The Parts Men Play

Chapter 41

"Well, what of it?"

"Look here, Van," said Selwyn vehemently; "we have been friends for many years. I came to you to-night because my whole career is at a standstill. I want to tell you everything--I must do it--but I can"t as long as you withhold your confidence. It isn"t curiosity on my part--you know that. I want to bring back the old sense of understanding we once had."

"You haven"t changed," said Van Derwater, an inscrutable smile playing about his mouth. "You always had a habit of piercing people"s moods, no matter what defence they put up. But if you want candour, I"ll tell you frankly I am sorry you came here this evening. I knew that it would be difficult to keep from hurting you, and for old-times" sake I didn"t want to do that. As you know, I have never made friends. You and Forbes were the nearest thing to it, and I suppose you two meant more than I would ever care to admit. You might ring the bell over your head. The fire needs more coal."

As the negro obeyed his master"s instructions and stoked the fire into vigour, the two friends sat without speaking. Selwyn was mute with apprehension of what he was to hear; the older man was dreading the words he had to utter. To certain strong natures it is more painful to inflict than to receive a wound.

"If you want my story," resumed the host, after the servant had left the room, "and as you are concerned you have a right to hear it, this is how it goes. I went into the diplomatic service. Then I met Marjory. I needn"t say what that meant to me. For the first time, I think, I knew what living was. Shortly after came the war. At first I thought that if America remained neutral as a country, it was not up to individuals to quarrel with that att.i.tude. Then came the _Lusitania_.

I wanted to go over at once, but hated to suggest it to Marjory. One night, though, to my delight, the plucky little girl mentioned it herself. I hurried back to Washington and offered my resignation, but the chief urged me to remain three months longer, saying that I was absolutely necessary in the reorganisation of a certain branch of the Intelligence Division in New York. To cut the story short, months and months went on, and they refused to release me. As a matter of fact I was directing an investigation into German foreign diplomacy that was of so delicate a nature I dared not mention it to Marjory. At its conclusion I went to Washington and demanded that they let me go--I gave my exact reason. The chief said he would give me a reply in a week; but I told him that, no matter what he wrote, I would go at the expiration of that time. It was while I was waiting for the answer that Marjory said it rested with me whether or not the engagement was to be broken. I told her that I should be able to state my position in a couple of days. Well, the letter came. Perhaps you had better see it. You can read it to yourself."

He went to his desk, and searching among the papers, produced a correspondence-form bearing an official stamp. He handed it to Selwyn.

"WASHINGTON, November 2, 1916.

"_Personal and Confidential_.

"MY DEAR VAN DERWATER,--As a boyhood friend of your father"s I have been most anxious to accede to your request for release from your present duties. I may say that in my desire to do the fairest thing by you, I went so far as to place the facts of the matter before the President himself. He agreed with me that your services ent.i.tled you to every possible consideration; but he also pointed out that the intimate knowledge of our secret diplomacy which you have gained marks you as too valuable a man to let go lightly. I finally secured his consent, but an hour later he sent for me again. It was to talk over a new enemy that has arisen in this fight of the present administration to weld the conflicting elements of our nation into a single-thinking whole. I refer to the ultra-pacifist section which has grown so large recently.

"You told me once that you knew this fellow, Austin Selwyn. I am sorry to set friend against friend, but his influence over the cultured and pacifist elements has to be met sternly and at once. We cannot take personal action against him, because he is within his rights as a citizen of a neutral country; but nevertheless his writings are proving a strong disrupting force--stronger, in fact, than many of the clumsier methods employed by subjects of belligerent nations.

"Word has reached us that in all probability this nation will be faced shortly with the most momentous decision of the war. Therefore I must insist that you take charge of the anti-disruptionist propaganda. I shall be in New York next Wednesday, and will discuss with you the methods by which we can stem the tide of disloyal pacificism as exemplified by this man Selwyn.

"We have no hold over you, my boy; but in the name of this great Republic which is struggling against such odds for unification of her national life, I bid you remain at your post. I know that the son of my old friend Colonel Van Derwater will not question an order.--Yours faithfully,

A. WALTER GALLEY."

As Selwyn finished the letter, a flush swept into his cheeks and his jaw stiffened with his old fighting mannerism.

"This is infamous!" he cried hotly. "Do you accuse me of disloyalty to my own country?"

"I do," said Van Derwater calmly.

Selwyn"s fists clenched with fury. "Van," he said, his voice quivering with suppressed pa.s.sion, "I may have been blind--I can see where I have injured you and many others--but when you or Galley say that I have been trying to disrupt America, you lie. There is no one more pa.s.sionately devoted to his country than I."

"Which is your country?" said Van Derwater.

Through the dim light of the room the eyes of the two men met.

Selwyn"s were blazing like hot coals; Van Derwater"s were cold and steely.

"What have I done," said Selwyn, twice checking himself before he could trust his voice, "but tried to show that war is wrong--that men without quarrel are killing each other now--that every nation has contributed to this terrible thing by its ignorance? What is there in that which merits the name of traitor?"

