose. As an aviator, if I could. I've been thinking of going
to France, anyhow."
"That's adventure," said the major. "And as for enlisting, would you be
most valuable there or here--helping to produce those twenty-five thousand
'planes? Think that over."
"Do you believe we shall be in it?" asked Potter.
"I don't know," said the major. "But I do know that the man who goes ahead
as if he were sure we shall will be doing the thing he should do. You, for
instance, might think aeroplanes, plan aeroplanes, dream
aeroplanes--fighting-'planes.... Shall we play around now?"
They played around, for the most part in silence, for Potter was following
the major's direction to think. In the locker-room and in the shower-baths
they did not allude to the matter of their conversation, and when they
came out on the piazza of the club they found themselves in the midst of a
party of younger members talking the sort of talk that is generally to be
heard on country-club piazzas and drinking as if that were the business of
their lives.
"Hey, Potter," called Jack Eldredge, "come over here and meet a pilgrim
and a stranger--also state your preference."
The major touched Potter's shoulder. "Think it all over," he said, and
turned away.
Potter walked to Eldredge's table, and Jack presented him to a young man
in his early thirties who stood up and shook Potter's hand warmly.
"Mr. Cantor, Mr. Waite," said Jack. "Mr. Cantor came this morning from New
York. Friend of the Mallards and the Keenes. Goin' to be around Detroit
quite some time--so I put him up here, of course."
"Mr. Eldredge was very kind indeed," said Cantor. "I have hoped to meet
you, Mr. Waite. I have letters to you from Mr. Welliver and Mr. Brevoort."
They sat down and Potter observed the stranger. He was dark, smooth of
face save for a carefully shaped, slender mustache. His features were
rather thin, but quick with intelligence. There was a hint of military
training in his shoulders. It appeared he had recently come from abroad,
and soon was talking fluently and entertainingly about his experiences on
the fringe of the zone of war. Potter wondered what his nationality might
be. At first he fancied the accent was of Cambridge, but there was another
hint of accent underlaying the careful enunciation of the Cambridge man.
Potter made the guess that Cantor had been born to some tongue other than
English, but had, probably, been educated in one of the English
universities. This supposition was proved later to be correct.
"I represent an investment syndicate," said Cantor to Potter, presently.
"They have sent me over to study the situation here, particularly the
automobile industry. I seem to have come to the place to do that
thoroughly," he added, with an attractive smile.
"Detroit suffers with the automobile-manufacturing habit. There's no
cure," said Eldredge.
"What a fascinating location your city has, Mr. Waite!" said Cantor. "I
call to mind no other great city situated directly upon an international
boundary-line. You sit in your offices and look into foreign
territory--but I presume you are so accustomed to it that you seldom give
it a thought."
"Somehow," said Potter, "we don't think of Canada as foreign."
"No," said Cantor, "but I can conceive of circumstances which would compel
you to think of it as foreign. I understand your government is irritated
by certain British actions with regard to your mails and shipping. Might
not something disagreeable grow out of that?"
"It might. These are puzzling days, Mr. Cantor. I confess I am bewildered
by them. Impossible events happen with startling ease, and inevitable
consequences fail to follow amazingly. Yes, I can imagine trouble coming
with Great Britain, but somehow it does seem unlikely as long as Germany
lays a murder on every mail-bag England plays. You aren't especially apt
to bother with a man who jostles you in a crowd if there is another man
trying to hit you with an ax."
Cantor half shut his eyes and peered into his glass. Presently he looked
up to Potter and nodded. "I get your point of view," he said. "I wonder
how many people share it."
"I've given up guessing what the people think."
"It wouldn't surprise me to see your public opinion veering to favor
Germany."
"Some of our public opinion does favor it. Our German-Americans and such
like."
"A good many of them--millions I understand."
"Yes."
"Perhaps capable of influencing a majority?"
"I don't know," said Potter, and nodded his head, not exactly with
satisfaction, but as a man does who fancies he has made a point in an
argument. "German public opinion here seems to be organized," said Potter.
"The German government is efficient. If it has felt the need of fostering
your favorable opinion, I think we may say it has taken steps to foster
it."
Potter wondered just where Cantor stood in the matter, but the courteous
air of the man, his manner of putting a question, were not those of a man
holding to one opinion or the other, but of a seeker after information. He
asked questions, but answered none, not even by the expression of his
face. He had made no direct statement; had shown neither pleasure nor
displeasure with what he had heard. Yet Potter judged him to be a man
capable of strong opinions and of taking action in support of them. There
was nothing neutral about the man. He was positive, but baffling. He was
an individual who would play his cards on the merits of his own hand,
Potter thought, and would carry his betting just as far as the value of
his cards warranted. Until that point arrived he would not lay down his
hand. Potter determined to see what a direct question would produce.
"What do you think of the sinking of the _Lusitania_?" he asked, abruptly.
Cantor regarded him for an instant with the air of a man who wishes to use
care to express himself clearly, and then he replied with such a manner of
clarity as made Potter chuckle inwardly.
"The sinking of the _Lusitania_," he said, with the positiveness of a man
stating an incontrovertible fact, "is a matter without precedent. It is my
firm opinion that the German Admiralty considered carefully every effect
which might derive from it before ordering the act."
An ironic rejoinder occurred to Potter--a rejoinder which he would have
made regardless of courtesy had his unlovable mood been upon him--but he
withheld it now, contenting himself with a smile which Cantor read
correctly and answered with a twinkle of his clear eyes. Potter knew that
Cantor had weighed his intention to draw a positive statement and rather
enjoyed the knowledge that Potter understood fully his evasion of it.
The conversation turned to less momentous affairs, but it seemed as if
Cantor could not express fully his admiration for Detroit and for its
location. He spoke of the Lakes, of the millions of tons of ore and
millions of bushels of wheat traveling past Detroit's door in the holds of
mighty vessels; of vessels which carried northward cargoes of coal to a
region where coal was a necessity. He referred to the carriage of
passengers by water on steamers of a size and luxury which the stranger
perceived with amazement on an inland waterway. He had a word to say about
the ship-canals at Sault Sainte Marie and the Welland, and of that minor
canal at the mouth of the River St. Clair. Eldredge told him something of
the new channel constructed in American waters across Lime Kiln Crossing
and Bar Point Shoals below the city, and described how engineers had
constructed the mightiest coffer dam in the history of engineering; how
they had built dikes miles in length to hold out the waters of the river,
pumped dry the areas between, and then sawed their channel out of the dry
rock. Cantor was fascinated by it all.
"But," said he, "those are points of danger, are they not? Suppose that
war with England should arrive. Would not your Eastern steel-mills, upon
which you must depend for the manufacture of ordnance and munitions, be
left helpless if one of these gateways from lake to lake should be closed?
Imagine the destruction of the locks at the Soo, for instance? Are they
well guarded?"
"Probably," said Potter, "there is an aged constable with a tin star
within calling distance."
"It is a splendid thing for a country to have the feeling of security that
yours holds," said Cantor, with open admiration that Potter felt, but
could not identify, to be derisive.
"Why should we guard them?" Eldredge asked. "We aren't fighting anybody.
Besides, an army never could get to them."
Potter shot a glance at Eldredge which was tipped with contempt, and
Cantor intercepted it and smiled at Potter as one man smiles who shares a
bit of humor with another. It was as much as to say, "You and I have more
common sense than to say that, haven't we?"
Cantor drew the conversation away from war again. "You play golf here
frequently?" he asked Potter.
"As often as I can manage it."
"I play a duffer's game myself, but I hope you will take me on some day.
They tell me you are above the average. I shall enjoy watching you--and
possibly can pick up some pointers. My approach is miserable--miserable."
"Easiest stroke in the bag," said Eldredge.
"No doubt, but there is no easiest stroke for me. In my case they are all
difficult, with some worse than the rest."
"Glad to go around with you any time," said Potter, and Cantor made it
apparent that he was really gratified. He had abilities that way, a manner
which seemed, without effusiveness, to express admiration; to show that he
was most favorably impressed by a companion.
Either the man was naturally affable or he had set himself with purpose to
make friends of those in whose company he found himself at that moment,
Potter decided. As for Potter, he did not enter into the conversation, but
sat back listening and thinking. Without setting himself deliberately to
do so, he studied Mr. Cantor, and was compelled to the conclusion that the
stranger was an exceptionally brilliant man; not only that, but a man of
personality, dominating personality. The others of the party appeared
colorless when set against him. Potter wondered if he himself seemed as
colorless as they.
Potter was one who liked or disliked swiftly. Usually, on meeting an
individual, he determined instantly and almost automatically whether or
not he cared to continue the acquaintance and to admit the stranger to
fellowship. He found himself unable to make up his mind about Cantor. That
gentleman was too complex to make the judgment of him a matter of a word
and a glance.
Potter was disturbed and uneasy. The atmosphere of the club piazza
irritated him this afternoon. He could not enter into the spirit of the
effort to make dragging time pass endurably, which was the profession of
most of the men present. Major Craig had surprised him, had increased the
restlessness, the dissatisfaction which so frequently possessed him, and
he wanted to go away alone to carry out the major's direction to think. He
got up suddenly.
