When Peter came into his office one afternoon a couple of weeks after the Yale game he found Pat sitting at his desk waiting for him.
"I"m through," said Pat.
"What"s the matter?"
"Well, as a matter of fact, they"re through with me. They"ve fired me."
Pat looked across the desk expectantly awaiting a question. Peter didn"t ask it. "I"m sorry," was all he said.
"You know about it. I suppose you must have the letter from the dean by now. It took me three days getting back from Cambridge."
"I don"t know anything about it. You can tell me if you want to."
"Well, I got fired the worst way. It wasn"t just flunking courses. I didn"t even mean to do it. Not ahead of time anyway. It just sort of happened."
Peter waited and then suddenly he remembered his interview with Miles years ago, the day he came to the office in bandages and was never offered a chance to tell about it. A question would be kinder.
"What happened, Pat?" he asked.
"The proctor reported me. I had a girl in my room. No, that"s slicking it up and making it sound romantic and pretty. What I mean is I had a woman in my room. You know ... a woman."
"I know," said Peter.
"You remember I was low in my mind after the football game. It let me down. I don"t care what I wrote you before the game. I really did think it was going to be fine. I thought I"d get stirred by it and after it was all over the only things I remembered were Bill French sitting on the side-lines crying and Charlie Bullitt out on the field putting his lunch. You don"t mind if I tell it this way--the long way."
"Take your time."
"Well, I know it sounds silly, but it seemed to me that I just had to go out and find something that was thrilling and beautiful too. I saw this girl--this woman--walking across Harvard Square. It was night and raining and blowing. The wind was almost carrying her along. You know it made her seem so alive."
He paused again. Peter could not resist an impulse to break into the story. "She said to you, "Come along" or a something like that," he suggested.
"No, I spoke to her. I said, "Why get wet?" It was dark and we sneaked up the stairs in Weld to my room. And then it wasn"t beautiful at all."
Pat buried his head in his hands.
This time Peter did put his arm around his shoulders. "That"s right,"
said Peter, "it wasn"t beautiful. You couldn"t know that. n.o.body ever does. I didn"t."
Pat looked up and in the second he had snapped back to normal. The shame had gone somewhere; into Peter"s protecting arm perhaps. He managed a smile.
"Peter," he said, "there"s something more I"m sorry about. I"m sorry for what I said about that football story. It was a good football story. A peach of a story--all but that part about Charlie Bullitt and Dr.
Nichols."
Peter grinned back at him. "That"s my weakness. I can"t help being a little yellow sometime."
A sudden elation swept over Peter. Here at last was a secret shared just by him and Pat. Of course, the Dean of Harvard College and the proctor and the woman who walked in the rain knew about it, but they didn"t count.
"The proctor saw her when she was going out," Pat added just to finish up the story. There they left it and went on to talk of other things but presently Miss Nathan came in.
"Mr. Neale," she said, "Mr. Twice wants to see you in his office."
Peter got up. "No," she said, "it"s Mr. Pat Neale he wants to see. He"s been asking for him for a couple of days now. I told him that he was here this afternoon."
"What"s Twice want to see you for, I wonder?"
"I know," said Pat. "I"ve just thought of it. He must have got the Dean"s letter. Don"t you remember it was Mr. Twice arranged about my going to Harvard before you got back? I suppose they think he"s still my guardian."
"Do you want me to come in with you?"
"Never mind. Now that I"ve got it off my chest once I guess I can do it again."
Pat was gone for almost three quarters of an hour. Peter walked up and down nervously. He wondered what was happening. From across the transoms of Twice"s office he could hear just the rumbling of the editor"s voice. Pat didn"t seem to be saying anything. At last he came back.
"What did he say to you? He seemed to be raising Cain."
"No, he didn"t say anything much. At least not much about the Dean"s letter. He had that all right. He got talking to me about Krafft-Ebing."
"Oh, was that all?"
"No, there was more than that. I report down here for work on Monday."
"The trouble with him," said Rufus Twice, "is that he doesn"t seem to understand that you"ve got to have a certain routine in a newspaper office. Deering tells me that he hardly ever gets in at one o"clock.
Along about two he calls up on the phone and wants to get his a.s.signment that way. And last night Warren says that he called up after ten and said, "It"s raining like h.e.l.l. You don"t really want me to go out and cover that story, do you?" Warren told him, "Oh no, Mr. Neale. I didn"t know it was raining. Of course, if this keeps up we won"t get out any paper at all.""
Peter couldn"t laugh because Twice was telling him of the reportorial shortcomings of Pat. He spoke to Pat about it when he got home to the apartment. The old flat in Sixty-sixth Street was again theirs.
"But I get such lousy a.s.signments," said Pat. "I think Deering"s down on me. I suppose I"ve given him cause all right, but he"s taking it out on me. He sends me where there isn"t any chance of getting anything. If I do write something it never gets in the paper anyway. I did tell him it was raining. What was the use of my getting wet for nothing? They wanted me to go up to a meeting of the trustees of the Museum of Natural History. Now what could I get out of that?"
"Didn"t you go up?" said Peter aghast. "He was just being sarcastic when he told you there wouldn"t be any paper if the rain kept up."
"Oh, I know that. The Bulletin comes out every day all right. That"s the trouble with it, but I took him up literally on what he said. I don"t think the joke was on me. It was on him."
"You shouldn"t do things like that."
"Suppose I had gone. There wouldn"t have been any story anyway."
"You"ve got to quit supposing. Let the city editor do that. The worst-looking a.s.signment may turn out to be something if you go after it."
"Yes, once in every twenty years those directors of the Museum of Natural History get into an awful row about whether to put the ichthyosaurus on the second floor or in the bas.e.m.e.nt and if anything like that happened they"d turn over the whole front page to me."
Peter shook his head gloomily. "You"ve got the wrong spirit. Even if your a.s.signments are no good keep your eyes and your ears open when you go round the city and something will turn up. That"s the way to show them. Bring in something you pick up yourself. Every day of the year there must be whole pagefuls of stuff just as good and better than the stuff we get in the paper. Only we don"t find out about it. Keep scouting for stuff like that. When you say newspaper work"s stupid you"re practically saying that life"s stupid."
"Maybe it is," said Pat, "but I"m not so sure about that as I am about newspapers."
"It"s the same thing."
"I don"t think so. Here"s the sort of thing that makes life amusing and isn"t worth anything for a newspaper. I was riding in one of those B.R.T. subway trains the other day and there were two women sitting next me on one of those cross seats. One was fat and middle-aged and the other was younger. I didn"t notice her so much. It was the fat one who was doing the talking. She was very much excited and she was explaining something to the younger woman. "Why, I said to him," she told her--"I said to him, "Why, Mr. Babc.o.c.k, I don"t want to be sacrilegious but that girl she"s so sweet and so pretty I don"t even believe our Lord himself could be mean to her." That made me satisfied with the whole day, but imagine coming in and trying to put it over on Warren or Deering for a story."