"He"s a demagogue," said Davy with an angry jerk at his rein. "He knows the people aren"t fit to rule."
"Who is?" said Jane. "I"ve yet to see any human creature who could run anything without making more or less of a mess of it. And--well, personally, I"d prefer incompetent honest servants to competent ones who were liars or thieves."
"Sometimes I think," said Davy, "that the only thing to do is to burn the world up and start another one."
"You don"t talk like a man who expected to be elected," said Jane.
"Oh--I"m worrying about myself--not about the election," said Hull, lapsing into sullen silence. And certainly he had no reason to worry about the election. He had the Citizen"s Alliance and the Democratic nominations. And, as a further aid to him, d.i.c.k Kelly had given the Republican nomination to Alfred Sawyer, about the most unpopular manufacturer in that region. Sawyer, a shrewd money maker, was an a.s.s in other ways, was strongly seized of the itch for public office.
Kelly, seeking the man who would be the weakest, combined business with good politics; he forced Sawyer to pay fifty thousand dollars into the "campaign fund" in a lump sum, and was counting confidently upon "milking" him for another fifty thousand in installments during the campaign. Thus, in the natural order of things, Davy could safely a.s.sume that he would be the next mayor of Remsen City by a gratifyingly large majority. The last vote of the Workingmen"s League had been made fifteen hundred. Though it should quadruple its strength at the coming election--which was most improbable--it would still be a badly beaten second. Politically, Davy was at ease.
Jane waited ten minutes, then asked abruptly:
"What"s become of Selma Gordon?"
"Did you see this week"s New Day?"
"Is it out? I"ve seen no one, and haven"t been down town."
"There was a lot of stuff in it against me. Most of it demagoguing, of course, but more or less hysterical campaigning. The only nasty article about me--a downright personal attack on my sincerity--was signed "S.G.""
"Oh--to be sure," said Jane, with smiling insincerity. "I had almost forgotten what you told me. Well, it"s easy enough to bribe her to silence. Go offer yourself to her."
A long silence, then Davy said: "I don"t believe she"d accept me."
"Try it," said Jane.
Again a long pause. David said sullenly: "I did."
Selma Gordon had refused David Hull! Half a dozen explanations of this astounding occurrence rapidly suggested themselves. Jane rejected each in turn at a glance. "You"re sure she understood you?"
"I made myself as clear as I did when I proposed to you," replied Davy with a lack of tact which a woman of Jane"s kind would never forget or forgive.
Jane winced, ignored. Said she: "You must have insisted on some conditions she hesitated to accept."
"On her own terms," said Davy.
Jane gave up trying to get the real reason from him, sought it in Selma"s own words and actions. She inquired: "What did she say? What reason did she give?"
"That she owed it to the cause of her cla.s.s not to marry a man of my cla.s.s," answered Hull, believing that he was giving the exact and the only reason she a.s.signed or had.
Jane gave a faint smile of disdain. "Women don"t act from a sense of duty," she said.
"She"s not the ordinary woman," said Hull. "You must remember she wasn"t brought up as you and I were--hasn"t our ideas of life. The things that appeal to us most strongly don"t touch her. She knows nothing about them." He added, "And that"s her great charm for me."
Jane nodded sympathetically. Her own case exactly. After a brief hesitation she suggested:
"Perhaps Selma"s in love with--some one else." The pause before the vague "some one else" was almost unnoticeable.
"With Victor Dorn, you mean?" said Davy. "I asked her about that. No, she"s not in love with him."
"As if she"d tell you!"
Davy looked at her a little scornfully. "Don"t insinuate," he said.
"You know she would. There"s nothing of the ordinary tricky, evasive, faking woman about her. And although she"s got plenty of excuse for being conceited, she isn"t a bit so. She isn"t always thinking about herself, like the girls of our cla.s.s."
"I don"t in the least wonder at your being in love with her, Davy,"
said Jane sweetly. "Didn"t I tell you I admired your taste--and your courage?"
"You"re sneering at me," said Davy. "All the same, it did take courage--for I"m a sn.o.b at bottom--like you--like all of us who"ve been brought up so foolishly--so rottenly. But I"m proud that I had the courage. I"ve had a better opinion of myself ever since. And if you have any unspoiled womanhood in you, you agree with me."
"I do agree with you," said Jane softly. She reached out and laid her hand on his arm for an instant. "That"s honest, Davy."
He gave her a grateful look. "I know it," said he. "The reason I confide things to you is because I know you"re a real woman at bottom, Jane--the only real person I"ve ever happened across in our cla.s.s."
"It took more courage for you to do that sort of thing than it would for a woman," said Jane. "It"s more natural, easier for a woman to stake everything in love. If she hasn"t the man she wants she hasn"t anything, while a man"s wife can be a mere detail in his life. He can forget he"s married, most of the time."
"That isn"t the way I intend to be married," said Davy. "I want a wife who"ll be half, full half, of the whole. And I"ll get her."
"You mean you haven"t given up?"
"Why should I? She doesn"t love another man. So, there"s hope. Don"t you think so?"
Jane was silent. She hastily debated whether it would be wiser to say yes or to say no.
"Don"t you think so?" repeated he.
"How can I tell?" replied Jane, diplomatically. "I"d have to see her with you--see how she feels toward you."
"I think she likes me," said Davy, "likes me a good deal."
Jane kept her smile from the surface. What a man always thought, no matter how plainly a woman showed that she detested him. "No doubt she does," said Jane. She had decided upon a course of action. "If I were you, Davy, I"d keep away from her for the present--give her time to think it over, to see all the advantages. If a man forces himself on a queer, wild sort of girl such as Selma is, he"s likely to drive her further away."
Davy reflected. "Guess you"re right," said he finally. "My instinct is always to act--to keep on acting until I get results. But it"s dangerous to do that with Selma. At least, I think so. I don"t know.
I don"t understand her. I"ve got nothing to offer her--nothing that she wants--as she frankly told me. Even if she loved me, I doubt if she"d marry me--on account of her sense of duty. What you said awhile ago--about women never doing things from a sense of duty--that shows how hard it is for a woman to understand what"s perfectly simple to a man. Selma isn"t the sheltered woman sort--the sort whose moral obligations are all looked after by the men of her family. The old-fashioned woman always belonged to some man--or else was an outcast. This new style of woman looks at life as a man does."
Jane listened with a somewhat cynical expression. No doubt, in theory, there was a new style of woman. But practically, the new style of woman merely TALKED differently; at least, she was still the old-fashioned woman, longing for dependence upon some man and indifferent to the obligations men made such a fuss about--probably not so sincerely as they fancied. But her expression changed when Davy went on to say:
"She"d look at a thing of that sort much as I--or Victor Dorn would."
Jane"s heart suddenly sank. Because the unconscious blow had hurt she struck out, struck back with the first weapon she could lay hold of.
"But you said a minute ago that Victor was a hypocritical demagogue."
Davy flushed with confusion. He was in a franker mood now, however.
"I"d like to think that," he replied. "But I don"t honestly believe it."
"You think that if Victor Dorn loved a woman of our cla.s.s he"d put her out of his life?"
"That"s hardly worth discussing," said Davy. "No woman of our cla.s.s--no woman he"d be likely to look at--would encourage him to the point where he"d presume upon it."