"I'm off," he said. "Hope I shall see more of you, Mr. Cantor."
"I should like to call as soon as convenient," said Cantor, "to present my
letters."
"We don't go much on letters of introduction out here," Potter said,
smiling. "A letter of introduction never made anybody like a man he didn't
cotton to, nor dislike a man he took a liking to. Call when you like, and
don't bother with the letters."
Cantor laughed. "Perhaps you're right. But I've always believed that a man
coming to a strange place should come well introduced, if he can. People
are suspicious of strangers. I have provided myself with letters because
it is important to me that there should be no uncertainties about me."
"Bring them along, then," said Potter, who was by nature unfitted to
understand how anybody could care much what strangers or acquaintances
thought of him.
Potter walked to his car, and in a moment was driving toward the street. A
runabout which he recognized at once turned into the grounds and a glance
showed him Hildegarde von Essen was driving. She saw him at the same
instant, and lifted her hand, drawing over to the side of the drive and
stopping. He drew up beside her.
"To-morrow's Tuesday," she said.
"Now look here, Miss von Essen, your father--"
"My father's aunt's rheumatism!" she said. "Father's in New York, and you
promised."
"I know I promised, but in the circumstances you ought to let me off. He
didn't exactly welcome me with open arms, and the Lord only knows what
he'd do if I took you flying."
"You promised," she repeated, stubbornly.
"I know," he said, with the elaborate pretense of patience one shows to a
difficult child, "but--"
"And I'm not afraid of father. To-morrow morning? I'll be ready as early
as you like."
"Nine-thirty, then," he said, helplessly, "at the hangar."
She beamed on him. "You're a duck, Mr. Waite," she said, "and I'll not let
father hurt you."
She drove on and left him looking after her. What a flamelike little thing
she was, he thought. What he did not think was--how like she was to
himself; how her restlessness matched his; how her recklessness and his
recklessness were cut off the same piece. And she was charming in an
exciting sort of way. "If she ever cuts loose--" he said to himself.
He drove home and went up to his own rooms to sit down with his pipe and
figure matters out. Almost word for word he could repeat what the major
had said to him, and he looked for answers to the major's questions. Did
he love his country? What would he do if war came? What ought he to do?...
The first was hardest to answer. He had not been accustomed to the idea of
love of country, but had been contented with the thought that America was
a good-enough place and he was generally satisfied with it. He tried
picturing to himself the invasion of Michigan by German troops; the
re-enacting of the crime of Louvain upon the city of Detroit. His
imagination was vivid, active.... As he created the picture he felt
emotion welling up within him, a sense of the unbearableness of what he
had imagined, the feeling that he could not endure the happening of such a
catastrophe. It was not reason, but heart, that told him there was nothing
he would not sacrifice, suffer, endure to prevent it--and then he asked
himself why.... It seemed, then, that he did love his country. In that
event--what?
CHAPTER V
Hildegarde von Essen sprang boyishly out of her roadster at the door to
Potter Waite's hangar. She looked like a glorious, slender boy in the
riding-breeches and puttees she had thought appropriate for the
adventure--not like an ordinary boy, but rather like some princeling out
of a fairy-tale. There was that air about her--the air of a prince who
trafficked with fairies and would ride forth to battle with giants and
dragons. Her eyes danced with excitement and anticipation; she was charged
with eager life until it seemed to radiate from her and to form a tingling
aura about her.
Potter appeared in the doorway and stopped abruptly as his eyes found her.
It was the sincerest tribute. He felt as if some potent current had darted
out from her to touch him with its mysterious force--almost as if it
arrested his heart an instant and made it skip a beat.... That was the way
she looked; not dazzlingly beautiful; the effect was not that of beauty,
but of something more compelling, more thrilling. It was rather as if
Youth in person advanced to meet him--throbbing, eager, glowing Youth;
neither masculine nor feminine, but the personification of everything
young, ardent, breathless, fearless.
"I'm early," she said, "but I _had_ to come. I hardly slept all night for
thinking about it."
He advanced, finding that he very much wanted to take her hand, and she
looked up into his face and laughed impishly, for it was plain reading to
her that she had startled this young man and unsettled his equilibrium.
"Come in," he said, rather stupidly. "We've been tinkering, but we're
nearly ready now, I guess." He knew it was hardly the thing to say to such
a magical creature, but it was the best he could do.
She walked to the machine and patted the tip of its wing. "We're going to
be friends, aren't we?" she said to it, and smiled up at Potter again.
"How do I get in? Where do I sit?" Her voice was eager.
It had been in his mind before she came to try to persuade her against the
flight; to show her the inadvisability of it, especially in the face of
her father's attitude toward him. He did not make the effort now. It
seemed futile, not to be considered, so he helped her to her place
silently. "Ready?" he asked one of the men in overalls who were going
fussily about the 'plane, touching wires, testing braces.
"Ready, sir."
Potter looked at Hildegarde. No trace of fear or nervousness was visible,
nor was she calm. Her eyes danced with excitement, her face was alight
with gay eagerness. "I don't suppose I could drive it, could I?" she
asked.
"Well, _hardly_," Potter said.
"I'd love to. I'm sure I could."
"This is your excursion," he said, disregarding her manifest desire to
become pilot of the craft. "What part of the earth shall we fly over?"
"It's to be a good, long fly, you know," she said. "Not just up and down
like those twenty-five-dollars-a-ride things we had here last year. I want
to go miles and miles.... Let's go right across the lake to the Flats and
then swing around and come home over Mount Clemens. Can we do that?"
"I have made that circle."
"What do I do?"
"Sit still and hang on. There's no promenade-deck to this ship--no
orchestra and no dancing."
"Are you a dancing-man?"
"Far from it. The _th; dansant_ is too dangerous for me. I don't speak the
language."
"I _love_ to dance," she said. "I don't know that the language is more
difficult than the one you speak while we dance on the floor above.
'Waiter, another round of cocktails.'"
Potter climbed up and settled himself in his seat. "You're not going to
quarrel because I don't like dancing?" he asked.
"I'd forgive you 'most anything this morning. Let's start. I'm crazy to
know how it feels."
The engine started with a tremendous throbbing roar and the
hydro-aeroplane was trundled out on its rails and down the incline to the
smooth waters of Lake St. Clair. For an interval it scudded along, neither
floating nor flying, like a wild duck frightened and beginning its flight;
then the water dropped away, and they were mounting, mounting into the
clear, cold spring air.
Potter directed their flight out over the lake, presently veering to the
northward and heading toward a small black blot resting distantly on the
glittering expanse of water. Hildegarde's cheeks were flushed, her eyes
excited, brilliant. She sat drinking in the sensation of flight, and
watching with childish joy and wonder as the lake spread its beautiful
panorama beneath and on all sides of them. It seemed but a moment before
the distant blot became the familiar light-ship, and, looking ahead, she
could see dimly the parallel lines which she knew must be the ship-canal
which opened a passage for the largest freighter through the bars and
shoals into that channel of the delta of the St. Clair River which has for
a generation been a marvelous playground for the Lake region, a playground
rising on a ribbon of spiling--a sort of hem binding the raveling edge of
the great marsh.
Slow as the 'plane was, compared with those miracles of speed with which
the chivalry of the air hold their tournaments in the lists of the sky, it
seemed to eliminate time and space. Distances which the swiftest vessel
passed laboriously in an hour seemed to withdraw themselves as at a magic
word of command. Abreast of the light-ship they passed an up-bound
freighter. Its deck seemed a mammoth gridiron as Hildegarde looked down
upon it--a gridiron whose cross-bars were battened hatches. It was
traveling its fifteen miles an hour on its way to Duluth or Superior--but
they left it behind. It dropped away from them almost with the swiftness
of a falling stone.
They flew low over the piers, and then mounted. Beneath them lay the
familiar, rambling structures of the Old Club. They continued to mount,
for Potter wanted to spread before her the great reaches of the delta--a
world of close-growing wild rice and reeds, a universe of wild birds,
myriad tiny islets, with here and there a strip of land high enough above
the water to supply a foothold for wind-bent, scraggling trees. Here and
there wound a maze of channels, some navigable by small boats, and to the
northward another gleaming river, the North Channel, up which the fleets
of the Lakes had been compelled to pass before the construction of the
ship-canal.
Before them stretched the interminable line of summer cottages and hotels,
untenanted now. To the right and left of it were loneliness,
desolation--yet a certain arresting beauty. Hildegarde felt a sudden
loneliness.
Potter veered to the left over huge Muscamoot Bay, a bay whose waters were
hidden by reeds and rice--a hundred square miles of reeds and rice and
shallows. One could wade almost the length and breadth of it. Hildegarde
picked out a tiny island in the midst of the waste, and the thought came
to her that here one could hide in security if all the world joined in the
hunt.