Van Derwater shrugged his shoulders, and taking a book from the table, idly studied its cover. "Since the war began," he said, his tones calm and low, "the United States has been trying to speak with one voice, the voice of a united people. It was the plain duty of every American to aid the Administration in that. Instead, what have we found?

Pro-Germans plotting outrage, and pro-Britishers casting slurs; conspiracy, political blackmailing, financial pressure--everywhere she has looked, this country has found within her borders the factors of disruption. We have fought them all. We have refused to be bullied or cajoled into choosing a false national destiny. At the moment that we seem to have accomplished something--with Europe looking to us for the final decision that must come--you, and others of your kind, contrive to poison the great educated, decent-thinking cla.s.s that we always thought secure. Your cry of "Peace--peace--at any price let us have peace," has done its work. Consciously or unconsciously, Austin, you have been a traitor."

Selwyn rose furiously to his feet. "This is the end of our friendship," he said, with his voice almost choking, and his shoulders chafing under the pa.s.sion which possessed him. "Your chief has chosen to name me as a reason for keeping you in America, and so it is I who have come between you and Marjory. For that I am sorry. But when you question my loyalty to America--that is the finish."

Van Derwater had also risen to his feet and with the utmost courtesy listened to Selwyn"s outburst. More than ever there was a mystic atmosphere of the Past in his bearing. He might have been a diplomat of the sixteenth century bidding adieu to a thwarted enemy plenipotentiary.

"Austin," he said, with the merest inclination of his head, and his arms hanging wearily by his sides, "we live in difficult times."

With an angry gesture, Selwyn left the room, and taking his coat and hat from the negro, went again into the street.

Closing his study door, Van Derwater moved slowly to his chair, and lifting his book, opened it. For a long time he gazed at the open page without reading a line. "Difficult times," he murmured.

III.

Still in the grip of uncontrollable fury, Selwyn stamped his way through the streets. Colliding heavily with a pa.s.ser-by, he turned and cursed him for his clumsiness. He cherished a mad desire to return to Van Derwater"s rooms and force an apology by violence. He had expected criticism, reproach, even abuse; but that any man should brand him treasonous! . . .

He spat into the gutter, and a sound that was almost a snarl escaped from his throat. He stopped, irresolute, and the wound in his head burst into a violent pain. He leaned against a post until the agony had pa.s.sed, and once more he made for Broadway. At the sight of his face glowing-red with pa.s.sion, girls t.i.ttered and men drew aside.

Crossing the road, he stood to let a street-car pa.s.s, its covered wheels giving an odd resemblance to an armoured car, when an extra burst of light made him look up.

It was the gum advertis.e.m.e.nt again.

CHAPTER XXI.

A NIGHT IN JANUARY.

I.

Next morning, when Selwyn left his hotel, a few desultory snowflakes were falling through the air, and moistly expiring on the asphalt pavements. It lacked a few minutes of nine, and the thousands who man the machinery of New York"s business were hurrying to their appointed places. People who had to catch trains were hurrying to stations; and people who had nowhere to go were hurrying still faster. Taxi-cabs were rushing people across the city; and other taxi-cabs were rushing them back again. The overhead railway was rattling and roaring its noisy way; the surface cars were clattering and clanging through the traffic; and every half-minute the subways were belching up cargoes of toilers into the open air.

New York was in a hurry.

All night the great engine of a million parts had lain idle, but morning was the signal that every wheel must leap into action again, driven by the inexhaustible army of human souls. Hurry, noise, clamour, greed, fever, progress. . . . Another day had dawned!

Crossing Broadway to reach Fourth Avenue, Selwyn could not repress a smile at the stricken glory of the great Midway. The illuminated signs that had searched the secret crevices of the mind, and had aided the iridescent foam seen from the harbour, looked tawdry and vulgar, like a circus on a rainy morning. Even the theatres, with their sign-borne superlatives, were garish and illusion-shattering. There was almost an apologetic air about the bill-boards proclaiming their nightly offering to be the "biggest ever."

Selwyn began to resent that word "biggest." One of the sad things about America is that she started out to make language her slave--only to find that it is becoming her master.

Entering a great office-building, he consulted the directory-board, and was swooped up to the twenty-fourth floor in a non-stop elevator.

Finding the room of his literary agent, he went in, but a young lady told him Mr. Lyons was in Chicago.

"It doesn"t matter," said Selwyn. "I shall see him when he returns.

But I want a couple of addresses. Have you the file of letters to me?

Austin Selwyn is my name."

The young lady was gratifyingly fl.u.s.tered at the announcement, and by her haste to produce the required letters indicated the esteem in which her employer held the author.

"It was early last September," said he. "Mr. Lyons mentioned two names: a Mr. Schneider, who purchased the foreign rights of my stuff; and some one who wanted me to lecture--yes, that is the letter. Could you give me the addresses of these gentlemen?"

She wrote them on a card and gave it to him. "Mr. J. V. Schneider,"

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