The Clarion

Chapter 48

"Suppose I have. The "Clarion" hasn"t."

"Isn"t that rather a fine distinction?"

"On the contrary. Personally, I might refrain from saying anything about it. Journalistically, how can I? It"s the business of the "Clarion" to give the news. More than that: it"s the honor of the "Clarion.""

"But what possible good will it do?"

"If it did no other good, it would warn other reckless drivers."



"Let the police look to that. It"s their business."

"You know that the police dare do nothing to the daughter of Elias M.

Pierce. See here, Partner,"--Hal"s tone grew gentle,--"don"t you recall, in that long talk we had about the paper, one afternoon, how you backed me up when I told you what I meant to do in the way of making the "Clarion" honest and clean and strong enough to be straight in its att.i.tude toward the public? Why, you"ve been the inspiration of all that I"ve been trying to do. I thought that was the true Esme. Wasn"t it? Was I wrong? You"re not going back on me, now?"

"But she"s so young," pleaded Esme, shifting her ground before this attack. "She doesn"t think. She"s never had to think. Your article makes her look a--a murderess. It isn"t fair. It isn"t true, really. If you could have seen her here, so frightened, so broken. She cried in my arms. I told her it shouldn"t be printed. I promised."

Here was the Great American Pumess at bay, and suddenly splendid in her att.i.tude of protectiveness. In that moment, she had all but broken Hal"s resolution. He rose and walked over to the window, to clear his thought of the overpowering appeal of her loveliness.

"How can I--" he began, coming back: but paused because she was holding out to him the proof. Across it, in pencil, was written, "Must not," and the initials, E.S.M.E.

"Kill it," she urged softly.

"And my honesty with it."

"Oh, no. It can"t be so fatal, to be kind for once. Let her off, poor child."

Hal stood irresolute.

"If it were I?" she insisted softly.

"If it were you, would you ask it?"

"I shouldn"t have to. I"d trust you."

The sweetness of it shook him. But he still spoke steadily.

"Others trust me, now. The men in the office. Trust me to be honest."

Again she felt the solid wall of character blocking her design, and within herself raged and marveled, and more deeply, admired. Resentment was uppermost, however. Find a way through that barrier she must and would. Whatever scruples may have been aroused by his appeal to her she banished. No integer of the impressionable s.e.x had ever yet won from her such a battle. None ever should: and a.s.suredly not this one. The Great American Pumess was now all feline.

She leaned forward to him. "You promised."

"I?"

"Have you forgotten?"

"I have never forgotten one word that has pa.s.sed between us since I first saw you."

"Ah; but when was that?"

"Seven weeks ago to-day, at the station."

[Ill.u.s.tration: "KILL IT," SHE URGED SOFTLY.]

"Fifteen years ago this summer," she corrected. "You _have_ forgotten,"

She laughed gayly at the amazement in his face. "And the promise." Up went a pink-tipped finger in admonition. "Listen and be ashamed, O faithless knight. "Little girl, little girl: I"d do anything in the world for you, little girl. Anything in the world, if ever you asked me." Think, and remember. Have you a scar on your left shoulder?"

The effort of recollection dimmed Hal"s face. "Wait! I"m beginning to see. The light of the torches across the square, and the man with the knife.--Then darkness.--was unconscious, wasn"t I?--Then the fairy child with the soft eyes, looking down at me. Little girl, little girl, it was you! That is why I seemed to remember, that day at the station, before I knew you."

"Yes," she said, smiling up at him.

"How wonderful! And you remembered. How more than wonderful!"

"Yes, I remembered." It was no part of her plan--quite relentless, now--to tell him that her uncle had recounted to her the events of that far-distant night, and that she had been holding them in reserve for some hitherto undetermined purpose of coquetry. So she spoke the lie without a tremor. What he would say next, she almost knew. Nor did he disappoint her expectation.

"And so you"ve come back into my life after all these years!"

"You haven"t taken back your proof." She slipped it into his hand. "What have you done with my subscription-flower?"

"The arbutus? It stands always on my desk."

"Do you see the rest of it anywhere?"

Her eyes rested on a tiny vase set in a hanging window-box of flowers, and holding a brown and withered wisp. "I tend those flowers myself,"

she continued. "And I leave the dead arbutus there to remind me of the responsibilities of journalism--and of the hold I have over the incorruptible editor."

"Does it weigh upon you?" He answered the tender laughter in her eyes.

"Only the uncertainty of it."

"Do you realize how strong it is, Esme?"

"Not so strong, apparently, as certain foolish scruples." A soft color rose in her face, as she half-buried it in a great ma.s.s of apple blossom. From the ma.s.s she chose a spray, and set it in the bosom of her dress, then got to her feet and moved slowly toward him. "You"re not wearing my colors to-night." This was directed to the white rose in his b.u.t.tonhole. He took it out and tossed it into the fireplace.

"Pink"s the only wear," declared the girl gayly. With delicate fingers she detached a little luxuriant twig of the bloom from her breast, and set it in the place where the rose had been. Her face was close to his.

He could feel her hands above his heart.

"Please," she breathed.

"What?" He was playing for time and reason.

"For Kathleen Pierce. Please."

His hand closed over hers. "You are bribing me."

If she said it again, she knew that he would kiss her. So she spoke, with lifted face and eyes of uttermost supplication. "For me. Please."

Men had kissed Esme Elliot before; for she had played every turn of the game of coquetry. Some she had laughed to scorn and dismissed; some she had sweetly rebuked, and held to their adoring fealty. She had known the kiss of headlong pa.s.sion, of love"s humility, of desperation, even of hot anger; but none had ever visited her lips twice. The game, for her, was ended with the surrender and the avowal; and she protected herself the more easily in that her pulses had never been stirred to more than the thrill of triumph.

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