She became aware that the motor no longer roared in perfect rhythm. It
seemed to pant and labor, to snort in disgust. It was missing, and she saw
that Potter was intent upon it. Suddenly silence fell. Hildegarde had not
known that silence could be like this. It was as if the end of all sound
in the universe had come, as if life had been extinguished, and they two,
soaring in the sky, were alone left of all the teeming millions of the
earth's population....
She was not frightened, but looked at Potter's face for its expression. It
was one of irritation, not of alarm.
"We'll have to 'plane down while I tinker," he said. "This is a _fine_ day
for something to go wrong."
"It'll be fun," she exclaimed. "Imagine being cast away down there--in an
aeroplane!"
"It won't be such a picnic if I can't get her going again. Hotels and
mechanicians and telephone service are moderately scarce below."
All the while they were sliding down an invisible hill, swiftly, smoothly.
A narrow ribbon of open water lay below them, and Hildegarde imagined
Potter to be heading for it as a place of landing.
"Why," she exclaimed, "there's a house!"
Potter did not turn his head; he was busy now with the 'plane.
"There are a few scattered in the bay--squatters and summer folks. Muskrat
trappers and French fishermen.... Mighty lonesome, _I'd_ say."
A puff of wind caused the 'plane to swerve and rock. Hildegarde saw Potter
suddenly in feverish action. They were swerving away from the ribbon of
water, which was now close below, veering toward the island upon which she
had been astonished to see a house.... The 'plane would not obey. It swept
on and down.... Almost in a winking of the eye the solid land was before
them ... a tree.... Hildegarde felt a wrench, a shock, heard a crash, and
saw the planes at their right side crumple and shatter as they were
sheared off in collision with the willow-tree.... The crippled 'plane
careened sickeningly--and there was a frightful shock....
Potter, half blind, dizzy, suffering agonies, crept out of the wreckage.
One leg dragged helplessly. There was a wrenching pain inside. Dumbly he
looked for Hildegarde. She lay at a little distance--without movement. She
was stretched at full length, her face pillowed on her arm as if she had
lain down on the grass for a nap. Peacefully, gracefully she lay--but very
still. Potter dragged himself toward her, reached her. Then he was
conscious that a man was running to them, was stooping over them. He
looked up into the man's face. It was very confusing. He seemed to know
the man, yet it was impossible the man should be there....
"How do you do, Cantor?" he said. "Did you--bring--your letters?..."
Then his arms failed him and he slumped downward, his face resting on
Hildegarde's knees.
The man Potter had called Cantor turned the young man over gently, wiped
the blood from his face with his handkerchief, and grunted. He opened
Potter's clothing and laid an ear to his breast. The heart was beating
feebly.... Hasty examination showed him Hildegarde was alive, too.
"Start the boat," he called over his shoulder. "Be quick about it." He
lifted Hildegarde and carried her past the house to a tiny dock and handed
her aboard a narrow, cabined motor-boat. "Two of you get the man," he
said.
"What will we do with them?" a man asked, in German.
"To the hospital in that town--Mount Clemens," the man in authority
replied, in the same language. "They're badly hurt. I doubt if he lives to
get there."
"So much the better," growled the man. "Do you go with us?"
"I remain.... You found them on the shore ten miles from here. Don't be
definite. To-night we'll get the wreck of this machine across and out of
the way."
"What was he doing here, Herr?"
"Nothing for you to worry about.... The chances are he'll never regain
consciousness. If he does he won't be able to remember anything.... Make
haste, for he's more valuable alive than dead."
The motor-boat swung into the channel and sped away. Once in open water,
it showed an astonishing gift of speed as it made for the mouth of the
Clinton River.
Not as they wound their way up the narrow river, not as they touched the
wharf, did Potter or Hildegarde betray a sign of returning consciousness.
The man in charge leaped ashore. He had chosen his landing with judgment,
for the spot was deserted. For ten minutes he disappeared, returning with
two men from a near-by office.
"We found them on the shore ten miles up," said the man who habitually
spoke in German, but whose English was acceptable. "They fell with an
aeroplane."
"Who are they?"
The man shook his head. "I don't know anything.... We found them, that's
all."
Presently the authorities who had been telephoned for arrived, and Potter
and Hildegarde were lifted gently and carried away. In the haste and
excitement the men who had brought them to the spot were not questioned,
as they might have been in a city more accustomed to the handling of
accidents. As the two inert bodies were carried away the motor-boat
quietly moved away from the dock and headed down the river. No one thought
to hold it. Presently it disappeared....
At the hospital Potter was quickly identified by the contents of his
pockets. There was no clue to Hildegarde's identity. The news of the
accident to his son was telephoned to Fabius Waite, and local
correspondents of Detroit papers saw that the story went where it should
go. In two hours city reporters were on hand, for the thing promised to be
that desirable thing known to newspaper men as a "big story."
The early editions carried brief accounts of the accident to Potter Waite
and an unknown young woman.... Identification came later, and in the
morning papers the names of Potter Waite and Hildegarde von Essen were
coupled in a manner not likely to give satisfaction to the girl's father.
Reporters set out to find the smashed aeroplane, but their search was
futile. It was not found until noon next day, when a farmer on the shores
of Baltimore Bay telephoned that it lay against a tree on his farm, near
the shore. Reporters viewed it, and from its position were able to
describe accurately how the thing had happened. "Must have been pickled
again," was the consensus of their experienced opinion, and they did not
hesitate in their accounts to impart this view to their public. Also the
morning papers reported that Potter would not live through the day.
Hildegarde was still unconscious, but hopes for her recovery were
entertained by the surgeons in charge.
Altogether it was looked upon as the inevitable--and fitting--termination
of the reckless career of a vicious and depraved youth. It was an affair
to be reveled in by the sensational press. They made an orgy of it.
CHAPTER VI
"Any news of Potter Waite to-day?" Tom Watts asked, as he dropped into a
chair at the table which was regarded as the property of the crowd in the
Pontchartrain bar.
"No change," La Mothe said. "Still unconscious or something like that."
"Anybody seen him? Any of the crowd been out to Mount Clemens?" asked
Brick O'Mera.
"No good. They wouldn't let anybody in. They say he just lies with his
eyes half open. When you say he's alive that ends it. It's a matter of
days, they say."
"Seems like we ought to do something--this crowd he trained with," said
O'Mera.
"We'll get together and send him some bang-up flowers," said Randall. "One
of those pillow things, or a horseshoe or something. Most likely they'll
want us for pall-bearers."
"I sent him a box of cigars and a book," said Kraemer, seriously.
"Which, being unconscious, he's enjoyed like the devil," said La Mothe.
"There's the Teutonic mind for you, fellows. Gets an idea and goes ahead
with it regardless.... I suppose if Potter had been an Englishman you'd
have sent him cigars with dynamite in 'em." La Mothe took great joy in
baiting Kraemer, for whom, nevertheless, he had a very considerable
affection.
"You always send cigars and books to a sick man," Kraemer said.
"And torpedo vessels--even when there are women and babies on 'em. Women
and babies ought to keep off vessels, is that your idea?"
"Of course.... Listen here, you fellows." His voice changed to the voice
of one repeating a lesson learned by heart. Even the wording was not his
own. "Germany acted within her rights in sinking the _Lusitania_, because
she gave preliminary notice to all the world by establishing a war zone
around England. She gave special notice to travelers before the sailing of
the _Lusitania_. England is to blame for what happened because she used
American citizens as human shields to guard ammunition supplies on an
English auxiliary cruiser."
"Hear! Hear!" applauded La Mothe. "Doesn't he recite beautifully! Who
taught you the piece, Wilhelm?"
"I hear the von Essen girl is coming out all right," said Watts.
"Her father said so at the Harmonie last night," Kraemer told them.
"She'll be out of the hospital in a couple of weeks. Nothing broken, just
shock, and a little concussion.... If Potter doesn't die von Essen will
kill him. He talked like a crazy man."
"Wonder how she got mixed up with Potter?" Watts said. "She's only a kid,
isn't she?"
"The speediest kid this town's seen for a while. Regular little devil.
Always up to something. They say she had old von Essen fighting for air
most of the time." La Mothe usually could be trusted to supply the spice.
"Natural enough she and Potter should fly in a flock. Same kind of birds."
"The rate Potter was traveling, he was bound to come a cropper some day,"
said Randall, virtuously.
They were already speaking of him in the past tense; Potter Waite, in a
couple of weeks, had become something that used to exist.
"You could trust him to make it a gilt-edged, sensational cropper when he
got to it," La Mothe rejoined. "He was one good scout."
"But peculiar. He was all-fired peculiar," Kraemer said, seriously. "I
never quite understood him."
"Well, the data's all in, Wilhelm; there'll never be any more. Study over
it a few years and you may begin to get him."
"You've got to hand it to Potter for one thing," said Watts; "if he made
up his mind to do a thing he would pull it off, hell or high water."
There was a moment's silence, a moment's depression, then La Mothe said,
"Seen the new girl that's dancing at the Tuller?"
Interest quickened. One might almost say that the agile, silken-clad legs
of the dancer kicked Potter Waite out of the minds of his friends. Why
not? They had pronounced his obituary. He had been and was not. Dancers
must dance and cocktails must be mixed and the world must wag on as is its
custom, though more important personages than a reckless, headstrong,
purposeless boy be removed from the scene.
