The two girls did not hear. The wind straight from the Arctic was plying its hideous lash upon their defenseless bodies.

"Come on, lovey!" cried the man. "Let"s go in out of the cold."

"Oh, Lorna! You can"t go with a drunken man! I"ll--I"ll take him. I can stand it better"n you. You can go when there"s a gentleman----"

"You don"t know," said Susan. "Didn"t I tell you I"d been through the worst?"

"Are you coming?" broke in the man, shaking his head to scatter the clouds over his sight.

The cold was lashing Susan"s body; and she was seeing the tenement she had left--the vermin crawling, the filth everywhere, the meal bugs in the rotting corn meal--and Jeb Ferguson. "Wait in the restaurant," said she to Etta. "Didn"t I tell you I"m a n.o.body. This is what"s expected of me." The wind clawed and tore at her quivering flesh. "It"s cold, Etta. Go get warm. Good-by."

She yielded to the tipsy man"s tugging at her arm. Etta stood as if paralyzed, watching the two move slowly westward. But cold soon triumphed over horror. She retraced her steps toward Vine Street. At the corner stood an elderly man with an iron-gray beard. She merely glanced at him in pa.s.sing, and so was startled when he said in a low voice:

"Go back the way you came. I"ll join you." She glanced at him again, saw a gleam in his eyes that a.s.sured her she had not imagined the request. Trembling and all at once hot, she kept on across the street. But instead of going into the restaurant she walked past it and east through dark Eighth Street. A few yards, and she heard a quiet step behind her. A few yards more, and the lights of Vine Street threw a man"s shadow upon the sidewalk beside her. From sheer fright she halted. The man faced her--a man old enough to be her father, a most respectable, clean looking man with a certain churchly though hardly clerical air about him. "Good evening, miss," said he.

"Good evening," she faltered.

"I"m a stranger--in town to buy goods and have a little fun,"

stammered he with a grotesque attempt to be easy and familiar.

"I thought maybe you could help me."

A little fun! Etta"s lips opened, but no words came. The cold was digging its needle-knives into flesh, into bone, into nerve.

Through the man"s thick beard and mustache came the gleam of large teeth, the twisting of thick raw lips. A little fun!

"Would it," continued the man, nervously, "would it be very dear?"

"I--I don"t know," faltered Etta.

"I could afford--say--" he looked at her dress--"say--two dollars."

"I--I" And again Etta could get no further.

"The room"d be a dollar," pleaded the man. "That"d make it three."

"I--I--can"t," burst out Etta, hysterical. "Oh, please let me alone. I--I"m a good girl, but I do need money. But I--I can"t.

Oh, for G.o.d"s sake--I"m so cold--so cold!"

The man was much embarra.s.sed. "Oh, I"m sorry," he said feelingly. "That"s right--keep your virtue. Go home to your parents." He was at ease now; his voice was greasy and his words sleek with the unction of an elder. "I thought you were a soiled dove. I"m glad you spoke out--glad for my sake as well as your own. I"ve got a daughter about your age. Go home, my dear, and stay a good girl. I know it"s hard sometimes; but never give up your purity--never!" And he lifted his square-topped hard hat and turned away.

Suddenly Etta felt again the fury of the winter night and icy wind. As that wind flapped her thin skirt and tortured her flesh, she cried, "Wait--please. I was just--just fooling."

The man had halted, but he was looking at her uncertainly. Etta put her hand on his arm and smiled pertly up at him--smiled as she had seen other street girls smile in the days when she despised them. "I"ll go--if you"ll give me three."

"I--I don"t think I care to go now. You sort of put me out of the humor."

"Well--two, then." She gave a reckless laugh. "G.o.d, how cold it is! Anybody"d go to h.e.l.l to get warm a night like this."

"You are a very pretty girl," said the man. He was warmly dressed; his was not the thin blood of poverty. He could not have appreciated what she was feeling. "You"re sure you want to go? You"re sure it"s your--your business?"

"Yes. I"m strange in this part of town. Do you know a place?"

An hour later Etta went into the appointed restaurant. Her eyes searched anxiously for Susan, but did not find her. She inquired at the counter. No one had asked there for a young lady. This both relieved her and increased her nervousness; Susan had not come and gone--but would she come? Etta was so hungry that she could hold out no longer. She sat at a table near the door and took up the large sheet on which was printed the bill of fare.

She was almost alone in the place, as it was between dinner and supper. She read the bill thoroughly, then ordered black bean soup, a sirloin steak and German fried potatoes. This, she had calculated, would cost altogether a dollar; undoubtedly an extravagance, but everything at that restaurant seemed dear in comparison with the prices to which she had been used, and she felt horribly empty. She ordered the soup, to stay her while the steak was broiling.

As soon as the waiter set down bread and b.u.t.ter she began upon it greedily. As the soup came, in walked Susan--calm and self-possessed, Etta saw at first glance. "I"ve been so frightened. You"ll have a plate of soup?" asked Etta, trying to look and speak in unconcerned fashion.

"No, thank you," replied Susan, seating herself opposite.

"There"s a steak coming--a good-sized one, the waiter said it"d be."

"Very well."

Susan spoke indifferently.

"Aren"t you hungry?"

"I don"t know. I"ll see." Susan was gazing straight ahead. Her eyes were distinctly gray--gray and as hard as Susan Lenox"s eyes could be.

"What"re you thinking about?"

"I don"t know," she laughed queerly.

"Was--it--dreadful?"

A pause, then: "Nothing is going to be dreadful to me any more.

It"s all in the game, as Mr. Burlingham used to say."

"Burlingham--who"s he?" It was Etta"s first faint clew toward that mysterious past of Susan"s into which she longed to peer.

"Oh--a man I knew. He"s dead."

A long pause, Etta watching Susan"s unreadable face. At last she said:

"You don"t seem a bit excited."

Susan came back to the present. "Don"t I? Your soup"s getting cold."

Etta ate several spoonfuls, then said with an embarra.s.sed attempt at a laugh, "I--I went, too."

Susan slowly turned upon Etta her gaze--the gaze of eyes softening, becoming violet. Etta"s eyes dropped and the color flooded into her fair skin. "He was an old man--forty or maybe fifty," she explained nervously. "He gave me two dollars. I nearly didn"t get him. I lost my nerve and told him I was good and was only starting because I needed money."

"Never whine," said Susan. "It"s no use. Take what comes, and wait for a winning hand."

Etta looked at her in a puzzled way. "How queer you talk! Not a bit like yourself. You sound so much older. . . . And your eyes--they don"t look natural at all."

Indeed they looked supernatural. The last trace of gray was gone. They were of the purest, deepest violet, luminous, mysterious, with that awe-inspiring expression of utter aloneness. But as Etta spoke the expression changed. The gray came back and with it a glance of irony. Said she:

"Oh--nonsense! I"m all right."

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