"I was examined at the free dispensary up in Second Avenue the other day. I"ve suspected what was the matter for several months. They told me I was right."
"But the doctors are always making mistakes. I"d not give up if I were you."
"Do you suppose I would if I had anything to live for?"
"I was thinking about that a while ago--while you were asleep."
"Oh, I"m all in. That"s a cinch."
"So am I," said she. "And as we"ve nothing to lose and no hope, why, trying to do something won"t make us any worse off. . . .
We"ve both struck the bottom. We can"t go any lower." She leaned forward and, with her earnest eyes fixed upon him, said, "Rod--why not try--together?"
He closed his eyes.
"I"m afraid I can"t be of much use to you," she went on. "But you can help me. And helping me will make you help yourself.
I can"t get up alone. I"ve tried. No doubt it"s my fault. I guess I"m one of those women that aren"t hard enough or self-confident enough to do what"s necessary unless I"ve got some man to make me do it. Perhaps I"d get the--the strength or whatever it is, when I was much older. But by that time in my case--I guess it"d be too late. Won"t you help me, Rod?"
He turned his head away, without opening his eyes.
"You"ve helped me many times--beginning with the first day we met."
"Don"t," he said. "I went back on you. I did sprain my ankle, but I could have come."
"That wasn"t anything," replied she. "You had already done a thousand times more than you needed to do."
His hand wandered along the cover in her direction. She touched it. Their hands clasped.
"I lied about where I got the money yesterday. I didn"t work.
I begged. Three of us--from the saloon they call the Owl"s Chute--two Yale men--one of them had been a judge--and I.
We"ve been begging for a week. We were going out on the road in a few days--to rob. Then--I saw you--in that old women"s dance hall--the Venusberg, they call it."
"You"ve come down here for me, Rod. You"ll take me back?
You"ll save me from the Venusberg?"
"I couldn"t save anybody. Susie, at bottom I"m N. G. I always was--and I knew it. Weak--vain. But you! If you hadn"t been a woman--and such a sweet, considerate one you"d have never got down here."
"Such a fool," corrected Susan. "But, once I get up, I"ll not be so again. I"ll fight under the rules, instead of acting in the silly way they teach us as children."
"Don"t say those hard things, Susie!"
"Aren"t they true?"
"Yes, but I can"t bear to hear them from a woman. . . . I told you that you hadn"t changed. But after I"d looked at you a while I saw that you have. You"ve got a terrible look in your eyes--wonderful and terrible. You had something of that look as a child--the first time I saw you."
"The day after my marriage," said the girl, tearing her face away.
"It was there then," he went on. "But now--it"s--it"s heartbreaking, Susie when your face is in repose."
"I"ve gone through a fire that has burned up every bit of me that can burn," said she. "I"ve been wondering if what"s left isn"t strong enough to do something with. I believe so--if you"ll help me."
"Help you? I--help anybody? Don"t mock me, Susie."
"I don"t know about anybody else," said she sweetly and gently, "but I do know about me."
"No use--too late. I"ve lost my nerve." He began to sob.
"It"s because I"m unstrung," explained he.
"Don"t think I"m a poor contemptible fool of a whiner. . . .
Yes, I _am_ a whiner! Susie, I ought to have been the woman and you the man. Weak--weak--weak!"
She turned the gas low, bent over him, kissed his brow, caressed him. "Let"s do the best we can," she murmured.
He put his arm round her. "I wonder if there _is_ any hope," he said. "No--there couldn"t be."
"Let"s not hope," pleaded she. "Let"s just do the best we can."
"What--for instance?"
"You know the theater people. You might write a little play--a sketch--and you and I could act it in one of the ten-cent houses."
"That"s not a bad idea!" exclaimed he. "A little comedy--about fifteen or twenty minutes." And he cast about for a plot, found the beginnings of one the ancient but ever acceptable commonplace of a jealous quarrel between two lovers--"I"ll lay the scene in Fifth Avenue--there"s nothing low life likes so much as high life." He sketched, she suggested. They planned until broad day, then fell asleep, she half sitting up, his head pillowed upon her lap.
She was awakened by a sense of a parching and suffocating heat.
She started up with the idea of fire in her drowsy mind. But a glance at him revealed the real cause. His face was fiery red, and from his lips came rambling sentences, muttered, whispered, that indicated the delirium of a high fever. She had first seen it when she and the night porter broke into Burlingham"s room in the Walnut Street House, in Cincinnati.
She had seen it many a time since; for, while she herself had never been ill, she had been surrounded by illness all the time, and the commonest form of it was one of these fevers, outraged nature"s frenzied rise against the ever denser swarms of enemies from without which the slums sent to attack her.
Susan ran across the hall and roused Clara, who would watch while she went for a doctor. "You"d better get Einstein in Grand Street," Clara advised.
"Why not Sacci?" asked Susan.
"Our doctor doesn"t know anything but the one thing--and he doesn"t like to take other kinds of cases. No, get Einstein. . . . You know, he"s like all of them--he won"t come unless you pay in advance."
"How much?" asked Susan.
"Three dollars. I"ll lend you if----"
"No--I"ve got it." She had eleven dollars and sixty cents in the world.
Einstein p.r.o.nounced it a case of typhoid. "You must get him to the hospital at once."
Susan and Clara looked at each other in terror. To them, as to the ma.s.ses everywhere, the hospital meant almost certain death; for they a.s.sumed--and they had heard again and again accusations which warranted it--that the public hospital doctors and nurses treated their patients with neglect always, with downright inhumanity often. Not a day pa.s.sed without their hearing some story of hospital outrage upon poverty, without their seeing someone--usually some child--who was paying a heavy penalty for having been in the charity wards.
Einstein understood their expression. "Nonsense!" said he gruffly. "You girls look too sensible to believe those silly lies."
Susan looked at him steadily. His eyes shifted. "Of course, the pay service _is_ better," said he in a strikingly different tone.
"How much would it be at a pay hospital?" asked Susan.
"Twenty-five a week including my services," said Doctor Einstein. "But you can"t afford that."