Two weeks and three days passed over Potter's unconscious head. He did not
know that his mother sat by his bedside through long days and slept in an
adjoining room through sleepless, woeful nights. He did not know how much
of the priceless time of his busy father was spent in that still room. Had
he been conscious he might have understood something of his mother's
agony, for, quiet, simple as she was, she had retained her turbulent son's
affection. Perhaps she understood him. Assuredly she had never abandoned
hope for him even when his wildest escapade was bruising her heart. But
she had not been strong enough, forceful enough, to restrain him, and,
realizing her limitation, she had grieved silently.
In his most alert moment Potter could not have read Fabius Waite's mind. A
tidal wave of business success had carried Fabius far away from his son,
into a distant country. For a dozen years they had been growing farther
and farther apart, each taking the other for granted, looking upon the
other as something that was and could not be blinked. Fabius had no time
for his son; Potter had no time for his father. They had no point of
contact.... It was natural that Potter should now be unable to see into
his father's heart and comprehend the love that had sprung to life again,
the dull ache of self-accusation that would not be assuaged. He could not
know that Fabius Waite was saying in his secret soul, "This is my son, my
only son, and I have sinned against him."
"Mother," said Fabius, that afternoon, and his voice was different from
the voice with which he usually spoke, "this is my fault."
She did not seek to comfort him by a denial. "We have both been to blame,"
she said, gently.
Fabius was silent a moment; then he said, fiercely, "I've been a hell of a
father...."
She laid her hand on his knee and he placed his hand over it. Many years
had passed since they had sat with hand touching hand.... The nurse sat
looking from the window, her back to the bed. Suddenly a voice, yet not a
voice so much as the ghost of a voice, spoke from the pillow. It was not a
babble, not a mutter. It was a whisper directed by a mind. "Hello--folks!"
it said.
Father and mother were on their feet, bending over the bed. Their son had
spoken; his eyes looked up at them, dim, but intelligently; their son whom
famous surgeons had told them would never regain consciousness!
"He knows us! He knows us!" his mother whispered.
"Sure," Potter said. "What ..."
Then he was gone again into that murky region which was not life and which
was not death.
"Nurse!" said Fabius Waite, tensely, "he spoke. He recognized us....
What--what does that mean?"
The nurse knew no more than they. It might be a promise held out to them;
it might have been his farewell to the world. She could not tell.
"He knew us," Fabius said to himself again and again. "He knew us."
So the boy who could not live lived on. Intervals of consciousness came
again and again, and lasted longer and longer. The physicians, who would
not admit of hopes at first, were compelled--against their wills, it
seemed--to give Potter a reluctant chance of recovery.... Another ten days
saw him fully conscious--not safe yet, but with chances of safety
multiplied. Though doubts existed in the medical mind, none were permitted
to exist in the minds of Fabius Waite and his wife. Their son was to be
given back to them; they _knew_ it.
Despite fractured bones, despite invisible but awful injuries, Potter not
only clung to the life that was in him, but reached out and strengthened
his grasp upon it, until even the medical mind was convinced and, with due
eye to its reputation, gave to the parents the assurance, "We've saved
him," and then expatiated on the miracle wrought by its skill. Two months
after the catastrophe Potter Waite was on his snail-like way to recovery.
At first Potter seemed to have little curiosity regarding his accident. He
appeared not to remember it or to have any idea why he was in his bed in a
hospital. Later he asked questions.
"Somebody was with me," he said one day. "When we fell ..."
"Hildegarde von Essen," his mother said.
"Was she--"
"As well as ever," his mother said, a bit resentfully. "She has been out
of the hospital for weeks."
"That's ... good," said Potter.
A day or two later he asked about his 'plane. "What's become of it?" he
wanted to know.
"It's up on the shore where you--fell," his mother said.
"The shore?" he repeated. "The shore?... What shore?"
"About ten miles up on Baltimore Bay," she said.
He thought about that for minutes, and it was apparent he was not
satisfied. "It was on an island," he said. "A little island ... not on
Baltimore Bay.... Just back of the Flats."
"No, son, it was on the mainland. You--you don't remember."
He shook his head uneasily, and his eyes were puzzled. "There was an
island," he said, and then let the subject drop as if he were too weary to
go on with it.
"Is the war still going on?" he asked, one day.
"Yes."
"Are we in it?" he asked, after a pause.
"No."
"We should--be," he said. "There's some reason why we should, but I seem
to--have forgotten it."
Day by day he grew stronger; day by day his memory returned to him, and he
brooded over his recollections. For hours he would lie with closed
eyes--thinking. It was the first quiet he had ever known; the first
opportunity ever forced upon him to think. He remembered Major Craig.
"Would you like to read to me?" he asked, one day.
"I'd love to, son. What shall I read?"
"I wish you'd get a history of the United States--the best one there is.
I'd like you to read that."
So his mother sat by his bedside and read to him the history of his
country, and when she laid down the book he considered what she had read,
and pondered over the significance of it. He had been vaguely familiar
with the history of the nation, but only vaguely. Now he was meeting his
country for the first time, and groping for an understanding of it. Major
Craig had asked him if he loved his country.... He fancied he had answered
that question when he imagined it invaded as Belgium had been invaded.
Now, day by day, he was learning why he should love his country; what his
country meant, why it existed, why it had prospered, what his country was
giving to him as one of its citizens. The United States was emerging from
chaos in his mind, assuming a distinct entity, a _character_.... It was a
lovable character. As he lay there, listening to the story of its life,
Potter Waite was falling in love--he was falling in love with his country
and his country's flag.
His mother understood something of what was passing in his mind. It made
her glad, for there was promise in it.... One day, following the
completion of the history, she brought a thin little book.
"I'd like to read this to you, son," she said, and he, not even asking for
its name, because he thought to please her, nodded assent. It was a story
with a peculiar title. "_The Man Without a Country_," his mother said.
She commenced to read, and he lay with eyes closed, his attention not
fixed. Presently he opened his eyes, and before half a dozen pages were
read he was giving to the reading such attention as he had never given to
any narrative before. His eyes did not leave his mother's face, and there
came into them a hungry, troubled look.... His mother's face became dim,
and he realized that he was seeing through a mist. Every word of that
wonderful lesson, that text-book of patriotism, was reaching his mind as
with rays of white light. At last she finished and looked down at him, and
his cheeks were wet. She did not speak. It was he who spoke after a long
silence.
"That's the answer," he said, and his mother, possessing that marvelous
quality, intuition, went quietly out of the room.
It was not long before he was able to sit up. Two weeks past the second
month of his confinement, he was well enough to be taken to his home, and
there, in his own rooms, he demanded books. Not the books one might
suppose, not books to pass the long hours of convalescence lightly, but
treatises on the gas-engine, on carburetion, on ignition; highly
specialized books on the aeroplane.
"I should think you'd had aeroplane enough," his father said--a father who
was now nearer to him by much than he had been before. "You're not going
to meddle with those things again, I hope."
"Dad," said Potter, slowly, "they're the only thing I'm going to meddle
with. They're my business, and I haven't any other business.... I'm going
to be the man in the United States who knows more about aeroplanes and how
to build them than anybody else.... And some day I'm going to build them."
"Can't make it a commercial success, son. Nothing in it. If you want to
get into business seriously, why, when you're strong enough, just drop
around at the plant. I'll give you all the business you want."
"I'm not thinking about commercial success," said Potter.
"What's the big idea, then?" his father asked, jocularly.
"Do you believe we can keep out of this war?" Potter countered.
"Certainly. Why not? All we've got to do is keep our heads level and mind
our own business. Nobody can get to us, and we couldn't get to anybody.
You can't go to war in this country unless the people want war--and you
never saw a people who want war less."
"They're educated not to want war," Potter said, with an access of
shrewdness. "Business is educating them, and I shouldn't be surprised if
Germany was helping the education along. The Germans seem to be pretty
well organized in a publicity way over here."
"Well, don't let the possibility of war bother you. It won't come."
"I'm afraid, Dad," Potter said, "that it _will_ come. If it comes, what
shape are we in to fight? Do you realize that we would have to have twenty
thousand aeroplanes? That's one item, but one of the most important.
Twenty thousand! An army of millions--and the aeroplane is as vital to the
army as the commissariat. That's fact. You can't dodge it. And we've got
to get ready. Not to build an army of men alone. That is simple compared
to the other things.... Where would we get twenty thousand aeroplanes if
they were necessary suddenly?"
"We wouldn't," said Fabius, and he laughed indulgently. "When you're well,
you'll get these notions out of your head. It's just your condition, son.
It'll work off."
"No, Dad. It's here to stay.... We've got about fifty 'planes to-day.
Bulgaria's got more.... Do you care much if this country keeps on?"
"Why, sure! I'm an American. It's my country, but I guess nobody's going
to monkey with us." It was the old, absurd notion of military
invincibility.
"We're going to get a mighty unpleasant waking up.... We've got to get
ready. If we're ready there's less likelihood of trouble than if we
aren't. Burglars don't break into a house when a policeman is standing in
front and a bulldog is barking inside.... It's insurance. But we won't get
ready. Not all of us." He paused, and something in the level determination
that shone from Potter's eyes impressed his father.
"But one of us will be ready," Potter said, "and that's me. I'm going to
be ready for the day when the country needs that twenty thousand 'planes.
I'm going to know how to build them, and I'm going to know where and how
they can be built. Dad, the day's coming when the main business of the
Waite Motor Car Company will be the building of aeroplane engines."
"Fiddlesticks!" said Fabius Waite, and there could be no doubt of his
sincerity. Fabius Waite considered himself a good American. He was a good
American, but, like millions of other able, sincere, honest,
country-loving men in those summer days of the year 1915; those days which
were seeing Italy's entrance to the war, which were witnessing Mackensen's
war-machine crushing the Russians out of Galicia, capturing Przemysl and
then Lemberg; wondering if Calais and the Channel ports could be
held;--like those other millions Fabius Waite was asleep. Potter's voice
was of one crying in the wilderness. All ears were shut against him.
CHAPTER VII
If every young man could be put in a position where he could do nothing
but think for a matter of a couple of months just at that time when he is
ready to take up the major business of his life, one may well believe the
history of the world would be other and better than it is. Potter Waite
was injured early in May. Three months passed before he was able to take
the air even in a slowly driven, pillowed limousine. If ever a chance were
given a human being to check up on his accounts, take a trial balance, and
arrive at definite conclusions with respect to himself, Potter had that
chance. Not only had he the opportunity, but a vital consideration had
intervened, urging him to wider, deeper, bolder considerations. He thought
much about Potter Waite, but the time in which he lived, the world turmoil
which surrounded him, the pressure of great events on his own life,
compelled him to think about himself with respect to grave, impending
affairs and to the requirements of his country, which he had come, in some
measure, to know.
This state of affairs developed in him a rare singleness of purpose. From
the beginning of time men with rare singleness of purpose have been
regarded as monomaniacs, cranks. They have been derided. The world has
whispered about them behind its hands and snickered. This was an attitude
which Potter was to encounter, first from his father, later from those who
had formerly been his cronies.
Fabius Waite became more and more irritated by his son's absorption in
aeronautics, for he was a practical business man, and when he could not
see how a profit could be entered in the ledger from a given transaction,
he deleted the transaction.
"I'm glad, of course," he said to Potter, "to see you taking an interest
in something--outside the Pontchartrain bar and the chorus of a comic
opera--but you're going over the line with this thing. You're getting as
bad as Old Man Jeffords. I sit in directors' meeting at the bank with him
once a week, and he'll butt into any sort of a discussion with idiocy
about some new postage stamp he's found in somebody's attic. I suppose
people must have fads and amusements." He said it as if he did not in the
least see why they should have such absurd things. "But they can be
carried too far. You're riding this hobby day and night. Aeroplanes!
There's no money in aeroplanes."
"I'm not thinking of making money out of them," said Potter.
"Then why are you monkeying with them? Too much aeroplane, or too much
golf, or too much bridge, or too much anything that interferes with a
man's business, is about as bad as too much whisky."
"But aeroplanes are my business."
"Fiddlesticks, son! You've been sick a long time, and you've gotten this
notion. Automobiles is your business."
"I guess we don't get the same point of view, Dad. You're interested in
one thing and I'm interested in another. Somehow they don't match up."
"I should say they didn't.... I think you and I are better friends than we
used to be, son."
"Yes," said Potter.
"On the whole, your accident was a good thing for both of us.... I've
gotten acquainted with you, son, and it's done me good. You had me going
for a while. I thought you were a worthless young cub who would never do
anything but squander what I made--and, by Jove! I was going to fix things
so you couldn't! But you're not. You've got the stuff in you to take my
place and carry on the business. A few years' training and you'll be up to
the job. Don't let any foolishness like this aeronautic stuff side-track
you. Why, you've got to be a regular darn fanatic about it!"
"I suppose I have, Dad. I guess it needs a fanatic."
Fabius shook his head with disgust. "I don't want folks saying my son's a
crank," he said. "I suppose boys at your age are bound to have
enthusiasms, but there's just one kind of enthusiasm that's worth a
tinker's dam, and that's enthusiasm about your business."
"I'm sorry, Dad, if I disappoint you so much. I expect to come into the
business after a while--when the world quiets down. I'll work there as
hard as you want me to, but first I've got to do this thing. It's _got_ to
be done. Nobody knows what will happen. You believe in fire insurance,
don't you?"
"Naturally."
"But you go ahead planning as if there wouldn't be a fire. You don't
expect a fire.... But you admit the possibility of it?"
"Certainly."
"Well, try to look at this thing in that way. We don't know what a year or
two years may bring. Germany may be licked or the Allies may be licked,
... or we may be dragged into it. That's a fire we've got to insure
against. And I'm going into one line of the insurance business--the
aeroplane line. If the fire comes we've got to have aeroplanes to put it
out. If it doesn't come, no harm will be done by insuring.... The
difference is that I believe it's coming--and we won't be ready."
"All balderdash."
Potter got up and walked slowly across the room. It was not easy, and his
father was making it harder than it ought to be. He thought he understood
his position and his reason for assuming it so clearly--that they were so
clear no one could fail to agree with him, yet his father utterly failed
to comprehend. Potter despaired of making him understand.
"Dad," he said, "let's make a bargain. Give me two years. Call it a
vacation or call it a course in mechanics or call it whatever you want to.
We ought to know where we're at by that time. At the end of two years I'll
come into the business and do whatever you want me to--but for two years
let me go ahead with this thing and don't interfere with me.... I'll need
some money, too. I've got to experiment. The experimenting won't do any
harm. It'll be with gas-engines. Maybe I'll turn out something that will
be worth money in our business.... just two years--and I'm pretty average
young yet."
His father shrugged his shoulders. "I'll go you," he said, with the air of
a man compelled against his will. "Two years it is, and then you quit this
foolishness and come down to earth.... But it's dog-gone nonsense."
One man did not share this common opinion. He was the bearded, ponderous,
blinking man of monstrous girth who had brought Potter into the world and
fed him pills and potions for his juvenile ailments--Old Doctor Ormond.
"Potter," said the old gentleman, "you've been down for three months.
You've taken into your system only the things you should have taken into
it. You have eaten as God and your stomach intended a man should eat, and
drunk as they intended you should drink. You're going to be well--as well
as ever. There won't be a limp, probably. I can guarantee that there isn't
a drop of alcohol about you. You're going to start clean. If you'll take
my advice, which probably you won't, you'll keep that way. Presbyterians
used to say hell was paved with unbaptized infants. _I_ say it's paved
with cocktail-shakers...."
Potter chuckled. "I've been thinking about the cocktails," he said. "I'm
afraid I sha'n't have time for them. And I used to know bartenders by
their first names."
"Do you ever feel a hankering?"
Potter shook his head. "I never did when I had anything else to do."
"Um!... Have you anything else to do now?"
Potter held up the book on his lap. It was a treatise on carburetion.
"Aeroplanes," he said, shortly.
"Your father said something about that," said the doctor. "What's it all
about?"
"While I've been down and out," Potter said, slowly, "I've discovered that
I've been a man without a country. I've found my country. I've thought
_hard_ and I believe my country is going to need me.... It can have me. If
we get into this war, Doctor, we're going to need twenty thousand
aeroplanes--quick. I've a knack that way. By the time this country needs
the 'planes I'm going to know more about building them than anybody else
this side the water--I'm going to be on the spot--ready.... That's all
there is to it. Dad thinks it's a fad like stamp-collecting, and that I'm
a crank."
"If it is," said the fat old practitioner, blinking his eyes, "I wish a
hundred millions of us could get bumped on the head and have a similar fad
jarred into us. You go to it, son. Stay by it. Don't let them whisper and
ridicule you out of it. Do you know that the greatest automobile
manufacturer in the world was once called Crazy Henry by his friends? You
don't hear anybody calling him Crazy Henry now, do you?... And remember
this: There'll always be some to believe in you, and their belief will be
worth more to you than the ridicule of all the rest. There'll be a
girl.... And there'll be a fat old man. Shake, son." They shook hands
gravely. "Now get well--and show 'em."
The last thought the doctor left with Potter remained. "There'll always be
some to believe in you.... There'll be a girl." He wondered if there would
be a girl, and if she would believe in him. Naturally there would be a
girl sometime; there never had been girls who ranked higher than episodes.
He had never seen a girl he wanted as a man should want the girl who is to
be his wife. Marriage had been a dim event in the distant future. It was
so now. But, he thought, to have such a girl, to give her such a love as
he could imagine--_and to have her believe in him_! That would be
something. He pondered it.
Somehow he found himself thinking about Hildegarde von Essen. It was a
pleasant exercise. He recalled her as he had seen her that morning when
she alighted from her machine at the door of his hangar, radiant, vibrant,
boyish--a flame of a girl. That picture had persisted.
They had visited the borderland of death together. That event connected
them, would always connect them, by an invisible thread. He would not
think of her as he thought of other women, nor she of him. Always the one
would be to the other something peculiarly distinct. There was an
overpowering intimacy about knocking hand in hand at the door of death.
He wondered how she was, wished he might see her. He had not seen her
since that moment when he had crawled to her as she lay so still and
graceful, like a lovely boy asleep. That wakened other puzzling memories.
The scene was so distinct--the little island, the reaches of the great
marsh.... And yet the island and marsh had not existed. They had fallen on
the mainland miles from any such island! The 'plane had been found against
a tree miles away from it. There had been a man.... Potter was certain he
remembered a man, and that the man's face had been familiar to him, but he
could not recall the man's identity. The whole thing gave him a queer,
gasping sensation. It was like thinking on eternity or on limitless
space--something inconceivable. He compelled himself to take his mind away
from it.
Hildegarde von Essen was away, had been sent away by her enraged father as
soon as she was able to travel. First she had gone to an aunt in the
Adirondacks, was now with friends on the Maine coast. Potter's mother had
told him this and had told him, too, of the raging call Herman von Essen
had made on Fabius Waite, of the arrogant, brutal manner of the man toward
the father of a boy whose death was declared inevitable. Fabius Waite had
shown von Essen the door almost with violence.
Yes, Potter wanted to see her....
That afternoon a servant brought him a letter. It was from her, the first
of her handwriting he had ever seen.
"DEAR POTTER," she began, addressing him by his given name, and he did not
regard it as forward or provocative. It was merely due to the intimacy of
their adventure with death, and natural to him. "I just found out you were
able to read letters," she went on. "You can't imagine the pains people
are at to keep news of you from me. It's as if I'd tried to elope with you
and been caught. You knew father shipped me away. You don't know how glad
I was to know that you are going to be all right again. Somehow I felt to
blame." How abruptly, jerkily she wrote, changing from one subject to
another without warning. It was like her, he thought. "I don't know when I
shall be home, but I'm making myself as disagreeable as possible. I don't
think they'll be able to stand me much longer. Then I'll come to see you.
It was great fun while it lasted. I don't think I ever enjoyed a morning
as much. There are things about it I don't understand--where we were
found, for instance. _I_ thought we fell on an island. Didn't you? I'll
write again when I can steal time. It's the least I can do, and we're
pals. Aren't we? Get well as quickly as you can and we'll fly again. Is
the 'plane fixed?" That was all. It stopped abruptly like that.
She wanted to fly with him again. He chuckled. A little thing like falling
out of the sky would not damp her enthusiasm, and fear seemed to have no
place in her vocabulary. She was the most utterly daring girl he had ever
met, and the most reckless of consequences. He perceived her similarity to
himself.
"Mr. La Mothe and Mr. Cantor to see you," announced a servant.
"Send them up," Potter directed, fumbling in his memory for the name
Cantor, recollecting it was the chap he had met at the Country Club who
had letters of introduction to him.
La Mothe and Cantor entered. Potter looked first at Cantor. There was
something about the man, something that made his memory itch. He had seen
Cantor somewhere, but where? What was there about the man? He noticed that
Cantor scrutinized him tensely. It was as if the man were searching for
something, something that he was afraid to find.
"Greetings, Potter," said La Mothe. "You're looking bang-up for a fellow
that was all fitted to a coffin. We were taking up a subscription to send
you a floral pillow.... You remember Cantor?"
"Yes," said Potter, extending his hand. "You're making quite a stay in
Detroit."
"He's joined the lodge," La Mothe remarked. "Shouldn't be surprised if he
squatted. Eh, Cantor?"
"I find Detroit very attractive, especially to a business man," said
Cantor. "I've even thought of making it my home."
"That's about the best compliment you could pay the city," said Potter,
but in his mind he was saying over and over: "What is it? What is there
about him? Where does he fit in?"
"I've never had an opportunity to present some letters I have from friends
of yours, Mr. Waite. But here they are."
"From Tom Herkimer and George Striker, eh?" said Potter, glancing over the
notes. "They seem to be rather strong for you. I'm not very useful as an
acquaintance just now, but as soon as I'm on my feet--"
"As soon as you're on your feet," said La Mothe, "he'll have you
chaperoning him through your plant. He's a regular factory hound. Never
saw a man so keen on factories."
"I'm interested in mill-work and manufacturing efficiency," said Cantor.
"It's an important part of my business."
"I'd say it was _all_ of your business," said La Mothe, with a laugh.
"I'll bet he could draw from memory the plans of half the plants in
Detroit."
Cantor smiled.
"Speaking of plants," said La Mothe, "things are getting a little thick. I
was just talking to Weston, of the Structural Steel. He said they'd put
armed guards all around the plant. Found explosives in the coal, and now
they're sorting over every chunk of coal that comes in. They're making
shrapnel-cases, you know.... Kraemer's friend, the Kaiser, is doing it, I
suppose."
"Dirty business," Cantor said, easily. "Trouble developed last week in the
Delmont Machine Company's shops. They found somebody had put emery in the
bearings."
"Any war news?" asked Potter.
"Nothing big since Warsaw fell. Looks as if Russia was about done," La
Mothe said.
"The war's going into its second year," said Cantor. "Who thought it could
last a year?"
"Looks as if we might have a little war of our own one of these days.
Mexico's in need of a cleaning up," La Mothe said.
"It's been Germany's year," Potter said. "Only for the Marne--"
"It looks as if she couldn't be beaten," said Cantor.
"She's got to be beaten," Potter replied. "The sort of thing Germany
stands for to-day has got to be wiped out--wiped clean off the slate."
"Hang the war!" La Mothe said, impatiently. "Can't we talk about anything
else? When does the sawbones tell you you can come out and play with the
boys, Potter?"
"In a week or two now."
"We'll have to pull a party for you. Welcome you back and all that. The
crowd'll be glad to see you around."
"I'm going to work," Potter said.
"Whoop!" exclaimed La Mothe. "At what and wherefore?"
"Fred," Potter said, "I want to talk things over with you and some of the
boys. I'm going to need your help--all the fellows who are in the
automobile game. I've laid around for three months with nothing to do but
think, and I'm here to say that the old stuff doesn't go. We've got to
take off our coats and get to work."
"At what?" said La Mothe.
"Aeroplanes," said Potter.
"I thought you had about all the aeroplane that was coming to you. Why
aeroplanes?"
"The country's going to need them, and Detroit's got to make the engines.
You seemed to be surprised that the war had lasted a year, Mr. Cantor. My
idea is that it's just begun. It'll spread, and it will spread to us.
We'll be in it."
"Rats!" said La Mothe; but Potter was aware of Cantor's close scrutiny,
and of an expression on the older man's face which baffled solution.
"Germany has run wild with the notion of grabbing the world," Potter said.
"If she gets away with Europe we'll come next."
"Fat chance. Germany doesn't want any of our action. Look how she backed
down on the submarine stuff."
"You've got the old notion, Fred, that nobody can get at us and that we
can lick all creation. If Germany's hands were free she could land an army
on our coast, and before we could start to get ready to fight we'd be
licked. We're like cake in an unlocked cupboard, and Germany's a hungry
boy. We'd be gobbled."
"Oh, say, Potter--"
"Think it over. The day'll come when this country will need thousands upon
thousands of aeroplanes--all of a sudden. When it comes it'll be sudden,
and we'll be caught. We won't have an army, we won't have equipment--and
we won't have aeroplanes, which will be harder to get than anything else.
That's going to be my business. Getting ready for the aeroplane end of it.
And I want you fellows to help."
"You've been laying around too much, Potter. You've been sick, that's
what's the matter with you."
Potter shrugged his shoulders. "Think about it, anyhow, will you, Fred?
Great heavens! you've got brains."
"Much 'bliged," said Fred. "Cantor, let's be wiggling on. We're exciting
the invalid. See you again soon, old man," La Mothe said.
Cantor stood up and extended his hand. "When you're around again," he
said, "I'm going to bother you. You interest me--about the aeroplanes....
And I want to see your plant. Making munitions, aren't you?"
"Yes," said Potter, "glad to show you around." He paused, and his eyes
darkened. He fixed them on Cantor and said, suddenly, "You weren't fishing
up at the Flats about the time I was hurt, were you--back in the marsh?"
"Flats? No. What are the Flats, Mr. Waite?" Little points of white
appeared at the comers of his jaw. Potter noticed them.
"It's nothing. I guess you got mixed up in a dream of mine."
"Dreams are queer," said Cantor, flatly.
"Damn vivid dream, though," said Potter. "Come again, fellows. My regards
to the crowd."
CHAPTER VIII
Between the date of Potter Waite's injury and the first of the new year
tremendous events occurred at home and abroad, and among the most
tremendous, the most hopeful to Potter, and to Americans who loved and
feared for their country, was the birth of the thing that came to be known
as the Plattsburg Idea. It was the one sign of life in an ocean of
lethargy; it showed that there were men not unaffected by sinister
manifestations--men who foresaw peril, men who were ready to give their
abilities and their lives for the safety of the flag that waved over their
prosperity. When history comes to be written the Plattsburg experiment
will stand out distinct, significant--a rainbow of promise.
Inert public opinion was preparing to stir. Germany, pursuing her
relentless way, chose to irritate a nation which it might have
conciliated. It irritated with patent propaganda; her Bernstorffs and
Dernbergs filled the public prints with their sophistry, while their paid
agents were fomenting industrial unrest and achieving arson and murder.
German bombs were discovered on outward-bound vessels; the German torch
was applied to factory and mill. Irritation increased, became acute to
such a point that Doctor Dumba, who had used his sacred station as
ambassador to shield his activities as arch plotter, was dismissed and
sent on his disgraced way Vienna-wards. Von Papen and Boy-Ed, red-handed,
were whisked away.... The _Arabic_ was sunk. Then it seemed that Germany
hesitated on her course. Mr. Wilson patiently indited note upon note, at
last wringing from the Imperial German government its solemn promise to
refrain from sinking liners without warning. This was heralded and
welcomed as a great victory for our diplomacy, and the country breathed
more easily. The cloud threatening the thunders and lightnings of war
passed around us harmlessly.
But Mr. Roosevelt would not let the country return to its sleep. His
alarm-voice rang in its ears, denouncing, demanding, stirring to
wakefulness.
The news from abroad had been depressing. For a year the western
battle-front had stood stationary, presenting a stalemate. The heralded
"big push" had failed, or what one might safely call failed. Russia was
being beaten into helplessness with a million prisoners captured since
May. Siberia had been stricken.
But Bernstorff and Dumba and Boy-Ed had not been without their value, as
Plattsburg had not been without its value. Preparedness was in the air. It
was a topic of conversation. It and the blind atrocity of the slaughter of
Edith Cavell.... The President's message in December dealt with
preparedness, naval and military, and promised much. Mr. Garrison had a
plan.... The inert mass of the people was no longer inert; it stirred,
moved, but did not awaken. Perhaps it was vexed by nightmare
visitations.... Henry Ford's heart made his head ridiculous with the
squabbling argosy aboard his peace ship.... All these things were straws
indicating not only the rising of the wind, but the direction of the
wind.... Potter Waite studied and appraised them at their true value.
He studied and weighed the manifestations of public consciousness in
Detroit, smug, wealthy, inaccessible Detroit. Detroit was on no exposed
coast; Detroit was safe from invasion; Detroit did not share the fears and
the excitement of the seaboard, but went on its way manufacturing
motor-cars and munitions, stoves and varnish, and piling up its wealth
fantastically, spending its wealth but never able to exhaust its income.
Submarine sinkings were academic affairs in Detroit; bomb plots, the
incitement of labor to violent unrest, the torch of the plotter, were
matters that affected her more nearly. There were those in high places who
knew that the stealthy eye of Germany's army of moles was on the city;
that they tunneled underneath the city's feet, sinister, frightful.... But
Detroit did not cry for war. She demanded protection in her activities.
Her German-Americans were loud in their talk. The hyphen had its definite
place among them. Potter watched and saw. Like the East, the Middle-West
was moving glacier-like toward a distant point. The moment would come when
glacier movement became avalanche rush.
Detroit continued to fly high.
Long before the new year Potter had discarded casts, bandages, crutches;
his body was as sound as ever it had been, more perfectly fit than his
habits had allowed it to be for years. There had been other changes for
the better--changes less easy to detect and to define. One might almost
have been justified in saying that he had not gotten well of his injuries,
but had been recreated. There is a spiritual rebirth which need not of
necessity have anything to do with so-called morals. Any changes apparent
in Potter were not due to his taking thought of moral considerations. The
only change of heart he had known was with respect to his country:
indifference had turned to devotion. The great alteration was that he had
acquired an object in life; everything else flowed out of that.
The nature of him was the same. There were the same dynamic possibilities,
the same urge to action, the same qualities which had formerly made for
unrest, recklessness, restlessness. His dynamo had been creating
electricity which must have outlet, and, none being provided, took what
freakish, ill-considered outlet it found. The same dynamo was still
generating, but its product flowed evenly, with stable force, along wires
placed to carry it. What had been turbulent potentialities were harnessed;
they had been harnessed by an idea, and that idea was that the needs of
his country demanded a certain service of him.
He went about his work not so much enthusiastically as grimly,
relentlessly. He was a man driven by an obsession; that obsession was to
clear the way against his country's call for aeroplanes. And Detroit came
to the conclusion that he was mad as a March hare. There were those of his
friends whose nature it was not to pronounce unpleasant words; these spoke
of him as eccentric.
One man, however, seemed to take Potter seriously, and his name was
Cantor. After his first call he came frequently to visit, making his
desire to cultivate Potter's friendship plainly apparent. Cantor was,
Potter judged, in the neighborhood of thirty-five; a man of wide
experience, whose eyes had seen most of the world with a distinctness
which enabled him to talk of it as no mere globe-trotter could talk. In
spite of a feeling, not so much of suspicion as of questioning, with which
Potter regarded Cantor at first, he found himself attracted by the man.
This was due, in its inception, doubtless to Cantor's attitude toward
Potter's object in life. There was no doubt that Cantor accepted Potter's
clearness of vision and was deeply interested in his plans. This, an oasis
of belief in a desert of skepticism, went far. Then the man had undoubted
charm. He was handsome; his manners were distinguished and wholesome,
though a trifle foreign; his brain was acute, active; his wit was a joy.
In short, he was an unsurpassed companion for a house-bound man. Potter
found himself liking Cantor more and more. He had never possessed a close
friend, a chum. It seemed as if Cantor were to be a successful aspirant to
that position.
But of all the events of that period the one which had, perhaps, most
significance was the return of Hildegarde von Essen. Potter was being, had
been, modified by a number of momentous happenings whose effects he was
able himself to see. Hildegarde was to modify him without his perceiving
it. And it may be asserted that her modification was the most profound,
far-reaching of all. It is the intent of Nature that the life of man shall
stretch over many years. A third of these years, say twenty-five, are used
up in bringing him to man's stature and in equipping him with mental tools
to carry on the trade of living. At the end of this period he stands
balanced in the doorway, ready to step out into the jostle. It is usually
at this moment that a woman intervenes. The most critical event of any
man's career is the advent of some woman. This point may be argued and
combated, but not successfully. It is critical because it is the major
point of departure in his journey. The character of this woman touches
every instant remaining in the man's life, either for good or ill. And it
is all a matter of chance! Here Nature does not plan. One might almost
accuse her of being sardonic. She shuts her eyes, shuffles together a
multitude of young men and young women, themselves blindfolded, and then
gives the word, "Choose your partners." Perhaps that is the fun Olympus
gets out of godship. It may be the whole thing is some Olympian gamble.
Upon this blind scramble depends the future of the race!
The marvel of it is that so many grasp possible partners.
Men are educated to choose a profession or business; they are educated to
enter a drawing-room; they are educated to choose a hat or a cravat. But
to choose a wife--that choice which is so paramount that one might almost
say it is the one choosing of his life, is not a choice of educated
reason, but is a blind snatch into a grab-bag. The worst of it is that he
cannot refuse to grab. Nature has seen to that. For the perpetuation of
the race she has given him sex, and sex may bless him or damn him, she
cares little which, so long as she produces another generation. It forces
him into the game.
Potter had news of Hildegarde's return from Hildegarde in person. He was
working in the old hangar--the one to which she had come looking like a
fairy prince on the day of their disastrous flight. It was now his
headquarters, enlarged to accommodate his needs. The building housed a
reasonably complete machine-shop, drafting-room, a combination technical
library, office, and study, as well as the rebuilt hydro-aeroplane for
which it had been constructed originally. Here Potter worked, and here his
world was content to leave him alone with his fad. Few visitors came, and
these found themselves unwelcome, for Potter was busy. He was designing a
motor that would be efficient to drive the battle-planes of his country to
victory.
He stood now coatless, eyes protected by a green shade, attention fixed
upon his drafting-table. He had not heard the stopping of a motor-car, nor
was his concentration interrupted by the unceremonious opening of the
door.
"What's the use pretending you don't know I'm here?" said Hildegarde.
Potter turned abruptly and found himself without words. He was not content
to extend one hand, but must stretch out both, ink-stained though they
were, and she took them boyishly.
"I just got home this morning," she said. "Dad said I couldn't come and
wouldn't send me any money, so I got a man to pawn some things and ran
away. I don't think the man gave me all the money he got--_quite_. Dad was
furious. He almost _busted_. As soon as he'd shouted himself into a state
of collapse and rushed out of the house I called your house on the
telephone. They said you were here, so I got in my car and came--and
aren't you going to say _anything_?"
"It's you," his lips said, stupidly enough, but his eyes must have been
more eloquent, for Hildegarde said, with satisfaction, "You _are_ glad to
see me."
He was thinking to himself that his memory was inefficient, for it had not
retained so many of the delights of her reality; it had forgotten the way
her little ears cuddled into her unruly hair; it had forgotten that
daring, challenging glint in her blue eyes; he had forgotten something of
that determined line of her brows--a determined line which did not give an
expression of severity. He had recalled her general appearance as one of
some pertness; it was not pertness, he saw, but keenness. She had seemed a
little girl--a rather naughty, wilful, impertinent little girl; that
seeming of youth was there, but it was no longer the youth of the little
girl with whom one _plays_ house--it was the youth of the girl on the
point of womanhood with whom one would desire to _keep_ house. She had
been alluring, intriguing, as he remembered her; in reality she was
enchanting, compelling, startling. She excited the imagination, not
physically, but adventurously. Potter had once compared her to a dancing
flame; he approved that comparison. The inevitable conclusion to be drawn
from studying Hildegarde was that life in her vicinity would be far from
uneventful. She was full of dynamic promise.
"I _am_ glad to see you," he said, letting her hands go with reluctance.
"I've been thinking about you."
"How nice! I've been thinking about you--wondering how you came out of it
... if your nose was flattened or one leg shorter than the other. Why, you
don't look as if you had been smashed all to pieces." She laughed gaily.
"I'll try to limp," he suggested, "if it will please you."
She drew her shoulders together and became serious. "I was afraid," she
said. "I couldn't bear to think you--were not the way you used to be. If
you had been crippled--and it was my fault! That's why I came so quickly.
I wanted to know. You see, I didn't know anything--except that you were
alive."
"On the whole, I think I benefited," he said.
She looked at him quickly, appraisingly. "Yes," she said, "you _have_
benefited. You look different, somehow, and better. There was something
about you before that made me feel uneasy--not exactly comfortable. Like a
panther in a cage." She laughed lightly at her simile. "You seemed to be
pacing up and down and glaring at the world. That is gone.... Yes, and
you've been behaving yourself, taking better care of yourself."
"Yes," he said. "My address is no longer the Pontchartrain bar--and I've
got a job."
"That satisfies you?" she said.
"Yes."
"Something happened. Something has made a great change in you. What was
it? I'm interested, you know."
"The thing that happened was the necessity for filling in several months'
time while I lay on my back. It was necessary to think quite a little."
"What did you think about?"
"The United States of America," he said, "mainly."
"I don't understand. Are you joking?"
"No," he said, so seriously that she knew he spoke of a momentous thing in
his life. "It was the result of the war, I suppose, and of little things
which derived from the war. The first thing I discovered was that I was a
sort of Nolan--a man without a country. Have you read that book?"
"Yes."
"I hadn't done what Nolan did. I'd just neglected my country utterly. I
hadn't bothered with it. Just before I was hurt a man asked me if I loved
my country, and that rather started things.... I don't go around talking
this sort of thing to everybody," he said with sudden reserve.
"Of course not."
"Have you ever thought much about it?"
"No--I think not. I've rather taken the country for granted, except when
Dad has bellowed about the fatherland and that sort of thing. Then I've
been stirred up a little. Irritated, I guess the word is. I haven't been
an out-and-out American, but I haven't been anything else. That's all....
Like father, for instance. His father was chased out of Germany in
'forty-eight, and you'd think Dad would have a grudge against it. But he
hasn't. He gets sentimental about Germany. He isn't an American at all,
though he was born here ... and that never seemed right to me."
Potter nodded. "He's not alone, of course, and it is a dangerous
condition.... Well, the thing that happened to me was that I learned
something about the United States, and the first thing I knew I was mighty
strong for it."
"And what are you doing here--with all these drawings and this machinery?"
"Aeroplanes," he said. "Maybe you can understand what I'm doing. Nobody
else seems to.... Doesn't it seem to you that we've _got_ to get into this
war?"
"I haven't thought much about that--not a great deal. But nobody seems to
want war."
"No. We're smug and satisfied and cocksure. But I think we will be forced
into it. We can't stand everything. And if we go in it will be a
tremendous thing--for which we won't be ready. We'll be in the position of
a man with a hand-saw who is suddenly compelled to cut down a forest.
We'll have to do everything after the thing comes--raise an army and equip
it. And we'll need aeroplanes by the thousands.... That's what I'm
doing--getting ready for the time when we need aeroplanes. That is, I'm
doing what I can to help."
"And you're not getting much help or sympathy," she said.
He smiled wryly. "But I'm going ahead, just the same. I hope we never need
them. Maybe we can stay out of it, and maybe we will stay out of it--but
I'm going to stick to this game until I know. Because," he said, with a
sudden lighting of the face, a glow of enthusiasm from his eyes, "it's the
best thing I can do for the country--and I want to do my best for it."
She touched his arm lightly and in her eyes was a glow caught from his
own. "It's fine," she said. "I think I understand. I'm going to understand
better. I guess I'll be an American, too."
There was a rap on the door, and Potter, thinking it was one of his
machinists, called to come in. Cantor entered, hesitated when he saw
Hildegarde.
"I beg your pardon," he said. "I didn't know you were engaged."
"Come in, Cantor.... This is Miss von Essen. You know her father, I
think."
"Yes, indeed," said Cantor, advancing, a graceful, forceful, pleasing
figure. "I didn't know Miss von Essen had returned." His eyes were fixed
upon her boldly, but not offensively--admiringly. "I have heard much of
Miss von Essen, and even saw her once at a distance. Since then I have
hoped it might be my privilege to be presented to her."
Even as he spoke he was studying her face intently. He turned a sharp
glance upon Potter, and apparently was satisfied. In spite of his
well-trained face and manner, he had been unable to conceal a trace of
embarrassment, of uneasiness. It had passed unnoticed by Potter.
Hildegarde had set it down to her unexpected presence.
"Cantor is about all the company I have here," Potter said.
"I shall come more frequently now if surprises like this are to be
expected."
Potter turned to Hildegarde. "It was no end good of you to come," he said,
"but really, you know, you shouldn't.... And you mustn't come again."
"I shall," she said, defiantly, "whenever I want to."
"I'll have to lock the door," Potter laughed. "You know what affection her
father has for me, Cantor."
"Indeed, yes.... But fathers don't learn everything."
Potter pressed his lips together, for this hint of something clandestine
in his relations with Hildegarde affronted him. He said nothing.
Then the door burst open and Herman von Essen rushed into the room,
bristling, panting. He stopped, glared at the little group, and pointed a
trembling finger at Hildegarde. "There you are.... I had you watched. I
knew you would come here.... It is like you, disgracing yourself. Have you
no brains? Rushing here to this man that has made your name common in the
whole city.... Out of here, out of here while I attend to him!" He
advanced threateningly, but Hildegarde did not move, only eyed him with
level contempt. "You," he raved at Potter, "you entice my daughter!... By
God! I'll show you!..." He advanced again, burly fists doubled,
Bismarck-like face purple and distorted by rage.
At the instant when it seemed the furious German would rush upon Potter,
Cantor took one step forward and spoke. His voice was incisive, cold,
compelling. It cut through von Essen's rage to his consciousness and
halted him. "Von Essen," said Cantor, "you forget yourself." That was all.
He stood very straight, heels together, shoulders squared--the attitude of
an officer facing his company.
Von Essen stopped, and his rage dropped from him as if it had been some
false face which could flutter to the ground. He was _compelled_. Cantor's
cool voice had a surprising, a powerful effect. "I--" he faltered, seeming
to grow smaller of stature, to wilt.
"You will take your daughter home," said Cantor, still in that cool,
commanding voice, "and you will treat her as a gentleman treats a lady. Am
I understood?"
Von Essen nodded. He was inarticulate.
"See to it," Cantor said. "Miss von Essen." He bowed to Hildegarde, and,
walking to the door, held it open for her, standing cold and straight
while she passed her father and came toward him.
Von Essen followed. He had the appearance of a man suddenly caved in.
Hildegarde paused in the door and turned. "I can't ask you to pardon him,"
she said. "I shall come again." Then she preceded her father through the
door.
Cantor closed it and smiled grimly. "You need have no anxiety over Miss
von Essen," he said.
Potter shook his head. "That gets me," he said. "How do you do it, Cantor?
In another minute I'd have had to thrash that old bounder.... I'm much
obliged for the miracle."
"He needs a little taking down," Cantor said, contemptuously. "These rich
German-Americans get too cocky sometimes. They have to be shown."
"I'd like to have your formula," said Potter.
Cantor changed the subject. "How's the motor coming?"
"Slowly."
"I haven't seen the drawings," Cantor suggested. "I'm interested, you
know."
"I'd like to show them to you," Potter replied, "but I'm not showing them
to anybody. I feel as if it were government work, you know. I'm sure
you'll understand."
"Perfectly. I shouldn't have suggested it.... Just dropped in to ask you
to come down to the club to dinner to-night."
"Thanks. I'll show up early. Want a game of handball and a shower? Take me
on?"
"You've been beating me too regularly, but I'll let you do it again. Maybe
La Mothe and O'Mera will be around."
Cantor walked out. As he got into his car he shrugged his shoulders and
smiled.
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